Puget Sound Liberals Weekly Newsletter #161

Enhancing Freedom, Opportunity and Cooperation in Puget Sound and Beyond

Through informing and networking Liberals and Liberal Organizations.

 

Our vision is hundreds of thousands of well-informed Puget Sound Liberals working together.

 

   3000 members                                                                    February 13, 2009                                       formerly Lake Hills Liberals                

 

 

 

 

                                                     

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              Table of Contents      * Featured Articles

 

About Puget Sound Liberals

Communication With Our Members

Calendars of Events

Opportunities and Petitions

 

Commentaries from Our Members

Linda Seltzer:Remove Me from this Anti-Semitic Group

Cheryl Banks:Encourage Support for President Obama

Cliff Wells: Put Martin Luther King on Our $20 Bill

Jack Smith: Help Support Bus Ads about Gaza

Valerie Tarico: What Should Obama Ask of Us?

 

Liberals and Democrats Links to the Beef

Obama Watch – Week 3 *

Conservatives Falsely Claim Liberal Values

Sometimes Pictures Say a Lot

 

State and Local  Links to the Beef

Progress Toward Meeting Washington’s Major Needs *

Economic Opportunity Institute’s Important Reports*

Sightline Releases 2009 Cascadia Scorecard

Murray and Dicks Work to Stimulate State’s Economy

Governor Christine Gregoire’s Priorities

 

Nation and World  Links to the Beef

Job Losses Are Greater than in Recent Recessions*

Understanding Earnings for Dummies *

Understanding Bailouts for Dummies *

Understanding Economic Stimulus for Dummies *

Commercial Media Enable Consume and Speculate

Ocean Use Management

 

Our Liberal Spirit

Changing Paradigms

 

Recommended Books

 

 

 

 

Our Political Values

 

Our Political Priorities

 

·       Fair Clean Elections and Open Government

·       Fair Taxes and Competent Spending

·       Investment for Productivity

·       Quality Health, Education, Jobs, Income

·       Environmental Protection and Energy Independence

·       Security and Equal Rights

·       Justice and Peace Everywhere

·       International Cooperation and Leadership

 

Conservatives oppose all of these

 

     Let’s End Our National Nightmare

 

         Let’s Restore Our American Dream

 

More on Conservative opposition to our American Dream

 

Washington State’s 5 Major Needs

·       Federal Funding for Health and Education

·       Stop Corporate Abuse

·       Public Campaign Financing

·       Substitute a Progressive Income Tax

·       Replacing Conservative Legislators

 

Quote of the Week

Successive transition from one paradigm to another via revolution is the usual developmental pattern of mature science. Thomas Kuhn (1922-1996)   For more.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Communication with Our Members

 

My favorite advocacy groups are ones which best address our major issues.  These include: Economic Opportunity Institute, Washington Public Campaigns, Washington CAN (Community Action Network), Statewide Poverty Action Network), Sightline, Futurewise, and Environmental Priorities Coalition (and its members.  Beginning with the Economic Opportunity Institute, I am going to describe their missions and activities and direct you to their reports. 

 

Calendars of Events                           

 

King County Democrats - LD Meetings            Some 2008 Legislature Lobby Days

Thurston County Progressive Net                  Western Washington Fellowship of Reconciliation

Alliance for Democracy                               Democratic Underground.Com                          

Sierra Club Cascade Chapter Calendar           Cool State Washington

Washington Public Campaigns Calendar          Town Hall Seattle Calendar

Washington State Labor Council                    Whatcom County Peace and Justice Calendar 

Conversation Cafe      Drinking Liberally          Seattle NOW          

Wallingford Neighbors for Peace and Justice – Friday Night Movies      Liberal films on PBS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Calendar of Events

Friday, February 13 at 7 PM at Rainier UU Center (835 Yesler Way, Seattle) - Film Screening & Discussion  “Present in All That We Do”, a documentary about hostility toward immigrants in Bellingham one hundred years ago and now.  Arrive 6:30 for coffee and visiting.

Monday, February 16 at 10 AM to 4 PM at – Democratic Party Precinct Organization training.  $10 including lunch.

Monday February 16 at 5 PM at Saint Martins University Pavilion (5300 Pacific Avenue SE, Lacey) – Democratic Party Crab Feed, with Governor Christine Gregoire, Congressman Adam Smith, Senate Majority Leader Lisa Brown and other Democratic government officials.  $50.  To buy tickets.

Saturday, March 7 at 7 PM at Northlake Universalist Unitarian Church (308 Fourth Ave South, Kirkland) – David Korten addresses Real Security, Community and the New Economy.

Saturday, March 14 at 6 PM at Seattle Center Fisher Pavilion – Futurewise Carnaval Dinner and Fundraiser, including live and silent auctions.  $85.  RSVP by March 6th.

 

Opportunities and Petitions

Opportunities

Useful Websites: contacts, maps, community organizing tools, and more.

Access to jillions of political cartoons.

Download Sightline Institute’s climate policy primer ‘Cap and Trade 101’.  About Sightline.

Learn more about the Obama-Biden policy agenda and share your ideas.

For updates from Obama-Biden Transition Project, including video of Obama’s weekly address.

Ask Democratic national committee Chair Tim Kaine about future of Democratic Party.

Obtain Progressive States Networks resources for improving many state government services.

 

Petitions and Donations

Tell the Nigerian government to stop wasteful flaring of natural gas.

Tell President Obama to appoint an envoy to deal with Darfur and Chad.

Tell President Obama to appoint an envoy to deal with Darfur.  Different petition than one above.

Tell your house member to support the Omnibus Public Land Management Act without amendment.

Tell President Obama to protect Alaska's Tongass rainforest.

Tell President Obama to create a Whitehouse kitchen garden with Tacoma’s Carrie Little as gardener.

Tell your congress members to pass the economic stimulus-investment proposals now.

Tell your congress members to support 7 steps to a green stimulus.

Tell your congress members to support clean energy provisions in stimulus-investment package.

Tell your congress members to legislate a cap and trade system to reduce global warming.

Tell your senators to keep support for early childhood education in our stimulus-investment package.

Tell Interior Secretary Ken Salazar to protect Rocky Mountain wolves.

Join Senator Leahy to tell congress to support a commission to investigate Bush administration abuses.

 

Commentaries From Our Members

 

Linda Seltzer: Please Remove Me from this Anti-Semitic Group

 

Please remove me from this list and newsletter.  I wanted to join a group of liberals.  I do not seek to be a member of a group that has, however unintentionally, fallen into Anti-Semitism without studying Jewish history or Israeli current events.  Sorry, but I have better things to do with my time.  Linda Seltzer

 

Cheryl Banks: Encourage Support for President Obama

 

Dave, I think that it is true that the country has changed a lot in these past three weeks. You are smart to have picked up on it and are willing to respond.

  1. I think that anything which keeps the continued occupation of Iraq is still pertinent.
  2. Encourage us to support Obama and to push the Democrats to support him to in the spirit of "Give him a chance to work his magic."  I know that our three: Jim McDermott, Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell are pretty good, I would suppose that they are supporting him, but we need to put pressure on Dave Reichert, and encourage friends and relatives to do the same as well as encourage people in other states where Republicans still can be elected.

Sincerely, Cheryl Banks

 

Alex O’Reilly: Tell Me about Bellevue’s Top Human Services Needs

 

As a Bellevue Human Services Planner, I need to know what you believe are Bellevue’s top human services needs.  Please inform me of your concerns for a report I am composing.  Alex O’Reilly (425-452-2824, AOReilly@bellevuewa.gov)

 

Cliff Wells: Replace Andrew Jackson with Martin Luther King on our $20 bill

 

For more.

 

Jack Smith: Help Support Bus Ads about Gaza

 

These five photos are on 12 Metro Buses in downtown Seattle: one, two, three, four, and five.  Twelve buses that say END SIEGE OF GAZA - will be added on Monday between Seattle and Bellevue and when we raise more funds, we will add 12 more between Mercer Island and Seattle.

 

The cost is $300 per bus for a 4 week ad - that is Great Bang for the Buck, as they say. Most important it is an excellent method to educate people on the travesty in Gaza today.  This is very much a grassroots operation, with no corporate funding. We ask that people who are able give $10, $30 or more if they can afford it. Contributions should be mailed to AACC, P.O. Box 31642 Seattle WA 98103;

noting "Bus Ad."

 

Liberals and Democrats

 

Obama Watch – Week 3

 

An Unprecedented Rapid Start

President Obama’s transition team quickly filled his staff positions and nominated cabinet members, with only several glitches.  Although our commercial media pundits dramatize the glitches, he has already signed various executive orders and several long delayed bills.  Our major stimulus-investment package is moving quickly toward passage. 

 

The most difficult unresolved issues are responding to mortgage defaults and bailing out financial companies in order to increase credit.  The major obstacle is indecision concerning how much to continue our Borrow, Consume and Speculate habits and how much to painfully return to Earn, Conserve and Invest habits, which were prevalent during our prosperous period following World War II.  We need to decide how much credit we should have and what financial qualifications households should have to assume mortgages.  Our answers to these questions will ease our making decisions concerning bailing out financial companies and defaulting borrowers.

 

A Master Strategist

President Obama is a master strategist, keeping his eye on winning the war, even as he loses a few battles.  Passing our stimulus-investment package is winning the war.  Knowing that some Republican Senators must support passage of our stimulus-investment package, he continues to reach out to them, even at the cost of some investments in education, other human infrastructure and assistance to state and local governments.

 

Our stimulus-investment package passed the house without any Republican support, was modified in the Senate to gain 3 Republican votes necessary to passage, and now has been compromised by a conference committee to be passed soon for President Obama’s signature.  For more.  For more.  Liberals can support virtually everything in the package, although we would desire more investment in our physical and social infrastructure.  The package delivers on President Obama’s campaign promises to cut taxes for 95% of Americans.  It provides greatly needed assistance our state and local governments. 

 

It introduces a disagreement between Republican congress members and Republican state and local officials and legislators.  It opens the door for further public investments.  After a 50 year wait, John Kenneth Galbraith is smiling from heaven.

 

Poor Framing

I am surprised that the Obama Administration has poorly framed the cost of our stimulus-investment package.  Conservatives have been allowed to complain about the $800 billion cost (over 2 years) as though there would be no cost without the package. 

 

The Bush administration has left us with an economy which is losing hundreds of thousands of jobs each month.  With an increase from 4.6 to 7.6% unemployed, there are now 3% (4.6 million) more of the labor force unemployed than in early 2007.  Since each worker produces $94,000 ($14.5 trillion GDP divided by 153 million workers), the annual cost to our economy is $430 billion ($94,000 times 4.6 million workers) per year.  At an average annual earned income of $50,000, lost household income per year equals $230 billion per year.  The cost to our government would be the lost income tax on $230 billion per year plus the costs of services and payments caused by increased unemployment. 

 

In addition, we have lost several trillions in speculative home values and several trillions in speculative stock market values.  We will and should perhaps lose some more.  But stimulating our economy will prevent us from over-correcting these values and ease the transition to appropriate ones.

 

If unemployment continues and increases because our government does nothing, our economy will lose more than $430 billion a year, our workers will lose more $230 billion per year and our government will lose some amount.  If spending $800 billion puts 4 million people back to work, increases our national production and their incomes, reduces the amount of household dislocation (mortgage defaults, bankruptcies, divorces and mental illness), and the government recovers some of its money, it may be a very good deal. 

 

This statistical argument is too complicated for framing, but supports it.  The basic choice is between losing more than $800 billion in production plus experiencing many other negative consequences (due to Conservative economic policies) or spending l$800 billion over the next two years.  The economic stimulus-investment package costs us nothing.  It enables us to regain the more than $800 billion that Bush’s economic policies have already cost us.

 

Conservative Hypocrisies

·       Given the increasing collapse of our economy, only a few Conservatives (mostly ones who aren’t in congress) argue that no stimulus is needed. 

·       They mostly argue that our stimulus-investment package is too large, even though they voted for all of President Bush’s budgets with huge deficits. 

·       Even though large tax cuts contributed to our economic mess, Conservatives still argue we need more tax cuts (including supply side tax cuts for business) instead of investments which directly create jobs.

·       They argue that investments in our infrastructure won’t be spent soon enough, even though they supported permanent tax cuts as economic stimulus.

·       Even though they have long argued that services are better offered by state and local governments instead of our national government, they are now warning that including funding for the former will be wasted by poor state and local decisions.

·       They were wrong when they predicted in 1993 that Clinton’s tax increases on the wealthy would harm our economy.  They now argue that our package won’t stimulate the economy.  Even if it takes a while, our economy will improve and Democrats will receive credit for their stimulus efforts.

I believe that Republican attempts to delay our stimulus-investment package, their refusal to vote for it and their hypocritical arguments will harm them.  With 5 incumbent Republican senators not running for re-election in 2010, Democrats can expect to win more senate seats.

 

Our Current Political Struggle Is Only the Beginning

Our Obama administration will soon unveil its 2010 budget proposal.  It will surely include more expenditure for physical and human infrastructure.  It will also include reduction of subsidies for powerful corporations and for military technology which fulfills no realistic defense need.  It may include eliminating the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy.  Republicans and their cronies will certainly fight these shifts in budget priorities.  So expect another big battle.  For more.

 

Our Obama administration will then address health care and coverage reform.  Even though more Americans, more employers and more providers will support reform than ever before, private insurers and market fundamentalist Republicans will provide strong resistance.  Complicating the struggle will be a lack of consensus among reformers concerning whether to support a single payer or a compromised approach which includes private insurers.  So another big battle.

 

What will follow in 2010, will depend upon the outcome of these battles.  And the extent to which our economy is recovering.  If the economy is recovering and we win these battles, we can expect even further progress in 2010, followed by election victories which further weaken the Republican Party.  Hopefully, we can also beat Republican state legislators to preclude them from gerrymandering the redistricting following the 2010 census.

 

Conservatives Falsely Claim Liberal Values

 

President Obama has stoutly defended old-fashioned values: honesty, hard work, courage, fair play, tolerance, curiosity, loyalty and patriotism.  Some Conservatives have proclaimed these values as their own.  Thus Obama is seen to be at least partly Conservative.  But these are Liberal values.  We are the ones who believe in freedom, opportunity, fairness, tolerance competence, compassion, cooperation and our constitutional rights. 

 

Conservatives are the ones who reward wealth instead of work, inequality over fair play, intolerance and lack of compassion.  They are the ones whose dogmas preclude curiosity to determine realities.  They are the ones whose put private interests before public patriotic interests.  For more.

 

 

Sometimes Pictures Say a Lot

 

      

 

Here’s the Beef

President Obama offers leadership lessons.

President Obama is a fighting conciliator.  He uses both carrots and sticks.

See the ten proposals which received the most votes from 650,000 respondents to Ideas for Change.

Ten actions President Obama should take, but maybe won’t.

Liberals must maintain an independent movement outside of Obama’s movement (video).

Liberals start movement to influence public opinion to support gov’t measures to rebuild economy.

Two thirds of Americans support President Obama’s handling of stimulus-investment package.

President Obama addresses us about our stimulus-investment package (video).

President Obama is dealing with many of Keynes’ government-economy concerns.

Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner unveils bailout plan to support $1.5 trillion in new lending.

Our people are revolting against bailing out financial companies which caused our mess.

Unlike Treasury Dept, FDIC has expertise to take over, reform and resell banks.

Security Exchange Commission chief resigns, replacement will investigate, stop and punish fraud.

How far will President Obama go to promote unionization?

President Reagan clobbered unions.  President Obama clobbers overpaid executives.  For more.

President Obama supports bankruptcy reform.

Obama administration will change U.S. Forest Service policy to counteract global warming impacts.

President Obama should promote a stimulus package for the whole world, especially poorest countries.  For more (video).

What will President Obama do about climate change and when?

President Obama should create panel to investigate claims of abuse by the Bush administration.

Rush Limbaugh is Conservative version of Reverend Jeremiah Wright.

Some Republicans cooperate with President Obama.  Others seek his failure.

Republicans choose partisanship over cooperation to stimulate economic recovery.

Republicans disliked filibusters when they were in control.  Now they like them.

Republican mortgage plan harms, without helping.

Organized labor and GLBT groups can cooperate to pass legislation.

Besides necessary public services, Liberals should support reforms which prevent corporate abuse.

Obama Administration appears to ignore Howard Dean in spite of what they owe him.

Labor Secretary Hilda Solis may be Obama’s best cabinet choice.  She must be confirmed.

Democrats may do well in 2010 as Republicans did in 1982, two years after Reagan’s election.

 

State and Local

 

Progress toward Meeting Washington State’s Major Needs

 

Federal Funding for Health and Education

The passage of SCIFF will provide health coverage for some of Washington’s children.  Our stimulus-investment package will provide funds for health and education.  More funding may be included in our 2010 budget.  Universal health care and coverage reform will greatly reduce the need for state funding for health care.  Such additional federal funding will greatly reduce the necessity for state spending on these two service areas, making it much easier to meet our needs without increasing taxes.

 

Stop Corporate Abuse

Granted the same rights as people, our corporations unduly influence us to reduce their taxes, escape regulation and allow them to create externalities, which harm our environment, workers, suppliers, consumers and others.  We may not be able to eliminate giving corporations the same rights as people.  But we can expect more regulations and enforcement by the Democrats to protect us from corporate abuse.

 

Public Campaign Financing

Legislation has been passed which grants local governments the right to institute public campaign -financing for candidates for their offices.  A house bill with 32 co-sponsors has been filed to provide public campaign financing for judges.

 

Substitute a Progressive Income Tax

Without civic or political leadership or support from those labor, educational and tax payer groups which would gain the most, no progress is occurring toward substitution of a progressive income tax for some of our regressive sales, excise and property taxes.  Even our Tax Fairness Coalition is unwilling publically promote or even mention an income tax.

 

Replacing Conservative Legislators

In spite of Barack Obama’s and Christine Gregoire’s victories last November, we were unable to replace any of our three Republican congress members and Republicans gained a few seats in our state legislature.  A Democratic candidate with campaign and legislative experience will likely win our 8th congressional district seat in 2010.  If our economy begins to recover well, it may even be possible to replace one or both of our other Republican congress members.  Registering Hispanics in the Yakima Valley will help.

 

For Democrats to win more state legislative seats, we need more assistance from our Washington State Democrats, including:

·       Greatly increase our identification of likely Democratic voters from 50% and stimulate them to vote.

·       Increase the number of likely Democratic voters on our email list above 100,000 and communicate regularly with them concerning our priorities, activities, opportunities for participation and candidates.

·       Through dues and regular pledges, greatly increase our funding, using much more to support legislative candidates.

·       Challenge Republicans in state, county and municipal positions who may become candidates for higher office, while grooming more Democrats to run.

 

In Summary:

Except for substituting an income tax, we have made or may make progress toward meeting Washington State’s major needs.  Much of this progress is due to federal actions.  We should continue to strongly support President Obama and our Democratic members of congress. 

 

Economic Opportunity Institute’s Important Reports

 

Our Economic Opportunity Institute (EOI) is a progressive public policy center, working on economic security issues in Washington State.  It is dedicated to advancing new ideas to make Washington a better place to live, work and do business.  It pursues change through research, media outreach, public dialogue and policy initiatives that shape public debate and promote educational opportunity, modern work-life standards, retirement security, and a fair tax system for working families.

 

Our EOI has created and published numerous fact sheets and other reports, concerning:

·     Educational Opportunity: Early Learning, Strong Schools

·     Work-Life Standards: Paid Family Leave, Minimum Wage, Paid Sick Leave

·     Retirement Security: Social Security, Voluntary Accounts

·     Shared Prosperity: Public Revenue and Spending, State Economy

 

The State of Working Washington 2008 (one of an annual series) describes:

·     Our workforce – older, better educated and more diverse than earlier

·     Our working women – now half of our employment, but segregated in different jobs than men, and earning less per hour and per month than men

·     Our household finances – stagnant incomes, increasing income inequality and poverty, and inflated costs

·     Our economy – our diversified and high tech economy has not declined as much as the national average.  [But in early 2009, the decline is increasing.]

 

Policies to improve our work and family life include improving education, encouraging more income equality, and creating flexible work conditions which enable attention to family needs.  A report Building an Economy that Works for Everyone notes policies and programs that EOI has supported, including higher quality early childhood education; assistance for labor force entrants; increased health coverage; family friendly work policies; higher minimum wage; Washington Voluntary Accounts, which enable employees to safely save for retirement; and a fair progressive tax system, which brings in sufficient income while lowering most people’s taxes.

 

A Stimulus and Recovery Plan for Washington State recommends:

·       Put money into the pockets of people who will immediately spend it locally;

·       Build the infrastructure of transportation and energy-efficient technology our 21stcentury economy needs

·       Educate and train the workforce for that economy

·       Modernize workplace standards and benefits to serve today’s families and businesses.

·       Modernize and strengthen our state tax structure to better finance both immediate and long term needs

 

Our EOI does more than research and issuing reports, it actively works with other organizations to promote needed reforms, through legislative and other action.  I strongly recommend that you join learn from and support our Thinking and Fighting EOI.  Dave Thomas

 

Sightline Releases 2009 Cascadia Scorecard

 

The 2009 update of the Scorecard—a project launched by Sightline in 2004 to track seven long-term trends critical to the region’s progress—spotlighted energy as the region’s worst-performing trend. Overall, it found that the Northwest is achieving modest progress toward goals of robust human health, shared economic prosperity, and a legacy of thriving nature.

Key findings from the 2009 Scorecard include:

·       Energy’s economic toll reaches record high in 2008: Spending on fossil fuels in the Northwest States quadrupled in just a decade, reaching a record high in 2008 of $29.5 billion, including $16.6 billion in Washington, $9.4 billion in Oregon, and $3.6 billion in Idaho. The Scorecard also reported a disappointing 12 percent increase in electricity consumption in homes and businesses between 2003 and 2008.

·       Northwest drivers easing off the gas: The good news about energy is that northwesterners are using less gasoline per person than they have since 1965. Idaho’s reductions have been especially notable—declining more than one-fifth per person in a single decade. And despite a 15 percent increase in population over the last decade, Cascadia used no more gasoline in 2008 than in 1998. But northwesterners still consume, on average, the energy equivalent of 2 gallons of gasoline per person per day in transportation fuels and nonindustrial electricity—nearly double the Scorecard model, Germany.

·       BC residents are healthiest, surpass goal: Of the seven trends, the region performs best on health, as measured by lifespan, and British Columbia continues to lead. Not only do BC residents live an average of two years longer than residents of the Northwest states, but if BC were an independent nation, it would have the second longest lifespan in the world, after Japan.

·       Teen birthrates tick upward, reversing long-term slide: Teen birthrates rose in 2006 and again in 2007, a troubling trend that broke a long-standing decline that had been underway since the 1990s. Birthrates as a whole also rose, and the Northwest states still struggle with high rates of births from unintended pregnancies.

·       Stalled economic progress: Prior to 2008, northwesterners enjoyed several years of modest gains in economic security, with unemployment inching down and median incomes inching upward. However, a steep rise in unemployment in late 2008 may foretell rising poverty and falling middle-class incomes.

For more.

 

Senator Murray and Congressman Dicks Act to Stimulate State’s Economy

 

Senator Patty Murray (Chairwoman of the Transportation, Housing and Urban Development Subcommittee of the Appropriations Committee) and Congressman Norm Dicks (Chair man of the Interior, Environment and Related Agencies Subcommittee of the Appropriations Committee) use their influence to include funds in our Stimulus-investment Package for which Washington may qualify, including:

$5.5 billion for transportation such as our Seattle viaduct and SR-520 bridge replacements

$5.5 billion for nuclear waste cleanup such as our Hanford nuclear site

$3.2 billion in loans for the Bonneville Power Administration

$1.5 billion for national park maintenance and improvement such as our Olympic and Rainier parks

$60 million for ferries

 

In addition, funds are included to assist state and local governments to maintain and improve our physical and human infrastructure.  And funds for Medicaid.  And other funds for energy conservation and to stimulate creation and implementation of non-carbon based energy production.  Let’s hope that funds will similarly stimulate the economies of all of our states.  For more.

 

Governor Christine Gregoire’s Priorities

 

Governor Gregoire has been hard at work:

·       Passing a responsible budget,

·       Protecting current jobs and creating new ones

·       Helping government do more with less through a series of reforms.

For more.

 

Here’s the Beef

What our stimulus-investment package does for Washington State.

Read press release concerning Sightline’s 2009 Cascadia Scorecard.

Report describes how climate change will affect Washington.  For more.

What’s what and who’s who in our 2009 legislative session.

Statewide Poverty Action Network’s 2009 Legislative Agenda

King County homelessness is increasing.  Only half as many houses as planned are being built.

State Senator Adam Kline introduces bill to correct ‘3 strikes, you’re out’ law.

State Representative Sharon Nelson introduces bill to encourage affordable housing near transit stops.

Climate change is already weakening and killing our forests.

Policy makers study land use changes necessary to helping Puget Sound waters.

Our Olympic Peninsula is suffering from lack of wolves.

Our Columbia Basin is suffering from toxic pollutants.

Judge may close some Columbia River system dams to help preserve salmon spawning.

Monroe and non-profit Qualco Energy Corp are converting wastewater treatment residue into compost.

There are many obstacles to small intensive organic farming.

Port of Chelan seeks stimulus money to fund conversion of standard Prius hybrids to plug-in hybrids.

Recession increases payday lending concerns.

 

Nation and World  

 

Current Job Losses Are Greater than in Recent Recessions

 

 

 

We need to return to an Earn, Conserve and Invest economy from our present Borrow, Consume and Speculate economy.  We must increase our earnings, which have declined as a proportion of our production.  We provide adequate credit, for qualified borrowers, in the aftermath of collapsed credit used for excess consumption and for speculation.  We must provide economic stimulus-investment measures to provide employment with good earnings and investment to increase the efficiency of our economy.  The following three commentaries address these three topics: (1) earnings, (2) bailouts and (3) economic stimulus-investment.

 

Understanding Earnings for Dummies

 

The wage ratio is defined as the relationship of incomes from dependent work (employee payment) to the national income and is an important indicator for the functional income distribution, i.e. the distribution of the national income on the factors of production "work" and "capital".  It is well known that earnings have not kept up with productivity gains since 1973.  I have unsuccessfully spent several hours web-browsing to find statistics necessary to detailing the changes in the wage ratio from 1945 to the present.  I did find the following relevant commentary.

 

Dean Baker’s commentary The Productivity to Paycheck Gap: What the Data Show shows that from 1948 to 1973, average annual productivity increased 2.72% while real wages increased 2.23%.  From 1973 to 2006, average annual productivity increased 1.56 percent while real wages increased 0.02%

 

Baker stated that: “After making all the appropriate adjustments, there is still a large gap between the rate of usable productivity growth and the rate of growth of hourly compensation for the typical worker. Over the period from 1973 to 2006, median hourly compensation rose by 20.1 percent while usable productivity grew by 47.9 percent. This indicates that there was still a very substantial upward redistribution from typical workers to profits and high paid workers.

 

This redistribution was the result of a number of policies that were supposed to increase productivity growth, such as the removal of trade barriers, the deregulation of major industries (e.g. airlines, trucking, telecommunications), and less union-friendly labor rules. However, usable productivity growth remained far lower than in the early post-war period throughout the period from 1973 to 2006. Even in the period following the productivity upturn in 1995 the rate of growth of usable productivity was still 1.2 percentage points lower than in the early post-war period.

 

While it is possible that productivity growth in the years since 1973 would have been even slower without these policy changes, they clearly have not succeeded in boosting productivity growth back to rate for the years from 1947 to 1973. If the economy had sustained the early post-war rate of usable productivity growth rate in the years from 1973 to 2006, the level of usable productivity would be more than 80 percent higher today. This would have allowed for substantial increases in wages and/or leisure.”

 

As Baker stated, instead of going to workers, the productivity gains went to profits and high paid workers (i.e. executives).  Some of the profits were distributed to stockholders.  Others went to service debts, often the result of real or threatened takeover attempts.  Ultimately many of these undistributed or distributed profits ultimately were used for speculation.  For more.  For more.

 

Understanding Bailouts for Dummies

 

As I have studied bailouts, the alternatives seem very complicated.  But I finally have come to realize that the underlying reality is fairly simple.  Driven by infectious greed, almost all large financial companies speculated in mystery securities (with underlying mortgages or other assets of unknown value).  Based on the market value of these assets, most of these companies are now insolvent. 

 

To bail out (make solvent) these companies, our government must buy the mystery securities at more than their market value or otherwise give money to them.  If our government does not bail them out, they will become bankrupt, their stockholders wiped out and their assets sold at market value.  If our government does bail them out, our tax payers will take a beating.  The unlikely exception is if we purchase the mystery securities for more than they are worth, but manage them so that over time, they become more valuable.  For a succinct analysis by Dean Baker.  Read about Tim Geithner’s BARF (Bad Assets Relief Fund).

 

So the question is, “Do we need these financial companies to survive, at great expense to our government and ultimately our taxpayers?”  As we reduce our speculation and consumption, we have less need to borrow.  Can’t we rely on local and regional banks and credit unions which are solvent (due to not participating in speculation in mystery securities)?  To provide the credit that we do need for appropriate consumption and investment by qualified borrowers.  Can’t our government loan money to them, to augment their ability to loan at appropriate levels?  For more.

 

Unfortunately, many of the stockholders that will be hurt by the collapse of large financial companies are mutual and retirement funds, in which many of us have placed our savings.  Driven by our desire to maximize returns, we have unwittingly become speculators.  Not wanting to allow our speculative gains to disappear and to save their cronies, our government has provided bailouts.  As taxpayers, we don’t like bailouts.  As speculators, we favor them.  We will all be better off in the long run without bailouts.  If we bought or refinanced houses our bought stocks directly or indirectly, we will be better off in the short run with bailouts.  The major push for bailouts comes also from financial companies and their stockholders who benefited from their leveraged speculation and then lost when the bubble popped.

 

Note that our highly leveraged speculative credit bubble is much like a Ponzi scheme.  As earlier speculators made money, more companies, funds and individuals joined.  Until finally there were no new entrants and the weakness of the whole scheme was revealed.  As with Madoff, many of the victims were unaware that they were speculating.  They were attracted by various enabling funds which took their money and speculated with it.

 

Understanding Economic Stimulus-Investment Package for Dummies

 

To stimulate the economy, we need people to quickly spend money to provide demand for goods and services, such that providers will create more jobs.  The poorer people are, the more likely they are to spend any money they receive.  Excellent stimulants are increasing the minimum wage, the earned income tax credit, unemployment payments, food stamp payments, and tax reductions for low income persons.  These add to our safety net.  They stimulate private businesses to provide more jobs.  They may contribute some to making our economy more efficient through enhancing our human resources (infrastructure). 

 

Investing money in shovel-ready infrastructure projects also quickly creates jobs, some public and some private.  In addition, repairing and building new roads, bridges, dams, buildings, public transit, communications and other infrastructure, conserving energy and creating and implementing non-carbon based energy production make our economy more efficient.  Assuming that these infrastructure projects are helpful instead of make-work or even harmful.

 

Investment in slower to start infrastructure projects doesn’t provide immediate stimulus.  It would be justified by improving the efficiency of our economy. 

 

Providing funds to wealthy people or companies that will not spend it is a waste of stimulus money.  We must also be wary of incurring long term obligations, which can’t be met in future economic downturns.  Our regular budget should provide for permanent increases in government spending on child, disabled and elder care, education, and health.  Note that while government spending on health should go up, spending to buy private health insurance should decline or be eliminated, for a net reduction in national health spending.  For more.

 

To obtain enough votes from Republican Senators to pass the stimulus-investment, the stimulus-investment package was modified from the House version to provide more home and auto purchase tax credit stimulus and less investment in state, local and education projects.  For a comparison.  For more.  Paul Krugman has criticized the Senate version.  California Senator Barbara Boxer defended the compromises as necessary to pass the bill.  More commentary.

 

Dean Baker: How we changed from Earning to Borrowing and how to start back

 

Commercial Media Enable Consume and Speculate

 

Our commercial media depend upon advertising which promotes consumption.  They regard increasing housing prices as a good thing, even when there is no reason for the appreciation except more speculative buyers.   They regard increasing stock prices as a good thing, even when increasing P/E ratios indicate a bubble is forming.  Our commercial media have fueled our infectious greed which attracted us to the housing/credit Ponzi scheme.

 

Ocean Use Management

 

We are often informed about land use management.  We create and implement measures to direct uses of land to provide economies, improve our lifestyle and protect our environment.  The same principles apply to ocean use management.  By restricting fishing and other activities in some ocean areas, we provide havens for eco-systems which enable fish and other wildlife to thrive.  For more.

 

Here’s the Beef

Understanding how economic bubbles occurred can help us prevent them.

82% of job losses are affecting men.

We are already reducing our Consumption.  Our stimulus-investment package will increase investment.

Grassroots environmental acts should include green roofs and rain gardens.

Prices fall for gasoline, commodities, vehicles, retail products. Increase for services.

Nationalizing insolvent banks is the only way we can afford to save parts of them.

Co-Housing offers environmental and social benefits.

We need to remove the building code obstacles to prefabricated housing.

Canadian regulation saved their economy from collapse.  Canada thrives without leveraged speculation.

Bye bye Milton Friedman.

David Korten says: Don’t Fix Wall Street.  Fix Main Street.  For more.

Removing investment funding from stimulus-investment package will reduce employment gains.

Stimulus-investment package will help provide clean water.

Stimulus-investment package will help infrastructure which serves Native Americans.

$15,000 tax credit won’t help low income house buyers.

Climate change is shifting North American bird habitat to the north. Affecting other plants and animals.

United States and China may cooperate to minimize global warming.

As Americans consume less, Asia’s export strategy falters.

Durban dock workers ban Israeli shipments to protest Gaza destruction.

Israel illegally used American weapons in Gaza.

Israeli elections demonstrate that most Israeli voters oppose Palestinian state for peace.

 

Our Liberal Spirit

 

Changing Paradigms

 

Patricia O’Connell Killen’s and John de Beer’s 1994 book The Art of Theological Reflection includes the following on pages 20=21:

 

“The process of making meaning has a structure to it, though most of us move through the process without noticing its structure. This is because our drive is to find meaning in our lives. Asking how we do so is a different kind of activity.

 

Our work with theological reflection groups led us to ask how human beings make meaning when they reflect. In training sessions and theological reflection groups we observed a pattern to the process by which people came to significant insights. Key elements of this pattern were present in the process of reflection regardless of the particular method we used. We call this pattern in the process of reflection the “movement toward insight”.

 

The movement flows through five parts: experience, feelings, images, insight, and action. Think of them as related in a circular spiral: action, by leading to new experiences in our lives, propels us back to experience. The movement is this:

·       When we enter our experience, we encounter our feelings.

·       When we pay attention to those feelings, images arise.

·       Considering and questioning those images may spark insight.

·       Insight leads, if we are willing and ready, to action.

 

Becoming aware of this movement in our lives can strengthen and refine our habit of reflection. It puts you in touch with how, at times in our lives, we have come to significant understandings that allowed us to choose more freely among options or that strengthened or shifted our sense of who we are in relation to God, self, other and the world.”  See also.  And also.

 

Recommended Books – See our list of books for liberals

David Paul Kuhn, 2007, The Neglected Voter.  White Men and the Democratic Dilemma

Mark Stricherz, 2007, Why the Democrats Are Blue.  Secular Liberalism and the Decline of the People’s Party

 

Our Basic Training contains a commentary on the factors which enabled the New Conservatives to increasingly control our government from 1980 to 2006.  These two books describe one factor in more detail, the change from voting for Democrats to Republicans by White men, who faced increasing competition from women and Blacks and perceived the Democrats as favoring the latter.  These books also consider other factors, including Christian Conservative use of cultural issues; Republicans framing themselves as optimistic forthright masculine persons and Democrats as gloomy, ambivalent and equivocal; and Republicans attacking Democrats while Democrats assumed a defensive posture.  I prefer Kuhn’s book. 

 

Democrats won in 2006 and 2008, partly due to the declining proportion of White men among our electorate.  And to better framing and playing offense against New Republican failures.

 

 

 

 

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