Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Numbers hurt!

The basic defense budget for 2007 was $439.3 billion, up 48 percent from 2001, excluding (emphasis mine) the vast additional sums appropriated for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. According to federal regulators and current and former Pentagon officials, the accounting process is so obsolete and error prone that it's virtually impossible to tell where much of this money ends up. While the department's brass has made a few patchwork improvements, billions are still unaccounted for. The problem is so deeply rooted that, 18 years after Congress required major federal agencies to be audited, the Pentagon still can't be.

From this fascinating, highly informative, and mouth-frothingly frustrating article from politico.com.

A must-read.

Add an estimated $700 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan (from Feb. 2008). With this number we have increased the budget 434% on the military and for the wars since 9/11. Keep in mind this number is going up daily and that we are not paying for it, but paying it forward to future generations with interest.

Monday, April 28, 2008

My Thoughts on Wisconsin and Minnesota Voters in 2008.

Here's the rub. PA is not a swing state. Either Democrat will win in November. OH and FL are swing states where Clinton runs more favorably than Obama. WI, MN, CO, IA, VA, NC, NV, NH, NM are all swing states where Obama runs better than Clinton in recent polls. Additionally, other polls have shown Obama running competitively in crazy states like MT, AK, NE, and IN (I don't think he'd win these states, but it's weird to think about). To Clinton's credit, she puts WV and AR in play, whereas Obama would get crushed in those states.

Excellent analysis by billysumday commenting at Talking Points Memo. An opinion, but one I agree with. Worth a repeat.

I was raised in Wisconsin and now live in Minnesota. I'm pretty biased in my perceptions, so take this for what it's worth. I can say that there is a lot of diversity in politics in both. Democrats and Republicans have much sway, and there are many variations there of, all over the scale.

Overall it seems like people are frustrated with the war(s), the economy, Bush, and the media. I think the overall frustrations that the nation is experiencing as a whole also lie here. So starting off I think the Democrats have an advantage here.

However, traditional Republicans abound, a few neo-cons, lots of Rush and O'Reilly fans. Many cut from the Lou Dobbs cloth. I think McCain will have a lot of sway as well, and we'd be stupid to underestimate him.

Most of my friends, Wisconsin and Minnesota, are Obama people. A few McCain voters. One outspoken about it to almost a caricature degree, the rest are very quiet about it (kind of weird). There are few, okay one, outspoken Hillary supporter. And the rest, just a few, who just want to vote Democrat, as an anti-Bush or anti-Same vote essentially, and don't care who the nominee is. Yes, they are my less involved friends. However, it's also important to add that they also think this whole campaign season has been inanity.

I think it's important to keep those less involved Democratic voters perspectives in mind, as well. They think all of this bickering is silly and makes the candidates, both of them, look like idiots.

I agree with them.

Sunday, April 27, 2008

An interesting graph.....

Notice how much health care is costing us? Incredible how much it has gone up the last twenty years. Amazing how much of our income is spent on that! Though not much of a surprise to any of us. More on this soon.....

Update: I've been looking at this and studying it. I've come to one conclusion. 1946 looks sweet! It seems like we were healthy, well-fed, fashionable, consumers. Small amounts for gas, cars, maintenance, housing, and medical expenses. More is spent on food and clothing.

Food and clothing surely were more expensive then due to the war and since clothing manufacturing hadn't gone overseas yet. Perhaps, consumers cut back in later generations as costs increased elsewhere, namely for health care. It's a dubious claim, but one that makes sense. The first things I cut out when money is tight are clothes, dining out, and my grocery store buying habits. Namely, I'll go less and I'll buy generic.

However, also consider that for the next ten years food and clothing dropped as manufacturing changes and prices normalized while health care only increased slightly. It looks like we were well into the 60's before health care costs really took off. Overall, it looks like a pretty good time for the American economy. Health care costs have been soaring since the late 70's. Almost doubling in the same period, even adjusted for inflation!

Irregardless of the causes of the drop in expenditures on food and clothing, it's sure is nice that health care costs are filling that potential savings we could have, isn't it?

The Real Cost of Gas

Gas will cost the average American 4% of their income, if $4 a gallon becomes the average price of gasoline over the next year. I have reached this conclusion by taking the average American mileage for 2006 (15,000 miles), dividing it by the average American m.p.g. car fuel economy for 2008 (30.1), multiplying that by $4 a gallon of fuel and then dividing the average American income for 2006 ($48,000). Finally, taking one and dividing it by the remainder, getting the percent. In this case it rounds to just slightly over 4%.

Of course, I am using 2006 numbers for the math. I have not found a 2007 number to go off of for income, etc. Of course, 2008 numbers have yet to be determined. However, I would argue that incomes have remained rather stagnant since 2006, and very probably have gone down for many. Of course miles driven, fuel economy, etc. can also effect the math. I'm sure because of prices the number of miles may have gone down as well. However, those are tit for tat arguments. I think 4% is a pretty good number to go off of.

Of course, I think many of my friends are paying much more than that. The gap between rich and poor has grown. The rich are getting much richer, throwing the average income up. In reality, I don't think the average income has gone up much. Or at all.

When compared to 1998 levels, the height of the Clinton economic expansion/bubble (which in all fairness it ended up being) and record low gas prices, we have seen gas eat up 2 and half times more of our earnings. In 1998 the average American spent 1.6% of their income on gas (now that's more like it). The average income was $38,000, the average fuel economy was 22.1 m.p.g., and gas cost an average of $1.03 per gallon, and they drove an average of 13,000 miles that year.

Of course if you take into account the good number of people who make less than $48,000, including many who commute from small towns, suburban areas, and the countryside to more urban, industrial areas for work the prices go up even further. For someone making $28,000 like I almost did in 2007, this adds up to 7% of their income. Insane, especially when one takes into account that is using average mileage. Many people commute twice that in a given year, especially many rural workers.

All this makes me incredibly glad that I now walk to work and have cut my fuel expenditure by half or more.

I think it's time for something new! How about you? Until then, the prices just keep going up...

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Death and the Maiden


Ariel Dorfman's play "Death and the Maiden" and the subsequent movie (starring my fav Sigourney Weaver) is an excellent personal look at how torture affects the citizens it is performed on in the long term and how it effects their feelings of justice and country. I think you'll also find that you are unable to pick a side between the two protagonists, you'll be too scared. I think many here feel the same way about this issue. I'd highly recommend a viewing or a reading.

I know it has inspired my outrage at my government's actions and the discouragement I feel every time I think about how my country is doing this. Bush administration=South American military junta, in my book, everytime I think about it.

“What the country needs is justice, but if we can determine at least part of the truth…” – Gerardo (Pg 15).

In the end the play and the movie are ultimately about how we deal with the horrors of our past. Can we forgive what is unforgiveable? A good question, and ultimately, one our whole country will have to ask of itself.

Torture in the U.S.: The Ongoing Narrative the Media is Ignoring

Hot off the wire today, apparently the CIA has over 7,ooo documents relating to our government run torture program. Of course, we ain't gonna see 'em. If we do I'm sure they'll include pages upon pages of blacked out paragraphs. Heck they didn't even want to admit they have them until now.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/usnw/20080423/pl_usnw/cia_acknowledges_it_has_more_than7000_documents_relating_to_secret_detention_program__rendition__and_torture

Of course this speaks to the larger issue of the land of the free authorizing the use of torture on it's own citizens and the citizens of other countries. People who have been declared "enemy combatants" but many of whom have been found to have been erroneously captured.

How did we get here?

Here's is a great summary. Essentially this started with Bush's decision that the Geneva Conventions didn't apply to "enemy combatants" and was followed by several memos sent to and from members at the highest levels of our government.

http://lawofwar.org/Torture_Memos_analysis.htm (with links to the memos).


Gonzalez Memo (doesn't work in above link):

http://kbonline.typepad.com/random/files/gonzales_memo_on_gen_conv_january_25_2002_pt_1.pdf

A great summary from Talking Points Memo using sources from the Associated Press and ABC News:

http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/04/todays_must_read_315.php

There are some heroes in all of this horrible mess.

http://www.harpers.org/archive/2008/04/hbc-90002819 (text below).


"Matthew Diaz served his country as a staff judge advocate at Guantánamo. He watched a shameless assault on America's Constitution and commitment to the rule of law carried out by the Bush Administration. He watched the introduction of a system of cruel torture and abuse. He watched the shaming of the nation's uniformed services, with their proud traditions that formed the very basis of the standards of humanitarian law, now torn asunder through the lawless acts of the Executive. Matthew Diaz found himself in a precarious position—as a uniformed officer, he was bound to follow his command. As a licensed and qualified attorney, he was bound to uphold the law. And these things were indubitably at odds.

Diaz resolved to do something about it. He knew the Supreme Court twice ruled the Guantánamo regime, which he was under orders to uphold, was unlawful. In the Hamdan decision, the Court went a step further. In powerful and extraordinary words, Justice Kennedy reminded the Administration that Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions was binding upon them, and that a violation could constitute a criminal act. One senior member of the Bush legal team, informed of the decision over lunch, was reported to have turned "white as a sheet" and to have immediately excused himself. For the following months, Bush Administration lawyers entered into a frenzied discussion of how to protect themselves from criminal prosecution.

One of the crimes the Administration committed was withholding from the Red Cross a list of the detainees at Guantánamo, effectively making them into secret detainees. Before the arrival of the Bush Administration, the United States had taken the axiomatic position that holding persons in secret detention for prolonged periods outside the rule of law (a practice known as "disappearing") was not merely unlawful, but in fact a rarefied "crime against humanity." Now the United States was engaged in the active practice of this crime.

The decision to withhold the information had been taken, in defiance of law, by senior political figures in the Bush Administration. Diaz was aware of it, and he knew it was unlawful. He printed out a copy of the names and sent them to a civil rights lawyer who had requested them in federal court proceedings.

Diaz was aware when he did this that he was violating regulations and that he could and would, if caught, be subjected to severe sanction. What he did was a violation of law, even as it was an effort to cure a more severe act of lawlessness by the Government. Diaz violated the law in precisely the same sense as Martin Luther King reminds us, in the Letter from Birmingham Jail, that his arrest was based on a violation of law. That everything the Nazis did in Germany was lawful. And that every act of the Hungarian freedom fighters was a crime. In terms of the moral law, however, Diaz was on the side of right, and the Bush Administration and the Pentagon had, by engaging in the conduct that the Supreme Court condemned, placed themselves on the side of lawlessness, corruption and dishonor.

Diaz was charged, tried and convicted for disclosing "secrets." For the Bush Administration, any information which would be politically embarrassing or harmful to it is routinely classified "secret." In this fashion the Administration believes it can use criminal sanctions against those who disclose information it believes will be politically damaging. The list of detainees at Guantánamo, which by law was required to be disclosed, was classified as "secret." Diaz spent six months in prison and left it bankrupt and without a job. In addition to his sentence, the Pentagon is working aggressively to have Diaz stripped of his law license so he will not be able to practice his profession. The Bush Administration has sought to criminalize, humiliate and destroy Diaz. Its motivation could not be clearer: Diaz struck a blow for the rule of law. And nothing could be more threatening to the Bush Administration than this.

In the week in which Diaz received the Ridenhour Prize, another Pentagon "secret" was disclosed. This "secret" was a memorandum made to order for William J. Haynes II, Rumsfeld's General Counsel, and the man at the apex of the Pentagon's military justice system that tried, convicted and sentenced Diaz. The memo was authored by John Yoo. This memorandum was designed to authorize the introduction of torture and other cruel, inhuman and degrading interrogation techniques to be used upon prisoners held at Guantánamo, and ultimately also used in Afghanistan and Iraq. The memorandum authorized waterboarding, long-time standing, hypothermia, the administration of psychotropic drugs and sleep deprivation in excess of two days in addition to a number of other techniques. Each of these techniques is long established as torture as a matter of American and international law. The application and implementation of these techniques was and is a crime.

The exact circumstances surrounding the dealings between Haynes and Yoo that led to the development of this memorandum are unclear. However, it is clear that Haynes had previously authorized the use of the torture techniques, and had secured an order from Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld authorizing them.

Following the implementation of these techniques, more than 108 detainees died in detention. In a large number of these cases, the deaths have been ruled a homicide and connected to torture. These homicides were a foreseeable consequence of the advice that Haynes and Yoo gave. The introduction of torture techniques destroyed America's reputation around the world, dramatically eroded a system of alliances that generations of Americans fought and labored to sustain and build, and provided the basis for a dramatic recruitment campaign for terrorist groups who are the nation's principal adversaries in the war on terror. Yoo's and Haynes's conduct dramatically undercut the security and safety of every American. And equally, Yoo and Haynes demonstrated by their conduct contempt for the rule of law and the principles for which hundreds of thousands of Americans shed their blood in prior conflicts.

Yoo is currently a professor at the University of California at Berkeley, the author of a number of widely featured books, and a widely followed media figure whose works are routinely published in the Wall Street Journal and other publications. He remains a member of the bar in Pennsylvania and California.

Haynes recently left the position of General Counsel at the Department of Defense to become General Counsel–Corporate at Chevron Inc. He remains a member of the bar in North Carolina, Virginia and the District of Columbia.

A system that punishes and shames Matthew Diaz, yet obstructs any investigation into the misconduct of John Yoo and Jim Haynes, and particularly their focal rule in the introduction of torture, cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, is corrupt. Indeed, it persecutes the innocent and rewards the guilty. A bar association that disbars Matthew Diaz and leaves Yoo and Haynes free to practice is fundamentally corrupt. In essence, this choice reflects a legal profession that puts upholding the will of the Executive, even when it commands the most egregious and unlawful conduct, over the Rule of Law. It reflects the abnegation of the bedrock principles of the profession and the principles of the American Constitution and the Revolution which gave rise to it.

Lieutenant Commander Diaz reminds us of the powerful words of Justice Brandeis:


Our government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches the whole of the people by its example. If the government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for the law and invites every man to become a law unto itself. It breeds anarchy. To declare that the end justifies the means would bring terrible retribution.

In a day when the legal profession is disgraced repeatedly by the performance of lawyers in the service of their government, Matthew Diaz is emerging as a hero to many, and as a symbol that for some lawyers devotion to truth, integrity and justice still matters. Indeed, that dedication and willingness to shoulder the burden it can bring, is and will likely be seen by future generations of Americans as the higher form of patriotism."



108 detainees killed! If that isn't torture, I don't know what is.

We are "disappearing" our own citizens and the citizens of other countries. Disturbing, reminds me of (from Wikipedia):


Operation Condor and Argentina's Dirty War

The phrase was infamously recognized by Argentinian de facto President, General Videla, who said in a press conference during the Military Government he commanded in Argentina: "They are neither dead nor alive, they disappeared".

It is thought that in Argentina between 1976 and 1983 up to 30,000 people (9,000 verified named cases according to the official report by the CONADEP)[7] were subject to forced disappearance under the military junta that was in power. From information collected from military officers involved in the so-called "Dirty War" it is known that many victims were sedated and dumped from airplanes into the Río de la Plata (today these are called vuelos de la muerte, death flights). Other people were held in torture and detention centres, the most notorious one being the Navy's Mechanics Training School (ESMA) in the Núñez district of Buenos Aires.

Detention centers that torture. Sounds like Guantanamo Bay. Do we as a nation really want ourselves to be compared to a military junta's torturing of their own citzens in a "dirty war". I am not alone in this comparison. Is the "war on terrorism" just another "dirty war" on this front?
What's next in the war on terrorism? Death flights? Oh, wait it's crushing children's testicles....

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article11488.htm

Also, please consider that even the Nazis did not believe in torturing high-value prisoners of war. I am not saying they didn't torture. Obviously, they did. The crimes the committed against the Jewish communities of Europe are inexcusable. However, they did not find torture to be an effective way of getting reliable information.

Take this, from Wikipedia:


Hanns-Joachim Gottlob Scharff (December 16, 1907September 10, 1992) was a German Luftwaffe interrogator during the Second World War. He has been called the "Master Interrogator" of the Luftwaffe and possibly all of Nazi Germany; he has also been praised for his contribution in shaping U.S. interrogation techniques after the war. Merely an Obergefreiter (the equivalent of a senior lance corporal), he was charged with interrogating every German-captured American fighter pilot during the war after his becoming an interrogation officer in 1943. He is highly praised for the success of his techniques, especially considering he never used physical means to obtain the required information. No evidence exists he even raised his voice in the presence of a prisoner of war (POW). Scharff's interrogation techniques were so effective that he was often called upon to assist other German interrogators in their questioning of bomber pilots and aircrews, including those crews and fighter pilots from countries other than the United States. Additionally, Scharff was charged with questioning V.I.P.s (Very Important Prisoners) that funneled through the interrogation center, namely senior officers and world-famous fighter aces.

And I can't help myself (from ThinkProgress):


FEB. 13, 2008: Today, the Senate brought the Intelligence Authorization Bill to the floor, containing a provision from Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) that establishes one interrogation standard, requiring the intelligence community to abide by the same standards as articulated in the Army Field Manual and banning waterboarding. Just hours ago, the Senate voted in favor of the bill, 51-45.

Earlier today, ThinkProgress noted that Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), a former prisoner of war, has spoken strongly in favor of implementing the Army Field Manual standard. When confronted today with the decision of whether to stick with his conscience or cave to the right wing, McCain chose to ditch his principles and instead vote to preserve waterboarding: Mr. McCain, a former prisoner of war, has consistently voiced opposition to waterboarding and other methods that critics say is a form torture. But the Republicans, confident of a White House veto, did not mount the challenge. Mr. McCain voted "no" on Wednesday afternoon.



Naturally, the result:

Bush Vetoes Bill Banning Torture- March 8, 2008

However, the story does not end there. Anyone who is following this story knows that the Judiciary Committee wants to hear from John Yoo:

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/04/08/politics/politico/thecrypt/main4002602.shtml

Not that it is being covered by any major news outlets. In fact his article from CBS is the only mention I've found from a major news source. The liberal blogs are on top of the story however.

Oh, wait I found one article on this recent news from one major media outlet. One, this time ABC. John Yoo refused to testify to the House Judiciary Committee on torture.

http://blogs.abcnews.com/legalities/2008/04/former-doj-offi.html

Of course, he was very willing to speak to several magazines and reporters for money.

http://www.esquire.com/the-side/qa/john-yoo-responds

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/torture/interviews/yoo.html

Why the problem with going in front of our elected officials and testifying under oath?

Finally, it has also been revealed that top members of Bush's cabinet met in the White House to discuss torture on a case by case basis. The group included Vice President Dick Cheney, then-national security adviser Condoleezza Rice, then-defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld, then-secretary of state Colin Powell, then-CIA director George Tenet and then-attorney general John Ashcroft. Nice, the leader's of the free world are meeting to discuss how they are going to torture prisoners in all it's disgusting details.

http://abcnews.go.com/Video/playerIndex?id=4622610&affil=wjla

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/blog/2008/04/10/BL2008041002069_pf.html

"Should we waterboard 'em, Condi?"

From ABC:

Then-National Security Advisor Rice, sources said, was decisive. Despite growing policy concerns - shared by Powell - that the program was harming the image of the United States abroad, sources say she did not back down, telling the CIA: "This is your baby. Go do it."

Conyers wants to speak to these cabinet members as well.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/04/11/politics/politico/thecrypt/main4010254.shtml

Two for CBS! Ya know I've always liked Olberman on MSNBC, but I think CBS may be my new major network news outlet. ABC sure isn't after that last miserable debate in Pennsylvania. Guess I'll have to warm up to Katie Couric (who a New Yorker friend tells me is actually quite personable).

Also, may I add that I heart John Conyers!

I digress. Now, most of the torturing seems to have been performed by the CIA, or in the very least authorized for CIA use in "special cases" that some would argue are not so "special" by the Pentagon, it also seems the FBI has been incapable of prosecuting, and perhaps investigating, this potential unconstitutional abuse of power by the CIA and Pentagon.

http://www.opednews.com/maxwrite/diarypage.php?did=7126

I heart Wexler, also!

Opinion: Personally, it sounds to me like the Department of Justice is interfering and not allowing the FBI to continue with it's "protocols".

This would not surprise me, as the DOJ has been very tight lipped on, well, just about everything lately.

http://rawstory.com/news/2008/Mukaseys_non_responsive_explanation_of_pre911_0418.html

This story is developing, more and more so every week. Yet one would hardly know it given our media's total lack of coverage on this major issue. I guess flag pins and mistatements by presidential nominees are more important.



Wednesday, April 23, 2008

To the future.....

One post down (not including my introduction). Coming up in the next days and weeks I hope to cover the Iraq war, torture, health care, and more on the economy. So please check back often. Also, let me know of any issues you may want me to look into or elaborate on.

While I may not post everyday, I will do my best to do so. I hope that any lack in day to day coverage will be compensated by the depth of coverage of the issues I do post on.

Excelsior!

Sacrifice: Economies, Taxes and Wars, Then and Now

Many on the right like to use comparisons between Word War II and our present situation in Iraq. Namely, they like to say that we didn't "cut and run" then and we shouldn't now. However, I think the following should be considered when using comparisons to WWII and the sacrifices we made then and what we are doing now.

From labor journalist Sam Pizzigati:

"During World War II, there was 94 percent marginal income tax rate. And what's more, the president had originally proposed a 100 percent tax rate. In those days, everyone made contributions for the war, and the wealthy made the biggest ones..... this shared sacrifice from the top down helped define the "Greatest Generation" and pulled the country—including the elites—together in wartime."

"The 16.1 million Americans in uniform who fought—and won—World War II didn't win the war alone, the new monument's creators remind us. They had help from the home front. Housewives pounded rivets. Kids collected aluminum. Families went without staples at the dinner table. During World War II, everyone seemed to be making contributions. Everyone, at some level, seemed to be making sacrifices.

Even the rich. All Americans were asked to pay more in taxes during World War II, and the wealthy were asked to pay the most of all, more in taxes than any Americans had ever before paid. In 1943, America's most affluent households faced a 93 percent tax rate on all their income over $200,000. The next year, 1944, the nation's top tax rate would rise even higher, to 94 percent on income over $200,000—the highest rate in American history.

A 94 percent tax? We scan this figure today with no small measure of disbelief. We who live in an era where politicos routinely equate taxes with tyranny cannot imagine a Congress of the United States ever imposing a tax rate so lofty. But here's the truly incredible part. Back during World War II, many Americans, including the president of the United States, wanted our nation's top tax rate to rise even higher.

How high? In 1942, only a few months after Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt proposed a 100 percent top marginal tax rate. At a time of "grave national danger," the president advised that April, "no American citizen ought to have a net income, after he has paid his taxes, of more than $25,000 a year. Roosevelt was proposing, in effect, what amounted to a maximum wage—at an income level that would equal, in our contemporary dollars, about $300,000.

Imagine, for a moment, what would happen today if John Kerry—suddenly inspired by FDR's bold example—were to propose a 100 percent tax on income over $300,000 to help wage the war against terrorism. Kerry would be hooted off the political stage, maybe even tagged a terrorist himself for trying to disrupt and destroy the American economy.

FDR's 1942 income cap proposal, interestingly, invoked no such feverish reaction. The nation, most Americans agreed, faced an emergency. All Americans needed to do their part. Some Americans were sacrificing their lives to stop fascism. The least the rich could do, as even some rich Americans agreed, was sacrifice some fortune.

"I regret," announced Hollywood starlet Ann Sheridan, "that I have only one salary to give for my country."

The opposition to FDR's income cap proposal would go about its business behind the scenes. The mandarins on the House Ways and Means Committee would quietly refuse to give the president's cap any serious consideration. But Roosevelt would not be deterred. Shortly after Labor Day, he repeated his call for a $25,000 income limit, "the only practical way of preventing the incomes and profits of individuals and corporations from getting too high." Congress would eventually relent and tilt in the president's direction. The Revenue Act of 1942 would leave America's most fortunate paying taxes on income over $200,000 at a tax rate well over 90 percent. The war years would go on to become, notes historian John Witte, "the most progressive tax years in U.S. history."

Today, by contrast, we are waging a war amid what have become the least progressive tax years in modern U.S. history. Pulitzer Prize-winning tax analyst David Cay Johnston estimates that our nation's wealthiest households are now paying federal income taxes at a mere 17.5 percent rate, after exploiting all available loopholes. America's richest households in 1943, after exploiting all available loopholes, paid nearly 78 percent of their total incomes in federal tax.

Americans during World War II, in other words, expected wealthy households to pay more than four times as much of their incomes in wartime taxes as we do today.
Those World War II Americans were onto something. High tax rates on high incomes do not, of course, insure war-time victory, either against fascism or terrorism. But high rates on high incomes do send a message. High rates announce in no uncertain terms that sacrifice will be universal, that all Americans—even our highest and mightiest—will be expected to do their part, to give of themselves in some way that counts.
In World War II, Americans did give of themselves, at the battlefield and on the homefront. Those who made that effort we now honor.

We ought to do that honoring not just by cheering, but by remembering. We ought to be remembering just how the "Greatest Generation" became great. Our parents and grandparents shared sacrifice, from the top down. We should, too."

Interesting, huh? Now consider, one of the causes of the Great Depression (from Wikipedia):

Marriner S. Eccles who served as Franklin D. Roosevelt's
Chairman of the Federal Reserve
from November, 1934 to February, 1948 detailed what he believed caused the Depression in his memoirs, Beckoning Frontiers (New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1951):
"As mass production has to be accompanied by mass consumption, mass consumption, in turn, implies a distribution of wealth -- not of existing wealth, but of wealth as it is currently produced -- to provide men with buying power equal to the amount of goods and services offered by the nation s economic machinery. [Emphasis in original.] Instead of achieving that kind of distribution, a giant suction pump had by 1929-30 drawn into a few hands an increasing portion of currently produced wealth. This served them as capital accumulations. But by taking purchasing power out of the hands of mass consumers, the savers denied to themselves the kind of effective demand for their products that would justify a reinvestment of their capital accumulations in new plants. In consequence, as in a poker game where the chips were concentrated in fewer and fewer hands, the other fellows could stay in the game only by borrowing. When their credit ran out, the game stopped.

That is what happened to us in the twenties. We sustained high levels of employment in that period with the aid of an exceptional expansion of debt outside of the banking system. This debt was provided by the large growth of business savings as well as savings by individuals, particularly in the upper-income groups where taxes were relatively low. Private debt outside of the banking system increased about fifty per cent. This debt, which was at high interest rates, largely took the form of mortgage debt on housing, office, and hotel structures, consumer installment debt, brokers' loans, and foreign debt. The stimulation to spending by debt-creation of this sort was short-lived and could not be counted on to sustain high levels of employment for long periods of time. Had there been a better distribution of the current income from the national product --in other words, had there been less savings by business and the higher-income groups and more income in the lower groups -- we should have had far greater stability in our economy. Had the six billion dollars, for instance, that were loaned by corporations and wealthy individuals for stock-market speculation been distributed to the public as lower prices or higher wages and with less profits to the corporations and the well-to-do, it would have prevented or greatly moderated the economic collapse that began at the end of 1929.

The time came when there were no more poker chips to be loaned on credit. Debtors thereupon were forced to curtail their consumption in an effort to create a margin that could be applied to the reduction of outstanding debts. This naturally reduced the demand for goods of all kinds and brought on what seemed to be overproduction, but was in reality underconsumption when judged in terms of the real world instead of the money world. This, in turn, brought about a fall in prices and employment.

Unemployment further decreased the consumption of goods, which further increased unemployment, thus closing the circle in a continuing decline of prices. Earnings began to disappear, requiring economies of all kinds in the wages, salaries, and time of those employed. And thus again the vicious circle of deflation was closed until one third of the entire working population was unemployed, with our national income reduced by fifty per cent, and with the aggregate debt burden greater than ever before, not in dollars, but measured by current values and income that represented the ability to pay. Fixed charges, such as taxes, railroad and other utility rates, insurance and interest charges, clung close to the 1929 level and required such a portion of the national income to meet them that the amount left for consumption of goods was not sufficient to support the population.

This then, was my reading of what brought on the depression."

Sound familiar to anyone? Sounds eerily like 2008 to me. I work at a financial aid office- 4 lenders have gone out of business since January. Supposedly, there are more considering it or in the process of doing so, they just aren't talking. Of course, there is also the whole Bear Stearns mess. The housing loan and mortgage crisis, etc. etc. Two wars going on simultaneously and we have some very ominous signs on the horizon.

Are the rich getting richer and the poor poorer in 2008? Are corporations making massive profits and getting government handouts and tax cuts? The answer- yes! Don't believe me? Read this:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/27/AR2008032703145.html
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A61178-2004Aug12.html
http://www.cbpp.org/1-25-05bud.htm
http://www.cbpp.org/4-14-04tax-sum.htm

Don't believe them? Check this (I love statistics, though from 2003):
http://www.ctj.org/pdf/allbushcut.pdf

Also, important are these statistics on tax rates for our country:

http://www.taxfoundation.org/publications/show/151.html

Notice how starting in the Eighties all of a sudden the rich had to pay much less in. The reason for this? The Voodoo/Trickle down policies of Ronald Reagan started to become a major player on the political scene. Not much has changed since then, in fact with Bush's tax cuts it's worse. We are a trickle down economy now. The rich corporations have all the money and they occassionally throw some money at us when it's conducive for them to do so. They have the money, blue-collar workers do not. Especially consider how these companies are trying to keep their money by sending jobs over seas. The combination of NAFTA trade policy, loss of our jobs overseas and to downsizing, and our trickle down economic policies and tax rates are crippling our economy and our workers.

Of course if big business gets in any trouble we'll be there to bail them out with our tax money (ya know the money WE give the gov't):
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080403/ap_on_bi_ge/congress_bear_stearns

What do all those hard working homeowners who got suckered into bad mortgages get?
Nothing so far.

And because I'm a bastard (from Media Matters):

In reporting on President Bush's March 5 endorsement of Sen. John McCain, several news outlets -- including ABC, USA Today, and CNN -- purported to contrast Bush and McCain's positions on tax cuts by noting only McCain's initial opposition to Bush's 2001 and 2003 tax cuts. None of the outlets noted, however, that McCain has changed his position and now supports making the Bush tax cuts permanent. Nor did the reports note that McCain has repeatedly claimed that he initially opposed the tax cuts because they were not paired with spending cuts -- reasoning he did not mention in his 2001 floor statement explaining his vote. In fact, McCain said both in 2001 and 2004 that he opposed the tax cuts because they favored the wealthy.
In his report during the March 5 broadcast of ABC's World News, correspondent Ron Claiborne reported that the "relationship between" McCain and Bush "has not always been so rosy. McCain and the president have clashed over a number of issues from tax cuts, to interrogation techniques, to military strategy in Iraq." Similarly, a March 6 USA Today article stated that McCain and Bush "have differed on domestic issues, including taxes," and during a report on the March 5 edition of CNN's
The Situation Room, CNN correspondent Elaine Quijano reported that "the two have differed sharply on tax cuts."
In fact, McCain has flip-flopped on his support for Bush's tax cuts, a fact omitted in each of these reports. In May 2001, McCain voted against the final version of Bush's initial $1.35 trillion tax-cut package. McCain voted against legislation in 2003, which would have accelerated the tax reductions enacted in the 2001 bill and to cut dividends and capital-gains taxes. In February 2006, however, he switched positions and
voted
to extend the 2003 tax cuts on capital gains and dividends through 2010. Grover Norquist, president of the anti-tax group Americans for Tax Reform, reportedly said at the time: "It's a big flip-flop, but I'm happy that he's flopped." In May 2006, McCain voted for the final version of a bill that extended the tax cuts on dividends and capital gains. Now, while campaigning for the presidency, as Peter Baker reported February 7 on the washingtonpost.com campaign blog The Trail, McCain "says he supports making those tax cuts permanent."
Additionally, McCain has now claimed that he opposed the tax cuts because, as he stated during a January 24 Republican presidential debate, he "knew that unless we had spending under control, we were going to face a disaster." But that was not the reason he gave at the time of the 2001 vote. During the May 2001 Senate debate on the conference committee report of the
Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA), McCain made a floor statement in which he explained his vote against the bill, in which he stated: "I cannot in good conscience support a tax cut in which so many of the benefits go to the most fortunate among us, at the expense of middle class Americans who most need tax relief." McCain made no mention of the absence of offsetting spending cuts at the time. McCain reiterated this position in an April 11, 2004, interview on NBC's Meet the Press, saying: "I would have -- I voted against the tax cuts because of the disproportionate amount that went to the wealthy Americans."

Opinion: The point of all this, I'm hoping you will reach? Quite simply, we have to increase taxes on the rich. I'm talking $250,000 plus income earners. A return to close to seventies levels (adjusted for inflation) would be a start, though the Republicans would not have this in the present day in age. It's funny, how there is all this talk of how our taxes are out of control, yet many paid more in taxes in the past. Also, please consider how in the past when we've had ongoing, long term wars going on we had higher tax rates then. The government was making more money then (again adjusted for inflation). Now we have two wars going on at the same time with significantly less tax revenue coming in. Is it any wonder we are in a recession? Also, are we possibly facing much worse than a recession? I think, yes, if we do nothing about it. The causes of the Great Depression and what is happening right now in our economy are too similar. Also, factor in that wars were not a factor for that period. Add that to the list and we are in a precarious position. Finally, the Iraq war is it's own entity. Yet, if we are truly going to compare the sacrifices we are willing to make now to what we did sacrifice in WWII or Vietnam, we need to take a look at the big picture. We need to look at more than how long they went on and how many soldiers we lost, we need to look at more than definitions of "victory", we need to look at what we did collectively as a society then and to what we are doing now. I think the sacrifices we were willing to make then pale in comparison to what the Bush administration has asked of us and certainly of what McCain will ask of us. The question we all have to ask this election year is: what are we willing to contribute for the greater good of our country, our government, and our society and who is best able to do it? Furthermore, which candidate is recognizing this need, this imperative, and which is asking for more of the same? Finally, and most succinctly, who has the best plan for an economy of a country involved in two wars that is bleeding it dry? Drastic times call for drastic measures. Bush's drastic measures of the past have failed and in fact, caused many of the problems we now face. Now who's going to clean up the mess?

Welcome!

Hello, and thank you for finding us and spending a little portion of your day with us here at InDepth Left. Let me state that I am not a professional political blogger, whatever that may be. However, I decided to start this little political blog after my family and friends got sick of my political emails and said I should start a blog instead. Actually, they didn't get sick of them, they liked them. I'm too modest to admit that outright. In any case, here we are. The purpose of my emails was essentially to investigate an issue and explain how us left-leaning, liberal, progressives arrive at our decisions and opinions. Included in these analysis' will be links to news articles and my favorite, Wikipedia. Whenever, possible I will try to use facts and news articles the general populace would say are respectable. I will use citations and dates, whenever possible. I will try to use historical context. Finally, I will try to assert my opinion as little as possible, and if I do, only as a conclusion. I want people to make up there own mind. I do not want this blog to be considered propaganda, nor news. I do want it to explain the progressive viewpoint and perhaps, help sway a few people to that viewpoint after they have reviewed the facts and thought about them. In addition, I hope it will help progressives solidify there views and "talking points", help refresh their memory, and perhaps, just perhaps, provide some valuable insight into an issue, policy, or decision. Welcome to InDepth Left. Enjoy!