SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: zeta1961 who wrote (100837)9/5/2011 8:05:10 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
Link didn't make it in the post.

Sorry here's the link......its in at 2:30

positivedetroit.net

I get what you're saying and I agree.....yes, straightening is painful, I've been told. Takes hours...We need to look no further than the hair styles of the black female pundits on the news programs and Oprah re: the pressure to make themselves acceptable for "our society"....PS: did you know they call getting their hair straightened a "permanent" instead of straightening?

I am not sure what a permanent is......I thought its what happens when you go to the salon and have your hair done. Sorry I am little behind when it comes to hair. ;-)

I threw the crack and prison sentence issue in there because I witnessed it first hand in Boston when it was peaking in the early 90s----coupled with the easy acquisition of guns?....so painful to witness. It made me hate(don't use this word lightly)Reagan. His CIA imported the cocaine/crack from south of the border to arm their side and dumped it into inner cities like LA, NY, etc...This issue made impelled me to go full bore activist re: our children and families.

There is so much crap about Reagan that came out in the congressional hearings that took place in the early 1990s.....I read about them in the early part of this century and I was stunned. Its incredible that Rs hold him in such high regard.

Coke, PCP and meth just added to the break down of black familes.........but the spiral was already in place well before then. Life is hard enough when you are white but it gets much harder when you are person of color.

The native Americans haven't fared too much better. Did you know that huge populations of NW native Americans were wiped out by European settlers when they first moved into the PNW? Not with guns.....but by disease. The tribes up here had no horses so they had no immunity to the diseases caused by horses.......like the measles. I think measles killed 200K native Americans in the PNW.

And then there is the whole thing about what the introduction of sugar based products like bread and alcohol did to the reservations during WW I............diseases like diabetes, hypoglycemia, heart disease, candida and heart disease which had been fairly rare previously, suddenly skyrocketed. Alcoholism and diabetes continue to be a big problem.



To: zeta1961 who wrote (100837)9/5/2011 8:19:21 PM
From: koan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
If it's Monday, it's Krugman.
-------------------------------------------------------
September 4, 2011
The Fatal Distraction
By PAUL KRUGMAN

Friday brought two numbers that should have everyone in Washington saying, “My God, what have we done?”

One of these numbers was zero — the number of jobs created in August. The other was two — the interest rate on 10-year U.S. bonds, almost as low as this rate has ever gone. Taken together, these numbers almost scream that the inside-the-Beltway crowd has been worrying about the wrong things, and inflicting grievous harm as a result.

Ever since the acute phase of the financial crisis ended, policy discussion in Washington has been dominated not by unemployment, but by the alleged dangers posed by budget deficits. Pundits and media organizations insisted that the biggest risk facing America was the threat that investors would pull the plug on U.S. debt. For example, in May 2009 The Wall Street Journal declared that the “bond vigilantes” were “returning with a vengeance,” telling readers that the Obama administration’s “epic spending spree” would send interest rates soaring.

The interest rate when that editorial was published was 3.7 percent. As of Friday, as I’ve already mentioned, it was only 2 percent.

I don’t mean to dismiss concerns about the long-run U.S. budget picture. If you look at fiscal prospects over, say, the next 20 years, they are indeed deeply worrying, largely because of rising health-care costs. But the experience of the past two years has overwhelmingly confirmed what some of us tried to argue from the beginning: The deficits we’re running right now — deficits we should be running, because deficit spending helps support a depressed economy — are no threat at all.

And by obsessing over a nonexistent threat, Washington has been making the real problem — mass unemployment, which is eating away at the foundations of our nation — much worse.

Although you’d never know it listening to the ranters, the past year has actually been a pretty good test of the theory that slashing government spending actually creates jobs. The deficit obsession has blocked a much-needed second round of federal stimulus, and with stimulus spending, such as it was, fading out, we’re experiencing de facto fiscal austerity. State and local governments, in particular, faced with the loss of federal aid, have been sharply cutting many programs and have been laying off a lot of workers, mostly schoolteachers.

And somehow the private sector hasn’t responded to these layoffs by rejoicing at the sight of a shrinking government and embarking on a hiring spree.

O.K., I know what the usual suspects will say — namely, that fears of regulation and higher taxes are holding businesses back. But this is just a right-wing fantasy. Multiple surveys have shown that lack of demand — a lack that is being exacerbated by government cutbacks — is the overwhelming problem businesses face, with regulation and taxes barely even in the picture.

For example, when McClatchy Newspapers recently canvassed a random selection of small-business owners to find out what was hurting them, not a single one complained about regulation of his or her industry, and few complained much about taxes. And did I mention that profits after taxes, as a share of national income, are at record levels?

So short-run deficits aren’t a problem; lack of demand is, and spending cuts are making things much worse. Maybe it’s time to change course?

Which brings me to President Obama’s planned speech on the economy.

I find it useful to think in terms of three questions: What should we be doing to create jobs? What will Republicans in Congress agree to? And given that political reality, what should the president propose?

The answer to the first question is that we should have a lot of job-creating spending on the part of the federal government, largely in the form of much-needed spending to repair and upgrade the nation’s infrastructure. Oh, and we need more aid to state and local governments, so that they can stop laying off schoolteachers.

But what will Republicans agree to? That’s easy: nothing. They will oppose anything Mr. Obama proposes, even if it would clearly help the economy — or maybe I should say, especially if it would help the economy, since high unemployment helps them politically.

This reality makes the third question — what the president should propose — hard to answer, since nothing he proposes will actually happen anytime soon. So I’m personally prepared to cut Mr. Obama a lot of slack on the specifics of his proposal, as long as it’s big and bold. For what he mostly needs to do now is to change the conversation — to get Washington talking again about jobs and how the government can help create them.

For the sake of the nation, and especially for millions of unemployed Americans who see little prospect of finding another job, I hope he pulls it off.

nytimes.com



To: zeta1961 who wrote (100837)9/5/2011 8:21:50 PM
From: koan  Respond to of 149317
 
This is how to do it. I really like this woman:

en.wikipedia.org