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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: J_F_Shepard who wrote (745434)10/9/2013 10:16:28 PM
From: longnshort  Respond to of 1569612
 
"They have to buy auto insurance also, don't they?"

and if you have a precondition to being a bad driver you are either denied auto insurance or you pay a ton more



To: J_F_Shepard who wrote (745434)10/9/2013 10:37:58 PM
From: one_less2 Recommendations

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joseffy
TideGlider

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1569612
 
They have to buy auto insurance also, don't they?
If people don't need to drive they are not required to buy auto insurance. People who do drive can buy auto insurance in the free market. They have a choice on whether or not to drive and buy insurance. I know people in their twenties who don't drive and don't have to buy auto insurance. If they decide to drive they can shop around for something as cheap as possible from the free market industry. I see companies competing to bring the price down as low as possible.

So why would they view the ACA any differently???

If every young person did not need to drive until middle age and was forced to pay the government to insure people who do drive, you might have a point. We are talking about the population of healthy young people, who do not receive medical services, and in general wont need much for decades, being forced to pay for ACA, so that other people will be taken care of. With no competition for customers the ACA has no reason to improve services or to keep costs down. We will be billing the kids, we just wont tell them about it until they are too screwed to do anything about it ... our sweet little secret ... they can't win, they can't break even, and they can't get out of the game.



To: J_F_Shepard who wrote (745434)10/10/2013 9:19:28 AM
From: Brumar891 Recommendation

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TideGlider

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1569612
 
Science Indicates That Sprite Might Be A Great Hangover Cure

News YOU can use!

popsci.com



To: J_F_Shepard who wrote (745434)10/10/2013 9:25:28 AM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

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joseffy
TideGlider

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1569612
 
Wolf Blitzer: Maybe the GOP’s right that Democrats should delay ObamaCare for a year

posted at 4:01 pm on October 9, 2013 by Allahpundit

If you say something like this on MSNBC, a gong sounds and a trapdoor opens beneath your feet.

The clip picks up with Blitzer but what the other guy said immediately before this is worth noting too:

“We’re also hearing now that the administration was warned about these potential problems months in advance,” Todd continued. “We spoke to a health care consultant who has clients who are insurers. He says his insurers, who dealt with the administration in the months ahead of time, had contentious meetings with people at [Health and Human Services] and other health care officials who were in charge of this, warning them, ‘This isn’t working, it’s not going to be smooth, don’t do it.’ He says those warnings were ignored, they went full speed ahead, and said we’ll work these problems out. There’s been a bit of pushback from the White House, we’ll hope to get more later from them.”

Here’s Slate with a little more specificity about what the pre-launch warnings were likely about. I can’t remember right now where I read it, but one techie was quoted in a news story a few days ago as saying that using two different contractors to build the “front end” and “back end” of the site is sort of like trying to build a bridge by starting on opposite shorelines and trying/hoping to meet in the middle:

So we had (at least) two sets of contracted developers, apparently in isolation from each other, working on two pieces of a system that had to run together perfectly. Anyone in software engineering will tell you that cross-group coordination is one of the hardest things to get right, and also one of the most crucial, because while programmers are great at testing their own code, testing that their code works with everybody else’s code is much more difficult.

Look at it another way: Even if scale testing is done, that involves seeing what happens when a site is overrun. The poor, confusing error handling indicates that there was no ownership of the end-to-end experience—no one tasked with making sure everything worked together and at full capacity, not just in isolated tests. (I can’t even figure out who was supposed to own it.) No end-to-end ownership means that questions like “What is the user experience if the back-end gets overloaded or has such-and-such an error?” are never asked, because they cannot be answered by either group in isolation.

The login issues with the site are now so profound that the feds apparently have no choice but to reset everyone’s passwordto make things run more smoothly, and by “everyone” I mean the few dozen or few hundred people who managed to successfully create an account in the first place. But never mind that. Blitzer’s offhand endorsement of a one-year delay is an intriguing bit of anecdotal evidence that Glitchapalooza might be nudging public opinion towards supporting a postponement of the law for a few months or a year while the bugs are worked out.But then that raises the question — why isn’t “delay” the GOP’s core message right now? Boehner’s holding one or two press conferences a day to complain that Obama won’t talk to him when he should be using that free media to hammer the point that O-Care isn’t ready for primetime. Frankly, unless I missed it, this has been a minor point from Ted Cruz and Mike Lee lately too. Whenever I’ve seen them on the news the past few days, they’re more likely to be talking about using small funding bills to restart parts of the government than the many, many catastrophic technical problems with the exchanges.

What am I missing here? Why isn’t Glitchapalooza and “delay” the party’s top talking point right now, especially in the aftermath of that Sebelius bloodbath on “The Daily Show”?

hotair.com



To: J_F_Shepard who wrote (745434)10/10/2013 1:13:32 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1569612
 
NYT editor: Overseeing Krugman's work a "nightmare"

Former NYT Public Editor Told Scarborough Majority of Workload Involved Krugman's Inaccuracies and Misstatements

By Noel Sheppard | October 10, 2013

NewsBusters readers are well-aware that one of our problems with New York Times columnist Paul Krugman - besides his perilously liberal bias, of course! - is how he plays fast and loose with facts to support his agenda.

On MSNBC's Morning Joe Thursday, co-host Joe Scarborough said, "One of the public editors of the New York Times told me off the record after my debate that their biggest nightmare was his column every week" (video follows with transcript and commentary):

[iframe width="500" height="281" title="MRC TV video player" src="http://www.mrctv.org/embed/123298" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen=""][/iframe]

NIALL FERGUSON, HISTORIAN: Nobody seems to edit that blog in the New York Times and it’s high time that somebody call him out. People are afraid of him. I’m not.

JOE SCARBOROUGH, CO-HOST: I actually won’t tell you which public editor it was, but one of the public editors of the New York Times told me off the record after my debate that their biggest nightmare was his column every week.

Unfortunately the segment ended there and Scarborough didn't have time to elaborate. So I contacted him via email and received the following:

"During a conversation with one of the New York Times public editors, it was volunteered that the majority of their workload revolved around inaccuracies and misstatements attached to Paul Krugman's column and blog. What made that conversation with the former public editor all the more compelling is that it occurred several years ago before Mr. Krugman and my public battles. The public editor at the time rolled his eyes and said of overseeing Krugman's work 'It's a nightmare.'"

Makes you wonder if the unnamed public editor was Daniel Okrent who in his final column for the Times on May 22, 2005, deliciously observed, "Op-Ed columnist Paul Krugman has the disturbing habit of shaping, slicing and selectively citing numbers in a fashion that pleases his acolytes but leaves him open to substantive assaults."

Read more: newsbusters.org



To: J_F_Shepard who wrote (745434)10/12/2013 10:04:10 AM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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joseffy
TideGlider

  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1569612
 
Niall Ferguson: Paul Krugman Has Gotten Nearly Everything Wrong, And Yet This Has Only Provoked Further Arrogance, Self-Flattery, and Sneering At Those Who Got It Right

Niall Ferguson is an influential historian. I just heard of him. I'm immediately a fanboi.

He railed on Paul Krugman yesterday on the useless Joe Scarborough show, which was interesting enough.

It's from that exchange that I learned of Ferguson's three part demolition of Paul Krugman, whom he tastelessly, childishly taunts as "KRUGTRON, the Invincible!"

Wait a minute, Ferguson didn't call Krugman that. Krugman calls himself that. Ferguson is just using Krugman's preferred styling.

I hate linking the Huffington Post, but that's where Ferguson writes (apart from writing history books on the Depression and such).

Here are some excerpts from this three part series.

Krugtron the Invincible, Part 1: Krugtron gets everything possible wrong about Europe's weathering of the financial crisis, and then... begins claiming himself to have gotten everything right.

These quotes are by no means the only good stuff here; I just have to be picky about excerpts. I do suggest you break down and Read the Whole Thing(s).

Krugman reserves a special contempt for people who, in his words, "take a position and refuse to alter that position no matter how strongly the evidence refutes it, who continue to insist that they have The Truth despite being wrong again and again." He calls this "derping." The awkward thing for Krugman is that "being wrong again and again" perfectly characterizes his own commentary on what proved to be one of the crucial issues of the financial crisis: whether or not Europe's monetary union would survive it.To begin with, Krugman was blithely confident that Europe would weather the economic storm better than the United States. On January 11, 2008, he hailed it as "The Comeback Continent":

... Since 2000, employment has actually grown a bit faster in Europe than in the United States ... If you think Europe is a place where lots of able-bodied adults just sit at home collecting welfare checks, think again. ... Europe's economy looks a lot better now - both in absolute terms and compared with our economy - than it did a decade ago.
Krugman explained Europe's comeback in terms of "deregulation", a more competitive broadband market than the U.S., "strong social safety nets" and "very high taxes." On May 19, 2008, after a visit to Berlin, he even told his faithful readers: "I have seen the future, and it works ... in the heart of 'old Europe'." (Admittedly this column was a standard "peak oil" piece, exhorting to Americans to have German-style cars and public transport, as opposed to, say, developing new technology to unlock hitherto inaccessible domestic supplies of oil and natural gas.)

Finally, in December 2008, Krugman woke up to the fact that the "Comeback Continent" was in fact an "economic mess." But what kind of mess? No, not the mess of excessively leveraged and effectively insolvent banks that had maxed out on CDOs, bubbly real estate and Club Med government bonds. The mess Krugman discerned was the failure of the German government to see "the need for a large, pan-European fiscal stimulus." The main thing, he wrote in March 2009, was not to make the mistake of thinking that "big welfare states are ... the cause of Europe's current crisis. In fact ... they're actually a mitigating factor." It was a theme he returned to when he and I debated the crisis in New York three months later, when he argued that "the human suffering [was] going to be much greater on this side of the Atlantic" because of Europe's "strong social safety net." Even in January 2010 he was still insisting that:

The real lesson from Europe is actually the opposite of what conservatives claim: Europe is an economic success, and that success shows that social democracy works. ... taking the longer view, the European economy works; it grows; it's as dynamic, all in all, as our own.
All of this sheds (to say the least) interesting light on Krugman's boast in an interview in March of this year to have been one of the few commentators who had "predicted the unfolding economic disaster in Europe." This is by no means the only retrospective prediction Krugman has ever made, but it is surely the most shameless.

Incidentally -- I'm not sure if this disproves Krugtron the Invicible or not -- but the one country in Europe that really did weather the crisis is Germany, with its hateful devotion to balanced budgets.

I say I'm not sure it disproves Krugtron the Invincible because he seems to be talking about how Germany can help Europe, not how Germany can help itself. Nevertheless, it sure does seem interesting, to me at least, that the one country insisting on fiscal sanity is also the one Western country that's not doing too bad at all.

Krugtron the Invicible, Part 2: Krugman gets everything about the housing crisis wrong.

Regrettably, Krugman - also known to himself and his cronies as "the Invincible Krugtron" - has not found time in his busy schedule of blogging to make the apologies that I believe are due, not only for his incivility and hypocrisy, but also for his own personal contribution to the crisis of confidence that afflicted Europe in 2011 and 2012....
In 2006, the year before the financial crisis began, Krugman had a twice-weekly New York Times column. What a perfect opportunity, one might have thought, for the infallible Nobel laureate and author of Depression Economics to warn his readers about the gathering storm. Retrospectively, Krugman pats himself on the back. "How did I do?" And the answer is, not too badly. ... I've had a pretty good stretch." In fact, only eight of Krugman's more than a hundred columns in 2006 referred to the bubble in the U.S. housing market and the danger posed by its bursting. The key word "subprime" did not appear in his column until March 2007. Nearly everything else was a partisan rant of one sort or another against the policies of the administration of George W. Bush.

...

Back on the eve of the crisis, Krugman also blew hot and cold on inflation, which I suppose is one way of being "right about everything"....

By August 2006, Krugman's diagnosis of the risk of a coming recession was correct in only one respect: that he thought there was a risk. In every other respect he was wrong...

I'll digest here and just say that when Krugtron the Invincible speculated on the chances of a recession (which he thought was only a fifty/fifty proposition; which is a nice way to be "right about everything"), he boldly asserted it would begin with a stock market crash in China.

But let's move on:

...

One might have expected a little more humility from an economist who so clearly failed to understand the nature of the biggest financial crisis of his lifetime until after it had happened. Or at least a little less egomania: "Yes," he wrote in January, "I've heard about the notion that I should be Treasury Secretary. I'm flattered, but it really is a bad idea." Gee, Professor Krugman, why do you say that?


It would mean taking me out of a quasi-official job that I believe I'm good at and putting me into one I'd be bad at. ... An op-ed columnist at the [New York] Times ... [can] have a lot more influence on national debate than, say, most senators. Does anyone doubt that the White House pays attention to what I write? ... By my reckoning ... an administration job, no matter how senior, would actually reduce my influence.
...

I confess I am at a loss to understand the basis for this self-satisfaction. If Krugman was wrong about the origins of the crisis, and wrong about the fate of the euro - wrong, in short about the two biggest crises of our time - what exactly was he right about? What, besides the doubtless large number of his Twitter followers, entitles him to be so pleased with himself?

Just as an aside: This opening structure, "I can't understand how/why..." Is it ever used straight anymore?

No criticism intended; just an observation about the structure. It seems like 90% of the time "I can't understand why..." is deployed, the writer has some Strong Suspicions about the why.

Krugtron the Invincible, Part 3: Krugman is an egregious partisan hack and hypocrite whose sensitivity to the deficit is binarily correlated to which party is in the White Houseincreasing the deficit.

Part 3 also gets into the personal nature of the spat, which I'll just refer you to the article for. I'll keep it on Krugtron The Invincible's strangely toggling predictions about whether a deficit will, or will not, cause a "fiscal train wreck." If it's a Republican in the White House, such deficit spending will crash the global economy; if a Democrat, not so much.

Important for this article is the fact that Krugtron the Invincible has been savaging the world (even Obama) for not pushing for a stimulus three times the size of the nearly trillion dollar fiasco actually implemented.

Because this is a counterfactual proposition, he is free to assert it would have whatever effect he likes. He seems to be arguing that his Prediction on this score is Correct, in as much as, not having been implemented, it hasn't been proven Incorrect. (Whereas his real-world predictions have in fact been largely proven incorrect.)

Interestingly, as we'll see, when McCain proposed a larger stimulus than Obama did in 2008, Krugtron the Invincible... attacked McCain.

Other equally eminent economists have taken a much less sanguine view of this "vulgar Keynesianism" [the "vulgar," crude understanding of Keynesianism favored by Krugman that just throwing money around automatically works with little or no negative consequences], openly questioning his back-of-envelope calculations about a mega-stimulus. In a parallel debate about the policy options open to the United Kingdom, there seems a rather stronger argument against additional borrowing even in terms of Krugman's own "simplish IS-LM model". And, as Greg Mankiw has pointed out, in an earlier debate about the wisdom of deficit finance - when the President was a Republican, not a Democrat, and when the stimulus took the form of tax cuts and spending on war - Krugman himself took the diametrically opposite position.In 2003, he warned, the United States was heading for "a fiscal train wreck":

The Congressional Budget Office operates under ground rules that force it to wear rose-colored lenses. If you take into account - as the C.B.O. cannot - the effects of likely changes in the alternative minimum tax, include realistic estimates of future spending and allow for the cost of war and reconstruction, it's clear that the 10-year deficit will be at least $3 trillion. ... We're looking at a fiscal crisis that will drive interest rates sky-high. ... because of the future liabilities of Social Security and Medicare, the true budget picture is much worse than the conventional deficit numbers suggest. ...I'm terrified about what will happen to interest rates once financial markets wake up to the implications of skyrocketing budget deficits. ... my prediction is that politicians will eventually be tempted to resolve the crisis the way irresponsible governments usually do: by printing money, both to pay current bills and to inflate away debt.

And as that temptation becomes obvious, interest rates will soar. ... I think that the main thing keeping long-term interest rates low right now is cognitive dissonance.

For the record: the federal debt in public hands back then was $2.8 trillion, 35% of GDP. Today it is approaching $12 trillion, more than double as a share of GDP. The projected ten-year deficit then was, as Krugman states, $3 trillion; now, the equivalent figure is more than double that. And yet today we supposedly have no "train wreck" to worry about; indeed, it would be fine if the debt were a trillion dollars bigger.

Yes, I know, that was then and this is now; this time is different, we're in a liquidity trap, and all that. But what about 2008, the year the crisis began? For some strange reason, at that time Krugman vehemently opposed the presidential candidate arguing for - as he himself acknowledged - the larger fiscal stimulus. His name was John McCain - "McCain the Destroyer", as Krugman crudely called him. Four years later, Krugman explicitly acknowledged that Mitt Romney's (admittedly vague) fiscal plans would "blow up the deficit" and - shamelessly using an argument he had previously derided - compared the United States in such a high-deficit scenario with Greece.

In short, if Paul Krugman truly has won "a stunning victory" in "an epic intellectual debate" - as he recently claimed - it appears to have been over ... Paul Krugman.

Well. That just about takes care of Krugman, and his various remoras and pilot-fish bloggers following him around and sniffing at his boy-size jockstrap.

minx.cc

huffingtonpost.com

huffingtonpost.com
huffingtonpost.com