Monday, January 2, 2012

Richard (RJ) Eskow: For a Sane Economy in 2012, How About a Little Shame?

The other day I was asked what one single thing could do the most to save our economy. What one idea or tool might help us create a more just society? My answer was "Shame."

Shame isn't always a wasted or negative emotion. On the contrary, it can perform an important and socially useful function. Shame enforces our moral values even when legal and political institutions are too broken or corrupt to do so. Our society must learn to develop a "Moral Economics," and morality is often enforced through shame.

We live in a society where it's no longer consider shameful to oppose spending $6 billion to save nearly eight million lives, even though that's less than $800 apiece. This kind of cynicism is so accepted, in fact, that even the more liberal political party doesn't dare suggest it. We live in a society where it's not shameful to let crooked bankers go unpunished while asking everyone else to pay the cost of their illegal enrichment. Nowadays even the lawbreakers aren't ashamed of themselves!

Incredible.

Perhaps no single change to our culture could do more to improve our lives than the rediscovery of the shame we used to attach to vile, greedy, selfish, and corrupt behavior. Consider how far we've fallen:

Not long ago a person would have beenashamed to appear in public if they had shattered the global economy by cheating millions of innocent people, accepted the outstretched hands of the same people they'd cheated by accepting an unconditional bailout ... and then cheated them again.

Not long ago a politician who accepted the corrupting dollars of of known criminal bankers immediately paid a steep price. (See the Keating Five, for example.)

Not long ago political figures and pundits were ashamed to openly advocate the deaths of millions of people just to provide tax advantages for the wealthy or ensure more favorable market conditions for predatory corporations.

In 2012, it's time for shame to make a comeback.

Where would it be useful? Here are just four examples out of thousands to choose from:

1. We should be ashamed we don't give more to fight global AIDS.

A new medical study showed that developed nations could save nearly eight million lives in the next eight years (7,900,000) by increasing AIDS funding for Third World countries by $6 billion. That comes out to $789 for each human being whose life would be spared. As an added benefit, an estimated 2.5 million people would never be infected with AIDS at all.

George W. Bush began the anti-AIDS program known as PEPFAR in 2003, and funding grew steadily every year until President Obama took office. It then flatlined in the first year and dropped in the second year, before increasing slightly in the third Obama budget:

2012-01-02-PEPFAR2.JPG

Image source: Kaiser Family Foundation

An ethical society -- not just ours, but of all developed nations -- would find it unacceptable to deny these programs the funding they need. Six billion sounds like a lot, but the top 25 US hedge fund managers made $22 billion last year. Taxing them at the same rate they paid under Ronald Reagan would cover the entire amount, and would save all those lives.

But the Republican Party opposes anything like that, and President Obama hasn't asked for more.

2. Leaders of serial corporate criminal banks should he ashamed of themselves.

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, makes it a habit to publicly express his resentment at the very mild and genteel criticisms that lawbreaking bankers must endure in our society. He does so with a combination of disingenousness and genuine self-deception that is a marvel to watch. In his latest outburst, Dimon complained about Occupy Wall Street by saying that "Acting like everyone who's been successful is bad and because you're rich you're bad, I don't understand it. Sometimes there's a bad apple, yet we denigrate the whole."

Maybe those "bad apples" would provoke a different reaction if executives like Dimon weren't personally supervising such a large barrelful of 'em. Shortly after Dimon expressed his outrage, his bank and a number of its employees went on trial in Italy for allegedly deceiving a municipality into deliberately and deceptively purchasing bad investments. And while this Business Week article carefully points out that this alleged crimes took place before Dimon became CEO in 2006, he was already President and COO at the time of the worst allegations

As President and COO, Dimon also presided over an institution that paid hundreds of millions of dollars after it bribed municipal officials in Alabama and misled investors in a fund called Magnetar. Under Jamie Dimon's leadership, JPMorgan Chase (or rather, its investors and insurers) paid a fine for its breaking the law and promised not to do it again - and then promptly did, at least three more times.

Similarly, GE Capital keeps breaking the law under GE CEO Jeffrey Immelt. In its latest settlement, a division of GE paid (or rather, its investors and insurers) paid $25 million after being charged with what the SEC described as "fraud for participating in a wide-ranging scheme involving the reinvestment of proceeds from the sale of municipal securities."

This is merely the latest in a GE crime spree that includes misleading investors, bribing Iraqi officials in the "oil for food" scandal, and what the SEC described as "fraud, deceit, or deliberate or reckless disregard of regulatory requirements (that) resulted in substantial loss, or significant risk of substantial loss, to other persons."

And yet Immelt, like Dimon, walks in polite society. He evens leads the President's recently re-named "Jobs Commission."

Nobody is saying "because you're rich, you're bad." Nobody's calling Warren Buffett bad, for example. They're not even saying that about megamillionaire Jimmy Buffett -- and after the sixth thousandth hearing of "Fins," that's pretty damned generous if you ask me.

But here's why words like "bad" get attached to executives like Dimon and Immelt: Because they or their subordinates keep breaking the law, and either they don't care about it or they aren't competent enough as managers to stop it. Their arrogance and pronounced lack of remorse suggests it's the former, rather than the latter. But either way they're in no position to lecture others, especially since the lawbreaking keeps fattening their personal bank accounts.

They should be ashamed.

3. Officials and bankers should be ashamed that 'too-big-to-fail' banks still exist.

As Simon Johnson notes, "Big banks represent the ultimate in concentrated economic power in today's economies. They are able to resist all meaningful reform that could really change their compensation schemes. Their executives want to get all the upside while facing none of the true downside. But capitalism without the prospect of failure is not any kind of market economy. We are running a large-scale, nontransparent, and dangerous government subsidy scheme for the benefit primarily of a very few extremely wealthy people."

The top US banks now control more of the economy than they did before the Great Recession. The Fed is secretly bailing out Europe's too-big-to-fail banks as this is being written. And nobody's doing anything to change that.

They should be ashamed.

4. It's shameful to preach welfare for bankers and austerity for everyone else.

Meanwhile, in the great capitals of Europe and North America, the talk is of austerity economics. That means drastic cutbacks in government services that the public has paid for, like Social Security, and which form the backbone of a prosperous, fair, and humane society. Leaders are calling these cuts "unavoidable" even as economists warn that they're already creating a new European recession.

It is, as Paul Krugman observes, something that will appear remarkable to future historians (if any history departments survive the austerity cuts to preserve the profession). They're not prescribing the 'hair of the dog.' They're forcing the entire dead animal down the public's throat.

Why would Europe's leaders propose a set of policies that is already demonstrably making the economy worse? In part, probably because it's the easiest way to prop up the current financial system. Comprehensive economic reform would threaten the institutions they feel sworn to protect. Conventional thinking is also a big part of the problem - and conventional thinking makes no room for a "moral economics."

For that they should be deeply, deeply ashamed. The Hall of Shame includes Angela Merkel of Germany, Nicolas Sarkozy of France, David Cameron of Great Britain, and -- at times -- Barack Obama of the United States. And if they're not capable of shame, the society around them must express that shame for them. It's already moved Obama's rhetoric, and we need more of the same in the coming year.

For those who preach the radical dismantling of the government that made our society great -- especially the Republicans of the United States -- no amount of shame can be enough. And for someone like Mitt Romney, who knows how to read financial reports and clearly knows better, it's worth noting that the eighth circle of hell is reserved for those who knew better and yet did wicked things anyway.

Let's make 2012 the Year That Shame Returned to the Economic Debate.

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Follow Richard (RJ) Eskow on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rjeskow

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rj-eskow/for-a-sane-economy-in-201_b_1180027.html

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Apple lead designer Jonathan Ive knighted for the New Year, how's your 2012 looking?

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times... Those words seem to encapsulate Apple's 2011 perfectly. The year saw the company both became the most valuable company in the world and lose its founder, savior, visionary, and leader. Earlier, ...

Source: http://www.cliqz.com/gadgets/c/94456.html

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Afghan president welcomes US remarks on Taliban (AP)

KABUL, Afghanistan ? Afghan President Hamid Karzai on Saturday welcomed remarks from the Obama administration saying that Taliban insurgents were not America's enemies.

Earlier this month, Vice President Joe Biden said in an interview with Newsweek magazine that the Islamist militants did not represent a threat to U.S. interests unless they continued to shelter al-Qaida.

Biden's comments came amid reports that the Obama administration and other governments are trying to establish a peace process with the Taliban to help end the 10-year war.

"I am very happy that the American government has announced that the Taliban are not their enemies," Karzai said in a speech to the Afghan Academy of Sciences. "We hope that this message will help the Afghans reach peace and stability."

A senior U.S. official has told The Associated Press that Washington plans to continue a series of secret meetings with Taliban representatives in Europe and the Persian Gulf region next year.

The U.S. outreach this year had progressed to the point that there was active discussion of two steps the Taliban seeks as precursors to negotiations, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue.

Trust-building measures under discussion involve setting up a Taliban headquarters office and the release from the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, of about five Afghan prisoners believed affiliated with the Taliban.

On Tuesday, Karzai said his government would accept the Taliban establishing a liaison office in Turkey, Qatar or Saudi Arabia for the purpose of holding peace talks.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111231/ap_on_re_as/as_afghanistan

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Sunday, January 1, 2012

Techmeme: Nokia Ace LTE Windows Phone potentially revealed in holiday video card (@bcbishop / The Verge) http://t.co/LvYxUFoE http://t.co/pBMisni8

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Engadget Distro's 2011 Year In Review is here!

As yet another year of spectacular technological gains and enormous losses comes to a close, we present to you our best attempt at a comprehensive look back: Engadget Distro's Year In Review. In "Technology_In_2011.zip" we'll provide a compressed month-by-month timeline of just a few of the year's standout stories and announcements. We'll also bring you the year in corporate mudslinging with a collection of the most outrageous "CE-Oh No He Didn't" moments and present "The Top 10 Crappiest Crapgadgets of 2011," as selected by our readers. Looking ahead, we have our predictions of what's to come at CES 2012, TechnoBuffalo's Jon Rettinger gives us some insight into his distaste for OS wars in "Q&A" and Don Melanson offers up his list of the year's must-reads. So, in the interest of retrospection, hit that download link and let's reflect.

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Engadget Distro's 2011 Year In Review is here! originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Dec 2011 09:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AerysSports: Duke at Temple: Women?s Basketball Edition Part 2 http://t.co/hRKMxWx5 #Duke #NCAA

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Crowding in ER May Delay Pain Relief for Kids (HealthDay)

THURSDAY, Dec. 29 (HealthDay News) -- Overcrowding in emergency rooms appears to keep children with broken arms and legs from getting pain relief in a timely manner, according to a new study.

Researchers from the University of Colorado School of Medicine said their findings are significant since these injuries, known as long bone fractures, are common among children and very painful.

"Pain associated with long bone fractures can be pretty severe," study author Dr. Marion Sills said in a university news release. "But crowded emergency departments are impacting the delivery of care on many levels, including the delivery of pain medication."

In conducting the study, published in the December issue of the journal Academic Emergency Medicine, researchers examined 1,229 children treated in an ER over the course of one year. They found the children were 4 percent to 47 percent less likely to receive treatment in a timely fashion when the ER was very crowded (at the 90th percentile) than when it was less crowded (at the 10th percentile). The researchers also found the children were 3 percent to 17 percent less likely to receive effective care in these crowded conditions.

"The relationship between emergency department crowding and pain treatment is not unexpected," noted Sills. "When the emergency department gets busier, staff may be less responsive to the needs of individual patients and, as a result, patients have a higher likelihood of non-treatment and delays in treatment."

The authors said delays happen in some cases when only doctors are permitted to provide certain pain medications to patients.

"The expensive way to mitigate crowding is to hire more staff. Another way is to leverage the staff you have," Sills said. "Institutions can use techniques like protocols for pain management with standing orders for nurses, and computer- or phone-based alerts to call attention to under-treated pain."

Crowding is a serious issue, said Sills. "It is caused by a variety of things, from patients who too readily use emergency departments to federal policies that exacerbate the problem," she noted. "We as a nation need to get serious about this. Crowding needs to be a policy priority at every level."

More information

The U.S. National Institutes of Health provides more information on pain relievers.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111231/hl_hsn/crowdinginermaydelaypainreliefforkids

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