An anecdote from the trenches…
In my day job, I work as an environmental and transportation advocate for low-income people in Los Angeles. Recently, I was fairly stunned by a meeting I attended organized by local environmental groups to discuss the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s (MTA) Long Range Transportation Plan (LRTP). The “bottom line” in the LTRP can be found at page 53, wherein it is stated that if all goes as planned, L.A. will spend tens of billions of dollars on transportation improvements over the next twenty-plus years, only to see surface transportation-related greenhouse gas emissions in L.A. County will rise from 72,670 metric tons per day as of 2004 to 98,900 metric tons per day in 2030. According to the MTA's own numbers, that total represents a less than 1% reduction as against what would would happen if we did absolutely nothing.
What you might find even more amazing is that this plan will likely enjoy the support of the so-called “environmental” community here in Los Angeles, because it includes a plethora of long-sought after multi-billion-dollar rail projects. See, an unholy alliance between MTA planners, rail advocates and housing developers (hereinafter collectively referred to as “rail fetishists”) have framed the debate about public transit in LA as exclusively about whether or not we could find the funds to build this or that billion-or multi-billion dollar rail project, while any further expansion or improvement of bus services are quickly dismissed as not financially feasible, even though improving basic bus service has shown itself to be the most cost-effective way to improve public transit ridership in Los Angeles and other similarly laid out cities around the country and the world. Many of these same groups supported, or at least failed to oppose, a draconian fare increase proposal last spring.
Now, don’t get me wrong. I love riding trains. I happen to own a home within walking distance of new rail line currently under construction. I went to planning school at Berkeley and recognize that every mode of transportation has a place within a well-functioning transportation system. But at the same time, there are few things in life that I find more disturbing than watching a “snow job,” i.e. a presentation of opinion masquerading as fact. And that’s exactly what happened at this meeting. The fact that rail fetishists such as MTA and the Transit Coalition would present the debate on transit in LA in such a fashion is not particularly newsworthy. What I find particularly disturbing was the presentation of such as the perspective of the environmental community.
I’m not sure how this is all going to shake out, but from my perspective, the MTA’s LRTP by its own terms does almost nothing to address the environmental challenges that we face here in Los Angeles. They are projecting that twenty years from now, the mode share between private automobiles and alternative modes will be exactly the same as it is now and that emissions will be reduced by less than 1% not from where they are now, but from the increase that they project to occur were we to do nothing. These numbers utterly fail to fulfill LA County’s responsibilities in terms of global climate change pursuant to a landmark anti-global warming law (AB 32) signed by Governor Schwartzenegger last year.
When pressed on this point, the MTA called on the environmental community to help them to magically bring about some kind of “behavior modification” whereby people would become so guilt-ridden about their emissions-spewing ways that they would just stop driving so much.
I asked a question during the meeting about why an expansion of the very popular and cost-effective “Rapid Bus” program was not in the plans. FYI, “Rapid Bus” is a program of introducing greatly improved service on heavily used transit lines in Los Angeles that has lured thousands of new riders with very modest investments (essentially the cost of additional buses at approximately $500,000 each), while simultaneously vastly improving mobility for the transit-dependent. The answer was very revealing, I thought: in the bizarro world of MTA, the Rapid Bus lines are a problem because they tend to stimulate ridership. Yes, you read that correctly. The MTA had hoped that the Rapid Buses would be revenue-neutral because the faster service would require fewer buses to move the same number of people. In fact, however, because the reduced travel times led to increased ridership, they have not seen the cost savings they were hoping for.
So, here we have MTA planning to spend tens of billions on wonderful new rail lines that are not projected to result in a shift in mode share or significant reduction in pollution, while leaving it up to divine intervention to somehow get people out of their cars. At the same time, simple and inexpensive improvements in bus service with proven effectiveness at luring people onto transit are casually dismissed as infeasible due to the financial effects of that increased ridership. And this is something that the environmental community appears ready to get behind? My head was spinning, indeed.
Thankfully, the LA Times published an article on Thursday morning that reassured me that I am not bat-shit crazy. The Column One article for that day’s paper entitled “London’s levy for sins of emission,” detailed the measures being taken by that city to effect the kind of “behavior modification” that we can apparently do nothing more than pray for here in Los Angeles. The solution there is exceeding simple: charge people who drive (upwards of $50 a day under the latest proposal) and apply the proceeds toward improved bus service: “Much of the $252 million a year raised under the existing congestion management charge has been poured into the city’s bus system, which has undergone a remarkable transformation and now offers citizens clean, reliable and frequent transit alternatives.”
So there you have it, all ye rail fetishists! Even a city that boasts one of the world’s best rail systems, when pressed to actually reduce pollution and congestion, has devoted the lion’s share of new transit resources to building a better bus system! No longer must we gaze in envy at Europe or the East Coast, or even our lovely City by the Bay to the north, wishing that if only we had a decent rail system, then maybe we could do something about getting people out of their cars. No, we can do something right now, and it’s very simple: adequately fund the damn buses!
I suppose, maybe my personal perspective grows out of my own personal experience with Metro Line 212/312. The “212” is essentially the La Brea Avenue bus. I live near the corner of Rodeo and La Brea, so I take it a lot. It’s a pretty great bus line actually, in terms of where you can go. It connects Hollywood and Inglewood, and travels through quite a few densely-populated and very walkable communities along the way. It also crosses paths with a lot of the major East-West bus lines in the city and it even connects with the Red Line, the Green Line, and soon, the Expo Line as well. You can take care of business in downtown Inglewood’s civic center, party in Hollywood, shop in the Fairfax district, recreate at Rancho La Cienega, and so much more, all within mere steps of Line 212 bus steps.
I’m not the only person enamored with the 212 -- it’s very popular. The 212, however, is a local bus and thus stops at every other corner. The 312 is supposedly a “limited” but I’ve seen a 212 beat a 312 plenty of times, so I have no idea what the limited designation really stands for. One could say that it’s limited in the sense that it won’t stop for you if it’s already full, but that is the case with the 212 as well. And this is what happens all day every day on this line: the bus gets even fuller than it’s usual sardine can-like state, and the bus driver has no choice but to drive right past stops crowded with riders.
All day every day there is a battle between the bus driver and the passengers, with the bus driver urging the passengers to “move back,” and the passengers trying to not get crammed too deep into the rear of the bus. My natural inclination to give up my seat to elderly passengers or those with young children in tow is rendered quite meaningless when at any given time there are twenty such passengers standing on the bus.
But according to the current MTA LTRP, when I walk out of my house in 2025, I can expect to be dealing with the exact same bus service, local or “limited” only, except that I can also expect that the car traffic with which the bus must compete for road space will have gotten progressively worse, and thus my ride will likely be even slower and more crowded than it is now. There are no plans in the medium- or long-distance for a Rapid Bus on La Brea. If I’m “lucky”, I might get an articulated bus, running at decreased intervals. What a lovely vision of the future indeed!
So it kind of rubs me the wrong way when I hear mainstream environmentalists and MTA staffers baying on about what kinds of magic words need be spoken in order to finally guilt people into leaving their cars at home. That’s not the problem right now on Line 212, nor is it the problem on hundreds of other bus lines across LA County. Nor is it the problem, by the MTA’s own admission, on those bus lines that have gone “Rapid.”
There’s no magic to getting people out of their cars in Los Angeles, or lots of other places for that matter. The solution has already been proven. Better bus service equals more ridership. In a sane world, increased ridership would lead to more frequency. More frequency leads to a further increase in ridership and so on and so forth. And this is not even to get into the proven effect that radical fare reductions have also had on ridership in Los Angeles (see the 1980’s three-year experiment with 50 cent fares that was used to sell one of the half-cent sales tax that we’re now so thankful for).
I do understand the environmental concern about emissions from our naturally gas-fueled buses, which, while significantly better than diesel, are not perfect. To this I would say two things. First, it seems clear that the technology for zero-emission buses is close at hand. Hydrogen fuel buses are on the roads today, as are all-electric ones. With the automobile industry seemingly on the brink of a major shift toward hybrids, this technology can only get even better, cheaper, and more effective within the 20-year planning horizon of the LTRP. Secondly, rail has its own significant environmental costs as well. Aside from the fact that we’re still getting 80-90% of our electricity from non-renewable sources, there’s also the environmental destruction that comes with the construction process itself. Trees and vegetation must be cleared, houses and businesses too at times. Millions of tons of concrete are poured and even more steel is riveted into place, all of which in the long-term will end up as pollution somewhere.
There’s also the growth-stimulating effect of the lines themselves, which actually goes to the central point around which this whole global warming debate really revolves: growth vs. sustainability. I see this all over the place in my work – planners treat growth as an inevitability, and they then work to accommodate it. This then becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy, however, as we in fact not only accommodate growth, but also enable it. Rail seems at first glance to be an environmentally friendly alternative, and compared to new or expanded highways, it is (though there’s plenty of those in the MTA plan as well). But in actually, rail grows out of the same paradigm of accommodating growth, only with recognition that as the city urbanizes, there is just not enough space to accommodate growth by building highways.
There is an immediately poignancy to all of this long-range planning because transit advocates in Los Angeles are right now organizing to place an initiative on the November ballot for a new tax or fee for transit, the money from which would dedicated to implementing the LTRP. As things now stand, I’m not sure that I would support such a tax. The fact is that Los Angeles County has been collecting similar taxes for the past twenty-plus years, and yet, year after year, the situation gets worse. The roads are more congestion, the buses more crowded, the air smoggier (with any improvements in air quality coming not from reduced traffic flow, but instead for better technology) and the trains are just never going to do a particularly great job of covering our 400 square mile wide metropolitan area.
The MTA’s main objection to expanded bus service seems to be that it’s too operationally expensive, and that most new money (federal and state) is for capital projects, not operations. If the problem in our transit system is that we don’t have enough money to operate more buses, then why not dedicate the new money to that? If the new money is going to do nothing other than implement the MTA LTRP, as currently constituted, what are we really offering to the voters of Los Angeles? Doing our part to combat global warming? No, not when the plan contemplates a huge increase in emissions in the County, even given full implementation. Reducing congestion? Not in the cards under the current plan either.
My alternative would be to come up with something that, if it goes as planned, will actually solve the problem by providing an inexpensive, efficient, clean-air transit system that can take riders anywhere they want to go in the County in a reasonable amount of time? I believe that such a system could be implemented for a fraction of the cost and in a fraction of the time of the proposed expansions of the rail network. With the same money, we could reduce fares, bring top-level Rapid bus service to every major street in LA County, and phase in a new clean fleet of buses running purely on electricity or hydrogen. Add in some additional freeway express buses and local circulators, along with a greatly improved pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure and I think we’d be in business. If a radically progressive federal government ever comes into being, maybe they would allocate the tens of billions that it would take to build out our rail network.
For those of you who are in the LA area and want to comment on the draft LRTP, go here.
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Friday, March 21, 2008
Bernanke's Wall Street Welfare
I've spent a number of years working as a lawyer in the general area of housing finance, so I believe that I understand a bit about what's going on with the recent federal actions. And I don't like it. Hundreds of billions of our tax dollars have been put at risk by the recent actions of the Federal Reserve Bank under Ben Bernanke's leadership, and nobody seems to care how the decision is justified.
Part of the reason, I believe, that nobody is challenging this giant theft of our national treasury is that very few people aside from those who directly benefit from it actually understand it. So in the interest of doing my small part to spread the word, here's my take on it...
The origins of this mess can be found in the ability of Wall Street to package mortgages and the risks associated with them in a variety of ways to meet the needs of every kind of investor. Traditionally, if you wanted to buy a house, you went to your local bank and, if you were credit-worthy, and had a sufficient down payment given the price of the house (typically 20%), they would give you the loan and they would receive the payments.
In or around the 1990's or so, banks discovered that they could package these loans and sell them to investors from around the world, thereby raising more money for additional rounds of lending. As that market got more sophisticated, they invented various forms of ratings and insurance and default contracts and other fancy bells and whistles that, in theory, allowed the risk to be allocated exactly to those who could most afford to bear it.
The system worked pretty well, actually, and with the stock market doldrums that set in after the dot-com crash, a lot of money began to flow into real estate. With these sophisticated mechanisms in place, there was plenty of money available for lending. In fact, the appetite for these packaged loans became so intense that the credit-worthiness of the buyer was not that important so long as the loan amount was ever so slightly below the market value of the house, and, more importantly, so long as prices were rising fast enough such that any financial difficulty encountered by the buyer could be immediately solved by a refinance with a cash out of accrued equity.
As housing prices continued to rise at an incredible rate, the loan packages became a huge cash cow for Wall Street, with investment houses buying and selling them by the billions, and the total amounts actually went into the trillions when you added in all of the related exotic financial instruments also being sold that were backed ultimately by these loans and the wonderful little houses on which they were issued.
Of course, like all bubbles, the whole apparatus worked great only because prices were rising. I don't have as much personal knowledge of this as others, but based on my own experience, I'm willing to bet that there was a lot of laziness built into the system during the frenzy. People created a lot of paperwork covering all kinds of "what if" scenarios that would never come to pass in 99% of the cases because the ultimate insurance policy was in place: rising prices and easy refinancing. The sloppiness gets papered over when the worst case scenarios never come to pass.
Well, at some point you get into the "froth" of the bubble. Loans were being made to anybody with a pulse, no down payment, no verified income, houses being appraised for way above prices that could ever be sustained across the entire market (as opposed to the small percentage of houses that sell in any one given year). A substantial number of "sub-prime" borrowers just couldn't make those payments, and they started to default.
When that news hit Wall Street, everyone knew that the "jig was up" and the only question was who was going to get caught holding the bag. Suddenly, investors were no longer interested in buying these loans, and those holding them could not sell them. This ended the availability of sub-prime loans at the retail level, which ended the housing boom. With no loans available, prices started to drop.
For those "holding the bag", the question quickly became: what is that bag really worth? How many people would walk away from their loans, having put no money down in the first place? What would the houses actually be worth if they had to be foreclosed on? Unfortunately, these questions remain more or less unanswerable because until the market hits bottom, there's no way to predict with any degree of uncertainty the answer to those kinds of questions.
Therefore, everyone just kinds of stands still, at best trying to prevent the infection from spreading to the better classes of mortgages. Unfortunately, it has because (1) it's not always clear that a given package consists exclusively of one type or the other (the rating agencies themselves have come under fire for failing to do their job); and (2) with housing prices falling even a fairly credit-worthy individual may still decide that making payments that are three times the cost of rent when the price of the house is falling and he/she has no equity is not a smart thing to do.
And thus, we arrive at Bear Stearns, March 2008. Bear was a big loser in the game of who was left holding the bag, having gone into these mortgages in a bigger way than most of the others and, apparently, being late in the game in terms of heading for the exits. They were vulnerable, and on Wall Street, there's no pity, only opportunity for advantage.
By way of analogy, I visited an aquarium recently and there was an enclosed exhibit of Alaskan King Crabs. For whatever reason, I happened to witness a huge crab attack a "vulnerable" crab and literally rip apart its shell, dig into it with its huge claws and eat it alive, while three or four other crabs watched from the sidelines. It was really ugly, and the funny thing was that ten minutes later after the victim had been removed, we came back to see that each of the remaining crabs was occupying the corners of the exhibit with their backs to the wall, eyeing the others.
This is what happened during the week leading up to and including Sunday afternoon on Wall Street. Bear Stearns showed some weakness, and the rest of Wall Street got the hell away from them as quickly as possible, while the biggest crab in the cage (JP Morgan) went in for the kill.
Now that is all fine and dandy, American capitalism at its dog-eat-dog best. And if that was the end of the story, I could go on with my life without feeling the need to write this diary. But no, here comes Mr. Bernanke with hundreds of billions of our hard-earned dollars at his disposal. Actually, specifically, he apparently has approximately $800 billion dollars in Treasury notes that he can apply to this crisis (beyond that and we're getting into federal bankruptcy territory). Treasury notes, are, if you don't already know, almost just like cash, because everyone on this planet knows that, no matter what else happens, all of us G-d fearing Americans will be paying our federal taxes in full come hell or high water.
For at least six months, Bernanke had been trotting out the usual strategy for these kinds of situations, which is to lower interest rates just to keep the money flowing. This, of course, lowers the value of the dollar, which is dropping anyways, so no we won't be taking many exotic vacations anytime soon, or buying foreign cars, or even Swiss chocolate I suppose. It sucks that he's going to kill the dollar in order to keep these banks out of default, but I could live with it. I'm happy to stay and buy local. I could just chalk that up to one more consequence of the colossal FUBAR that is the Bush Administration.
Unfortunately for Bernanke, however, lowering interest rates hasn't done the trick. If the loans on the books are worthless, who wants to start making new ones, even if the terms are favorable? So now, he has gone to some new, more extreme, strategies and it is these that I really have an issue with. Here's what he's done just in the past two weeks:
1. He offered to trade $200 billion in Federal Treasury Notes for God knows how much in sub-prime loans (and how could you know being that there's no market for them?). So the ultimate answer to "who's going to be holding the bag" has found an answer and it is of course, the taxpayer. We the taxpayers will not collect much on these worthless loans, but we will make good on our obligations to these same bankers in paying the Treasury Notes. This is truly a case where someone else has a huge party, and leave us to clean up the mess and pay the caterers.
2. He gave a $30 billion loan guarantee to JP Morgan in order to entice it to buy Bear Stearns. So, JP Morgan takes over all of Bear Stearns assets and obligations and to the extent that people default on moneys that were owed to them, i.e. subprime borrowers, so long as it doesn't amount to more than $30 billion, we the tax payers will take care of it. Again, the "holding the bag" question is answered with the taxpayer.
3. He's opened up the Federal Reserves's "Discount Lending Window" to investment banks, so that these private fiefdom's of the very rich can now access our tax monies at the best possible rate -- the rate that for the last 70 years has been available only to commercial banks...you know the kind that you or me might actually be able to do business with. Tens of billions of dollars were so accessed in the first week.
I'd just like to hear a good argument in support of this. I suspect that the argument is that the cost to all of "us" collectively of the failure of a major investment bank, or of radically-discounted sales of these loan packages, or of investment banks lacking the liquidity to meet their obligations, would be far more than the $230 billion and counting that we're putting ourselves on the hook for in order to prevent that from happening. But I've not seen Mr. Bernanke make any such argument. Or anyone else.
For myself, I don't buy it. This is a pretty exotic little world here, and a market which as I mentioned above didn't even exist for the most part not that long ago. Was the market for mortgages so bad in 1990 that we can't afford to return to that?
And morally, it just burns me up to think that Bush gave these same guys not one but two trillion dollar tax cuts just a few years ago, then they made billions pumping up this market and luring millions into loans that they couldn't afford based on radically inflated house values (incidentally pricing out all but the most foolhardy), and now that the inexorable fall comes, well, the taxpayer must pay or the nation will crumble.
What would I do instead? I'd probably leave Wall Street to its own devices, and instead set up a federal program to buy the foreclosed houses and turn them over to nonprofit organizations for resale and/or use as affordable housing. The originators of the loans deserve to lose their money, and the borrowers deserve to lose their homes. But the rest of us deserve to be insulated from suffering the negative effects of having lots of vacant homes littering our neighborhoods, and the program I've described would accomplish that.
Part of the reason, I believe, that nobody is challenging this giant theft of our national treasury is that very few people aside from those who directly benefit from it actually understand it. So in the interest of doing my small part to spread the word, here's my take on it...
The origins of this mess can be found in the ability of Wall Street to package mortgages and the risks associated with them in a variety of ways to meet the needs of every kind of investor. Traditionally, if you wanted to buy a house, you went to your local bank and, if you were credit-worthy, and had a sufficient down payment given the price of the house (typically 20%), they would give you the loan and they would receive the payments.
In or around the 1990's or so, banks discovered that they could package these loans and sell them to investors from around the world, thereby raising more money for additional rounds of lending. As that market got more sophisticated, they invented various forms of ratings and insurance and default contracts and other fancy bells and whistles that, in theory, allowed the risk to be allocated exactly to those who could most afford to bear it.
The system worked pretty well, actually, and with the stock market doldrums that set in after the dot-com crash, a lot of money began to flow into real estate. With these sophisticated mechanisms in place, there was plenty of money available for lending. In fact, the appetite for these packaged loans became so intense that the credit-worthiness of the buyer was not that important so long as the loan amount was ever so slightly below the market value of the house, and, more importantly, so long as prices were rising fast enough such that any financial difficulty encountered by the buyer could be immediately solved by a refinance with a cash out of accrued equity.
As housing prices continued to rise at an incredible rate, the loan packages became a huge cash cow for Wall Street, with investment houses buying and selling them by the billions, and the total amounts actually went into the trillions when you added in all of the related exotic financial instruments also being sold that were backed ultimately by these loans and the wonderful little houses on which they were issued.
Of course, like all bubbles, the whole apparatus worked great only because prices were rising. I don't have as much personal knowledge of this as others, but based on my own experience, I'm willing to bet that there was a lot of laziness built into the system during the frenzy. People created a lot of paperwork covering all kinds of "what if" scenarios that would never come to pass in 99% of the cases because the ultimate insurance policy was in place: rising prices and easy refinancing. The sloppiness gets papered over when the worst case scenarios never come to pass.
Well, at some point you get into the "froth" of the bubble. Loans were being made to anybody with a pulse, no down payment, no verified income, houses being appraised for way above prices that could ever be sustained across the entire market (as opposed to the small percentage of houses that sell in any one given year). A substantial number of "sub-prime" borrowers just couldn't make those payments, and they started to default.
When that news hit Wall Street, everyone knew that the "jig was up" and the only question was who was going to get caught holding the bag. Suddenly, investors were no longer interested in buying these loans, and those holding them could not sell them. This ended the availability of sub-prime loans at the retail level, which ended the housing boom. With no loans available, prices started to drop.
For those "holding the bag", the question quickly became: what is that bag really worth? How many people would walk away from their loans, having put no money down in the first place? What would the houses actually be worth if they had to be foreclosed on? Unfortunately, these questions remain more or less unanswerable because until the market hits bottom, there's no way to predict with any degree of uncertainty the answer to those kinds of questions.
Therefore, everyone just kinds of stands still, at best trying to prevent the infection from spreading to the better classes of mortgages. Unfortunately, it has because (1) it's not always clear that a given package consists exclusively of one type or the other (the rating agencies themselves have come under fire for failing to do their job); and (2) with housing prices falling even a fairly credit-worthy individual may still decide that making payments that are three times the cost of rent when the price of the house is falling and he/she has no equity is not a smart thing to do.
And thus, we arrive at Bear Stearns, March 2008. Bear was a big loser in the game of who was left holding the bag, having gone into these mortgages in a bigger way than most of the others and, apparently, being late in the game in terms of heading for the exits. They were vulnerable, and on Wall Street, there's no pity, only opportunity for advantage.
By way of analogy, I visited an aquarium recently and there was an enclosed exhibit of Alaskan King Crabs. For whatever reason, I happened to witness a huge crab attack a "vulnerable" crab and literally rip apart its shell, dig into it with its huge claws and eat it alive, while three or four other crabs watched from the sidelines. It was really ugly, and the funny thing was that ten minutes later after the victim had been removed, we came back to see that each of the remaining crabs was occupying the corners of the exhibit with their backs to the wall, eyeing the others.
This is what happened during the week leading up to and including Sunday afternoon on Wall Street. Bear Stearns showed some weakness, and the rest of Wall Street got the hell away from them as quickly as possible, while the biggest crab in the cage (JP Morgan) went in for the kill.
Now that is all fine and dandy, American capitalism at its dog-eat-dog best. And if that was the end of the story, I could go on with my life without feeling the need to write this diary. But no, here comes Mr. Bernanke with hundreds of billions of our hard-earned dollars at his disposal. Actually, specifically, he apparently has approximately $800 billion dollars in Treasury notes that he can apply to this crisis (beyond that and we're getting into federal bankruptcy territory). Treasury notes, are, if you don't already know, almost just like cash, because everyone on this planet knows that, no matter what else happens, all of us G-d fearing Americans will be paying our federal taxes in full come hell or high water.
For at least six months, Bernanke had been trotting out the usual strategy for these kinds of situations, which is to lower interest rates just to keep the money flowing. This, of course, lowers the value of the dollar, which is dropping anyways, so no we won't be taking many exotic vacations anytime soon, or buying foreign cars, or even Swiss chocolate I suppose. It sucks that he's going to kill the dollar in order to keep these banks out of default, but I could live with it. I'm happy to stay and buy local. I could just chalk that up to one more consequence of the colossal FUBAR that is the Bush Administration.
Unfortunately for Bernanke, however, lowering interest rates hasn't done the trick. If the loans on the books are worthless, who wants to start making new ones, even if the terms are favorable? So now, he has gone to some new, more extreme, strategies and it is these that I really have an issue with. Here's what he's done just in the past two weeks:
1. He offered to trade $200 billion in Federal Treasury Notes for God knows how much in sub-prime loans (and how could you know being that there's no market for them?). So the ultimate answer to "who's going to be holding the bag" has found an answer and it is of course, the taxpayer. We the taxpayers will not collect much on these worthless loans, but we will make good on our obligations to these same bankers in paying the Treasury Notes. This is truly a case where someone else has a huge party, and leave us to clean up the mess and pay the caterers.
2. He gave a $30 billion loan guarantee to JP Morgan in order to entice it to buy Bear Stearns. So, JP Morgan takes over all of Bear Stearns assets and obligations and to the extent that people default on moneys that were owed to them, i.e. subprime borrowers, so long as it doesn't amount to more than $30 billion, we the tax payers will take care of it. Again, the "holding the bag" question is answered with the taxpayer.
3. He's opened up the Federal Reserves's "Discount Lending Window" to investment banks, so that these private fiefdom's of the very rich can now access our tax monies at the best possible rate -- the rate that for the last 70 years has been available only to commercial banks...you know the kind that you or me might actually be able to do business with. Tens of billions of dollars were so accessed in the first week.
I'd just like to hear a good argument in support of this. I suspect that the argument is that the cost to all of "us" collectively of the failure of a major investment bank, or of radically-discounted sales of these loan packages, or of investment banks lacking the liquidity to meet their obligations, would be far more than the $230 billion and counting that we're putting ourselves on the hook for in order to prevent that from happening. But I've not seen Mr. Bernanke make any such argument. Or anyone else.
For myself, I don't buy it. This is a pretty exotic little world here, and a market which as I mentioned above didn't even exist for the most part not that long ago. Was the market for mortgages so bad in 1990 that we can't afford to return to that?
And morally, it just burns me up to think that Bush gave these same guys not one but two trillion dollar tax cuts just a few years ago, then they made billions pumping up this market and luring millions into loans that they couldn't afford based on radically inflated house values (incidentally pricing out all but the most foolhardy), and now that the inexorable fall comes, well, the taxpayer must pay or the nation will crumble.
What would I do instead? I'd probably leave Wall Street to its own devices, and instead set up a federal program to buy the foreclosed houses and turn them over to nonprofit organizations for resale and/or use as affordable housing. The originators of the loans deserve to lose their money, and the borrowers deserve to lose their homes. But the rest of us deserve to be insulated from suffering the negative effects of having lots of vacant homes littering our neighborhoods, and the program I've described would accomplish that.
Saturday, December 29, 2007
Obama and Pakistan
Obama's catching heat this week for his campaign advisor's statement that Hillary shares some of the responsibility for Bhutto's assassination.
It's true.
Sucks to be you, Hillary, but you voted for this dumb assed war that Obama said from the start would be a disaster. If we weren't fuckin' around in Iraq, we might have actually caught bin Laden and Zawahiri by now and al Qaeda would be a historical footnote. Instead, they're in functional control of a whole provinces in Pakistan and the old Taliban is on the move in Afghanistan. Not to mention that the Iraq War has itself greatly fanned the flames of anti-American Islamic fundamentalism all over the region, including in Pakistan.
We done fucked up and what happened in Pakistan is just the "chickens coming home to roost," in the immortal words of El Hajj Malik El Shabazz (Malcolm X).
But alas, the truth is sometimes hard to take, thus the uproar about Obama. But that's also what keeps driving people to Barack. Truth equals "authenticity" -- a hard to define by critical attribute for a politician, and one that Barack enjoys in spades.
Comments?
It's true.
Sucks to be you, Hillary, but you voted for this dumb assed war that Obama said from the start would be a disaster. If we weren't fuckin' around in Iraq, we might have actually caught bin Laden and Zawahiri by now and al Qaeda would be a historical footnote. Instead, they're in functional control of a whole provinces in Pakistan and the old Taliban is on the move in Afghanistan. Not to mention that the Iraq War has itself greatly fanned the flames of anti-American Islamic fundamentalism all over the region, including in Pakistan.
We done fucked up and what happened in Pakistan is just the "chickens coming home to roost," in the immortal words of El Hajj Malik El Shabazz (Malcolm X).
But alas, the truth is sometimes hard to take, thus the uproar about Obama. But that's also what keeps driving people to Barack. Truth equals "authenticity" -- a hard to define by critical attribute for a politician, and one that Barack enjoys in spades.
Comments?
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Obama, Race and the Progressive Blogosphere
With Barack Obama's campaign for the Democratic nomination on a roll, the "long knives" have come out of their sleeves. While the attacks have come from all sides, the most disturbing ones, from my perspective, are being launched from the progressive blogosphere.
The acknowledged founder of said blogosphere, Jerome Armstrong, recently posted a diary on MyDD questioning Barack's electability, the first few lines of which contained the following admonition:
Mr. Armstrong is, of course, far more evolved than that:
All of that combined with the counter-intuitive illogic of the claim that Barack's chances in the general election will be somehow compromised by his insufficiently partisan rhetoric during the primary leads me to believe that there's something a little deeper going on here. For those new to progressive politics it might sound novel, but for many of us who know the history, it's an old story: white progressives are uncomfortable getting behind a black standard-bearer for the progressive movement who they cannot control.
Whether it be Paul Krugman's rants about Obama's failing to tow the progressive line on Social Security and health insurance mandates, the "McClurkin" controversy, or any number of other things, the problem isn't so much that Obama's not really a true progressive at heart (his biography and record are crystal clear on that), but that he's his own man; when confronted with a demand that he "back down" on mandates or "exclude" an ex-gay gospel singer from his campaign, Obama refuses to do so.
It would be one thing if there were a viable capital "P" Progressive Party with a track record of winning elections; that would be a great argument for enforcing a party line. But we all know how far from the truth that is. With very limited exceptions, the progressive movement has been on a losing streak in America for decades and the inability of white progressives to find a way to work with black leadership is a big part of that history of failure: without black support, progressive victories are few and far between, and without black leadership, there is no black support.
So, even though the progressive movement is presented with what would appear to be its greatest chance in history to simultaneously help America take a huge step forward in realizing it's age-old dream of racial equality while at the same time electing the most self-evidently progressive President in our lifetimes, apparently many would prefer to stay on the sidelines, sniping at Barack Obama, suppesedly for failing to march in lockstep and/or throw a sufficient amount of rhetorical red meat at the base, but in actuality because they're just not comfortable with the emergence of a free-thinking black man as the leader of the progressive movement.
Fortunately, however, through Barack's unique force of personality and charisma, and maybe also because of the presence on the scene of a new, younger generation of progressive activists who are more accustomed to working on an equal basis with people of other races, this historic logjam in the progressive movement appears to be breaking down. Once we begin to separate out the more established leaders who have a vested interest in Obama's defeat, i.e. paid and/or high-profile supporters of one or another of the other candidates, by and large progressives at the grass roots level across America are getting "fired up and ready to go" behind his candidacy. Barack's army of field volunteers now numbers in the hundreds of thousands and is growing by thousands more every day.
I'm confident that twenty years from now, many of Obama's detractors will be writing books and articles with not a hint of irony about how Barack rejuvenated America by putting together a new progressive majority that was able to bring about incredible changes in America life and politics on a par with that accomplished FDR and JFK. I won't mind at all.
The acknowledged founder of said blogosphere, Jerome Armstrong, recently posted a diary on MyDD questioning Barack's electability, the first few lines of which contained the following admonition:
First, let me just say that anyone who accuses skin color as some part behind the reasoning will find themselves banned--there is zero tolerance for accusations of racism.Mr. Armstrong's bold attempt to censor any discussion of the issue of race in connection with his critique of Barack's electability is stunning. Having talked to hundreds of people about Barack's candidacy over the past year or so, I can say with a great degree of certainty that the number one issue going through most people's minds when they consider Barack's electability is the obvious one: Is America ready to elect a black President for the first time in its history?
Mr. Armstrong is, of course, far more evolved than that:
I don't even view Obama as black or with racial distinction. Identity-wise, I can understand why he's seen as such, but in that regard (and I have two kids with this same beauty), it points to a bright future when such fallacies such as 'race' become historical dust, and racism ceases. One day, let's hope. Having black skin is not totally gone as an electability issue, but it's as negligible as being a woman, a southerner, or a northeasterner. You can ask Harold Ford if you doubt it's still an issue in certain races-- but nevermind, because he would have to say otherwise in public, and I hope one day he will be able to win in Tennessee-- but it no longer is an insurmountable hurdle to being elected President.According to Mr. Armstrong then, it's not the racists who will pose the greatest risk for Barack Obama in the general election; no, the bigger electability problem for him is that the progressive base of the Democratic Party will abandon him in the face of the Republican assault that is sure to come.
The skepticism about Obama's electability isn't grounded in empirical polling (which are too early to matter); instead, it's more just a feeling that, given how well he's positioned his candidacy with the media's blessing, he's setting himself up for being torn down without a partisan base to rely upon for pushing back.The amazing thing to me is that Mr. Armstrong can so casually dismiss "empirical" data, totally ignore the fact that Obama has the most progressive biography and record of any of the major candidates, admit that his sentiments are based on nothing more than "just a feeling," and then use his position as the owner of a supposedly "democratic" political forum to squelch any discussion of the possibility that the very factor most talked about with respect to Barack's electability -- race -- might have played a role in how he, himself, arrived at this "feeling."
Yes, right now, Obama does pretty well among Republicans & Independents. But there's been more and more of a dissonance growing between Obama's campaign and among progressive partisan Democrats.
All of that combined with the counter-intuitive illogic of the claim that Barack's chances in the general election will be somehow compromised by his insufficiently partisan rhetoric during the primary leads me to believe that there's something a little deeper going on here. For those new to progressive politics it might sound novel, but for many of us who know the history, it's an old story: white progressives are uncomfortable getting behind a black standard-bearer for the progressive movement who they cannot control.
Whether it be Paul Krugman's rants about Obama's failing to tow the progressive line on Social Security and health insurance mandates, the "McClurkin" controversy, or any number of other things, the problem isn't so much that Obama's not really a true progressive at heart (his biography and record are crystal clear on that), but that he's his own man; when confronted with a demand that he "back down" on mandates or "exclude" an ex-gay gospel singer from his campaign, Obama refuses to do so.
It would be one thing if there were a viable capital "P" Progressive Party with a track record of winning elections; that would be a great argument for enforcing a party line. But we all know how far from the truth that is. With very limited exceptions, the progressive movement has been on a losing streak in America for decades and the inability of white progressives to find a way to work with black leadership is a big part of that history of failure: without black support, progressive victories are few and far between, and without black leadership, there is no black support.
So, even though the progressive movement is presented with what would appear to be its greatest chance in history to simultaneously help America take a huge step forward in realizing it's age-old dream of racial equality while at the same time electing the most self-evidently progressive President in our lifetimes, apparently many would prefer to stay on the sidelines, sniping at Barack Obama, suppesedly for failing to march in lockstep and/or throw a sufficient amount of rhetorical red meat at the base, but in actuality because they're just not comfortable with the emergence of a free-thinking black man as the leader of the progressive movement.
Fortunately, however, through Barack's unique force of personality and charisma, and maybe also because of the presence on the scene of a new, younger generation of progressive activists who are more accustomed to working on an equal basis with people of other races, this historic logjam in the progressive movement appears to be breaking down. Once we begin to separate out the more established leaders who have a vested interest in Obama's defeat, i.e. paid and/or high-profile supporters of one or another of the other candidates, by and large progressives at the grass roots level across America are getting "fired up and ready to go" behind his candidacy. Barack's army of field volunteers now numbers in the hundreds of thousands and is growing by thousands more every day.
I'm confident that twenty years from now, many of Obama's detractors will be writing books and articles with not a hint of irony about how Barack rejuvenated America by putting together a new progressive majority that was able to bring about incredible changes in America life and politics on a par with that accomplished FDR and JFK. I won't mind at all.
Monday, December 3, 2007
Why I Support Barack Obama for President I
Like anyone else I suppose, my support for Barack stems from my own political beliefs. Although I have a passion for politics and policy, particularly insofar as they relate to social justice, I have spent relatively little energy engaging in electoral politics for one simple reason: from everything I can tell, money rules politics in America.
Almost everyone I've ever talked to, whatever their political philosophy, believes the same thing. At all levels of government and in all parts of the country, those who are able to back candidates with significant amounts of money get to decide who those candidates will be and which ones will win. That being the case, those who are not able to "ante up" do not have a voice, and the objective merit of any particular course of action counts far less than the pure self-interests of those who have ante'd up. In my opinion then, the most fundamental project for any progressive movement, the thing on which all other progressive possibilities are contingent, is political reform.
With that reality and goal in mind, I and most of my friends/allies have "retreated" in a sense to grassroots, community-based politics outside of the electoral system where we use community organizing, independent policy advocacy and legal intervention in order to bring the "people's" voice into the decision-making process. At the local level, at least, it is possible to make elected officials accountable to the people, if only because we can physically get in the way of stuff and bring uncomfortable truths to the public light. But the limits of our myopic focus on local, grassroots political activities has been amply demonstrated by the extreme havoc that the current administration has wreaked on the world. Therefore, even before Barack Obama's campaign, I, for one, was "fired up and ready to go" behind any Democrat who could at least put at stop to the "bleeding", so to speak.
My most significant previous foray into electoral politics was at the local level as well -- Jerry Brown's campaign for Oakland Mayor in 1998. In that campaign, Jerry refused any contribution over $100, made promises to nobody, but listened to everybody, and avoided a run-off by winning each and every precinct (save the home precinct of the runner-up) in the most racially diverse city in America against seven other candidates. One can argue one way or the other about Jerry's program once in office, but he served two terms, changed the face of what had been a down-at-the-heels town and was able to use his record there as a springboard for a successful run for California Attorney General.
But the most important lesson I took away from that experience is that it takes a special kind of candidate to actually pull off an insurgent, anti-big money, for-the-people campaign. There have been hundreds, if not thousands, of attempts across the country over the years, most of which failed. What is that special something? It's charisma.
And this is where we come to Barack Obama. Who can doubt his charisma? Tens of thousands flock to his speeches in all corners of the country. Hundreds of thousands donate to and volunteer for his campaign. Millions respond viscerally and immediately to his appeal. In my mind there are just a few political figures in modern American history that had a comparable appeal: John F. and Robert Kennedy, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton. That's it. No one else.
But more importantly, this kind of charisma is pointless from my perspective without a program of real change behind it. Reagan and Clinton wasted theirs by and large on misguided reactionary conservatism or triangulation and personal pecadillos, respectively. But if Obama's career has been about anything, it's been about real, substantive political reform. After cutting his teeth as a community organizer working to involve disenfranchised people in the decision-making process in Chicago, he passed landmark ethics and lobbying bills in the Illinois State Legislature and in the United States Senate. The recent string of high-profile Republican retirements such as Trent Lott is due in no small part to the fact that after Jan. 1 of this year, they will no longer be able to lobby their old colleagues immediately after retirement because of legislation spearheaded by Obama.
As a Presidential candidate, he has refused to take money from PAC's and federal lobbyists, instead raising tens of millions through small donations and low-dollar fundraisers. His campaign strategy prioritizes grassroots organizing. His platform includes support for new initiatives on lobbying reform, transparency, honesty and accountability. Finally, buried in his brilliant speech at Google, is to my mind maybe the most important idea Barack has put forward yet.
Almost everyone I've ever talked to, whatever their political philosophy, believes the same thing. At all levels of government and in all parts of the country, those who are able to back candidates with significant amounts of money get to decide who those candidates will be and which ones will win. That being the case, those who are not able to "ante up" do not have a voice, and the objective merit of any particular course of action counts far less than the pure self-interests of those who have ante'd up. In my opinion then, the most fundamental project for any progressive movement, the thing on which all other progressive possibilities are contingent, is political reform.
With that reality and goal in mind, I and most of my friends/allies have "retreated" in a sense to grassroots, community-based politics outside of the electoral system where we use community organizing, independent policy advocacy and legal intervention in order to bring the "people's" voice into the decision-making process. At the local level, at least, it is possible to make elected officials accountable to the people, if only because we can physically get in the way of stuff and bring uncomfortable truths to the public light. But the limits of our myopic focus on local, grassroots political activities has been amply demonstrated by the extreme havoc that the current administration has wreaked on the world. Therefore, even before Barack Obama's campaign, I, for one, was "fired up and ready to go" behind any Democrat who could at least put at stop to the "bleeding", so to speak.
My most significant previous foray into electoral politics was at the local level as well -- Jerry Brown's campaign for Oakland Mayor in 1998. In that campaign, Jerry refused any contribution over $100, made promises to nobody, but listened to everybody, and avoided a run-off by winning each and every precinct (save the home precinct of the runner-up) in the most racially diverse city in America against seven other candidates. One can argue one way or the other about Jerry's program once in office, but he served two terms, changed the face of what had been a down-at-the-heels town and was able to use his record there as a springboard for a successful run for California Attorney General.
But the most important lesson I took away from that experience is that it takes a special kind of candidate to actually pull off an insurgent, anti-big money, for-the-people campaign. There have been hundreds, if not thousands, of attempts across the country over the years, most of which failed. What is that special something? It's charisma.
Charisma: A rare personal quality attributed to leaders who arouse fervent popular devotion and enthusiasm.Without charisma, the politician needs money to succeed. They can be independently wealthy or they can find the backing of people with money, but in either case, their ability to really confront the status quo has already been greatly compromised long before they get into office. It's an unfortunate reality of the times in which we live that something as ephemeral and superficial as charisma is a prerequisite for something as serious and substantial as political leadership, but I believe it to be true nonetheless.
- American Heritage Dictionary
And this is where we come to Barack Obama. Who can doubt his charisma? Tens of thousands flock to his speeches in all corners of the country. Hundreds of thousands donate to and volunteer for his campaign. Millions respond viscerally and immediately to his appeal. In my mind there are just a few political figures in modern American history that had a comparable appeal: John F. and Robert Kennedy, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton. That's it. No one else.
But more importantly, this kind of charisma is pointless from my perspective without a program of real change behind it. Reagan and Clinton wasted theirs by and large on misguided reactionary conservatism or triangulation and personal pecadillos, respectively. But if Obama's career has been about anything, it's been about real, substantive political reform. After cutting his teeth as a community organizer working to involve disenfranchised people in the decision-making process in Chicago, he passed landmark ethics and lobbying bills in the Illinois State Legislature and in the United States Senate. The recent string of high-profile Republican retirements such as Trent Lott is due in no small part to the fact that after Jan. 1 of this year, they will no longer be able to lobby their old colleagues immediately after retirement because of legislation spearheaded by Obama.
As a Presidential candidate, he has refused to take money from PAC's and federal lobbyists, instead raising tens of millions through small donations and low-dollar fundraisers. His campaign strategy prioritizes grassroots organizing. His platform includes support for new initiatives on lobbying reform, transparency, honesty and accountability. Finally, buried in his brilliant speech at Google, is to my mind maybe the most important idea Barack has put forward yet.
Technology-enabled citizen participation . . . can help connect government to its citizens and engage citizens in a democracy. Barack Obama will use the most current technological tools available to make government less beholden to special interest groups and lobbyists and promote citizen participation in government decision-making. Obama will integrate citizens into the actual business of government by:This would be a subtle, yet profound revolution in the way governmental decisions are made in America. Barack is the person who can make that happen.
—Establishing pilot programs to open up government decision-making and involve the public in the work of agencies, not simply by soliciting opinions, but by tapping into the vast and distributed expertise of the American citizenry to help government make more informed decisions.
—Lifting the veil from secret deals in Washington with a web site, a search engine, and other web tools that enable citizens easily to track online federal grants, contracts, earmarks, and lobbyist contacts with government officials.
—Giving the American public an opportunity to review and comment on the White House website for five days before signing any non-emergency legislation.
-- http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/11/14/barack-obamas-google-friendly-technology-platform/
Saturday, November 24, 2007
A Proposal for Barack Obama on Illegal Immigration
There is a clear and present danger that the Republican Party will exploit illegal immigration in the 2008 Presidential election in the same way that they were able to ride the gay marriage issue to victory in 2004. Democrats are generally avoiding the issue, but when pressed, each of them professes support for "comprehensive immigration reform" that would combine stepped-up border security and workplace enforcement with an earned legalization program. For evidence that this response is unsatisfactory, one need look no further than the unprecedented public outcry that twice killed the exact same proposal in Congress. Even worse, that opposition was directed most specifically at the part of the proposal most closely associated with the Democrats - legalization.
The reality that Democrats seem unable to face is that any effort to normalize the status of illegal immigrants will alienate a huge portion of the electorate. Witness the fates of Gray Davis and Elliot Spitzer, both Democratic governors of deeply blue states, in the wake of their respective attempts to grant driver's licenses to illegal immigrants. Hillary Clinton's campaign was headed toward the safe shores of inevitability until her equivocating response to the driver's license issue opened a floodgate of criticism. Still smarting at the next debate two weeks later, she delivered a very UN-equivocal one-word response to the same question - "No" - and watched Barack Obama fall into the exact same trap. Given that these stumbles occurred in Democratic debates where none of the candidates is seeking to distinguish themselves on this issue, we can only imagine the pounding the Democratic nominee will take when faced with a Republican nominee like Rudolph Giuliani, who promises "tough" action on illegal immigration.
So the Democrats appear caught once again between a deeply held majority opinion and one of their core constituencies - this time Latinos. But all is not lost. I think that buried in the noise around this issue is a simple, elegant solution that a Democrat can wholeheartedly embrace. My suggestion proceeds from the very legitimate, universally accepted rationale behind comprehensive immigration reform: our legal immigration system is broken. Democrats are correct in advocating for a "fix" to this dysfunction. As mentioned above, however, normalizing the status of illegal immigrants currently in the country is not a viable solution. At the same time, an "enforcement-only" approach would wreak havoc on the Democratic coalition.
A better comprehensive immigration reform approach would be to replace the legalization plank with one in favor of substantially increasing the quotas for regular permanent resident visas. These are the famous "green cards" that do not require a sponsoring employer and allow their holders to work freely in the U.S. and, after five years, apply for full citizenship. Family reunification, potential to contribute to our economy and national diversity are already the priorities for these programs. Applicants are required to apply from their country of origin and known previous immigration violators are barred temporarily or permanently, depending on the nature of their offense.
Illegal immigrants, having voluntarily returned home, can apply for these visas, but with no special advantage or disadvantage. By significantly increasing the number of these visas available and improving processing times, however, many, if not most, current illegal immigrants would likely qualify and be able to quickly return to their communities with minimal disruption to their lives. Already, more of these visas go to Mexican immigrants than to those of any other nation. To the extent that their applications were unsuccessful, it would be in favor of similar applicants with even closer ties to America.
This proposal is neither amnesty nor mass deportation. By creating a powerful incentive for illegal immigrants to voluntarily repatriate and apply to enter legally, we would greatly reduce the pressure at the border and at workplaces. We would also, however, provide a true "path to citizenship" and a better life for many illegal immigrants without rewarding the fact that they broke the law. It would increase our ability to enhance our economy and society through our immigration policy. It prioritizes keeping families together. The proportion of citizens and permanent residents in immigrant communities would greatly increase, creating a host of benefits for them and for America. And it would actually fix to our broken system.
I sincerely believe that Barack Obama is uniquely situated to advocate for such a proposal. It does not directly contradict anything in his current platform and would reinforce his reputation for creating solutions that transcend the divisive and polarizing politics of the past. As a person of color and son of an immigrant himself, he’d be relatively immune to charges from immigrant rights extremists of racism and xenophobia. His charisma, integrity and character would allow him to initiate conversations with potential opponents that others couldn’t.
As a campaign strategy, taking a strong stand on ending illegal immigration would also allow Obama to increase his appeal to the blue-collar voters who have been slow to catch on to his candidacy to this point and who are key to a Democratic victory in the general election. Through his advocacy of increasing the quotas for family reunification visas, he would also be creating new opportunities to deepen his base of support in Latino, Asian and other immigrant communities. In the general election, he would put any Republican opponent on the defensive by forcing them to oppose legal immigration.
It is this final point that is most critical. Democrats should stand strongly for immigration when it’s done the right way – legally. Immigration is the story of America -- the vast majority of us proudly trace our ancestry beyond our borders. But so is the rule of law. Republicans who oppose even legal immigration would be exposed as the true xenophobes and racists that they are in utter contrast to everything that Barack Obama represents and everything that most Americans aspire to be. That can only be a win for my candidate.
The reality that Democrats seem unable to face is that any effort to normalize the status of illegal immigrants will alienate a huge portion of the electorate. Witness the fates of Gray Davis and Elliot Spitzer, both Democratic governors of deeply blue states, in the wake of their respective attempts to grant driver's licenses to illegal immigrants. Hillary Clinton's campaign was headed toward the safe shores of inevitability until her equivocating response to the driver's license issue opened a floodgate of criticism. Still smarting at the next debate two weeks later, she delivered a very UN-equivocal one-word response to the same question - "No" - and watched Barack Obama fall into the exact same trap. Given that these stumbles occurred in Democratic debates where none of the candidates is seeking to distinguish themselves on this issue, we can only imagine the pounding the Democratic nominee will take when faced with a Republican nominee like Rudolph Giuliani, who promises "tough" action on illegal immigration.
So the Democrats appear caught once again between a deeply held majority opinion and one of their core constituencies - this time Latinos. But all is not lost. I think that buried in the noise around this issue is a simple, elegant solution that a Democrat can wholeheartedly embrace. My suggestion proceeds from the very legitimate, universally accepted rationale behind comprehensive immigration reform: our legal immigration system is broken. Democrats are correct in advocating for a "fix" to this dysfunction. As mentioned above, however, normalizing the status of illegal immigrants currently in the country is not a viable solution. At the same time, an "enforcement-only" approach would wreak havoc on the Democratic coalition.
A better comprehensive immigration reform approach would be to replace the legalization plank with one in favor of substantially increasing the quotas for regular permanent resident visas. These are the famous "green cards" that do not require a sponsoring employer and allow their holders to work freely in the U.S. and, after five years, apply for full citizenship. Family reunification, potential to contribute to our economy and national diversity are already the priorities for these programs. Applicants are required to apply from their country of origin and known previous immigration violators are barred temporarily or permanently, depending on the nature of their offense.
Illegal immigrants, having voluntarily returned home, can apply for these visas, but with no special advantage or disadvantage. By significantly increasing the number of these visas available and improving processing times, however, many, if not most, current illegal immigrants would likely qualify and be able to quickly return to their communities with minimal disruption to their lives. Already, more of these visas go to Mexican immigrants than to those of any other nation. To the extent that their applications were unsuccessful, it would be in favor of similar applicants with even closer ties to America.
This proposal is neither amnesty nor mass deportation. By creating a powerful incentive for illegal immigrants to voluntarily repatriate and apply to enter legally, we would greatly reduce the pressure at the border and at workplaces. We would also, however, provide a true "path to citizenship" and a better life for many illegal immigrants without rewarding the fact that they broke the law. It would increase our ability to enhance our economy and society through our immigration policy. It prioritizes keeping families together. The proportion of citizens and permanent residents in immigrant communities would greatly increase, creating a host of benefits for them and for America. And it would actually fix to our broken system.
I sincerely believe that Barack Obama is uniquely situated to advocate for such a proposal. It does not directly contradict anything in his current platform and would reinforce his reputation for creating solutions that transcend the divisive and polarizing politics of the past. As a person of color and son of an immigrant himself, he’d be relatively immune to charges from immigrant rights extremists of racism and xenophobia. His charisma, integrity and character would allow him to initiate conversations with potential opponents that others couldn’t.
As a campaign strategy, taking a strong stand on ending illegal immigration would also allow Obama to increase his appeal to the blue-collar voters who have been slow to catch on to his candidacy to this point and who are key to a Democratic victory in the general election. Through his advocacy of increasing the quotas for family reunification visas, he would also be creating new opportunities to deepen his base of support in Latino, Asian and other immigrant communities. In the general election, he would put any Republican opponent on the defensive by forcing them to oppose legal immigration.
It is this final point that is most critical. Democrats should stand strongly for immigration when it’s done the right way – legally. Immigration is the story of America -- the vast majority of us proudly trace our ancestry beyond our borders. But so is the rule of law. Republicans who oppose even legal immigration would be exposed as the true xenophobes and racists that they are in utter contrast to everything that Barack Obama represents and everything that most Americans aspire to be. That can only be a win for my candidate.
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
A Response to Tom Hayden's 'Appeal to Barack Obama'
A Response to Tom Hayden’s Appeal
Tom Hayden recently posted “An Appeal to Barack Obama,” wherein he criticized Barack’s statements in a New York Times Magazine interview rejecting the Vietnam-era framework of Scoop Jackson Democrats vs. Tom Hayden Democrats. Hayden accuses Obama of Clintonian triangulation and centrism in general and in particular with respect to the War in Iraq and the issue of race. He argues that Obama would be better served politically by appealing to the antiwar “Tom Hayden Democrats” who will predominate in the Democratic primaries and intellectually by engaging in “substantive thinking” instead of just looking for a point exactly equidistant from each extreme. He also believes that Obama is consciously downplaying to his detriment “the deepest rationale” for his candidacy -- his race.
In my opinion, for Hayden, Clinton and others of the Sixties generation, the urgency to end the ideological battles that have stymied political progress in America is just not the same as it for younger people. After thirty years of ideological warfare in Washington and elsewhere, the Baby Boom generation will be the first in American history to bequeath to its children a worse quality of life than they themselves enjoyed. On issue after issue, we have seen the failure of our governmental institutions to make even the most basic progress on the fundamental issues facing our nation.
As the lives of the rich and poor diverge ever more widely from each other, our very status as a First World nation seems in question. Even as the affluent few enjoy unprecedented wealth and luxury, far more of us are sinking deeper and deeper into a quasi-Third World kind of existence where the basic necessities of housing, education, health care and a clean environment are increasingly out of reach. Meanwhile, our foreign policy spreads hatred and violence around the world, creating new enemies for American by the millions.
I, for one, am willing to trade a little bit of ideological purity in favor of a President who will roll up his or her sleeves, bring people together from across the political spectrum and produce some tangible progressive change in the status quo. Yes, the war in Iraq was a huge and immoral crime against humanity and Barack is the only major presidential candidate who spoke out against it when it wasn’t popular to do so. Iraq, however, is not Vietnam. We all want to end the war, but you don’t have to be a Scoop Jackson Democrat in order to be in favor of pulling our troops out in such as way as to avoid creating a humanitarian disaster and/or breeding ground for anti-American hatred and terrorism in our wake.
Hayden also seems to think that Obama’s alleged centrism is somehow connected to a desire to deemphasize his race – supposedly the “the deepest rationale” for his candidacy. Again, Hayden portrays his inability to lift his consciousness out of the false dichotomies of the Sixties generation – this time in the realm of identity politics. Obama transcends the old dichotomy of black militant/Uncle Tom Negro in the same way that he transcends the antiwar/hawk paradigm. He hasn’t built his popularity amongst whites by opposing affirmative action, like a Ward Connerly or Clarence Thomas. But at the same time, he’s not an Al Sharpton either, running from one racial flashpoint to the next in order to express his “outrage” at the latest example of white racism. Although he has an excellent record of achievement on black causes such as racial profiling and death penalty reform, he doesn’t analyze every issue facing our nation through the prism of race. Most of all, he provides inspired and effective leadership to our nation that is informed but not proscribed by his experiences as a black man in America. That, for me, is the “deepest rationale” for Obama’s candidacy.
Obama’s blackness is, by itself, no rationale at all for his becoming President. This is not to say that race has nothing to do with it. I’m sure that Obama’s racial consciousness probably contributed to his decision to forsake a cushy life on Wall Street in order to become a community organizer on the Southside of Chicago and, later, a civil rights lawyer. The fact that he successfully represented the Southside for two terms in the Illinois State Legislature indicates to me that he understands and can be an effective advocate for the needs and concerns of black constituents. I believe I can honestly state, however, that if a white, Asian or Latino candidate emerged with the exact same record, platform and abilities as Obama, I would be equally excited about his or her campaign.
I would invite Mr. Hayden and others of the Sixties generation to try to put aside the old litmus tests and take a good look at what Obama has stood and fought for throughout his career. His platform and record with respect to every progressive cause is there for all to see. Yes, he has the ability to reach across the aisle, but it’s because he triangulates himself to the center; it’s because he listens and finds common ground in order to move forward a progressive agenda. His campaign eschews money from federal lobbyists and has directed considerable resources into grassroots political organizing in disenfranchised communities.
It is only through some magical combination of luck, charisma and timing that someone like Barack even has a remote chance at winning – a set of circumstances that I don’t expect to see again in my lifetime. Progressives would be making huge mistake, in my opinion, to ignore the Obama campaign because he’s not perfectly ideologically aligned with them on every single issue and does not want to replay the battles of past decades. This is the best chance we’ve had in a generation to bring about real progressive change at the federal level in America. Let’s take advantage of it!
Tom Hayden recently posted “An Appeal to Barack Obama,” wherein he criticized Barack’s statements in a New York Times Magazine interview rejecting the Vietnam-era framework of Scoop Jackson Democrats vs. Tom Hayden Democrats. Hayden accuses Obama of Clintonian triangulation and centrism in general and in particular with respect to the War in Iraq and the issue of race. He argues that Obama would be better served politically by appealing to the antiwar “Tom Hayden Democrats” who will predominate in the Democratic primaries and intellectually by engaging in “substantive thinking” instead of just looking for a point exactly equidistant from each extreme. He also believes that Obama is consciously downplaying to his detriment “the deepest rationale” for his candidacy -- his race.
In my opinion, for Hayden, Clinton and others of the Sixties generation, the urgency to end the ideological battles that have stymied political progress in America is just not the same as it for younger people. After thirty years of ideological warfare in Washington and elsewhere, the Baby Boom generation will be the first in American history to bequeath to its children a worse quality of life than they themselves enjoyed. On issue after issue, we have seen the failure of our governmental institutions to make even the most basic progress on the fundamental issues facing our nation.
As the lives of the rich and poor diverge ever more widely from each other, our very status as a First World nation seems in question. Even as the affluent few enjoy unprecedented wealth and luxury, far more of us are sinking deeper and deeper into a quasi-Third World kind of existence where the basic necessities of housing, education, health care and a clean environment are increasingly out of reach. Meanwhile, our foreign policy spreads hatred and violence around the world, creating new enemies for American by the millions.
I, for one, am willing to trade a little bit of ideological purity in favor of a President who will roll up his or her sleeves, bring people together from across the political spectrum and produce some tangible progressive change in the status quo. Yes, the war in Iraq was a huge and immoral crime against humanity and Barack is the only major presidential candidate who spoke out against it when it wasn’t popular to do so. Iraq, however, is not Vietnam. We all want to end the war, but you don’t have to be a Scoop Jackson Democrat in order to be in favor of pulling our troops out in such as way as to avoid creating a humanitarian disaster and/or breeding ground for anti-American hatred and terrorism in our wake.
Hayden also seems to think that Obama’s alleged centrism is somehow connected to a desire to deemphasize his race – supposedly the “the deepest rationale” for his candidacy. Again, Hayden portrays his inability to lift his consciousness out of the false dichotomies of the Sixties generation – this time in the realm of identity politics. Obama transcends the old dichotomy of black militant/Uncle Tom Negro in the same way that he transcends the antiwar/hawk paradigm. He hasn’t built his popularity amongst whites by opposing affirmative action, like a Ward Connerly or Clarence Thomas. But at the same time, he’s not an Al Sharpton either, running from one racial flashpoint to the next in order to express his “outrage” at the latest example of white racism. Although he has an excellent record of achievement on black causes such as racial profiling and death penalty reform, he doesn’t analyze every issue facing our nation through the prism of race. Most of all, he provides inspired and effective leadership to our nation that is informed but not proscribed by his experiences as a black man in America. That, for me, is the “deepest rationale” for Obama’s candidacy.
Obama’s blackness is, by itself, no rationale at all for his becoming President. This is not to say that race has nothing to do with it. I’m sure that Obama’s racial consciousness probably contributed to his decision to forsake a cushy life on Wall Street in order to become a community organizer on the Southside of Chicago and, later, a civil rights lawyer. The fact that he successfully represented the Southside for two terms in the Illinois State Legislature indicates to me that he understands and can be an effective advocate for the needs and concerns of black constituents. I believe I can honestly state, however, that if a white, Asian or Latino candidate emerged with the exact same record, platform and abilities as Obama, I would be equally excited about his or her campaign.
I would invite Mr. Hayden and others of the Sixties generation to try to put aside the old litmus tests and take a good look at what Obama has stood and fought for throughout his career. His platform and record with respect to every progressive cause is there for all to see. Yes, he has the ability to reach across the aisle, but it’s because he triangulates himself to the center; it’s because he listens and finds common ground in order to move forward a progressive agenda. His campaign eschews money from federal lobbyists and has directed considerable resources into grassroots political organizing in disenfranchised communities.
It is only through some magical combination of luck, charisma and timing that someone like Barack even has a remote chance at winning – a set of circumstances that I don’t expect to see again in my lifetime. Progressives would be making huge mistake, in my opinion, to ignore the Obama campaign because he’s not perfectly ideologically aligned with them on every single issue and does not want to replay the battles of past decades. This is the best chance we’ve had in a generation to bring about real progressive change at the federal level in America. Let’s take advantage of it!
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