Stephen Fortunato’s Dystopian Fantasy

By Carroll Andrew Morse | May 11, 2006 |
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Follow along to understand the problem with the Marxist philosophy(*) espoused by Rhode Island Superior Court Judge Stephen Fortunato in Wednesday’s Projo.
1. Start in a place where Marxists and non-Marxists can find common ground. People get compensated differently for the work they do and there’s not always a strong correlation between some quantity like “importance to society” (or even “importance to your company”) and income received.
2. So how are incomes allocated? At present, they are determined by a market system, which Judge Fortunato believes to be inherently amoral…

In sum, globalization, whether called imperialism or capitalism, is neither benign nor moral for the majority of the earth’s 6 billion people. It has always been thus, and there is nothing inherent in capitalism — whose only guiding principles are increasing profits and cutting costs — that results in just wages and benefits for all…
The exorbitant salaries and lavish lifestyles of corporate profiteers is not a result of irresistible natural forces but, rather, of their domination of economic and political power. An executive makes $12 million a year not because some free-market force dictates this, or because of his inherent worth to the community, but because of decisions by executive-pay consultants and cross-pollinated boards of directors, who sup at the same trough.

3. Since capitalism is neither “benign nor moral”, Judge Fortunato wants to do away with it. In Judge Fortunato’s opinion, to reject that “fundamental changes in the current economic order” are necessary is to accept a “dire and fatalistic view”.
4. Wanting to do away with a system because it is neither benign nor moral implies there is a system more benign and moral that can replace it. The Judge doesn’t tell us in his op-ed what the new system is, but he does drop a few clues…
4a. The new system will be based on the “laws of right”…

The 19th Century philosopher of art and social reformer John Ruskin put it well: “It [is] the privilege of the fishes as it is of rats and wolves to live by the laws of demand and supply; but the distinction of humanity, to live by those of right.”

4b. The new system must be powerful enough to mandate income levels for everybody…

Equally unjust and irrational economic arrangements lead to the payment of exorbitant amounts of money to celebrities and sports figures, but no one could legitimately argue that the absence of Britney Spears or Paris Hilton — or even Johnny Damon — from society’s stage would be as calamitous as the departure of local nurses or garbage collectors.

5. But who will determine what the “laws of right” are? And who will determine how much income each person rationally and justly deserves?
Trying to answer these questions leads straight to the heart of the internal contradiction that ultimately unravels any socialist argument.
Having decried the “domination of economic and political power” by a few, Judge Fortunato implies that the remedy is more consolidation of economic and political power in a single set of hands; what is needed is a government powerful enough to manage all economic activity in a country so as to guarantee that everything is “fair” according to the “laws of right”.
But on what basis does the Judge assume that the people that rise to the top of his unspecified ideal system will be any more benign and moral than the people at the top of the current system? He doesn’t answer that question, ignoring the fact that the oligarchs in his centrally-planned dystopia will have much more power to pursue selfish interests at the expense of everyone else than do the elites in a free-market system.
Ultimately, Winston Churchill said it best…

It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have been tried.

The same sentiment can be applied to capitalism and economic systems.

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Harrah’s Has Entered Competitive Bidding Before

By Marc Comtois | May 11, 2006 | Comments Off on Harrah’s Has Entered Competitive Bidding Before
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Thomas K. Jones of West Warwick–who lives across the street from Harrah’s proposed casino sight–has done some research and discovered that Harrah’s has entered a competitive bidding process before. The difference in dollar figures is staggering.

I am not a legislator with legislative staffers and researchers at my disposal. Yet it took me all of five minutes to do a Google search which led me to a story about Harrah’s competitive high bid of $520 million for a casino license in Rosemont, Ill. If you do a Google search on Harrah’s Entertainment, you will find other sites with stories involving Harrah’s Entertainment being involved in competitive bidding with many other states in this country and competitive bidding out of this country.
My first point is that Harrah’s Entertainment is involved in competitive bidding for a casino license in other states far higher that the $100 million they are willing to give to Rhode Island. Why? Is it a sweetheart deal? To whose benefit, taxpayers of Rhode Island or Harrah’s Entertainment? You tell me the answer.
Second point, without competitive bidding, there will always be a question in the minds of Rhode Island citizens as to why this General Assembly now at this time knowingly has information that in the State of Illinois Harrah’s Entertainment had open competitive bidding for a casino license (and bid $520 million). But in Rhode Island, why is the General Assembly allowing Harrah’s to be the only bidder? Why is the General Assembly allowing Harrah’s Bid of $100 million when Harrah’s has been involved in competitive bidding in Illinois (for $520 million)?
The fact is that we all know that the competitive bidding process will produce the best results for Rhode Island. Why are we settling for less? Whether you’re for or against the casino, the voters should have the privilege of voting knowing that this General Assembly provided the best deal with a competitive bidding process for a casino license.
I have also looked into the matter of the revenue generated by various casino operations and my investigation has revealed that of all the casinos in this country, the ones drawing the most money on an annual basis are Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun. I believe any casino proposed for Rhode Island would bring as valuable as those facilities and as valuable as the one being proposed in Illinois. Yet Rhode Island is slated to receive a mere fraction of the monies those states are receiving.

I tried to duplicate Jones’ search and couldn’t (though this may be close) find the particular bid info, but I did discover that Harrah’s was the high bidder to build a casino in Waukegan, Ill. The price: $325 million. The point is that there can be no doubt that a competitive bidding process would be most beneficial to Rhode Island. But that should only occur after the approval of a statewide referendum legalizing the concept of casino gamblin, and not a specific enterprise.

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Creeping Socialism: ACORN & the Living Wage

By | May 11, 2006 |
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I have never understood the logic of the “living wage” argument, where certain organizations – like ACORN – seek to have government agencies mandate new and higher wage rates. Such people believe that higher wages must be realized and that they can only be achieved by government fiat, not by the ability of the market to efficiently incorporate wage information into the best possible outcomes over time.
More specifically, if they really believe it is possible for government to unilaterally set higher wages without any adverse economic consequences to private sector businesses or public sector operations, they sure do not think very expansively. Instead of mandating wages of $10-12/hour, why not simply legislate that everyone will earn $100,000/year? Or $150,000/year? Yet nobody does that. Could it be that they really do know there are adverse economic consequences to higher wages?
If only the living wage debate was so straightforward. But, more on that shortly.
ACORN stands for the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now and they are a key player in the tax-eater world. In their words, “the mission of ACORN is clear, the vision remains: power through organization and direct action.” A close reading of their website will quickly clarify their socialistic politics and alignment with the more politically radical labor unions.
Steven Malanga, in his book The New New Left: How American Politics Works Today (reviewed here), has this to say about the living wage movement:

…The living wage poses a big threat to [cities] economic health because the costs and restrictions it imposes on the private sector will destroy jobs – especially low-wage jobs – and send businesses fleeing to other locales. Worse still, the living-wage movement’s agenda doesn’t end with forcing private employers to increase wages. It includes opposing privatization schemes, strong-arming companies into unionizing…
The living-wage movement got its start in mid-1990’s Baltimore…
As it spread beyond Baltimore, the living-wage movement at first purposely kept its aims narrow…
Soon, though, living-wage supporters began to win ever broader laws, covering ever more workers and businesses. Detroit’s 1998 living wage applied to any business or non-profit with a city contract or to any firm that had received $50,000 or more in economic development assistance – ranging from the Salvation Army to small manufacturers located in the city’s economic development zones. San Francisco’s law went beyond city contractors to cover workers at the city airport, on the grounds that businesses there leased land from the city; airlines, newsstands, fast-food restaurants – none was exempt…Today forty-three states have at least one municipality with living-wage legislation on the books, or proposed laws.
The movement owes much of its success to the model campaign – exportable anywhere, anytime, fast – that its proponents, above all ACORN’s national living-wage center, have created…The prospective living-wage activist can find everything he needs to know in a step-by-step manual, concocted by ACORN director of living-wage campaigns Jed Kern and Wayne State University labor economist David Reynolds.
The manual echoes the organizational theories of legendary radical Saul Alinsky. Coalition building is key. Alinsky’s modus operandi was to get diverse constituencies to support his various causes by emphasizing their shared interests…
To pull off such coalition building in practice, you need more than a manual, of course; you need money – and the movement has lots of it, thanks to the backing of leftist foundations. The Tides Foundation has given hundreds of thousands of dollars…The Ford Foundation has been another big contributor.
The coalitions the movement has assembled have included hundreds of religious groups, allowing organizers to present their economic agenda as deeply moral…Labor groups have signed on too…
Living-wage campaigns have repeatedly outflanked the business community by practicing what ACORN calls “legislative outmaneuver.” Local groups work behind the scenes for months before going public. They draft partisan economics to release timely studies on the prospective benefits of the living wage before opponents can come up with any countering data, and they try to keep any actual legislation off the table until the very last minute, so that there’s no fixed target for opponents to get a bead on…
Providing the intellectual muscle (such as it is) for the living-wage movement is a small group of Marxoid economists led by University of Massachusetts-Amherst professor Robert Pollin, a longtime board member of the Union of Radical Political Economists, founded in the 1960’s to bring Marxist economics to American universities…in 1998 he co-authored…the book that has become the movement’s bible, The Living Wage: Building a Fair Economy.
In The Living Wage, the class war rages on – and on. Businesses, assert Pollin and Luce, have grown increasingly hostile toward workers in recent years. Their sole evidence for this claim – that the unionization rate has plummeted over the last three decades – ignores the conventional explanations for union decline in the United States: more intense global competition, the shift to a service-oriented, knowledge-based economy, and more generous benefits at nonunionized companies. But never mind: to keep ravenous capitalists under control, they argue, government clearly needs to impose a national living wage on the private sector. And that’s just the beginning. Caps on profits, mandated benefits, rules to make unionization easier, massive taxation – government will manage the economy from top to bottom in The Living Wage‘s warmed-over socialism…
The complete rejection of a free-market economy by these living-wage gurus…is too much even for many liberal economists. One of the most telling critiques of The Living Wage came from self-professed liberal economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman. In an article archived on the “cranks” section of his website, Krugman observes that “what the living wage is really about is not living standards, or even economics, but morality. Its advocates are basically opposed to the idea that wages are a market price – determined by supply and demand.”

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Kerr Offers Sage Advice to Kennedy

By Marc Comtois | May 10, 2006 |
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It’s not really news when those of us on the conservative side of things think Patrick Kennedy should bow out in light of his most recent shenanigans. Nor is it news when his Democrat enablers praise him for his “bravery” and endorse him for another Congressional run. What is news is when a liberal like Bob Kerr tells him it’s time to go:

In 1994, when Kennedy ran for Congress, he faced Dr. Kevin Vigilante. Vigilante is probably one of the most impressive people to seek public office in Rhode Island in the last quarter century — smart and caring and dedicated. Vigilante versus Kennedy offered a choice between accomplishment and family ties.
And family ties won. Credentials counted for nothing. There was a Kennedy in the race and somebody else.
And so it has gone. Kennedy has remained Rhode Island’s Kennedy in Congress. He has stumbled along with a boyish charm that has remained boyish. He is likable, in large part, I think, for his refusal or inability to change much. He still seems a kid among the grownups. And he screws up as kids will.
The incidents pile up — the one at the airport, the one on the sailboat, more than one at the wheel of a car. Kennedy has addiction problems. A lot of people do. But his become mini-dramas, played out in painful public confession.
Last week, he drove his Mustang into a concrete barrier near the Capitol in Washington in the early morning. Capitol police appeared to do all they could to keep the incident under wraps, but this one got loose.
Kennedy called a news conference to say he was going into rehab at The Mayo Clinic to deal with his addictions. Would he have made the same decision if the incident had not been made public?
I have to disagree with my friend Charlie Bakst on this one. I don’t think what Kennedy did was courageous. I think it was politically expedient. He didn’t have many options — except, of course, to decide there have been enough embarrassments, enough bad judgment, enough childish indulgence, enough examples of simply not being able to handle the pressures of public office while swimming in the family fishbowl.
On Monday night, Rhode Island Democrats endorsed Kennedy for reelection despite the questions raised by his behavior. Why not? He’s still a Kennedy. He’s still a sure thing.
But his fellow Democrats didn’t do him any favors. They didn’t make it easy for him to walk away and try to find a life in which he will be known for more than a last name. Who knows — he might end up happy.
And this would seem the time to find out if that’s possible.

Now, no matter what personal matters lay at the root of Rep. Kennedy’s recent actions, the fact remains that he seems to consistently revert back to the same sort of self-destructive, irresponsible behavior. He may be better at covering it up, but it’s still there. This isn’t about politics. Rep. Kennedy owes it to his constituents to follow Kerr’s advice. Let another Democrat run in his stead: the Democrats could probably run a ham sandwich in the 1st Congressional District in RI and keep the seat (Sorry Messrs. Leather and Rogers). Most of all, Patrick Kennedy owes it to himself to take a step back and focus on what really makes him happy. Right now, it doesn’t seem as if the “family business” is right for him.

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More Misguided Thinking From RIFuture & State Legislators on Illegal Immigration

By | May 9, 2006 |
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RIFuture is, once again, promoting muddled and ultimately dangerous thinking in their most recent posting on illegal immigration, A Closer Look at Immigration Reform.
This latest commentary again ignores how communist and socialist forces – people openly hostile and opposed to American Founding principles of liberty and equality – were key players in many May Day protests.
Ignoring some of the players is symptomatic of a larger problem: how their latest commentary again blurs factual distinctions between legal immigration and illegal immigration – thereby willfully undermining critical public policies related to American sovereignty, American citizenship, and the rule of law.
Their posting quotes from what they describe as a “compelling essay” by Bill Shuey, Executive Director of the International Institute of Rhode Island. In addition to declaring his support for the toothless McCain-Kennedy amnesty bill, here are some choice excerpts:

The proper place for immigrants – especially those deemed “illegal” (I prefer the term “undocumented” or “out of status” when characterizing the between ten and thirty thousand such residents of our state. We serve thousands of individuals every year who simply want to realize their “American dream.” Part of the American dream is becoming a U.S. citizen. We ought to remember who the immigrants of Rhode Island really are. Maybe you are an immigrant, or your neighbor, or co-worker. Quite probably – if you aren’t an immigrant yourself – your parents or grandparents were immigrants. Immigrants built Rhode Island and continue to do so; we feel strongly that Rhode Islanders should stand up and demand that immigrants receive basic protections and human rights: the freedom to travel as they please, see their families, choose their jobs, and have equal protection under the law.

Well, why don’t we all just gather ’round the campfire, hold hands, engage in happy talk, and sing Kum By Yah. A counter-argument to such shallow thinking was offered in an earlier posting on this site, Identifying Four Core Issues Underlying the Immigration Debate.
But shallow thinking is not limited to RIFuture. If you want a local example of how our General Assembly is also blurring the distinction between legal and illegal immigration, read how this bill grants illegal immigrants the right to pay in-state tuition costs at our state colleges – and then says the schools cannot share their information on the illegal status about such people with any government agencies. Wink, wink. Why pass a new law if we are going to knowingly not enforce existing laws? Now take a step back and think about the implications of this proposed bill: An American citizen born and raised in Massachusets will pay more to attend URI than an illegal immigrant. In other words, we are economically penalizing a law-abiding citizen and economically rewarding a law-breaking non-citizen. And that is just one small example of how illegal immigration and current amnesty proposals undermine the rule of law – and the sense of fair play – in America. All of us should send that message to the bill’s authors: Assembly members Grace Diaz, Joseph Almeida, Thomas Slater, and Anastasia Williams.
Unfortunately, the granting of in-state tuition rights to illegal immigrants is not limited to Rhode Island. As Peter Kirsanow, a member of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, writes:

They’re doing so in clear defiance of congressional intent to make such preferential treatment unlawful. Title 8 Section 1623 of the U.S. Code (part of the Illegal Immigration Reform Act of 1996) provides in pertinent part:

Limitations on eligibility for preferential treatment of aliens not lawfully present on the basis of residence for higher education benefits
a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an alien who is not lawfully present in the United States shall not be eligible on the basis of residence within a State (or political subdivision) for any postsecondary education benefit unless a citizen or national of the United States is eligible for such benefit without regard to whether the citizen or national is such a resident.

So the problem is actually worse than expected here in Rhode Island. The introduction of this bill by these four legislators not only violates all sense of fair play, it violates Federal law. What kind of example are they setting for the residents of our state? For our children? It is an outrage that only encourages further disrespect for the rule of law.
These kind of actions are creating a growing reaction across the country and (H/T to Power Line) Diana West addresses that in her editorial, Fighting Back:

“Backlash” is one of those words with an iffy reputation, connoting an angry or even unreasoned reaction to a benign or just plain immutable reality. Like a tantrum, a backlash is widely regarded as an emotional spasm that inevitably subsides, leaving the supposedly benign or just plain immutable reality to unfold unmolested…
…More often than not, “backlash” is the word mainstream liberals use to describe the sound the silent majority makes when it finally gets around to piping up. The nation’s borders are breached by millions of illegal aliens, who not only provide an immorally cheap labor force but also more than 29 percent of prisoners in Federal Bureau of Prisons facilities: That’s progress. Somebody yells, Hey, put up a fence: That’s backlash. The following headline in The WashingtonPost, summing up reaction to May Day amnesty demonstrations, crystallizes this cracked-prism vision. “After Protests, Backlash Grows: Opponents of Illegal Immigration Are Increasingly Vocal.”
Who, The Post seems to wonder, do these increasingly vocal “opponents” think they are: illegal aliens?…
But this is no fit of pique. Indeed, it could be part of an ad hoc movement. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, 463 immigration bills have been introduced just this year in 43 states, “the biggest crop of state immigration proposals ever recorded,” The Post writes. Most of the measures, the newspaper continues, “are designed to get tough on illegal immigrants, on employers who give them jobs and on state officials who give them benefits” – in other words, to fill the breach left by Congress…
Will these get-tough – or, at least, get-tougher – state measures pass? The answer will tell us a lot about whether what we’re witnessing is a passing “backlash,” or a durable national movement, that has emerged from the vaccuum on border protection and national preservation left by our leaders in Washington.
…I feel as though I’m seeing more anecdotal reports of American citizens taking local action. The fact is, if Americans can find a sustainable level of outrage and concern to drive such reform at the state level, we, as a nation, might actually have a chance to survive the hand-wringing, no-can-do gridlock in Washington.
…Surely, it’s time to wean ourselves from immorally cheap labor and immorally cheap goods. Surely, it’s time we learn that some things cost more than we want them to, even – no, especially – American citizenship.

So where should public policy go from here? In an article, A Two-Step for America: Addressing our immigration problems (available for a fee), Kate O’Beirne offers these ideas:

…Militant advocates for illegal immigrants smear those who oppose legalizing 11 million aliens as hostile to Hispanics…
But America is a nation of legal immigrants. The way to maintain that tradition is for Congress to reject the amnesty and guest-worker bills in favor of a two-phase approach. In Phase One, Congress would get serious about enforcing the immigration laws – and only afterward, in Phase Two, increase legal immigration. This approach would be pro-enforcement, pro-immigrant, and in accord with public opinion.
The American public are sticklers for obeying the law. They see a program that permits illegal aliens to live and work in the U.S. while awaiting citizenship as an amnesty for lawbreakers. And they recognize that millions around the world would jump at the chance to be accorded this privilege – if only they met the prerequisite of having violated our laws.
Public opinion overwhelmingly favors getting serious about border control and cracking down on illegal immigration. Polls indicate that more people view immigration as a security issue than as an economic one. A majority favors stationing troops at the border with Mexico and building a 2,000-mile security fence.
…Even senators McCain and Kennedy, the authors of the leading amnesty plan, have bowed to public sentiment by adopting a rhetoric of strengthening the borders. Of course, this is merely a pose, as their plan actually rejects all serious enforcement proposals. It neither increases the number of agents nor builds new barriers at the border. It does not make employers verify the legal status of new hires. It requires little more by way of enforcement than the creation of a national strategy to deal with our porous borders some time in the distant future. Its approach, in other words, is amnesty now, security later.
New enforcement measures aren’t enough. We also need to fix the federal agencies that are responsible for implementing them. Four years ago, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that immigration fraud owing to the widespread use of phony documents was “pervasive and significant.” This poses a security problem: Two-thirds of the 94 foreign terrorists known to have operated in the United States between the early 1990s and 2004 committed immigration fraud. The GAO also concluded in a recent study that the Department of Homeland Security has little prospect of discouraging the use of fraudulent documents because it has no strategy for punishing offenders.
Phase One of immigration reform should set appropriate benchmarks to establish that our borders have been strengthened, the problem of fraudulent documents has been addressed, the backlog of immigration applications has been eliminated, and an effective system of workplace enforcement is in operation. Our first priority should be dramatically to reduce the number of illegal entrants, currently about 800,000 a year. A reduction would permit easier assimilation of legal immigrants – and consideration could then be given to increasing their numbers.
There is no reason to wait until an enforcement system is in place before debating what future legal-immigration proposals should include: The incentive for illegal immigration could be reduced if, along with effectively enforcing our borders and ruling out amnesty, we gave preference in any future guest-worker program to those who have resided in their countries of origin for two years prior to entering the U.S. Privileged consideration should also be given to immigrants who demonstrate a strong desire to assimilate and become Americans by learning English.
There is little reason to think that illegal aliens will have more respect for the laws Congress passes than Congress has itself. Today’s dysfunctional system is a creature of Congresses that habitually pass immigration laws they have no intention of enforcing. By undertaking reforms in the two phases outlined here, the current Congress could win the public trust necessary for fundamental – and positive – change.

Newt Gingrich offers these thoughts as a guide to a more robust immigration policy in Honesty in Immigration: Our Shining City on a Hill Requires a Firm Foundation of Law:

The thousands of people we have seen marching in the streets of our cities and the planned May 1 boycott to protest U.S. immigration policy are the product of two decades of a fundamentally dishonest immigration system.
For more than 20 years, the United States has failed to control the borders or enforce immigration laws while many U.S. businesses have profited by breaking the law. In turn, the U.S. government failure to enforce the immigration laws has encouraged outright defiance of federal authority by certain state and local jurisdictions. Adding insult to this deplorable state of affairs is an immigration bureaucracy that has been slow, cumbersome, rude, heartless, and incompetent in the discharge of its duties.
This dishonest system has lured millions to enter our country illegally and obtain work here illegally.
Where are we and how should we proceed?…
First, we must deal with the immediate. Open borders are a grave national-security threat. Why have a multibillion-dollar ballistic-missile-defense system when a terrorist can rent a truck and drive a weapon of mass destruction across the border? Gaining control of our borders is therefore an immediate and pressing national-security requirement. The secondary effect is that it would dramatically stem the flow of illegal immigration, illegal drugs, and the human trafficking of slaves (mostly female and mostly for sexual exploitation).
The longer-term threats of illegal immigration are economic and cultural.
Economically, in a world of vast income differences, instantaneous communications, and cheap travel (even when illegal), we cannot continue to allow a wide-open illegal employment system. The current flood of illegal migration if left unchecked for a period of decades will decisively undermine the economy in both economic and legal terms.
Culturally we have shifted from an integrating, English-speaking American citizenship focused model of immigration to an acceptance of foreign habits (which are going to include corruption), foreign loyalties (illustrated by the waving of foreign flags by many of the marchers, some with attitudes of contempt) and the insistence (not necessarily by immigrants) on creating non-English speaking legal and educational structures.
Instinctively, most Americans understand the corrosive effects of lawlessness on the economy and the culture.
Most Americans are open to people who want to become American, who will work hard, obey the law, and who are willing to learn English and American history. Within this framework of patriotic integration it is possible to be both pro-conservative and pro-immigrant.
But this framework cannot stand unless it is built upon the solid foundation of the rule of law�

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Bakst Confusion: Democrat Tax-Cutters?!

By Marc Comtois | May 9, 2006 |
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ProJo columnist Charles Bakst is confused: how can Rhode Island Democrats want tax cuts for the rich? Playing to stereotypes, Bakst understands why Republicans want them–“Carcieri, who proposes spending slashes that will hurt the poor, asserts that he wants to boost Rhode Island’s economy”–but he’s simply flumoxed by how the representatives of the average working people could, too. So he tried to find out.

Here was Democratic Rep. Paul Moura, a proud, combative liberal steeped in the labor movement, standing in the House and touting the tax-cuts-for- the-wealthy bill. “We have to do this now,” he thundered.
My head would have been spinning, except I’d already talked with two of his top House allies, Majority Leader Gordon Fox and Finance Chairman Steve Costantino. I mentioned the social service advocates standing near the House entrance with signs such as “DON’T HELP THOSE THAT CAN HELP THEMSELVES.”
Costantino said he hadn’t forgotten his roots and hoped to generate revenue and charity to finance social programs: “Ultimately, there’s a responsibility of government to keep high-wage workers in the state . . . so that they can pay for those ‘root’ issues that are so dear to the Democratic Party.”
As if in an echo, Chamber of Commerce president [Laurie] White would say later, “I’m very pleased that we’re recognizing that a strong social service safety net and a competitive tax policy go hand in hand.”
Indeed, Democrat Fox said economic development might alleviate the need for so many social services: “Stay the course; trust us.” Long term, he said, the bill will benefit everyone.

And why is that? Let me help you out, Mr. Bakst. Nationally –somehow [it must be magic!!!]–tax revenue has increased even though the tax rates have gone down under President Bush.

budget receipts April 06.jpg

And we shouldn’t forget that just over 54% of those revenues come from the pockets of the top 5% of wage-earners. The very people to whom this new House bill is trying to appeal.
But I guess that’s just silly math and accounting tricks, right? After all, it’s much more emotionally gratifying to continue to demonize the wealthy and keep trying the same policies that continue to fail:

[There’s] no guarantee this bill will work — or is fair. Kate Brewster of the Poverty Institute at Rhode Island College contends it simply will drain money from state coffers. She often has depressing days at the State House, but on the day the House voted on this bill, she told me, “This is one of the worst.”

Ms. Brewster is a victim of her own inability to think outside of a class-warfare, static economic pie line of thinking.
To turn to the national economy one more time: tax rates went down, tax revenue went up, and spending went up. Now, the Congressional spending boom is a concern to many conservatives, but it should give liberals like Ms. Brewster some hope.
After all, with the time and money at her disposal as an advocate for the poor, she should have no trouble convincing her Democrat friends that some of the new tax revenue generated by a booming Rhode Island economy should find its way to her so that she can help the poor. And who knows, with a growing economy, there may be fewer poor for her to help, as Rep. Fox mentions. And isn’t that what we all really want?

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Rethinking Ethanol

By Carroll Andrew Morse | May 8, 2006 |
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60 Minutes ran a story last night on ethanol as a fuel for automobiles. There now exists a proven fuel blend called E85 that is 15% traditional petroleum, 85% ethanol. The ethanol can be produced from corn which can be grown in abundance in the United States. Automobile engines using an advanced fuel injection system capable of sensing and adapting to different fuel mixtures (“flex-fuel engines”) can use both E85 and regular gasoline. Flex-fuel engines are not significantly more expensive than standard fuel injection engines.
For years, conventional wisdom held that ethanol was not the solution to America’s energy problems. The belief was that more energy was needed to produce a gallon of ethanol-based fuel than was released when burning one. A growing number of studies are casting doubts on this assertion. A recent study done by study done by Hosein Shapouri and James Duffield of the USDA and Michael Wang of Argonne National Laboratory concluded that corn-based ethanol contains 1.34 times the non-renewable energy needed to produce it.
This Department of Energy summary of Shapouri, Duffield and Wang’s work explains two reasons for the new thinking. One is technical. Modern farming techniques and fertilizers have reduced the amount energy that goes into harvesting a bushel of corn. The other reason involves energy accounting. The DOE summary argues that the solar energy needed to produce a bushel of corn shouldn’t be counted against the cost of ethanol production because solar energy is “free, renewable and environmentally benign”.
To expand on the second point, the laws of physics (thermodynamics, to be exact) state that there is no process that can produce more energy than it uses. This is true even of fossil fuels. The energy released in burning a fossil fuel is less than the sum of the energy required to extract and refine it plus the energy from whatever geologic processes produced it. However, the geologic energy — energy that’s already been stored whether we use it or not — is not counted in fossil fuel efficiency calculations. In the same sense, the solar energy that goes into crop farming should not be counted against the cost of producing ethanol; the energy is there whether we use it or not.
According to a USA Today article, E85 is not as efficient as traditional gasoline — you’d have to burn more E85 than traditional gasoline (albeit at a cheaper price) to go the same distance. But unless there are problems bigger than this with the analysis of the viability of ethanol, it is long past time to consider what needs to be done to take the next step towards increasing the nationwide usage of ethanol-based fuels.

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Kurtz: National Media Gave Kennedy a Pass

By Marc Comtois | May 8, 2006 |
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Washington Post political scene reporter Howie Kurtz observes that the national media has been uncharacteristically silent concerning Patrick Kennedy’s previous “adventures,” especially since he is, well, a Kennedy:

It’s hard to imagine that Patrick Kennedy would have gotten elected to Congress a dozen years ago without his last name.
It’s equally hard to imagine that the media would be going wild about his late-night car crash and prescription drug addiction if he weren’t a Kennedy.
The only lingering mystery is why national news organizations didn’t pounce earlier on the Rhode Island Democrat’s long history of alcohol and drug abuse, depression and a series of downright embarrassing incidents.
The answer in large measure is that Kennedy hasn’t been a very important House member. But given the journalistic obsession with the Kennedy family and its tragicomic soap opera, he does seem to have gotten an easy ride — except in the New England press, which has chronicled his every misstep.
While Kennedy, the 38-year-old son of Ted Kennedy, was widely reported to have held a news conference Friday, it was nothing of the sort. He read a statement designed to elicit sympathy, saying he was going into rehab, and took no questions. This amounted to an age-old damage-control technique: changing the subject…
When national news organizations last week began throwing together their congressman-in-trouble profiles — along with the inevitable Ambien sidebars — there was a long list of local clips to pore over.
In 1991, while a state representative, Kennedy acknowledged — following a National Enquirer story — having used cocaine as a teenager, but said he had kicked the habit years earlier by checking into a treatment center.
In 2000 alone, Kennedy got into a scuffle with an airport security guard, who said he shoved her during an argument about oversize luggage; admitted taking antidepressants; was accused by a charter company of causing $28,000 in damage to a rented sailboat; and, after a few drinks and an argument, had a distraught date call the Coast Guard to be rescued from his chartered yacht.
Just last month, Kennedy hit another car in a Rhode Island parking lot.
Relatively little of this drew significant national coverage…

However, Kurtz does note that Kennedy gets more negative coverage here at home.

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Another Poll, Another Chafee Lead (but smaller)

By Marc Comtois | May 5, 2006 |
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New Hampshire polling outfit American Research Group (via RIFuture) seems to have done a more robust job of polling on the RI GOP Primary race than some recent efforts. The poll methodology was “based on 384 completed telephone interviews among a random sample of likely Republican primary voters in Rhode Island from April 25-May 2, 2006. The theoretical margin of error is plus or minus 5 percentage points, 95% of the time.” The poll question was:

If the primary election for US Senate were being held today between Lincoln Chafee and Steve Laffey, for whom would you vote – Chafee or Laffey? (names rotated)

And the results broke down as follows:

Likely primary voters — 48% Chafee / 39% Laffey / 13% Undecided
Rep. (56% of sample) — 46% Chafee / 42% Laffey / 12% Undecided
Ind. (44% of sample) — 51% Chafee / 35% Laffey / 14% Undecided

ARG also has a neat thing called the “Ballot Lead Calculator,” which tries to “take into consideration the sampling error for the difference between two estimates that are derived from the same sample.” I entered the numbers as instructed, and it revealed that Sen. Chafee has an upper margin of victory of 18.3% and a lower of -0.3%. This means, according to ARG, that “there is no significant difference between the ballot numbers for candidates A [Chafee] and B [Laffey] – they are statistically tied in that poll.” This is probably largely because of the significant number of undecideds.
Now, all of you amateur pollsters can play around with what you think the breakdown of Republicans versus Independents will really be in the GOP primary and come up with whatever number satisfies you!

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Discussing Patrick Kennedy

By Marc Comtois | May 5, 2006 |
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In the world of blogging, this whole Patrick Kennedy fiasco certainly qualifies as “low hanging fruit.”
CNN is reporting that Kennedy is going to enter rehab while the Congressman’s spokesperson says it’s going to be a “significant personal statement.” Meanwhile, we await Congressman Kennedy’s remarks.
Liveblogging Kennedy:
He realized this past Christmas he was addicted to prescription drugs and checked into Mayo Clinic.
He doesn’t remember the Wednesday incident and is concerned over this. He doesn’t want to ignore it. He takes full responsibility and knows he needs help and is going back to the Mayo clinic this afternoon.
He hopes his openness will help others and thanked his family and friends. And he called for passage of mental health parity.
He took no questions.

END Liveblog
Here’s the link to the ProJo story.
First, let me say I wish no personal ill will to the Congressman, but I do have to say that–politics aside–his past actions have always led me to question his competency. This latest incident has done nothing to change my mind. And it certainly seems as if he may be playing on his mental health and addiction vulnerabilities right now. The sad fact is that Patrick Kennedy has displayed an instability that is simply not acceptable for a member of Congress.
Open forum time: have at it.
UPDATE: Thanks to “smokinggun” for the link to Smoking Gun’s copy of the police report.

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