Saturday, June 27, 2009

Obama On ABC

My friend who writes Faithfool (link included below) wrote to me the other day, saying he keeps his blog tidy; short and sweet. A great idea. I'll emulate.

In Weekend Opinionator, a feature of the NYTimes, they conclude a poor review for Obama's ABC Health Care Special. With 4.7 million viewers, Obama had less than half the number of viewers of CSI: New York, rerunning itself on who knows how many channels. Pardon my french, but whoopty-shit - just because America the Beautiful are junked out TV zombies, that doesn't make 4.7 million a small number of people. I'd be much more worried if more Bill O'Reilly videos were us-Tubed during the same period.

However, in the same breath I have to say not every Obama article need be favorable. Personally, I remember him saying, "make me do it" (referring to reform) and so I'd be perfectly happy if every media bit about Obama included a heady critique or three of his policy making. That being said, the NYTimes puts crap in it's html when they call 4.7 million a flop.

If I were Aristotle, I'd analyze that rhetorical point - the NYTimes announces a 4,700,000 viewer TV special a "ratings loser" (which kind of sounds like a good Onion headline). I'd say, well, maybe instead of trying to say 4.7 mill is a ratings loser, they're really just professing the viewpoint that watching the President isn't very popular. Even if I weren't Aristotle I'd be able to see that if everything that's less popular than CSI: New York (and the few other shows that beat Obama for rating that night) then literally more than ninety-nine percent of TV sucks. I figured that out myself long ago, but with different reasons. Using a misleadingly simple analogy, like determining popularity by measuring it against CSI: Miami is what the Greeks liked to call fallacy.

If I were the media, I'd be worried about providing a reform oriented President hours worth of direct persuasion to swaths of the country at a go. After all, hailed as the second coming by Oprah the Baptist, there is no telling what all this President might do. Bush really warmed up the plate for him by putting all our hopes and anxieties into a packed stadium with a six year losing streak. So Status Quo stadium is a little dumpy right now but if more of us cheer for the home team, maybe our Congressional players will make enough runs to get us the pennant. Meanwhile, please don't believe the people who think a President talking to America on the TV is a bad thing. What would Bush have said for an hour? Maybe one of the great purposes to civilization creating things like leaders is so that the leader can unite the people just enough to escape the denizens of fear and folly. Of all the things that can destroy the financial well-being of the country, steeply rising health care costs is probably the most likely, most needless, and the hardest to explain and understand. Even if you disagree with him and the liberal conspiracy which is quickly transforming the younger generation into secular pragmatists of great hedonism and worldly conscience, even if you're afraid that the government will end the good thing we don't have going with health care, even if you are supremely confident that the newest CSI is a new eschelon of entertainment perfection and is the one thing your entire day's joy comes down to, I urge you to listen; if Obama speaks we should centrally process what he's saying. You can bring your gun to church if you don't like what he says - that'll show him.


As a post-script, it's worth mentioning that television does more harm to America than every jihadist in the world put together. If obesity were a spirituality, TV would be it's holy icon. If an informed electorate were a rubix cube, TV would be the cretin that beat the cube with a big hammer for outsmarting him. If TV were a religion, it would be the Baptist evangalism brought to you by Coke, Holy War, Falwell, and Bakker, but it's only pay per view if you believe in god.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

All We Have To Fear

I honestly believe that all we have to fear is fear itself. (there was a great T-shirt I saw the other day and almost bought, totally Alaskan or other outdoorsy places, with a picture of a tent, campfire, and night mountainous starry sky, and the caption below it read: "All we have to fear is fear itself, and bears.") Sometimes I feel like the more we invoke, remember, and pay homage to the mysterious and terrible events of 9/11, the more we give the perpetrators what they wanted from us. I idealogically agree with all such sentiments to remember and pay homage to the tragedy, but I pragmatically take exception to giving the event undue significance. I came by this opinion honestly and through the confluence of three or more things.

I) right after nine-eleven-oh-one, I had been a pharmacy cashier and then wine-salesman/gift-store cashier at a little place in vaguely conservative Corvallis, OR. By ten-eleven the place had literally hundreds of U.S. flags, all makes and models, for sale and on display. I hadn't thought anything of it, until a random customer, having recently returned from a trip to Europe and having been overwhelmed by the fervor in her home town, literally broke into tears in the store after having walked around and shopped amidst our patriotic looking store. The lady wasn't just freaked out by the sudden out-pouring of flag-waving, she felt clenched and frightened by the idea that if she didn't salute, she'd be completely frowned upon and ostracized. Since she had become vocal and angry while in the store, telling me all these things she was upset by since I was the Rice's Pharmacy representative closest at hand (and fortunately empathic enough to calm her down and preserve the company's reputation a bit), I received the brunt of her anger at our perceived symbolic demagoguery and opportunistic faux-patriotism. I myself hold the flag dear in terms of the Enlightenment ideals it represents, but also agree with the late great George Carlin, opponent of anti-flag-burning laws, who said: "I'll leave symbols to the symbol-minded." The lady I described points to the overwhelming pathos generated in the wake of my wedding day, and how odd the national reaction would have seemed had we all not been living it day by day. My reaction to her was colored by my own understanding of our national commerce and media: in a nutshell, I agree with the theory of Manufactured Consent developed by Noam Chomsky and that other guy. What this theory informs me of is that things like excessive flag waving or the demonization of flag burning (or if, say, some purportedly liberal senator did or didn't wear a U.S. flag lapel pin) is a social control designed to marginalize critics of the Federal government. The neo-con\military-industrial agenda was more than served by the hordes of symbol-minded patriots waving flags in the faces of the Progressives and True Conservatives who were both calling for a non-reactionary response (which ended up being cast as "offering counseling and sympathy to the terrorist enemies."

II) a few years before, my cousin had attended a WTO riot in Seattle that made world news headlines. His involvement and, much later, a Sociology class I took at UAA educated me as to what the WTO does or could represent. There is no excuse for violent action, but if those responsible for the nine-eleven attacks were muslim extremists who attacked us because we represent freedom and infadel threat, why would they attack the World Trade Center? I understand that in the world of economics, New York represents the heart and capital of the U.S.'s might. I get that there definitely is such a thing as muslim extremism, but again I think that unless you view the twin towers as a particular symbol for the United States (the patron saint of economic hegemony?), the World Trade Center itself is way less tragic to lose than the thousands of U.S. teens and twenties from poor cities and farms who were sent off to Iraq.

III) a little while ago I was posting a blog about things along these lines and tried looking up the actual statistics on an average American's chance of dying from a terrorist attack on U.S. soil from a muslim extremist. So this guy Michael Rothschild estimates: "Even if terrorists were able to pull off one attack per year on the scale of the 9/11 atrocity, that would mean your one-year risk would be one in 100,000 and your lifetime risk would be about one in 1300. (300,000,000 ÷ 3,000 = 100,000 ÷ 78 years = 1282) In other words, your risk of dying in a plausible terrorist attack is much lower than your risk of dying in a car accident, by walking across the street, by drowning, in a fire, by falling, or by being murdered." -source, http://www.reason.com/news/show/36765.html.

These three things made me realize that whatever happened that day, nine-eleven has been repeatedly pushed and invoked to the benefit of American militarism. The only reason Americans accept the notion of a war on terror is because they're all mostly terrified of something less dangerous to them personally than cars, or, by some estimates, being struck by lightening. The only threat to the elite of America is that the U.S. political system will work, and peace will prevent the military/industrialists from continuing or furthering economic hegemony through U.S. and key U.S. ally military actions designed to open foreign markets to exploitation. Fortunately nationalism struck a resounding chord that day (even internationally in the form of sympathy by non-U.S. entities) and another Pearl Harbor let the Pentagon fill up on orders for newly mechanized, self-guided bombs, drones, and global reconnaisance while simultaneously marginalizing the rising tide of true patriotism, which questioned the wisdom of pissing off everyone on the planet by consuming 25% of it's resources.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Health Care Debate: The People vs. Dollars


I've been mentally engaged in following the current health care debate; Obama says health care is priority one, so I jump. You could argue that this means I'm a sheep, except that I've never been a sheep in my life - ask anyone who knows me just how "conformist" I am. In fact, I hear a lot of that rhetoric from the right, and it really ticks me off - if being a sheep means uniting under a leader who can put us back on an enlightened path, then I am a exceptionally sheepish sheep among sheep who happen to be the majority. Well gang, the fact is that I'm sick of business as usual in so many ways and though he's still a politician, B.H.O. is the only new train through town.

My Critique of: Following the Money in the Health Care Debate

Published: June 13, 2009

Congress appears ready to confront one of the nation’s most contentious issues — health care reform — and arguments will fill the air in the coming months.


Luba Lukova

Related

Health Plan May Mean Payment Cuts (June 14, 2009)

I left this link above here in because I like how the title sounds kind of panicky in a way related to a fallacy coming up here soon. You can talk about saving American families in two different ways: 1) lowering the costs of living so less people are foreclosed, bankrupt, poverty-stricken, depressed, driven to crime/illness, etc. ; or 2) cutting payments to industry. The problem with casting "payment cuts" as the headline/link above does, is that mean pharmaceutical companies and health insurance companies benefit the economy and Dow Jones Industrial Average, but they do so by selling the same drugs to Canada for half the price as what we charge Senior Citizens or AIDS patients for those same drugs here (unless they buy them in Canada, which works out better including the bus fare). They aren't punished for doing this, and much to the contrary, Wall Street would be very happy if such companies could charge even more.
So would a person generally on the Right or generally on the Left try to spin a National Health Plan by saying it "May Mean Payment Cuts" instead of "May Lower Cost of Health Care"? Further: is our national crisis called "We Need Lower Health Costs" or "We Need More Payments To Health Insurance Companies and Health Care Providers"? Just a fun rhetorical question to begin with...

Todd Heisler/The New York Times

TOP PRIORITY One thing is certain. Everyone will argue that the patient is their No. 1 concern.

Correction: everyone, if asked by a Newspaper or other media outlet, would say their patient is their No. 1 concern, without a doubt. But, shareholders of Health-related companies (with control of lobbying money money money), if asked by an Economics professor from their alma mater, would say that profit is their No. 1 concern. The very hallmark of the commerce we live in is, undisputedly and openly stated to be that profit should drive everyone and everything's economic decisions.

Much of the discussion so far has focused on President Obama’s proposal for a government-sponsored health plan that he says will reduce costs. Insurers and doctors argue it will limit patient choice. Drug companies warn that the quality of care could be compromised.

Many many more people than just Obama think such a plan will reduce costs. Many many doctors think it's a good idea, and how many people have any choice in health insurance right now? Do you have a choice when you get a plan from your employer (other than maybe plan A or plan B) or, and this is very critical, when you look into getting a job (like at an interview) do you find out what the health plan is before deciding whether to take the job? Also, how often do you decide not to take a job just because the health plan isn't sufficient for your needs or desires?

Anything drug companies warn me about, I'm going to take as a hostile act by a vile industry that is second only to oil in the Quantities of Dollars category. Oil does amazing things, and so do drugs, but oil companies like to wait twenty years before compensating oil spill victims, and drug companies like to spend more money on researching erectile dysfunction than anything else (wonder what feminism would have to say about this).

But Mr. Obama’s proposal is only one of many that await Congress as it wrestles with how to rein in exploding health care costs while taking care of the country’s nearly 50 million uninsured. The size and complexity of the issue are daunting. To help understand what’s going on, you need to follow the money.

Roughly $2.5 trillion is at stake, the amount the nation spends each year on health care, nearly a fifth of the American economy. How that money is divided up — or prevented from rising at its current pace — is at the center of the debate. Many doctors, insurance companies and drug companies say they fear that their revenues could shrink significantly and patient care could be threatened.

Before we talk about how that fifth of the American economy is divided up, I think we should mention the overarching goal: the nation shouldn't be spending a fifth of it's money on health care when we're buying lower quality at higher prices than any other industrialized nation on the planet. IF AMERICANS BEING UNINSURED AND DYING OF TREATABLE ILLNESSES OR POVERTY IS THE PROBLEM WE'RE TRYING TO SOLVE, THEN HOW DOES INCREASING INSURANCE AND DRUG COMPANY REVENUES OUT OF FEAR HELP THEM. It doesn't. It can't. If the profits these companies were making (which are already huge, successful, and amazing by any analysis) went towards outreach clinics or something I could see the logic in this. But, profits don't go there. That's why there's this thing called non-profit entities, also called charities.

Their arguments may prove to have merit. Doubt it. But “people are voting with their own economic interests,” said Les Funtleyder, a Wall Street analyst who is following the debate closely for Miller Tabak & Co. in New York.

When you hear nothing from one of the interest groups on an issue that is part of the larger debate, you can assume the silence means it has no financial stake in the outcome, he said. “You wouldn’t probably weigh in if you don’t have any skin in the game because if you weigh in, it makes you more of a target,” Mr. Funtleyder said.

Riiiight. Because Mr. Funtleyder knows insurance companies are really worried about their PR right now, so they're definitely policing themselves, spending extra to hire people to double check their persuasive efforts to make sure they are completely benign, utterly noble, and beyond reproach of those who would criticize their lobbying efforts as being somehow motivated by self-interest or profit-centered thinking. Riiiiiiiiiight. Those little drug and insurance organizations that have so much to fear from being a "target" of...my Mom...or, something...especially when they spend more money on television advertising than any other industry in America.

What all of the interest groups reliably support is any new program that would expand coverage to the uninsured. Such a program would translate into tens of millions of new, paying customers for hospitals, doctors, insurers and drug makers.

What all of the interest groups (from both sides of the aisle in Congress) reliably support is, and I'm paraphrasing here from the paragraph above: any new government paid program that wasn't like medicare - the monied interests lobbying Washington want to make sure nothing like Medicare happens, and that the U.S. spends dollars on the penny for their crappy services. Such a program would line millions of pockets for companies that profit from denying health care to policy holders or keeping really sick people off the books - namely for-profit Hospitals, Doctors, Insurers, and Drug Makers.

But what worries those groups is the accompanying talk in Washington about how to address the skyrocketing cost of health care, since any decline in spending would correspond to a reduction in revenues. Yes, helping the people would ideally mean not letting the industry take a fifth of our GDP every year. The discussion has become particularly heated over exactly how the government will find the savings necessary to help generate the $1 trillion or so that the government will need over the next decade to pay for universal coverage. A trillion per decade? Can the drug companies live on that? That's only 8.3 Billion a year - only an Air Force bomber or two. The nation’s doctors, for example, say they wholeheartedly support health care reform. But the American Medical Association has a long history of being opposed to legislation that threatens the status quo. It opposed the creation of Medicare more than 30 years ago. Indicative that the A.M.A. may fear socialism almost as much as Cheney does. Cuba has awesome health care, but their doctors can't even buy German automobiles - why bother?

What concerns doctors about a government-run insurance program that looks like Medicare is the possibility that it will pay like Medicare, said Robert Laszewski, a health policy consultant in Alexandria, Va. “Medicare pays doctors 80 percent of what an insurance company pays,” he said. “If you get a public plan, the doctors are going to get a 20 percent pay cut.”

WRONG WRONG WRONG. First of all, part of why Medicare pays 80 percent is that only old, poor, or otherwise destitute people get Medicare. If Medicare recipients pay only 80 percent for the drugs they buy we'd applaud that twenty percent savings as smart negotiating, but it's somehow different for other medical profiteers? Second of all, "If you get a public plan" the doctors across the nation will be able to give preventative medicine to every child and young adult, and only a small percentage of their customers (the currently uninsured) will suddenly be paying them .80 to the 1.00 (still a better rate than we get with privately administered health plans). Overall, doctors will get a pay increase since they'll have millions of new paying customers, and in this recession, even new customers who only pay 80% is a good thing in the long run. I hate the way the last sentence reads..."20 percent pay cut"...it's just like the link above in the way it spins saving the country from tailspin health care costs. Look at it this way: insuring everyone will tend to increase preventative care. But, by increasing preventative care, the rates of preventable diseases (like diabetes for instance) goes down in the population. So, all the companies that profit from the health care of people with these preventable diseases will no longer have as many customers. HEALTH CARE COMPANIES WILL ALWAYS SUFFER IF FEW ARE SICK, YET YOU DON'T SEE JOURNALISTS WRITING: "DRUG COMPANIES WARN THAT INCREASING NATION'S HEALTH WILL REDUCE PATIENT CHOICE." This is why I always say the media is far from left-biased, and is if anything military-industrial-right-biased.

But doctors are also likely to disagree among themselves over how different types of physicians should be compensated. Most people everywhere disagree about most things. Congress is thinking about raising the pay of primary-care doctors — general practitioners, family physicians and the like — as a way to encourage them to more actively oversee the care of patients and reduce expensive visits to specialists and hospitals. The record will show that Congress hardly ever votes for anything that reduces the amount of money it spends, much to our detriment. Congress has no business raising anyone's pay.

The specialists — the cardiologists, neurologists, surgeons and others — may have a different take on the discussion, Mr. Laszewski noted, especially if Congress cannot raise salaries of primary-care doctors without taking money from the highly paid specialists. “The question is, how are you going to help the primary-care doctors without cutting the cardiologist and the other specialists?” he asked.

Who cares? Let them fight over it in their BMW's. They can all eat cake as far as I'm concerned. Like I said, Congress shouldn't be legislating pay increases - I'm baffled as to why this is even in this article.

But even the family physicians, who stand to benefit the most, say they are opposed to a government-run plan if it reimburses them at the Medicare rate.

I love how this tiny bit of Health Care Reform minuteua is delved into by this supposedly broad treatment article - I've never heard anyone talking about how government run health care is going to affect family practicioners in particular, and even after this article, I'm not sure this argument is remotely central to the issue of skyrocketing health care costs - no one's complaining about family practicioners raking in too much profit, or that family practicioners are going to suddenly go out of business because of thirty new patients who only pay 80 percent. Just do the damn math!

Another group with a lot to win or lose is the nation’s private health insurers. Yeah, one of three stakeholders you've explicitly mentioned a couple times already, and also the only stakeholder that: benefits nobody's health, sacrifices nothing, does nothing except block access. With the number of people who are privately insured through their employer or their own policy not increasing, insurers are eager to find a new source of business. Health reform promises them at least some new customers who cannot afford insurance now but who might receive government help to pay for coverage. Yeah, cause conservative pundits need ammunition to rally against public health care...

But the trade association, America’s Health Insurance Plans, has clearly staked out its opposition to any kind of government-run health plan (wow, what NEWS!), which it says would have an unfair advantage (anything fair to us will seem unfair to them - guaranteed). The trade group fears its members would be driven out of business as the government uses its purchasing power to demand much lower prices from doctors and hospitals. Translation: Insurance giants fear their days are numbered because American's have figured out that we're the only country who throws money at health care to no avail. They're worried they can't survive if Health Care costs don't reach 75 % of GDP by 2075.

Karen Ignagni, the chief executive of the association, has criticized the government’s track record in running Medicare as a good reason not to expand government health insurance beyond the elderly and disabled. She says the program has done a poor job in taking care of people when they are very sick. “Medicare has not effectively coordinated care, addressed chronic illness, or encouraged high performance,” she recently told Congress.

I'm not going to bother posting and critiqueing the second page of the article. It reads much like this last paragraph, and is really just old, thoroughly debunked rhetoric left over from the Reagan administration. Needless to say, I feel very negatively about it because it is printed in mainstream press and goes rather unchallenged despite it's many fallacies and figures misleading to the cause of progress. So a hearty wheat toast to you and your health, may we all profit from the losses of wealth!

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Breif Addendum To David Brooks Critique: Sanger's Article the Next Day

Without becoming as verbose as my criticisms in the David Brooks critique, I just wanted to point out a couple of things in today's NYTimes article by David E. Sanger about G.M.
After investing all that time yesterday fighting against G.O.P. rhetoric creeping into the national debate over buying a 60% stake in G.M. with tax dollars (a move that could really just be viewed as a credit-default swap of already spent bailout money - as opposed to just giving the money away and not getting any stock in return for the U.S. taxpayer), I'm yet again amazed by how the press is really politically right, and hardly ever really politically left.
Be that as it may, I still want to counter-persuade you that G.M. shouldn't be waterboarded as Socialism just yet. I think because this whole deal has the potential to succeed and thereby make people like Hugo Chavez look smart - this is why the rhetoric has become so outlandish. Here's some examples:

"And the longer the government holds on to its stake [in G.M. stock], the longer the pressures will build, from Congress and elsewhere, to intervene."

This is a critical statement that comes almost verbatim from David Brooks' op-ed. Fact is, the longer the government holds on to its stake, the more likely it will profit from it's sale and thus make a good deal for the American taxpayer. Where is the analysis that says: "here is why the government will do worse than the private market"? There isn't any. There never is. It's just demagoguery and anti-American hate speech.

The idea that government corrupts everything it touches is the hallmark of the great American political LIE that is propagated by the right-wing. Supposedly the party of Patriotism, as with most things, they are penny-wise, pound-stupid, and when I hear the constant drone of how the government can never do any good (except the military of course - they get carte-freakin'-blanche to do whatever the hell they say they should do) I also hear the deathtoll of democracy, handed to the fascists on a platter by unthinking, headline reading masses of stupid voters. Yet, despite the G.O.P.'s constant criticism of government, nine times out of ten, when the curtain gets pulled, the G.O.P. is the one with their pants down doing something as indiscreet as giving no bid contracts to war profiteers, and outsourcing military services (like food service and the like) to private contractors that do what the military used to do itself for on-the-cheap, and we end up with soldiers eating McDonalds (toxic), drinking diet Coke cans that have baked in the sun (toxic), and a military that now costs the cost of running an army, plus the cost of paying people to run it for us, plus interest on the money we borrowed to pay more for less.

Please don't let your faith in the United States and it's federal government be chipped away by unsupported statements by the right-wing press - any decent debater would ask for their evidence card on that one. This rhetorical push to the right is exactly why "Yes We Can" made waves among voters, and the mission we still have to carry out is to make government good and cool again by making it work for the people instead of against them, fighting their rhetoric with our own (even though this will earn us ridicule as sheep by the right, who ironically enough, are self-described lock-in-step sheep to begin with - the key to their religulous success).

The alternative is to let politicians screw everything up with their pants down, then convince us to let Halliburton run Medicare because, though it will cost more, at least the politicians won't be able to screw it up anymore. Instead, Halliburton can do anything it wants to and the people will have no power over it like they would have power over a politician.

(By the way, no one has proposed Medicare be run by the Dubai-based oil services company called Halliburton, I just think they make a good straw-person to attack).

Also from today's article:

"Already there are signs that both Mr. Obama and the company will face inevitable tradeoffs when political pressures, manufacturing realities and the need to maximize the interests of taxpayers and consumers come in conflict."

Maximizing the interests of taxpayers and consumers doesn't carry any pre-ordained conflict (unless you think businesses should be run to the detriment of taxpayers or consumers). The inevitable tradeoffs that will likely come from this whole process is that "business as usual" stakeholders will suffer, while the taxpayer and consumer will likely benefit (which is exactly what usually happens when government intervenes in the free market - look at the history of the seatbelt, a cheap device that car companies used to say were bad for business).

Also:

"But sooner or later, the company’s environmental goals are bound to come into conflict — again — with its overarching need to prove that the new G.M. can turn a profit, the necessary step before private investors and lenders will step back in."

I admit that Green business models are unproven, and that G.M. turning a profit will be challenging, but after the number of Green, Inc. articles that have come from the NYTimes, you'd think that this notion of inherent conflicts between environmental goals and profitability would a bit more expertly dealt with.

Next:

"Profits will also dictate decisions about building cars in lower-cost countries like South Korea or China, decisions that the old G.M. faced every day. As soon as that happens, there will be protests in Detroit and on Capitol Hill that as long as G.M. is owned by American taxpayers, its cars and components should be produced on American soil."

This is exactly the whole freakin' point of saving G.M. in the first place! Not just to save Wall Street (G.M. shareholders, who are already wiped out for now), but to save Main Street in literally dozens of Heartland Midwest towns! If profits dictate that cars be built in lower-cost countries, then G.M. shouldn't build cars anymore. If cars should be built in lower-cost countries, then why shouldn't everything be built in lower-cost countries? Maybe it should be sold there too. Maybe we should just ride bikes and run Universities to service the rest of the world - since that's all that we seem to excel at any more. Maybe we should end the cycle of Consumerism in order to elevate ourselves out of the dark ages of expansionism.

But, maybe instead we could dare to protect American workers with a few tariffs and by keeping manufacturing jobs here in America, even if we the people of 60% Shareholding in G.M. only make a hundred bucks of profit instead of a million bucks because we refused to outsource everything we possibly could in the name of profit maximization.

and Lastly:

"So, just as George Bush spent much of his presidency seeking a way out of Iraq, Mr. Obama may spend much of his seeking a way out of the morass of new government investments in the private sector. The hardest part will be knowing how to time the withdrawal of government support — a balancing act between maximizing the investment of taxpayers and risking the company’s fragile state."

Again, I emphasize that this article has crapiness taken directly from David Brooks' G.O.P. rhetoric. Iraq and Bush have nothing to do with Obama and G.M. - how thick can you get? The implication is that collecting stock for bailout money already given (which is about equal to one tenth of one percent of what we spent or are going to spend in Iraq) is politically tantamount to invading a soveriegn nation for no legitimate reason. On behalf of the soveriegn nations of the world, including this one I say: quit your shoddy rhetoric trying to convince people that government by the people can't fix Main Street. We'll do the best we can and hope everything turns out okay, like we do with everything, and Mr. Obama is still almost nothing if not hope.

Tell ya what - we'll go ahead and try this G.M. thing since we have little to lose, and if ya'll are right that the government is a bungling idiot that can't help but crap on everything it touches - then we'll go ahead and get rid of the federal government. At that point it will be useless, and State constitutions should protect us pretty well. Fortunately, I know a few militia guys that can protect us if the U.S. military decides it isn't ready to disband itself. Until then, think with your brain instead of your news articles, please.

Critique of David Brooks' The Quagmire

I don't exactly know why I always feel compelled to pick on this guy, but I'm sure there is a good reason. I sure seem to have written much more than I thought I would in response to his opinions about G.M.. David Brooks must be the sneaking under the scope op-ed columnist for the G.O.P...

Happy Belated Birthday to my niece Rosie. She's 8. I'm going to try not to miss peoples' birthdays anymore. David Brooks probably has a secretary that does that for him.

Op-Ed Columnist

The Quagmire Ahead

Published: June 1, 2009

On Jan. 21, 1988, a General Motors executive named Elmer Johnson wrote a brave and prophetic memo. Its main point was contained in this sentence: “We have vastly underestimated how deeply ingrained are the organizational and cultural rigidities that hamper our ability to execute.”

Well, Mr. Photo-stuck-from-nineteen-mid-eighties, I don't necessarily believe your analysis that the brave new prophetic memo you refer to was thrust mainly thus so as you say in this sentence: "We have vastly underestimated how deeply ingrained are the organizational and cultural rigidities that hamper our ability to execute." I've seen office space enough times to know that the "company" doesn't always "execute" in such a way that the organizational and cultural rigidities (also known as "people") respond so well. Perhaps you should "enact" or "lead" where "executing" seems to have caused hampering.

Oh, and some perspective on the quotee here, from NYTimes in 1987: About a year after Mr. Johnson joined G.M., he was given the added responsibility of managing personnel operations, a position he still holds today as head of both the operating and the public affairs staffs. In that role, he has overseen the company's critical effort to thin its white-collar ranks by 25 percent by 1990.

So he was Roger's henchman for downsizing around the time computers and e-mails started filling many formerly human niches. Not saying this process was unnecessary, just remember that's who we're talking about here: Corporate Lawyer, handpicked of Mr. Job-exported-thank-you-very-fuck-you-much-Roger B. Smith. So maybe he's a little bit more into wall street than labor unions.



David Brooks

On Jan. 26, 2009, exactly 21 years and five days later, which is significant... uhhmm,,,Rob Kleinbaum, a former G.M. employee and consultant, wrote his own memo. Kleinbaum’s argument was eerily similar: “It is apparent that unless G.M.’s culture is fundamentally changed, especially in North America, its true heart, G.M. will likely be back at the public trough again and again.”

eerie that both CEO's used the word CULTURE, and that both were in charge of G.M. in a time when the companies were undergoing huge cost cutting pushes from the shareholders. Oh, wait, this second guy wasn't a CEO, he was just a former employee and consultant. Oh, I get it, you're just using these two quotes to get at the heart of what you're about to tell us about - DAVID BROOKS's ETERNAL THESIS: LABOR UNIONS = BAD, AND GOVERNMENT = BAD.

These two memos, written by men devoted to the company, get to the heart of G.M.’s problems. Bureaucratic restructuring won’t fix the company. Clever financing schemes won’t fix the company. G.M.’s core problem is its corporate and workplace culture — the unquantifiable but essential attitudes, mind-sets and relationship patterns that are passed down, year after year.

No one suggested that bureaucratic restructuring alone will solve any problems, though for any comprehensive plan, bureaucratic restructuring would have to be the first step - unless we intervened just to keep everything the same (but you argue against that later, so I guess we'll just move on). Clever financing schemes won't fix the company, but clever financing schemes from executive branch clever financing squads may be able to save the taxpayers money, and since that is your cheif complaint of Government, I'd think you'd be more on board with the clever financing schemes we can apply to G.M. - isn't that what all you business types want out of life anyway? Clever financing schemes that increase the wealth gap? Oh, nevermind, we're talking about middle class jobs here, so I guess that's...yeah, that's just social welfare really. Funny how only the rich seem to be immune from social welfare, and yet their entire historically unprecedented richness comes from all the rest of society. Weird.

G.M.'s core problem is: competetive imports, health care costs, a long tradition of fucking it's employees (which of course we have Michael Moore to thank for showing us that freak show), a lobbying arm which has thrown uncounted billions into the U.S. government to buy: i) easier emmissions standards, ii) tax breaks for S.U.V.'s, iii) deregulation and corporate welfare wherever possible, and iv) the kicker: trade deals like NAFTA which really make the Unions look bad since the company can now pay a legion of less than minimum wages in lieu of putting blue collar families into G.M. auto lots and those same car driving kids to college.

Over the last five decades, this company has progressively lost touch with car buyers, especially the educated car buyers who flock to European and Japanese brands. Over five decades, this company has tolerated labor practices that seem insane to outsiders. Over these decades, it has tolerated bureaucratic structures that repel top talent. It has evaded the relentless quality focus that has helped companies like Toyota prosper.

True. False. True (with caveats). True. The false is the "labor practices that seem insane to outsiders" which is oddly the most specific arguement (and I would argue is certainly the between-the-lines thesis of this whole article). I'm not up on G.M. labor history, but I'm pretty sure the outsiders Mr. Brooks-Square-Pants is referring to are people who think that organized labor is the sole cause of everything profit-taking. In some sense they're right: unions to reduce profits for corporations. This is why corporations do everything they can pay for legally (and sometimes not so much) to restrict unions. David Brooks is obviously implying that organized labor has become it's own downfall. I'd say this is a grandiose thesis to defend, and even if it were true, I'd say: if the citizens of the midwest saw fit to prevent conditions they experienced in dangerous, exploitive factories where children were burned to keep their mothers warm while working through the night (I made that last part up to exersice recipricol negative imagry counteracting Mr. Brooks' hyperbole), then so be it. I understand that the logical conclusion of the bean counter is that if labor does anything to make itself more expensive, then the mighty capitalist nation suffers. In rebuttal: if organized labor hadn't intervened, we'd all be working on Sunday instead of reading the NYTimes, let alone having the ability to find a bit of stability in this world. Villainizing the unions just keeps people looking in the wrong direction for real solutions.

As a result, G.M. has steadily lost U.S. market share, from 54 to 19 percent. Consumer Reports now recommends 70 percent of Ford’s vehicles, but only 19 percent of G.M.’s.

And that's the union's fault how? Doesn't Ford have one of those union thingy's too?

The problems have not gone unrecognized and heroic measures have been undertaken, but technocratic reforms from within have not changed the culture. Technocratic reforms from Washington won’t either. For the elemental facts about the Obama restructuring plan are these: Bureaucratically, the plan is smart. Financially, it is tough-minded. But when it comes to the corporate culture that is at the core of G.M.’s woes, the Obama approach is strangely oblivious. The Obama plan won’t revolutionize G.M.’s corporate culture. It could make things worse.

Well, since I didn't buy your "culture is the problem" opinion from before, I'll just say to this: what I'd like G.M. to do is make good affordable cars that people want to buy, whether the culture changes or not is immaterial. If by "culture" you mean the corporate culture that has kept G.M. thinking only of Wall Street and abso-stinkin'-nothing about Main Street for the past few decades, well then, I'd say restructuring the bureacracy and finances of G.M. is probably the best place to start. Next we'll get the retirees and current employees national healthcare (sticker prices drop a couple thou.) and then we'll get what factories are left in the U.S. to buy domestic products (keeping other critical American industries afloat in hard times so we don't lose them forever) to produce cars that Americans want to buy and drive (affordable, reliable, easy to repair, and maybe not 20% bigger than the model from five years ago, as a start). Oh, and G.M. gets to quit being involved in high-profile racing and sporting events, focus on long-term sustainable investments, and the best part is, they'll be a car company again, instead of a derivative trading credit giant! Hooray for the U.S. auto industry!

First, the Obama plan will reduce the influence of commercial outsiders. The best place for fresh thinking could come from outside private investors. But the Obama plan rides roughshod over the current private investors and so discourages future investors. G.M. is now a pariah on Wall Street. Say farewell to a potentially powerful source of external commercial pressure.

First, the Obama plan will increase the influence of patriotic and progressive thinking insiders. I know insider is kind of a dirty word, but in this case, insiders means people who actually do the car making, the policymakers of the most powerful country on the planet (oft-villainized bureaucrats), and executive consultation of the highest caliber. The best place for fresh thinking, contrary to your statement is not going to come from outside Wall Street investors. When the air is tainted with the heavy breathing of derivative traders and outsourcers, it's just not so fresh, m'kay? G.M. is a pariah on Wall Street because Wall Street is lined like a rich uterine wall with bloodthirsty capitalists who've found strong footholds in the G.O.P. and Democratic party alike for busting unions and increasing the percentage of profits they get to keep every year. If G.M. is a pariah at an Ebenezer Scrooge convention, I'm not too worried. Say farewell to a potentially powerful source of external commercial pressure to turn a U.S. auto company into a multinational auto company brought to you by Dubai, Mexico Maquilladoras, and South East Asian Parts Suppliers. I'm not xenophobic, but I draw the line at the Corvette.

Second, the Obama plan entrenches the ancien régime. The old C.E.O. is gone, but he’s been replaced by a veteran insider and similar executive coterie. Meanwhile, the U.A.W. has been given a bigger leadership role. This is the union that fought for job banks, where employees get paid for doing nothing. This is the organization that championed retirement with full benefits at around age 50. This is not an organization that represents fundamental cultural change.

If Obama had brought in a whole bushel of new management, you'd be screaming about that instead. Meanwhile, the U.A.W. has nearly collapsed and is putting all their eggs in the basket of this dying company to pin their hopes and homes and dreams on. If this union can really get job banks where employees get paid for doing nothing, then I bet they have the ability to champion retirement at 55 or 60 (now that people are living longer, unlike when the union championed that right - which police officers, military personell, and a whole lot of other industries offer - if you start young, you only need so many years in before you can collect and I get it, maybe this is one of the union's least favorable ideas during an economic recession - it sure looked great when everything was booming though didn't it). This is not an organization that represents fundamental cultural change - this is an organization that represents it's fundamental culture to enact changes that keep auto workers employed and livin' the dream.

Third, the Obama approach reduces the fear that impels change. The U.S. government will own most of G.M. It would be politically suicidal for the Democrats, or whoever is in power, to pull the plug on the company — now or ever. Therefore, the current managers can rest assured that they never need to fear liquidation again. There will always be federal subsidies for their own mediocrity.

Third, the Obama does not use the dark side of the force to bring change to the Republic! If it is political suicide to pull the plug on the company, then really most of that damage has been done already - and Obama's still popular! So guess what - nngghaa! Wrong. The U.S. government, if it attaches by vein into G.M.'s plug, will likely reserve the right to liquidate any current managers who seem to be really screwing up. If anything I thought you'd argue that fear of losing their jobs would keep whatever you define as "top talent" from ever working for G.M. and thereby guaranteeing it's mediocrity. There have always been federal subsidies for the auto industry; it's just when people started listening to David Brooks and company did the government start giving tax breaks to horrifically gas guzzling S.U.V.'s to drive up the domestic price of gas that federal subsidies became truly destructive.

Fourth, the Obama plan dilutes the company’s focus. Instead of thinking obsessively about profitability and quality, G.M. will also have to meet the administration’s environmental goals. There is no evidence G.M. is good at building the sort of small cars the administration demands. There is no evidence that there is a large American market for these cars. But G.M. now has to serve two masters, the market and the administration’s policy goals.

What does that mean - "dilutes the company's focus"? WTF?! The administration isn't going to pump green technologies into G.M. turning it into some Cap-and-Trade Frankenstein! G.M. has a bunch of small cars, and big cars, and every single one of them would sell better if they used less gasoline. Less gasoline = better environmental quality = profitability. I understand that business isn't that simple, but it isn't a whole lot more complicated than that either. They don't just have to make the electric Obamaton Scooter model. They could still make Camero's for Highway patrol offices, and all kinds of GM fleet and commercial vehicles. Maybe they could serve one less master than before: the stockholders that pushed leadership to create a failed company.

Fifth, G.M.’s executives and unions now have an incentive to see Washington as a prime revenue center. Already, the union has successfully lobbied to move production centers back from overseas. Already, the company has successfully sought to restrict the import of cars that might compete with G.M. brands. In the years ahead, G.M.’s management will have a strong incentive to spend time in Washington, urging the company’s owner, the federal government, to issue laws to help it against Ford and Honda.

Fifth, every company has incentive to try and get money from the Government and that will never change. Company's care about profit, and really this point is designed to make you forget that companies pay lobbyists to get money from the government, not the other way around. If Obama has one lick of sense, he'll begin sweeping lobbying reform in his second year by using G.M. as a model; get the money out of Washington and back into the heartland for god's sake. Production centers back to U.S. - good. Restrict imports, also good, although it would be nice to see all those desirable eco-friendly G.M. cars that are already sold in Europe to be also sold here. And, in closing, if the U.S. government ever makes a law to help G.M. over Ford, I'll eat my hat. You've crossed the line this time Mr. Brooks-n-Beans - I'm takin' you for a one way trip on the fallacy-train buddy! This last statement about Ford and Honda is so silly, I worry I may spill red ink on my keyboard while laughing!

Sixth, the new plan will create an ever-thickening set of relationships between G.M.’s new owners — in government, management and unions. These thickening bonds between public and private bureaucrats will fundamentally alter the corporate culture, and not for the better. Members of Congress are also getting more involved in the company they own, and will have their own quaint impact.

Sixth, creating relationships between formerly robotic institutions is one of the innovative ways that Mr. Obama has set about solving some of our problems. These thickening bonds between public and private stakeholders (who happen to work in offices much of the time) will fundamentally alter the corporate culture, and they certainly can't do any worse than putting auto-factories in foreign countries, losing market share and consumer confidence while doing nothing substantial about it, and going bankrupt, just when the American Dream and our American Identity could have used a little old fashioned Chevy dependability.

The end result is that G.M. will not become more like successful car companies. It will become less like them. The federal merger will not accelerate the company’s viability. It will impede it. We’ve seen this before, albeit in different context: An overconfident government throws itself into a dysfunctional culture it doesn’t really understand. The result is quagmire. The costs escalate. There is no exit strategy.

The end result is that Mr. Brooks has become more like unsuccessful intellectuals. If G.M. is to become more like Toyota, I heartily disagree that creating partnerships between Government, Workers, and Stockholders will block that coup (coupe?). Instead, America's method of ballsy investment and go-getting-never-give-up-ness will hopefully prevail. An overconfident government does throw itself into a sometimes dysfunctional culture it doesn't really understand - fortunately the U.A.W. is a soft forgiving mistress who has substantial staying power, so once the Government gets the rhythm right, she should be churning out cars, wages, and profits again in no time. There doesn't need to be an exit strategy Mr.End-it-blandly-Brooks; this is our freaking country and we're not planning on exiting it any time soon (to counter your rhetorical thrust there), and furthermore (to address your literal concerns) I'd be happy to see a U.S. government owned school bus, mail truck, light-rail car, and public service and utility vehicle factory. If all our other industries fail because of poor management like your heavily conservative croney buddies advocated for (and still are), it would be nice to know our kids can still get to school - even if we have to switch to natural gas next year because of revolutions in the Middle East (which we would have helped cause, if history is any indicator).