The transfiguration of the GOP isn’t only about ideology, however. It is also about demography and temperament, as the party has grown whiter, less well schooled, more blue-collar, and more hair-curlingly populist. The result has been a party divided along the lines of culture and class: Establishment versus grassroots, secular versus religious, upscale versus downscale, highfalutin versus hoi polloi. And with those divisions have arisen the competing electoral coalitions—shirts versus skins, regulars versus red-hots—represented by Romney and Santorum, which are now increasingly likely to duke it out all spring.
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Reservoir Dogs and the GOP Primary
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Yoda's advice: Good for Luke, Bad for America
This may be good advice to an aspiring Jedi or Tibetan Monk but it isn't such great advice for America's economists and economic policy decision makers.
Paul Krugman bemoans in this post that the field of economics has seemingly lost many of its hard-won insights of the past eighty years.
I’ve been arguing for a while that much of the economics profession has lost its way, recapitulating old errors because it made a point of unlearning what Keynes taught. But it’s not just economists who willfully threw away hard-won insights.
While Krugman outlines a series of theories as to why this is so, I don't think he has embraced the one I find most interesting. The documentary of the 2008 economic collapse "Inside Job" directed by Charles Ferguson exposes the corrupt link between Wall Street and our nation's leading business and economics departments. Here Ferguson confronts Columbia University Business School Dean and former George W. Bush economic adviser Glenn Hubbard about potential conflicts of interest between his teaching and the exorbitant consulting fees he is paid by Wall Street banks and corporations.
It is so rare to see people like this called to account; one must simply relish the look on this guy's face when he is confronted with his shameless shilling for corporate robber barons. These are the people, or in this case one of the servants of these people, who have led us in to the abyss.
Monday, February 20, 2012
Sisyphus and Krugman
...among those journalists and politicos who enjoy his column, it's not uncommon to hear the comment that Krugman might be a little more effective if he were just a little less rabid. "It is considered the appropriate thing to say at a dinner party that, while Krugman is very bright, he's just too relentless on Bush," drawls James Carville. "Because to accept Krugman's facts as right makes the Washington press look like idiots."
Sunday, February 19, 2012
Chutzpah or Mad Genius?
This courtesy of Talking Points Memo:
As the economy slowly improves, the GOP’s effort to recalibrate its message for the 2012 elections continued Sunday as rising star and Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels took to arguing that the recovery is too slow and the economy remains “pathetically weak.”
“Let’s not kid ourselves: this is the worst recovery ever from a serious recession, and history says the deeper the down, the sharper the up,” Daniels said on CNN’s State of the Union. “It should have been a very vigorous one. Hasn’t been.”
“It is another sign of the importance P.R. tactics play in American politics,” Nyhan wrote. “The OMB director — once a budget expert — is now an operative chosen for his political skills, particularly his ability to sell the administration’s economic proposals in the media.
“In August [2001], Daniels admitted as much, telling the Wall Street Journal that ‘[t]o the extent I bring anything … to this job, maybe it’s an ability to think about how a product, whether it’s Prozac or a president’s proposal, is marketed.’ Predictably, he has displayed a disturbing tendency to make dishonest claims for political advantage on federal budget issues.”
Saturday, February 18, 2012
Weekend Musical Stylings
Friday, February 17, 2012
GOP Unhappy with Conservative Economic Recovery
Thursday morning brought the news that weekly jobless claims were down to their lowest level since March 2008. General Motors, which survived only because of a government bailout (that Romney opposed), posted its largest annual profit in history. And the Bureau of Labor Statistics released data this week showing that new housing starts are picking up, moving away from the December slowdown. True, the economy is far from fully healthy or at full recovery, but continuing good economic news will make Romney’s message a harder sell.
And despite GOP protestations that the nation is being led by a Kenyan, atheist, communist, anti-colonialist the recovery is actually conservative in nature. As Matthew Yglesias incessantly points out the entirety of job growth is coming from the private sector while public sector employment (teachers, police officers, firefighters) continue to contract.
Paul Krugman takes this analysis one step further and points out that if the federal government simply helped state and local governments keep their employment numbers constant with population growth that would be tantamount to one million to three million more jobs.
This suggests to me that we could put well over a million people to work directly, and probably around 3 million once you take other effects into account, without any need to come up with new projects; just transfer enough money to state and local governments to let them return to doing the essential business of government, like educating our children.
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Gleefully Cliche
I like the TV show "Glee." I often tell my students that they should not feel the need to leave high school to experience the "real" world. For better or worse high school is part of the real world and it's best not to delude oneself otherwise. (If anything college is not the real world, but that is for another post.)
Glee has proudly positioned itself as the champion of the outcast, the downtrodden, the bullied. But it is frustrating because its depiction of the different groups that fall within these categories is so uneven. Glee is rightfully admired for its compassionate, subtle, nuanced and bold depiction of the plight of the gay teenager. The character Kurt Hummel is arguably Glee's biggest breakout and best character. Episode after episode tackled issues rarely touched by network television: coming out to your parents, being bullied because of your sexual orientation or one's first romantic experience.
Monday, February 13, 2012
In a political debate, far, far away...
In preparation for taking my son to see the release of Star Wars: The Phantom Menace in 3D I was perusing the original reviews at Rotten Tomatoes to verify if my horrible reaction to that movie was shared by the critics at the time. Unfortunately it was as bad as I remembered, seeing as it garnered a 38% rating from top critics.
Can also say this:
Demography is destiny, for better or worse.
Demographic trends contain nothing but good news for those of us who are eager to see gay men and women have the right to marry whoever the hell they want. Additionally Democrats are eager to point to national demographic trends that identify hispanics, who overwhelmingly vote Democrat, as the fastest growing group in the country. It is hoped that they will soon help usher in a national Democratic governing coalition that will rival the FDR/New Deal coalition that dominated U.S. politics and policy from 1932 to 1980. These two charts summarize the demographic trends phenomenon nicely.
But sometimes when one lives by the sword one dies by the sword and there is an accompanying demographic trend that threatens liberal interests that is less talked about. While we may welcome the replacement of a generation of people who are homophobic and xenophobic we are simultaneously losing a generation who remembers an America before Social Security. Liberal or conservative, odds are if you are over the age of 65 you support the Social Security program.