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WHO'S IN CHARGE HERE?
Magpie is a former journalist, attempted historian [No, you can't ask how her thesis is going], and full-time corvid of the lesbian persuasion. She keeps herself in birdseed by writing those bad computer manuals that you toss out without bothering to read them. She also blogs too much when she's not on deadline, both here and at Pacific Views.

Magpie roosts in Portland, Oregon, where she annoys her housemates (as well as her cats Medea, Whiskers, and Jane Doe) by attempting to play Irish music on the fiddle and concertina.

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Saturday, August 12, 2006

Just a bunch of wimps.

That's pretty much the line that hardl-ine US neo-cons are taking when they talk about how Israel has been conducting its war in Lebanon. According to these armchair warriors, says journalist Jim Lobe, Israel's failure to smash Hezbollah immediately with a massive land invasion shows a lack of nerve on the part of Ehud Olmert's government — a lack that could endanger Israel's relationship with the US.

Of the hard-line criticisms of Olmert, the most controversial has been the charge that, by failing to prosecute the war more vigorously, his government was undermining the administration's confidence in Israel as an effective ally in the war on terror.

Because of Hezbollah's strategic importance to Iran, "America wants, America needs, a decisive Hezbollah defeat," wrote Krauthammer in his Aug. 4 column, which noted that the existence of a "fierce debate in the United States about whether, in the post-Sep. 11 world, Israel is a net asset or liability."

"Hezbollah's unprovoked attack on Jul. 12 provided Israel the extraordinary opportunity to demonstrate its utility by making a major contribution to America's war on terrorism," but Olmert's "unsteady and uncertain leadership" had put that in question.

"The United States has gone far out on a limb to allow Israel to win... It has counted on Israel's ability to do the job. It has been disappointed," according to Krauthammer, who is known to be a favourite of Cheney.

Although Krauthammer's message was particularly crude, it was echoed in part by hard-line neo-conservative editorial writers in both the National Review and the Wall Street Journal, which repeatedly called for Olmert to take stronger action more quickly lest, as the Journal put it, "President Bush's entire vision for the Middle East ...suffer a severe setback."

"Let's face it: Nobody likes a pushover; nobody likes a weakling," Ariel Cohen, a neo-conservative at the Heritage Foundation, told Nir. "This is something Olmert and (Defence Minister Amir) Peretz have to think about: how Israel is perceived not only in Europe and the Arab world, but also in the United States."

Just remember: These are some of the voices that are influencing what passes for policy-making in Dubya's administration. Pretty f'n scary, isn't it?

Via Inter Press Service.

| | Posted by Magpie at 8:54 AM | Get permalink



Friday, August 11, 2006

'Terrorism is insidious. It gets into everything.'

Lenin's Tomb has some observations about how people are responding to the airliner bomb plot. While the post is about the UK, pretty much all of the observations apply to the US, too.

The narcissism is astounding. Lebanon is actually being terrorised by Israel, Iraq is actually being terrorised by America, and this merciless, cruel, sadistic, reckless destruction is easily subsumed into the fabric of daily life — the first allegation of a threat of a potential attack in Britain at some unspecified point in the future, and suddenly we are encouraged to luxuriate in the fantasy prospect of annihilation. Knowing full well that the building next door is not about to be flattened under several tonnes of explosives, we are encouraged to pretend it's World War II and evince the stoicism of Blitz survivors. The Blitzkrieg is upon Beirut, but we are supposed to imagine that little Nazis are flying over our heads. Don't be complacent. Look out your windows. Keep an eye out. Don't forget to cast a nervous glance over your shoulder. Take notes. Tell the government everything. Root out the evil within. Question your own motives. Telephone the terrorist hotline if you suspect yourself of possessing the slightest nihilistic impulse. Oh — and do try to go about your daily life as normal.

Via wood s lot.

| | Posted by Magpie at 11:33 AM | Get permalink



More on the timing of the current terror alert.

Here's a very pertinent observation:

It was liquid explosives that were suspected in the plot back in 1995 that Clinton foiled, the one to blow up numerous US airlines over the Pacific. Why is it that since that time it's been okay to bring liquids on board planes, but now suddenly it's not? Why was it safe on Monday, but not safe on Friday? Bush knew at the start of his administration that terrorists had tried to use explosive liquids to blow up American planes, so did he or didn't he prepare for that possibility, and if he did, then why are they now banning all liquids (since, in principle, they should have already had a way to monitor the liquids they've been letting us bring on over the past ten years)? Something isn't quite right.

Via AmericaBlog. (Hat tip to Doug Krile)

| | Posted by Magpie at 10:16 AM | Get permalink



Falling right into line.

Greg Sargent has an excellent post on how, since yesterday's revelation of the terror plot against transatlantic airliners, the US press is parroting the GOP line that issues involving 'homland security' and the 'war on terror' automatically work in favor of Republicans.

Imagine for a moment that the situation were reversed, that Dems controlled the White House and Congress but all signs showed that they were going to take a beating at the hands of the GOP minority. Is there any doubt that the papers would be full of pieces about the surging GOP challenge ...?

Via The Horse's Mouth.

| | Posted by Magpie at 10:01 AM | Get permalink



A series of coincidences?

Consider these facts:

Given all of that, does it surprise you that — out of all of the weeks that the UK government could have chosen to reveal the plot to blow up transatlantic airliners — Dubya's pal Tony Blair chose this particular week?

I didn't even need to put on my tinfoil hat to wonder about the connections — especially given this.

| | Posted by Magpie at 9:18 AM | Get permalink






Thursday, August 10, 2006

Charles Darwin really needs a posse in the US.

Read it and weep.


Results of international study on acceptance of evolution

Don't look for the US anywhere near the top.
[Graphic: Science]


A comparison of peoples' views in 34 countries finds that the United States ranks near the bottom when it comes to public acceptance of evolution. Only Turkey ranked lower.

Among the factors contributing to America's low score are poor understanding of biology, especially genetics, the politicization of science and the literal interpretation of the Bible by a small but vocal group of American Christians, the researchers say.

"American Protestantism is more fundamentalist than anybody except perhaps the Islamic fundamentalist, which is why Turkey and we are so close," said study co-author Jon Miller of Michigan State University.

Via LiveScience.

| | Posted by Magpie at 12:25 PM | Get permalink



'I'm still in Lebanon, and couldn't get out if I wanted to.'

In the comments to the post below, a reader suggests looking at an interview he did with a young Lebanese art student who lives in Beirut. I read the interview and I suggest that you do, too.

I then asked her about how she felt about Hezbollah when they are fighting Israelis on Lebanese soil, and about the Lebanese army, other potential resistance or paramiliary groups, and whether others were opposing the invasion, to which she responded:

"As long as Hezbollah fight soldiers trying to invade my country, I must admit I am very grateful. But the firing rockets AT CIVILIANS has got to stop. On both sides. Even though we're getting a lot more than they ever will.

Hm, well, as an answer to your questions: Nasrallah is a very smart man, though I do not support him, I admit to that. Hezbollah aren't a simple militia, they're a powerful high-tech army. Don't let the beards and heated "Allah w Akbar" chants fool you. They have impeccable strategy, weaponry, paramedics and doctors accompanying their troops. They are a fully fledged army and intelligence agency, with hospitals, orphanages, retirement homes, and a TV station, with better chances to stand up to Israel than our measly army will ever have. why?

After our civil war ended, the USA sold the Lebanese army the only weapons it *allowed* them to yield -- mostly M-16, basic anti-aircraft weapons (useless against Israel's supersonics) and some tanks. . . It's common knowledge that if that part is damaged, you might as well throw the tank away. This is our Lebanese army, a crippled old man, unable to fight off anything. If it tries to re-arm, the international community and UN (not to mention Israel) will quickly "condemn" it. and we, unlike the USA / Israel axis, *have* to obey the UN.

The only ones capable of resisting Israel are the Hezbollah, although I must say, they have monopolized and capitalized on resisting Israel. Even if someone else wanted to help, they'd have to either join hezbollah or forget it. (I'm mainly refering the communist resistance that once existed and was quite effective in Lebanon.)

Via Insomnia's LiveJournal.

| | Posted by Magpie at 11:48 AM | Get permalink



Is the war in Lebanon just a dry run for a US attack on Iran?

It's no surprise to this magpie that Larisa Alexandrovna thinks so. Over the past year at Raw Story, she's been warning about a slide toward a US-Iran war for months now. In her current AlterNet piece, Alexandrovna suggests that such a war is no longer a possibility — it's almost dead-certain:

When I was told that Israel had begun a military strike on Lebanon, for me there was no question: This was the trigger. Just prior to Israel's bombing of Lebanon, I got a call from a friend in the military who told me about two Israeli troops being kidnapped across the border into Lebanon. My first question was, "Do they say it is Hezbollah?" and of course we know now that it was. But when my friend answered that it was indeed Hezbollah, I knew that Israel -- for whatever reason -- had become a proxy U.S. war machine for Dick Cheney's madness of regime change in Iran.

My friend said not to worry, that the soldiers would be exchanged for Hezbollah prisoners in Israel. I knew this not to be the case, and I said that this will be full military action, full war, with many casualties. My friend thought I was overreacting.

Yet there is a full war and full military action, and it is not by accident. It is also exactly on time to be the trigger. But this will not be the worst of it, because Syria will be drawn in; it has to be, and then Iran. This is the strategy that was feared and that is now being played out across the Middle East.

This is a strategy long wanted by the far right and people like Dick Cheney, and this is a strategy that was long in the planning. Even as we began military operations in Iraq, Iran was the subject of all major military discussions. And yet when Israel became engaged in military operations against Lebanon, the entire world failed to understand the true nature of this conflict and the real issues behind it. Israel is a client-state of the United States and, as such, it will do as it is told.

For Israel to act so harshly and so carelessly, putting its entire nation in jeopardy and with world support failing, one can only imagine the pressure that the Cheney "cabal" used to push for such an event.

The US 'mainstream' press has consistently put little credence in warnings like Alexandrovna's. (Seymour Hersh's New Yorker articles on US plans for an attack on Iran are the notable exception.) That's why I was so surprised to this piece in Newsweek's online version, in which Michael Hirsh suggests that, as early as this fall, the proxy war between the US and Iran currently going on in Lebanon is very likely expand into a 'real' war. The excuse for a US attack on Iran, says Hirsh, is the danger to Israel's security posed by Iran's nuclear program.

[H]ardliners in both Jerusalem and Washington are increasingly skeptical that diplomacy can work. There is also an unnerving tendency in the Bush administration to identify Israel's interests with America's, which is endangering Washington's position with whatever friends among Islamic moderates it once had. Despite leeriness about a military strike option, both the Israel and American militaries have been preparing for it. Washington has been selling bunker-busting BLU-109 bombs to the Jewish state while the Pentagon updates its own target lists. Israeli officials are also galvanized by a new sense of vulnerability to the rogue missiles exposed by Hizbullah's successful evasion of the Israeli air force. "We have seen a lot of proliferation by Iran to Hizbullah," said the Israeli official. "Take the C-802 missiles, one of the best surface-to-sea missiles in the world. China sold them to Iran. Then Iran violated its contract commitments to China and transferred them to a third party. We didn't even know this weapon existed in the Third World. So what else are they transferring?"

Let's not forget that America's timetable for confronting Iran has always been driven, in part, by Israel's own. Vice President Dick Cheney declared more than 18 months ago that Iran was at the top of the list of "the world's potential trouble spots" and cited a possible Israeli attack on Iran's nuclear sites as a reason.

Are you scared yet? I am.

| | Posted by Magpie at 8:41 AM | Get permalink



Joe Lieberman redux.

Editorial cartoonist John Sherffius summarizes Sen. Joe Lieberman's decision to continue his campaign for the US Senate after being beaten by challenger Ned Lamont in Tuesday's Democratic primary in Connecticut.


Bumper sticker for Joe Lieberman

[Cartoon © 2006 John Sherffius]

The full-sized cartoon is here. You can see more of Sherffius' cartoons over here.

Via Association of American Editorial Cartoonists.

| | Posted by Magpie at 1:44 AM | Get permalink



Missiles, moral 'high ground,' and propaganda.

These exchanges that aired on Sunday's edition of CNN's Reliable Sources deserve more attention than they've gotten. Speaking are program host Howard Kurtz and the Washington Post's Pentagon reporter, Thomas Ricks. (Ricks is also the author of Fiasco, a devastating book about the Dubya administration's conduct of the Iraq War.)

KURTZ: Tom Ricks, you've covered a number of military conflicts, including Iraq, as I just mentioned. Is civilian casualties increasingly going to be a major media issue? In conflicts where you don't have two standing armies shooting at each other?

RICKS: I think it will be. But I think civilian casualties are also part of the battlefield play for both sides here. One of the things that is going on, according to some U.S. military analysts, is that Israel purposely has left pockets of Hezbollah rockets in Lebanon, because as long as they're being rocketed, they can continue to have a sort of moral equivalency in their operations in Lebanon.

KURTZ: Hold on, you're suggesting that Israel has deliberately allowed Hezbollah to retain some of it's fire power, essentially for PR purposes, because having Israeli civilians killed helps them in the public relations war here?

RICKS: Yes, that's what military analysts have told me.

KURTZ: That's an extraordinary testament to the notion that having people on your own side killed actually works to your benefit in that nobody wants to see your own citizens killed but it works to your benefit in terms of the battle of perceptions here.

RICKS: Exactly. It helps you with the moral high ground problem, because you know your operations in Lebanon are going to be killing civilians as well. [...]

KURTZ: Tom Ricks, "The New York Times" reported the other day, quote, "Israel is now fighting to win the battle of perceptions," which to me says the battle of headlines. And, in fact, an Israeli cabinet minister was quoted, not by name, as saying, "That the narrative at the end, is part of the problem." I'm starting to hear echoes of Iraq.

RICKS: Echoes of Iraq, yes. But also the Israelis are very sophisticated in their handling of the media. They consider it part of the battlefield, officially. The word "narrative" always comes up with conversations with Israeli national security officials. They consider shaping the narrative, the battle for the narrative, to be key as part of any war fighting. So they see the media as part of the battlefield. And, in fact, there's some belief from our reporters that they have occasionally targeted the media.

The full transcript of Sunday's Reliable Sources is here.

Via CNN. (Hat tip to Monika Bauerlein at Mother Jones.)

| | Posted by Magpie at 1:23 AM | Get permalink



If you don't feel like you're worrying enough.

Try checking out 'Six Things to Nuke If You're Serious.' You'll find ample food for your paranoia.

Only a couple of them are obvious. (To this magpie, anyway.)


Map of tsunami from Cumbre Vieyo landslide


Via Accelerating Future.

| | Posted by Magpie at 1:06 AM | Get permalink



Wednesday, August 9, 2006

Dark days in Lebanon.

Here's part of journalist Chris Allbritton's latest post from Beirut:

[In] Beirut, the situation is growing dire. According to Nabil el-Jisr, coordinator for the Higher Relief Commission, Lebanon's power plants have cut down on production in order to stretch out the fuel left in the country, but most estimates gives us about a week of diesel fuel for generators and about the same for gasoline supplies, even with rationing. Three-hour waits in lines get you 10 liters of gasoline these days. I stupidly rented a car after having no end of troubles with hiring drivers, but now I just mainly leave it parked in an attempt to save fuel.

There are almost 1 million people displaced, and no one has any real idea of where they are or what's going to happen to them. El-Jisr said yesterday that about 250,000 were outside the country, but that still leaves 700,000 or so living in schools, shelters, parks or private homes of generous Lebanese. How long will they stay? Where will they go after the fighting stops? (A number of villages in the south are gone, simply wiped off the map, or with a high percentage of ruined houses.) So far, no one has any answers.

Further complicating matters is the cultural clash. Most of the displaced now squatting in various Beirut locales are poor, traditional Shi'ites. (Some Christians, too, but not many.) There's a growing tension between Sunnis and Shi'ites, and I encountered growing resentment — and outright classism — among Sunnis toward the Shi'ites. If this keeps up, Sunnis and Christians will be blaming "the Shi'ites" instead of Hizbullah for this war. And that's a recipe for social conflict.

Down in Tyre, my colleagues are forced to walk in the city now, as no one is willing to take a car on the road, much less out of the city. The Israelis have dropped leaflets saying any vehicle seen moving will be assumed to be Hizbullah and destroyed. Note that all the cars we journalists drive are clearly marked with big "TV" on the sides and roofs delineating us as media. No matter to the Israelis, apparently.

The roads and bridges out of Tyre are blown up anyway. The last remaining dirt causeway that was the only means of getting food and other aid south of the Litani was bombed a couple of nights ago and the Israelis have threatened to blow up any bridge that's built to replace it. Khaled Mansour, the spokesman for the U.N. in Lebanon, told me the organization is waiting for authorization from the IDF to build a bridge but so far, nothing.

It's incredibly serious because according to Mansour, there are between 70,000 and 130,000 people still left south of the Litani river, mainly concentrated in Tyre and Rmaiche, a Christian village south of Bint Jbail. In Tyre, the markets are closed and the shelves are empty anyway. He said that while there is no starvation yet, "They're running out of food very quickly." WIthout a bridge over the Litani, it will be impossible to get food into the region.

Meanwhile, this morning's news talked of the Israeli military's plans to occupy southern Lebanon up to the Litani River. And the rest of the world — especially Dubya's administration — does little or nothing to help end the war.

Via Back to Iraq.

| | Posted by Magpie at 8:31 AM | Get permalink



Is it too much to hope for another resignation?

32 years ago today — at noon Washington time, to be exact — US president Richard Nixon resigned his office in disgrace after the House of Representatives voted articles of impeachment against him for his conduct during the Watergate cover-up.


Richard Nixon resigning the US presidency

Nixon during his resignation speech, 9 August 1974.


I was driving through downtown Pasadena on my way home from work when a news bulletin came over the radio, announcing that Nixon would be resigning the next day. At the time, I truly believed that 'our long national nightmare' was over, and that the country was getting rid of the worst president I would see in my lifetime.

I would never in my worst dreams have imagined that, three decades later, the US would be groaning under the mis-administration of a president who makes Nixon look like the best friend the US Constitution ever had.

| | Posted by Magpie at 12:02 AM | Get permalink



Tuesday, August 8, 2006

Strange randomizer voodoo.

Our pal alphabitch is having odd experiences with her iPod.

| | Posted by Magpie at 11:17 AM | Get permalink



Be the first on your block!

As the US creeps closer to the fifth anniversary of 9/11, this magpie has been wondering about two things:

  1. When Dubya is going to pull Osama bin Laden out of the closet in order to boost the GOP's chances in the November election.
  2. When I'd see the first crass and tasteless attempt to make a quick buck off the 9/11 anniversary.

The answer to the first item still lies somewhere in the future, but the answer to the second ... well, just take a look at the picture.


World Trade Center 'commemorative' medal

Anything to make a buck, eh?


The outfit responsible for this crap is the National Collector's Mint, and you can read all the tawdry details of their offering here. While I'm definitely not one of those people who've turned the World Trade Center and 9/11 into religious icons, it sitll seems to me that using the attack as a way to make a fast buck is well beyond the pale.

(And if you think the web ad above is tasteless, I can assure you from experience that the TV ad is even more disgusting.)

Thanks to AlterNet for reminding me that I'd seen the ad.

| | Posted by Magpie at 8:33 AM | Get permalink



Another reason why Israel's attack on Lebanon was stupid.

This McClatchy report from Beirut says it all in one paragraph:

Known in the West mostly for suicide bombings and kidnappings, Hezbollah has emerged as the largest relief provider in war-ravaged Lebanon. Its efforts dwarf those of the government and international aid agencies, and they're cementing its role as Lebanon's leading social-welfare organization.

Via McClatchy Washington Bureau.

| | Posted by Magpie at 12:01 AM | Get permalink



Monday, August 7, 2006

Lebanon history lesson.

Just where did Hezbollah come from, anyway? Mideast scholar Nicholas Noe explains:

It is true that Hizbullah was formed almost immediately in the wake of the Israeli invasion of [south Lebanon in] 1982. But that is only part of the story. For Hizbullah was also formed because the main Shia political party, Amal, had joined a national unity government with the Christians and other sects in an effort to stabilize the country in the wake of the Israeli invasion and the ongoing Civil War. Indeed, Hizbullah would later, in 1985, be officially formed by leaders of the breakaway Islamic Amal of 1982.

Leaders of the mainline Amal party, however, to the consternation of Islamic Amal, worked behind the scenes with the Israelis in efforts to uproot PLO guerrillas, developing a sort of working relationship with Israeli forces over the first six months of occupation.

No matter the growing anger of the radicals, Amal was the overwhelmingly dominant Shia force in 1982 and for years afterwards — not Hizbullah. Mainly secular, but bolstered by the huge popularity of its deceased clerical founder, Imam Musa Sadr, Amal might have carried the day for the Israelis.

But as an American UN officer at the time, Professor Richard Norton, wrote, "The IDF and the Israeli security services operating in the South mistook the alienation of the Shia from the Palestinians as positive evidence for the possibility of establishing close formal ties between Israel and the Shia community ... Clumsy efforts to co-opt Amal ... failed. While the Southern leadership did not eschew a quiet dialogue with Israeli personnel, they were both unwilling and unable to allow themselves to follow the ... prototype of open clientship."

As the occupation wore on, and as Israel began to fight a nascent insurgency in late 1983, propelled mainly by Hizbullah, the Israeli response of overwhelming force and sometimes-systematic brutality only served to further alienate the Lebanese Shia, Amal and indeed many Lebanese across the confessional spectrum.

Thus, Israel and the architect of the invasion of 1982, Ariel Sharon, won the day in the south — Arafat was expelled and Fatah rocket attacks largely ceased.

But in its place, Israel had sown the seeds for a far more powerful foe
, one which would, 18 years later, lay claim to having been the only Arab force ever to defeat Israel on the battlefield of occupation.

Via MidEast News Source.

| | Posted by Magpie at 9:59 AM | Get permalink



Scumbag.

Really big scumbag.

I'm impressed that LA Times reporter Claire Hoffman had the stomach to do her story on 'Girls Gone Wild' honcho Joe Francis. I sure couldn't have done it.

| | Posted by Magpie at 9:40 AM | Get permalink



Recession, anyone?

In his latest column, Paul Krugman points out that economists aren't the only ones worrying about whether the US economy is heading into a recession. The housing bubble that has sustained what growth there's been in the past few years has definitely popped, and there's nothing on the horizon to replace it. And, warns Krugman, if the US truly does slide into a recession, you shouldn't hold your breath waiting for Dubya's administration to do something sensible to fix things.

Rather than send all you non-subscribers to the NY Times somewhere else to read the whole thing, I decided to step up to the plate and do the copyright infringement myself.

Intimations of Recession

By PAUL KRUGMAN

Published: August 7, 2006

These are the dog days of summer, but there's a chill in the air. Suddenly — really just in the last few weeks — people have starting talking seriously about a possible recession. And it's not just economists who seem worried. Goldman Sachs recently reported that the confidence of chief executives at major corporations has plunged; a clear majority of C.E.O.'s now say that conditions in the world economy, and the U.S. economy in particular, are worsening rather than improving.

On the face of it, this loss of faith seems strange. Recent growth and jobs numbers have been disappointing, but not disastrous.

But economic numbers don't speak for themselves. They always have to be interpreted as part of a story. And the latest numbers, while not that bad taken out of context, seem inconsistent with the stories optimists were telling about the U.S. economy.

The key point is that the forces that caused a recession five years ago never went away. Business spending hasn't really recovered from the slump it went into after the technology bubble burst: nonresidential investment as a share of G.D.P., though up a bit from its low point, is still far below its levels in the late 1990's. Also, the trade deficit has doubled since 2000, diverting a lot of demand away from goods produced in the United States.

Nonetheless, the economy grew fairly fast over the last three years, mainly thanks to a gigantic housing boom. This boom led directly to unprecedented spending on home construction. It also allowed consumers to convert rising home values into cash through mortgage refinancing, so that consumer spending could run far ahead of families' incomes. (Americans have been spending more than they earn for the past year and a half.)

Even optimists generally concede that the housing boom must eventually end, and that consumers will eventually have to start saving again. But the conventional wisdom was that housing would have a "soft landing" — that the boom would taper off gradually, and that other sources of growth would take its place. You might say that the theory was that business investment and exports would stand up as housing stood down.

The latest numbers suggest, however, that this theory isn't working much better on the economic front than it is in Baghdad.

Signs of a deflating housing bubble began appearing a year ago, but for a while it was possible to argue that eliminating a bit of "froth" in the housing market wouldn't do the overall economy much harm. Now, for the first time, problems in the housing market are starting to seriously reduce economic growth: the latest G.D.P. data show real residential investment falling at an accelerating pace. The latest job numbers show falling employment in home construction, and retail employment has fallen over the past year, suggesting that consumer spending is running out of steam. (Gas at $3 a gallon doesn't help, either.)

Meanwhile, neither business investment nor exports seem to be growing fast enough to make up for the housing slump.

Now maybe we'll still manage that soft landing despite a rapidly rising number of unsold houses; or maybe there's a boom in business investment and/or exports just over the horizon. But based on what we know now, there's an economic slowdown coming.

This slowdown might not be sharp enough to be formally declared a recession. But weak growth feels like a recession to most people; remember the long "jobless recovery" that followed the official end of the 2001 recession?

And what will policy makers do about a slump, if it happens? A snarky but accurate description of monetary policy over the past five years is that the Federal Reserve successfully replaced the technology bubble with a housing bubble. But where will the Fed find another bubble?

And with the budget still deep in deficit and the costs of the Iraq war still spiraling upward, it's hard to see Congress agreeing on any significant fiscal stimulus package — especially because history suggests that the Bush administration and Congressional leaders will turn any debate about how to help the economy into yet another attempt to smuggle in tax cuts for the wealthy.

One last thing: the real wages of most workers fell during the "Bush boom" of the last three years. If that boom, such as it was, is already over, workers have every right to ask, "Is that it?"

Via NY Times.

| | Posted by Magpie at 9:09 AM | Get permalink



Sunday, August 6, 2006

'Britons and Americans are watching two different wars.'

That's the money sentence in this op-ed about media coverage of Israel's attack on Lebanon by Julian Borger, the UK Guardian's Washington correspondent. According to Borger, the differences in how the US and UK media cover that war serve mainly to reinforce already existing biases:

There is a circular relationship between media coverage of the Middle East and public opinion. Correspondents and editors are often fearful of the avalanches of hate mail that can descend in a heartbeat on matters Middle Eastern, and their reports consequently serve to deepen entrenched points of view.

The difference between British and US polls on the current conflict are striking. Just over a fifth of Britons polled pre-Qana, compared with nearly half of the Americans questioned at about the same time, said they thought the Israeli use of force was proportionate; and another 9% of American respondents thought the Israelis were not being tough enough.

Some of that extraordinary divide must be attributable to the very different realities on British and American television screens.

Meanwhile, more Iraqi civilians are dying every day than Lebanese, but the horror of that war barely appears on television screens in either country any more. Lebanon is newer and much safer to cover. Anyway, Iraq fatigue set in long ago.

Borger has much more to say — don't miss his full piece.

Via wood s lot.

| | Posted by Magpie at 11:58 AM | Get permalink



Remember Iraq?

You know, the country Dubya invaded after he lost interest in his invasion of Afghanistan and before he abetted Israel's attack on Lebanon? Riverbend remembers Iraq really well because she lives there, and has to deal with the results of Dubya's attention deficit problems every day.

Here's part of her latest post:

I've said goodbye this last month to more people than I can count. Some of the "goodbyes" were hurried and furtive — the sort you say at night to the neighbor who got a death threat and is leaving at the break of dawn, quietly.

Some of the "goodbyes" were emotional and long-drawn, to the relatives and friends who can no longer bear to live in a country coming apart at the seams.

Many of the "goodbyes" were said stoically — almost casually — with a fake smile plastered on the face and the words, "See you soon" . . . Only to walk out the door and want to collapse with the burden of parting with yet another loved one.

During times like these I remember a speech Bush made in 2003: One of the big achievements he claimed was the return of jubilant "exiled" Iraqis to their country after the fall of Saddam. I'd like to see some numbers about the Iraqis currently outside of the country you are occupying . . . Not to mention internally displaced Iraqis abandoning their homes and cities.

I sometimes wonder if we'll ever know just how many hundreds of thousands of Iraqis left the country this bleak summer. I wonder how many of them will actually return. Where will they go? What will they do with themselves? Is it time to follow? Is it time to wash our hands of the country and try to find a stable life somewhere else?

Make sure to read the rest here.

Via Baghdad Burning.

| | Posted by Magpie at 1:12 AM | Get permalink




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