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canuck canuck

canuck canuck

My Comments (947 so far…)

Sarah Palin to Grace 'Portfolio,' Staff Split

I presumed that because it appeared you did not know about the telephone debacle. We do disagree and I truly hope as an American that this President succeeds. I am not usually a polititcal person countrywoman - not by any stretch and you might be surprised to hear that I have supported the Democrats many times over my long life. I always supported the party that promised to make things better for our country (not that any of them ever kept all of their promises). But we live in different times now. 911 made me aware of that. That was the day I realized our world has truly changed and it is not just America’s fault.

Sarah Palin to Grace 'Portfolio,' Staff Split

You do not understand because obviously you are still getting the news from Pro-Obama sources only. I go outside of this country to find out the truth in what is going on because you sure don’t get it here anymore.  There is nothing ANY American has to do to ‘undermine or sabotage’ this government. They are doing it to themselves. God forbid someone should help them in any way.  His leadership is not a huge improvement because he does not lead. He simply does what he is told.

The world was impressed to start with but as they see them tripping over themselves in the White House - showing great disrespect to the British Prime Minister when he was in Washington and giving ridiculous buttons to the Presdident of Russia that is what they are juding him and his administration on. They have turned America into a darn laughing stock - but don’t worry coutnrywoman - his days in office will come to an end and the power of our democracy will kick this beginner to the curb. I just hope there is someone who can come in behind him with a good enough broom to clean up the mess. I for one prefer to be heard rather than herded.

Sarah Palin to Grace 'Portfolio,' Staff Split

To the victor go the spoils: who answers the phone in the US Treasury? March 11, 2009 6:04pm

Nobody home in Washington DC

Since the Obama administration took over on January 20, the US Treasury has effectively been out to lunch.  As widely reported (see e.g. this account in the Financial Times),  Sir Gus O’Donnell (as cabinet secretary the top UK civil servant) has attacked the “absolute madness’ of the US spoils system, where a new Federal administration replaces the entire top stratum of the civil service with new officials possessing the right political connections and leanings.  Quite a few of these top officials need to be confirmed before they can start working.  This can take months.  Many of the new officials have no political, government or administrative experience and spend most of their first months in office trying to figure out where the washroom is instead of designing and implementing policy.

It is a system designed to produce protracted policy paralysis.  Often this does not matter much.  It may even be helpful to the greater good at times - “That government is best which governs least.” - but in times of war and deep economic crisis, when the world we thought we knew may be falling apart, it is not a bad idea to have a government that can both think and act.  The current US administration neither thinks nor acts much, judging from the results.

The reason Gus O’Donnell made his remarks is that the UK government are busy organising next month’s G20 summit in London, and found that when they ring the US Treasury, either nobody answers the phone or they get put on hold and have to listen to Vivaldi’s Four Seasons for hours on end.

In the UK system, there is a permanent civil service which smoothes the transition from one government to the next. This is also the norm in most other advanced industrial countries today.  The permanent professional civil service system also has its flaws - it can become a state within the state, running rings around their supposed political masters (watch Yes Minister or Yes, Prime Minister to get a wonderful and accurate depiction of an out-of-control professional civil service) - but there are ways of minimizing and mitigating the risk of rule by a professional civil service other than the US ’solution’: paralyzing and demoralising the professional civil service.

The price of the US spoils system: the emasculation of US macroecononomic policy making

The price of the US spoils system has been high, if the quality of economic policy making in Washington DC by the Obama administration is anything to go by.  The Obama administration’s handling of the financial crisis and the recession-verging-on-depression has been surprisingly fumbling and kak-handed.   The economic team should have hit the ground running following a lengthy transition period and the appointment to the top positions of experienced economic policy makers like Tim Geithner, Larry Summers, Peter Orszag and Paul Volcker.  But there is little evidence of coherent teamwork. Instead we are treated to repeated examples of the Unfinished Symphony (Geithner) or of  A Night at the Improv (Summers).

In the US Treasury, Timothy Geithner has come up with a number of half-baked plans, under the grand umbrella of the Financial Stability Plan of February 10.  These plans are not worked out to the point that they can even be evaluated properly, they are not costed properly and, except for the money left from the TARP and the funds approved by the Congress for the US$ 787 bn fiscal stimulus plan, they are not funded.

That the half-worked-out fiscal-financial rescue plans of the US government are not funded is due to a deeper flaw in the US political economy than the spoils system.  It reflects the extreme polarisation of American society and of the polity.  This may have started as early as the Vietnam War years, accelerated during the Reagan administrations and exploded during the George W. Bush administrations.  Almost any departure from the status-quo is subject to de-facto veto from some well-organised and well-funded special interest coalition.  During times of war and economic crisis, policy paralysis is costly.

But the fact that the economic plans of the administration are only half worked out is due to the fact that, except for the Treasury Secretary himself, the entire top of the Treasury is vacant.  it is even possible that Geithner has to make his own coffee, a task normally delegated to a Deputy Secretary. This is an insane situation that no self-respecting country should allow to continue.

With Geithner under-supported and over-worked, Larry Summers, Director of the National Economic Council, has jumped into the macroeconomic policy fray with gusto, but not, unfortunately, with the benefit and backing of careful analysis. Larry’s understanding of policy-oriented macroeconomics is fully ecompassed by the ‘Keynesian cross’ of introductory macroeconomics textbook fame.  We have a recession.  The world has a recession.  During recessions, firms don’t spend. So households and governments must spend.  Part of any national spending boost leaks abroad through imports.  The global public good of demand expansion will therefore be under-supplied unless there is international coordination and cooperation.  Therefore governments everythwere must cut taxes and/or boost public spending.

I will explain in a future post why the Keynesian cross is a dangerous half-truth, even under depression-economics conditions.  Here I will say only that even if two of the necessary conditions for Summers’ Keynesian cross-based policy prescriptions are met - (1) there are widespread idle resources of labour and capital to meet demand and (2) there are sufficient numbers of liquidity-constrained and current-disposable-income constrained households that act as ‘myopic’ current income-constrained, Keynesian consumers - there is still an important and potentially binding financial crowding out constraint on the ability of governments to use expansionary fiscal policy to boost aggregate demand.

In addition to (1) and (2) being met, there must be sufficient ‘fiscal spare capacity’ - confidence and trust in the financial markets and among permanent-income consumers, that the government will raise future taxes or cut future public spending by the same amount, in present discounted value terms, that they want to boost spending or cut taxes today.  Without this confidence and trust, financial markets and forward-looking consumers will be spooked by the spectre of unsustainable fiscal deficits.  Fear of future monetisation of public debt and deficits, or of future sovereign default will cause nominal and real long-term interest rates to rise.  Ultimately, the sovereign will be rationed out of its own debt market.  The US government (and the US economy as a whole) will encounter a ’sudden stop’.

These are not tales to frighten the children.  I am deeply concerned that, when the US Federal government starts to run Federal budget deficits of 14 percent of GDP or over, the markets will get spooked and will simply refuse to fund the US authorities at any interest rate.  Summers’  naive proposal for expansion now, virtue later, is simply not credible given the political economy of the US budget, now and in the foreseeable future.

Of course there are always the printing presses.  But these are most effective if their use is unanticipated.  Seigniorage or the expected inflation tax are a much more limited source of government revenue that the capital levy on the holders (domestic and foreign) of fixed-interest US-dollar denominated non-index-linked debt that can be inflicted through an unanticipated increase in the rate of inflation - the unexpected inflation tax.  So the US Treasury and the other members of the US macropolicy chorus plus the Fed have to simultaneously convince the holders of US Treasury debt that the real value of their investment is safe, and prepare to inflate that real value away if and when the need arises.

Summers’ macroeconomic policy prescriptions have dire ‘tail risks’ associated with them.  Effective fiscal expansions are not part of the US policy menu.  The spoils system has created the policy vacuum that permits Summers to make such ill-thought-out and dangerous proposals.  That alone should be sufficient reason to get rid of the system.

Abolish the spoils system

The spoils system - the manisfestation of government patronage (grants and favours) in the domain of civil service and government agency jobs - is, historically, the ubiquitous system.  It was the prevailing system in the UK and all other now-advanced industrial countries before the spread of electoral democracy and accountable government -except the US.  For some reason the US has been the only advanced industrial country to get stuck in a time-warp, with a 19th century spoils system at the level of the central government. Not surprisingly, the level of performance the US gets out of its government bureaucracy tends to be more like that found in developing countries and emerging-but-not-yet-emerged market economies, than the level one would expect from one of the world’s oldest and richest democracies.

The solution to the spoils system is simple: abolish it.  Cabinet-level positions are for political appointees.  All other civil service and government agency positions are filled by members of a non-partisan professional civil service, appointed on the basis of merit, that is, competence and independence.  You may also have to start rewarding public service competitively, and not just through a comprehensive health insurance package, if you want to attract high quality men and women into the civil service and to retain them.

Gus O’Donnell may get an F for tact and may even have committed a major diplomatic gaffe.  But what is really unforgivable is that he spoke the truth.  If your friends are people who point out your weaknesses when these weaknesses threaten to harm you and those around you, Gus O’Donnell is a good friend of America indeed.  Truth before tact.

To the victor go the spoils.  But the losers in this silly spoils game are the American people and those in the rest of the world who are waiting in vain for thoughtful and decisive American leadership.  They are getting neither.  And the spoils system is part of the problem.

http://blogs.ft.com/maverecon/2009/03/to-the-victor-go-the-spoils-who-answers-the-phone-in-the-us-treasury/

Sarah Palin to Grace 'Portfolio,' Staff Split

… and countrywoman, God forbid that teleprompter not help him while he is overseas. Diplomatic relationships with other countries is our most important tool in maintaining our own safety. If he misteps once - the consequences of that will go on for years and years. There have been too many misteps already and I wish he would just carry on not answering the phone at the White House and having his ridiculous parties at our expense - stay home - before he does damage to our country that may never be undone.

Sarah Palin to Grace 'Portfolio,' Staff Split

theleaderdaily.com

http://www.bclocalnews.com/daily/surreynorthdelta/news/national/41392904.html

Here is the real story of what happened. It has since been reported that some of those protesters were American Activists. Bush was given repeated standing ovations for his speech. Canadians are not as fickle as some think they are. They watch from over the fence and see a lot going on that they have experienced. We could learn a lot from them - I know- I was there once.

Our country is in real trouble folks. Until we get rid of Larry, Moe and Curly we better hang on to our hats. A lot of damage is being done to our country and the world is laughing at us. Frankly I don’t care a rat’s … what other countries think but I DO CARE about what our enemies think. We are appearing very weak, our administration is an unorganized joke and our President’s lack of experience is the greatest danger to us all right now.

Gibbs: Cheney Like Limbaugh, Only Less Popular (Video)

We have become the biggest joke in the world right now.  What have we done to our America?

Levi Johnston: I Want Bristol Palin Back

Right, ‘interview’ is what is was advertised as being - instead they hyjack this poor kid for what? Look, when you go into politics you are fair game but kids should never be used or mucked about like the media has done to ALL of the Palin children.  There are a lot worse things to deal with in this country right now and it ain’t in Alaska folks - it’s living in our White House!

Sarah Palin to Grace 'Portfolio,' Staff Split

Oh and Obama was supposed to bring it up with Stephen Harper when they met a couple of weeks ago on his first "International" trip - yeah right - across the border. It has to go through Washington first but from what I could find out he never mentioned it.

Sarah Palin to Grace 'Portfolio,' Staff Split

It is too bad that you have not let yourself know Sarah Palin Lizzie. She is a straight talking woman and we need more people like her in politics - about that pipeline …. Everything has been presented to the Canadian government - British Columbia will benefit from this and with the economy the way it is right now could use it as well. Palin has worked hand in hand with British Columbia on many successful projects.

Sarah Palin to Grace 'Portfolio,' Staff Split

200 protesters? That’s all that showed up and four were arrested …. 1500 people gave President Bush a warm welcome and he got many standing ovations ….

CFDA to Honor Fashion Icon Michelle Obama

Agree with you Patricia …. most of what she wears is very dowdy … not a trend setter for sure …

Michelle Obama Should Leave Daughters' Diets Out of the Press

 Sasha and Malia are admired by kids and tweens across the nation … My problem with this statement is what actually do ‘kids and tweens across the nation’ know about Sasha and Malia? They are cute kids for sure but the nation knows as much about them as they did their parents ….

Obama Comes Out Against AIG Bonuses (Video)

Some people can dish stuff out but can’t take it when you send it back at them. Obama is one of them.  Still in campaign mode instead of running the government. Careful what you say here folks …

Palin Pulls No Punches in Kennedy, Couric and Fey Attacks (Video)

DeBúrca obj - The day some Americans voted for Obama was the day America lost its brain. Apparently you are still looking for yours.  Letting the media have so much influence that they actually controled the outcome of an election in America was devastating to me. Letting the media with the help of Hollywood sway voters in America was even more devastating. I wish this site would start posting stories about what is now ‘allowed to be found out about Obama’. I do not think he is an evil man - I just happen to think that his inexperience will cost this country more than we ever imagined and that is from research I did all by myself.  The election was not a landslide. Not by any means and in just a few more months America will take steps to get control of its government again. Fool us once - shame on you … Fool us twice - shame on me …. There is a grounds well of revolt against this administration that is starting to rise. As Americans we need to hold our media responsible for fairness in reporting. It certainly did not happen in this last election.

Couric Wins Cronkite Award for Palin Interview

Global warming is disputed by just as many scientists as do support it but its made Gore a lot of money. I supported the war in Iraq based on the same intel the Rep and the DEM shared. 

You did not say where you live Pat but I hope it is a democratic country. See that means you can sit and say whatever you want because that is what freedom is all about. By the way, better hope we don’t go bankrupt - you might need our army to help you someday as we have done for almost every democracy around this world.

Frankly I don’t care what other countries think of America. Popularity contests are not very impressive ….

More than a bad day: Worries grow that Barack Obama & Co. have a competence problem

Sunday, March 15th 2009, 4:00 AM

Not long ago, after a string of especially bad days for the Obama administration, a veteran Democratic pol approached me with a pained look on his face and asked, "Do you think they know what they’re doing?"

The question caught me off guard because the man is a well-known Obama supporter. As we talked, I quickly realized his asking suggested his own considerable doubts.

Yes, it’s early, but an eerily familiar feeling is spreading across party lines and seeping into the national conversation. It’s a nagging doubt about the competency of the White House.

It was during George W. Bush’s second term that the I-word - incompetence - became a routine broadside against him. The Democratic frenzy of Bush-bashing had not spent itself when a larger critique emerged, one not confined by partisan boundaries.

The charge of incompetence covered the mismanagement of Iraq, the response to Hurricane Katrina and the economic meltdown. By the time Bush left, the charge tipped the scales to where most of America, including many who had been supporters or just sympathetic, viewed him as a failed President.

The tag of incompetence is powerful precisely because it is a nondenominational rebuke, even when it yields a partisan result. It became the strongest argument against the GOP hammerlock on Washington and, over two elections, gave Democrats their turn at total control.

But already feelings of doubt are rising again. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid were never held in high regard, so doubts about their motives and abilities are not surprising.

What matters more is the growing concern about Obama and his team. The longest campaign in presidential history is being followed by a very short honeymoon.

Polls show that most people like Obama, but they increasingly don’t like his policies. The vast spending hikes and plans for more are provoking the most concern, with 82% telling a Gallup survey they are worried about the deficit and 69% worried about the rapid growth of government under Obama. Most expect their own taxes will go up as a result, despite the President’s promises to the contrary.

None other than Warren Buffet, an Obama supporter, has called the administration’s message on the economy "muddled." Even China says it is worried about its investments in American Treasury bonds. Ouch.

Much of the blame falls on Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, whose appalling tax problems softened the ground under him before he took office. After his initial fumbling presentations, he became a butt of jokes on "Saturday Night Live," not a sustainable image for the point man in a recession. And still the market waits for his answer to the banks’ toxic assets.

Daily News