Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
User Journal

Journal Journal: Everything Obama Does Is Wrong 9

Letâ(TM)s all blame Obama for everything bad that has ever happened to any American, anywhere in the world.

Now that weâ(TM)ve got that out of the way, can we please pull together and try to solve this countryâ(TM)s problems?

Thank you,

- Robin

User Journal

Journal Journal: If Air Travel Worked Like Health Care 55

A sadly amusing article from National Journal that begins, "Hello! Thank you for calling Air Health Care, the airline that works like the health care system. My name is Cynthia. How can I give you travel care today?"

As one who has had a number of similar experiences with our health care non-system, I can tell you that there is way too much underlying truth to this parody. I am profoundly unhappy with the health care bills recently passed by Congress, but one thing is clear: our current health care system is broken and needs to be rebuilt from the ground up. And no, I do not believe parroting the "free market will save us" line will solve anything. Free market health care, in its current incarnation, is a major FAIL.

Article also appears at Roblimo.com

User Journal

Journal Journal: I Stand By My "One-Term President" Prediction 8

Back in August, 2008, I wrote an essay titled Voting For a One-Term President. At the time we didn't know whether Barack Obama or John McCain would be our next president. My contention was that we had so many contentious problems that neither contender could successfully contend with all of them.

I haven't changed my mind. I don't think Barack Obama will be re-elected in 2012. But I suspect this would be true if John McCain or Hillary Clinton or Mike Huckabee or Ralph the Wonder Dog had become president instead of Obama.

Our country's problems are too severe, and have been building far too long, for any one person to solve in four years. Indeed, I don't believe they can be solved within four decades unless a majority of elected officials from both major political parties decide to work together instead of playing stupid "gotya" games with each other all the time. Yes, I know your political party is straight and clean and tells the truth, and that the other one is full of corrupt liars. Well, too damn bad. You'd better figure out a way to work with those corrupt liars whose policies are (in your opinion) sure to ruin our country.

But you -- and most of our political leaders -- are not going to start doing that by 2012 unless we get attacked by space aliens or a major plague kills off 60% of our population or we have some other equivalent disaster. So I don't expect Obama to be re-elected in 2012.

I have no idea whether his replacement will be a Republican, a Democrat or someone nominated by a political party that hasn't formed yet. I have no idea whether our next president will be a "liberal" or "conservative" or "libertarian" or "socialist." A lot will depend on what happens to the economy between now and then.

And, you know, it's even barely possibly that enough people will be back to work by 2012 that Obama will be re-elected. But I'm not holding my breath waiting for that to happen. And if you are, I strongly recommend that you resume breathing, because you have no more idea than I have what will happen in the world (and in American politics) between now and then.

-------------------------

This essay also appears @ Roblimo.com

User Journal

Journal Journal: I Blame Democrats for the Current Wave of Ponzi Scheme Prosecutions 3

The Ponzi scheme prosecutions we've been reading about lately are unfair, and I blame the Democrats, or "Dumbocrats" as some call them, for treating business people as criminals when all they were trying to do was maximize profits.

Here's why:

For many years, starting with Ronald Reagan, all patriots have worked not only to "starve the beast" of government in order to stave off socialism and go back to the time when we all lived like Thomas Jefferson in the full glow of personal responsibility outlined in the Sacred U.S. Constitution, aided only by our slaves, but also to "deregulate" our financiers and corporate executives.Starting in the 1930s, our government passed many evil regulations that kept brave entrepreneurs from maximizing their profits. By the time Reagan (bless his holy name) became President, many of our nation's leading financial executives were only able to afford three or four houses, one or two yachts, and often could only support three or four ex-wives and two or three mistresses.

Reagan and the other Republicans came to the aid of our beleaguered financiers by lifting many onerous regulations from their shoulders while, at the same time, cutting taxes and raising government expenditures, thereby putting our country into greater debt than it had ever been in before, which forced cutbacks in enforcement by those once charged with regulating (what the teabaggies call "hobbling") our Great Financial System.Naturally, this deregulation proved to be a boon to many speculators. A few overreached, perhaps just a tad, and brought about a savings and loan crash. But not to worry! Our taxes bailed everyone out -- except the small investors, but who cares about them? I mean, do a bunch of old people in Florida really matter to anyone?

The example of the S&L debacle excited financiers so much that they funded a lot of "institutes" with names like Cato and American Enterprise and even a "Club for Growth," and had these "institutes" pour out studies and articles and op-eds that proved government was always evil, while anything Private Industry did was pure, unadulterated Good. Greed was Good, yesiree Robert!And Republicans bought into this in a big way. More deregulation! Why, a Republican Congress even managed to repeal the depression-era bank anti-speculation regulations and -- get this -- made derivative trading legal even though for many decades it had been prohibited under anti-gambling laws.

Ah, the sweet breath of freedom!

CEO salaries jumped and new financial schemes abounded. Brokers bought bigger yachts (for themselves, not for their customers), real estate mavens borrowed more money than they had ever been allowed to borrow before, and some of them (Donald Trump was a prime example) managed to have some of their companies go broke (thereby stiffing investors) while other companies they controlled prospered. What a boon for capitalism!

Naturally, there were silly people who still squawked about fiscal sanity and how all this was undermining our Judeo-Christion belief in hard work and rewarding labor and thrift. These sillies were obviously socialists or communists, and the various Institutes and their media stooges (who, but this time numbered far more than the original three) talked incessantly about the Wonders of the Free Market and how we would all benefit if we moved most of this country's blue-collar jobs overseas -- and some of our more lucrative white-collar jobs, as well.

Greed is Good! Capitalism Rules! Bigger yachts. More mistresses. More layoffs -- but don't worry, Wal~Mart and Target and Home Despot have lots of $8/hour jobs. Not quite as much as you *used* to make, but that's okay. The world is flat, and corporate profits are more important than small-timers who can't afford health insurance, decent housing, and other, similar luxuries.

In fact, with profit as the *only* measure of a company's or investor's success, why not skip the part about actually making things or selling goods and services or actually using investment clients' money to buy stocks, the way fuddy-duddies like Warren Buffett did? Why not just take the clients' money and SPEND it? And, meanwhile, keep promising new investors solid profits and endless growth from now unto eternity?

Is this not the holy grail of deregulated capitalism, American-style? To cut the payroll to zero or next to it? To make profits of nearly 100% on all money taken in while giving nothing back in return, all the while producing no useful goods or services because doing so would create overhead, thereby lowering the Holy Profit Margin?

So you had derivatives, securitized debt, and even more flagrant financial scams all over the place. Happy, happy, happy. Donald Trump even thought about buying a better toupee (but obviously decided against it). Mistresses got bigger breast enlargements than ever. The yachts got HUMONGOUS. A presidential candidate who was married to an Arizona heiress literally forgot how many homes he and his wife owned, and told us it took $5 million to belong to the middle class.

But while life was full of joy for the people who count in America, those sneaky communist Democrats somehow managed to grab control of Congress in 2006, and started looking into some of the stranger financial goings-on in our once-proud country.

Now, there had been a few scandals already that were so flagrant even Republicans couldn't hush them up. Remember Enron? And MCI? Ponzi schemes!

Also, please do not think all Democrats wore halos. Plenty of them were just as corrupt as their Republicans counterparts, which was very sad. I mean, we *expect* Republicans to steal and help their henchmen steal, and to do nasty corporate welfare deals like the Medicare Advantage insurance company giveaway and the "Welfare for Big Pharma" Medicare prescription plan. Democrats are supposed to be different. They're supposed to work to make our country better, and we have a right to be disappointed when they act as venal as Republicans, just as we have a right to get angry at Republicans who dare to have sex -- unless it is strictly for procreation, in the missionary position, with a spouse who doesn't enjoy it much.

So, anyway: after all those "Greed is Good" and "Private Industry Good, Government Bad," years, we started to see actual enforcement of some of the anti-fraud laws the Republicans hadn't yet been able to repeal.

We've had a few show trials of small fry like Madoff and Diamond. We haven't arrested Goldman Sachs or Citi or B of A execs, and probably never will -- even though any one of them has arguably done more harm to more Americans than all the recently-busted Ponzers put together.

The big question is, "What do we do now?" Do we keep listening to the bamboozlers who got us into this mess and seem to think we'll be happy if they throw us a Ken Lay or Bernie Madoff now and then? Or do we think seriously about who this country is for, what our government should and should not do, and what regulations we need to keep things fair?

I have looked at countries that tried to have true communism. Not one of them has succeeded. They all ended up as nasty dictatorships. I have also looked at countries where there is little or no government (Somalia is an obvious example), and have decided that extreme libertarianism *in actual practice* is no better than communism.

We need to come up with a new system. I don't know what it is. But, then, I'm a small-time schlump who lives in a Florida trailer park, not an award-winning academic thinker or cabinet member or economist or any of that. In theory, people who have all kinds of big-time credentials should be coming up with ways to compromise between the worst aspects of human economic behavior (unbridled "profit at all costs" greed) and the best parts of capitalism ("hey, if I work hard to build my company, I'll get rich -- so I'm going to work 20 hour days until I do").

So far, I see zero evidence that our "leaders" have any good ideas. The right-wingers have become pure noise, meant in the sense of "signal to noise ratio," and their extreme leftist counterparts aren't much better.

We need a lot more signal and a lot less noise.

I'll do my part if you'll do yours. We may not agree all the time. Handling disagreements peacefully and reaching useful compromises is a hallmark of democracies and well-run republics, while (theoretical) communist and libertarian countries tend to settle their internal debates with violence.

Let's not go the Somalian or N. Korean directions, okay?

Thank you, fellow Americans, for listening.

-------------------------

This article also appears at Roblimo.com

User Journal

Journal Journal: Why India Must (and Can) Do More to Fight Pollution Than the U.S. 10

This is a screed I originally posted on an Indian friend's Facebook wall: Don't worry about the US [on the pollution front]. We're down from using 40% of the world's resources (and generating 40% of the pollution) to under 30% -- and dropping. Our richie-riches are determined to keep us "competitive" in the world labor markets, which seems to mean they expect the majority of us to live in dirt-floored shacks, same as the rural poor in China and India. At the rate our working people's incomes are dropping, we will hardly be able to afford any carbon dioxide production at all within a few decades, and we'll be shipping our brightest University grads to India, not the other way around.

One thing to note is that the U.S. has a lot of really old industrial infrastructure. I know of textile mills in the state of Massachusetts running 100 and 150 year old machinery that has been modernized but is still dreadfully inefficient by today's standards. In contrast, Germany and Japan have hardly any factories built before 1946 because we bombed their previous ones in WWII. India, Vietnam, and other countries that had hardly any industry before the 1970s have even newer plants, on average.

And then there's technology leapfrogging, the phenomenon of jumping over old technology on purpose and going straight for the latest. Telephones are a prime example. The U.S. and other long-industrialized nations put in copper phone wires almost everywhere 75 or 100 years ago, then started switching to microwaves and satcom for long distance 50 years ago, and are now switching to fiberoptics and cellular systems. Countries now building out their telecomm infrastructure for the first time are going straight to fiber and cellular without the evolutionary steps.

In other words, they're using resource-efficient commo technology from the start instead of mining and manufacturing endless kilometers of copper wire first.

The same idea can and should apply to power generation. The U.S. has many 100 year old coal-fired electrical plants that still work well enough that, pollution (and mining damage) aside, there is no economically justifiable reason to replace them. And we have enough coal to power the U.S. for hundreds of years, so our government and power industry spend endless money on patchwork cleanups for coal-fired plants, while India can get right to the business of building clean, 21st century generating facilities.

Technology leapfrogging can and does happen in many other fields, too. The Tata Nano can be built cheaply in large part because it stands on the back of generation of (primarily) American, European, and Japanese auto and production engineering. Meanwhile, the big American car companies are still using some plants that -- while heavily modernized over the years -- were built in the 1920s and 1930s and are nowhere near as efficient as a brand-new Tata plant but are so expensive to replace that they go on being modified and patched up apparently forever. And the old auto plants that *have* closed become huge eyesores, too expensive to use for anything else, often too expensive to tear down so we can use that land for something else. So they sit there, rotting, a blight on the landscape, testimony to our country's former greatness.

The final indignity: I lost my job at the end of last year, and my chance of finding an equivalent one at my age (57) is essentially zero. This means I had to give up my mortgaged house because I could no longer afford the payments on it. The bank that held our mortgage went broke and was absorbed by a larger bank, which also went broke and got absorbed by an even larger one. Finally, nearly a year later, they are getting around to the legal foreclosure and title transfer process. But as part of that process, they have representatives call us several times a week to ask if there is any way we can start making at least partial payments and to threaten us with a severe drop in our credit rating -- which has already happened anyway, because of my job loss, so the threats are essentially meaningless.

Now, guess where those annoying calls come from? That's right. India. Wells Fargo Bank, which is still in business (and has manged to absorb other, even weaker, banks) only because of massive cash infusions from the U.S. government, is hiring Indians to harass Americans who have lost their jobs and can no longer pay their bills.

I'm sure those Indian debt collectors are glad to have their jobs, and are happily spending their paychecks on cellular phones, furniture, flats and houses, computers, clothes, motorcycles and perhaps even Tata Nanos.

Meanwhile, Americans like me, who have essentially been cast aside as unwanted surplus by American businesses, are buying hardly anything. We are, therefore, accounting for a lower percentage of global pollution than we did even a few years ago. At the same time, the Indian collector and his family are busily *increasing* their resource use and pollution production.

If I was in my 20s instead of in my 50s, I would move to one of the rising countries. But I'm not, so I stay here, watching my savings and my economic impact (and carbon footprint) dwindle every month.

This is why India and other rising countries need to do more, not less, than the U.S. to stop pollution and use resources more efficiently.

User Journal

Journal Journal: A Simple, Sane Health Care Reform Package That Will Never Happen 15

I have a simple approach to fixing our health care system that will piss off both Republicans and Democrats, not to mention insurance, hospital, pharma, and other health care executives whose huge incomes are dependent on major profits from the current system. Trial lawyers won't like it, either. Therefore, treat this as a fantasy -- but one that, if it came true, would save money and provide better medical care to Americans of all income levels.

Item One: Encourage Health Insurance Competition

This is a Republican idea, and a good one. Health insurance companies should not only be allowed but encouraged to sell their policies across state lines. And, as long as they don't turn down people with pre-existing conditions or sell insurance that has unrealistic deductibles (no more than, say, $2000 per year per policy) or copay provisions (perhaps capped at 20% of all bills up to $5000 or $10,000, with 100% coverage beyond those levels), they should not be forced to cover routine medical care. In other words, I'm talking about a shift -- entirely voluntary, only for those who want it -- from today's typical all-inclusive, HMO-type plans to old-fashioned major medical and hospitalization coverage. This would create a simple health insurance option that would keep people from going bankrupt because of medical emergencies. Let the free market dictate exact rates -- again, within broad limits, with perhaps a 3:1 maximum rate difference based on age and other risk factors.

The free enterprise component will piss off serious socialists. Fine. Let them be angry. And they will be, even though I believe we should subsidize health insurance premiums for people who can't otherwise afford to pay them. With tax dollars. Naturally, we'll put the subsidized insurance plans out for public bid. The least-expensive insurance companies (that meet basic plan standards) get the contracts. Less-efficient insurers don't. And, as an additional measure to keep quality high, Members of Congress, their staffs, and other federal employees will be insured under the same low-bid plans available to the rest of us.

Note that I am not stopping any insurance company from offering higher-priced plans with more than the minimum mandated benefit levels. Individuals and employers who want to pay more -- and hopefully get more services in return -- should be free to do so.

Item Two: Encourage More Non-Profit Routine Health Care Delivery

There are many low-cost alternatives to the mainstream medical system, such as this non-profit group where I live in Manatee County, Florida, that make routine doctor visits and prescription drugs affordable for even the poorest patients. Our local Gulf Coast Discount Medical Plan is not free. It's just a lot less expensive than any other local health care option we've found. Those who run to a doctor every time they sneeze pay every single time, which discourages excess use. Prescriptions are heavily discounted, too, but like doctor visits, they are not free. Once again, excess use is discouraged.

Gulf Coast has a sliding-scale fee structure. For those who can't afford even the lowest sliding-scale rate, let's have government subsidies, paid out of our taxes. On the other hand, I see nothing wrong with someone spending an hour or two cleaning bathrooms or picking up litter in the parking lot in return for a doctor visit or prescription. Or making phone calls to remind patients of their appointments. Or something. Anything. Naturally, it is only right to waive the service requirement for people who are so disabled or decrepit that they can't do much of anything, but I suspect that in the spirit of voluntarism many church groups and individuals would step up and do "their" service for them. (I surely would.)

As a personnel recruitment aid, perhaps we could offer partial or full tuition reimbursement for doctors, nurses and administrators who agree to spend a set number of years as salaried clinic employees. I also suspect that a large number of experienced doctors and nurses who are tired of dealing with insurance company forms and the other hassles that have become part of our current medical non-system would be drawn to this kind of practice.

If nothing else, a good system of non-profit clinics can help keep patients who don't belong in emergency rooms out of them. Yes, I've heard the Yowler yammer about how anyone who is seriously ill can go to the ER and get "free" treatment, but that treatment is not free. It's subsidized by the rest of us through higher hospital charges. Real, budgeted subsidies to non-profit clinics would not only be more honest than the current system, but would be easier to track and control.

Once again, I am not forcing anyone to do anything. If your local clinics (and I see no reason why there can't be many competing ones) don't suit your needs, and you can afford to go to a fee-for-service provider, go ahead. I also don't see why there can't be for-profit clinics competing with the non-profit ones either on price or by offering shorter wait times, free marijuana (sort-of kidding about this one) or other perqs to their patients. Choice is good, right?

Item Three: Tort Reform

Malpractice judgments are a tiny fraction of total medical expenses, and without public-spirited lawyers who often allow the damaged parties to keep 50%, even 60% or 70%, of court-awarded malpractice judgments, we would have nothing but drunk barber-surgeons in filthy hospitals. Let's give all those heroic lawyers plaques for having performed their valuable public service, and let them keep on suing for-profit physicians' groups, medical labs, hospitals, and pharmaceutical companies that don't participate in discount medical plans or otherwise make their services available, at least part of the time, to people unable to pay full tab for their services.

Patients harmed by medical care gone awry should still be able to collect some reasonable amount, surely enough to cover additional treatment they might require, plus compensation for lost income and general suffering, but let's have compensation set by competent boards made up of carefully-selected doctors and citizens, not random juries. And let's put a severe cap on the amount of punitive damages any one patient can get. And while we're at it, let's severely limit legal fees in class-action lawsuits, which all too often leave the actual damaged parties with little or nothing while the lawyers end up with millions.

Come to think of it, why limit tort reform to health care? I live in Florida, where defending against groundless lawsuits routinely bankrupts small businesses. Our entire civil litigation system is as nutsy as our current health care system. But for the moment, on the medical front, let's just take malpractice matters out of the court system for all doctors and others who accept any public funding for their services, and require patients who use doctors and other services that accept government money to sign away at least part of their "right" to sue if their toes start aching six years after they got their gall bladders removed. Once again, freedom-loving doctors and patients are 100% free to opt out of all this and stick with the current way of doing things.

Item Four: A Public Option If and Where One is Needed

What if, in some parts of the U.S., there are no low-cost non-profit medical clinics or private, for-profit companies willing to go into the discount medical care business? Why not allow government-sponsored health care in underserved areas? Said areas might be remote rural counties and they might be poverty-stricken inner city neighborhoods. Would even the nastiest, Glenn Beck-ist Republicans really deny medical treatment to Indians on remote reservations or children born in the worst parts of Detroit? Well... yes. They would. So let's ignore them. They're going to complain no matter what. We should let them yowl while the rest of us work not only to make our country's health care system better, but work in every way we can to promote the general welfare and make life in America better for everyone, rich or poor.

That's the Whole Plan

Socialists, libertarians, and trial lawyers will all line up to make sure this plan never happens. So will everyone at the top of the health care income hierarchy. In a lot of ways, my plan is closer to the Republican Small Health Bill (pdf) than to current Democratic proposals, even though it contains a "public option" provision that will raise as many Republican hackles as its free-choice provisions will raise among the most liberal Democrats. Still, my modest proposal would serve more people better than any alternative yet advanced by a major political party, while preserving more personal freedom for both doctors and patients than any other proposal I have seen so far.

Common sense is in short supply in this country, though, so whatever "health reform" we get will almost certainly be expensive, bloated, stupid, and designed to preserve health care industry profits more than to provide the most medical care, to the greatest number of people, at the lowest possible cost.

That (sigh) is 21st Century America for you. We haven't descended totally into Idiocracy yet, but we're working on it as hard as we can.

Security

Journal Journal: The Recession Is Getting Worse, Not Better 9

I am not a tenured economics professor or a Wall Street executive. I'm a common working stiff, laid off and trying to battle my way back to a decent income through self-employment. I'm in better shape than most other laid-off working people I know because my wife and I both have valuable skills and (barely) enough business acumen that our little start-up is doing rather well. But most of our friends and family are not doing so well. Even those who have replaced the jobs they have lost (and at least half of them have lost jobs in the last year) are earning lots less than they once did. And, last I looked, unemployment and underemployment are going up, not down. Economists and government mouthpieces talk about a "jobless recovery." To me, there is no such thing. A recovery, to people like me, is all about jobs. Nothing else matters. The fact that some high-rollers and speculators are doing better than they were last year has absolutely nothing to do with the American economy in which most of us live, which looks like it is going to stink for many years to come, if not for the rest of our lives.

I'll start with my own situation. My wife and I have watched our income drop by over 80%. For every five dollars we took in last year, we have taken in one dollar this year. Our house -- modest by six-figure income standards -- is gone to foreclosure. We are now living in a tiny mobile home. Don't get me wrong: it's a nice mobile home in a pleasant community, and we like it a lot. But this means we are not spending money on rehab work, as we constantly were on our old place, which means we do not spend much (hardly anything) on home improvement materials or yard care supplies. So our income drop trickles through the economy, same as millions of others' lost incomes. We eat out less (sorry, restaurant people), our plans to replace my ancient Jeep this year obviously went away (sorry, car people), and my plan to get some major dental work done is gone (sorry, dentists). I sold my sailboat and replaced it with a kayak. Our utility bills have dropped by 75%, and our property tax bill is down 90%. Our once-substantial charitable donations and financial help to less-fortunate family members have stopped.

Really, the only substantial purchase we expect to make in the near future is one more video camera for our business, along with a few accessories for it. Beyond that, nothing. And even though our income is creeping up, it is unlikely to exceed 1/3 of my previous salary within the next five years -- if ever -- and we expect to use any surplus to pay down debt and to build a financial cushion, not to buy anything beyond the the absolute minimum we need to get by day-to-day.

So our time as "consumers" is over. No big. We're 57, the kids are grown, and we already own most of the possessions a sane person might want. We're some of the most fortunate layoff victims we know.

Now let's talk about Bill, up in Tampa. He went from home ownership to living in a room in a friend's house. His wife is gone. He's semi-survived on a series of small-money temporary jobs. If I want to see him, I need to drive to Tampa, because his car is so junky he's scared to make the hour-long drive to Bradenton. His clothes have gotten, quite frankly, ragged enough that it's hard for him to put up the middle-class appearance he needs to look credible in the IT field. Basically, Bill is on the skids -- and sliding. He has some wing-ding eBay things going on, but I doubt that they're going to generate much income. Health insurance? Nope. Maybe/hopefully he can get Medicaid -- and then he'll need to find a doctor who will accept Florida's pitiful Medicaid payment rate.

Essentially, we as as society have told Bill he is human surplus. We no longer need or want him.

Then there's my young friend Scott; married, two kids, one on the way. Wife works part-time at Starbucks. Scott dumped a low-pay retail job without notice to start a supposedly much better one, but that job fell through. For the last five months he's been doing sporadic temp work. He's supposed to start a five-month gig next week doing tech support for a tax prep service. By the time that job ends he hopes to have his programming skills (mostly Visual Basic, C# and Java) honed to the point where he can get some sort of entry-level job in that field. Yes, I know. Programming is now an overcrowded field, and IT work is migrating to India and other low-cost countries so Scott will probably never make as much as American programmers once did. But what else is he going to do? Almost *any* work that isn't tied to geography is moving overseas. The Wall Streeters and speculators love this because they can make higher profits, but for the Scotts of the world it means a recession that may never end.

I can go on and on like this... about the relative in Baltimore who lost a half-decent warehouse job when his employers decided to use a "labor contractor" that employs no one but Spanish-speakers for minimum wage, and (wink wink) isn't picky about Social Security or other I.D. checks. And the woman with a bachelors degree and 15 years of useful customer service and law enforcement experience who has applied for over 150 jobs without a single nibble in return, and we're talking jobs in every field from what she's trained to do down to entry-level store security and other retail work.

And when a newly-refurbished Outback Steakhouse in Sarasota needed to hire 67 people, they had 1050 applicants. For no-benefit, mostly part-time work at or near minimum wage. That's scary. It didn't make the manage or Outback execs happy, either. They're not stupid, and they know that if that many people are looking for low-end jobs, it means fewer people who can afford to eat at Outback, even though CEO Joe Smith says the company is trying to keep many menu items below $10 despite higher food costs so that even people with small incomes can come to his restaurants for special occasions. And he's talking about people who once would have eaten at Maison Hoity-Toit. Those who once ate at Outback are probably now reduced to McDonalds.

So the richies have recovered from the recession. I'm glad to hear it. I hope they pop many bottles of domestic champagne to celebrate, and buy lots of American-made cars and yachts and hot tubs and expensive research reports from American economists saying everything is just fine, our country is doing well, don't you worry 'bout a thing -- and what we really need to do to spur economic activity is deregulate all financial scamming and never, never tax investment income or inheritances at rates as high as we currently tax working income.

(Funny note we never hear: if we taxed all investment and inheritance income over $100K/year at the same rate we tax a $100K/year worker's salary, and took out the same amount of FICA/SS tax, Social Security and Medicare would be on a sound financial footing, with plenty left over for universal health coverage...)

The tire industry is now moving en masse to China. More manufacturing jobs lost here, to go with the millions that already seem to be gone forever. I mentioned that I plan to buy a video camera. It will be a Japanese product. There are no (as in -0-) American-made, commercial-quality video cameras on the market in my price range. And if I am forced to buy a new computer, even if I choose an "American" Dell or HP, hardly anycomponents in it will be made here.

Tens of millions of Americans have lost their jobs. Something like half a million of us still lose our jobs every month. Some find jobs, too, but the new jobs almost always seem to pay less than the old ones -- and have crappier benefits, assuming they have any at all.

This is not a recession. It's an acceleration of a general economic shift that has been going on for several decades, in which the top few per cent of our society does better and the rest of us do worse. Baseballer Derek Jeter builds a 30,000 square foot mansion in Tampa while the local unemployment rate and the number of homeless people rise toward the sky. Union jobs go away. Wal~Mart and McDonalds keep hiring. American politicians talk about renewable energy sources and "green jobs," but China is starting to pump out solar cells like crazy.

We bailed out the bankers and the investment crowd, but we have no WPA-style program or CCC to employ any of the millions of Americans who desperately need work.

In other words, traditional Republicans (richies) have been bailed, and the rest of us haven't. For us, I'm afraid, the recession is just starting, and isn't likely to end for a long time -- assuming it ever does.

I know, we thought we could vote for change, and many of us did. But in the end, most of what we got was the same old same old with slightly different people talking from the podiums, and a new crop of Yowlers calling the current crop of corporate-bought politicians "socialists" instead of figuring out what's really going on.

What should we do next? I have no idea. Do you?

See more of my writing and videos at roblimo.com

Need a snazzy promo or instructional video? Check out my screencast samples.

The Military

Journal Journal: Fighting Terrorism is Law Enforcement, Not War 6

Right now, most terrorists worldwide are Muslims. Not that long ago, the biggest terrorist scourge was the Irish Republican Army. Japan and Chine have had terrorist incidents unrelated to either of these, and the U.S. has had its share of home-grown Christian and right-wing political terrorists in the past few decades, and once suffered a spate of terrorist activities by left-wingers.

The problem with talking about Islamic terrorists as if every Muslim in the world wants to kill all Americans is that this simply isn't true. One nut-case Muslim U.S. Army officer killing fellow soldiers is no indication that all Muslim soldiers are disloyal or murderous any more than Timothy McVeigh's actions meant that all disgruntled white Christian veterans were potential federal building bombers or that every bearded environmentalist was a potential Unabomber.

We have seen people convicted of statutory rape who claim they were not criminals because they were following Mormon doctrine, but most Mormons, including all the Mormons I've ever known personally, are law-abiding citizens.

War is, by definition, something you fight against an entire group or class of people, usually one that calls itself a "country" or "nation." Law enforcement is the art of finding the bad people within a country or group and targeting them -- and them only -- for punishment.

I have met plenty of peaceful, hospitable Muslims both here and abroad. I have met plenty of peaceful, non-murderous anti-abortion activists, plenty of peaceful, albeit disgruntled, veterans, and plenty of peaceful Christians. I've met Jews who didn't want to kill or oppress every Palestinian, and I've known Palestinians who didn't want to kill Jews.

Whether in the U.S. or Afghanistan, most people pretty much want to get through the day without trouble. Very few of us, no matter what our religious or political beliefs, have any desire to massacre our coworkers, neighbors or even the people down the street who play their music too loud when we're trying to sleep.

  I'd like to point out that the military strategy proposed by most of our smarter generals for Afghanistan is essentially law enforcement, not war in the traditional sense. They advocated rooting out and killing or arresting the nasty people there, while turning the rest of the population into law-abiding citizens -- once they have well-enforced laws by which to abide.

This was the strategy behind the famous "surge" in Iraq, and it seemed to work better than any previous strategies we tried there. Yelling, "All Muslims are evil! Kill them!" may be good for talk-radio ratings, but it's no way to get Muslims to stop being terrorists. If anything, it has the opposite effect.

Muslim terrorists on trial? In public? In New York? Excellent! This may be crappy military strategy, but it's great law enforcement strategy and great PR, because it shows the rest of the world how we decide who is a criminal and who isn't, thereby giving the lie to every statement by a radical Islamist that "America is at war with all Muslims."

Our system of law enforcement is flawed in many ways, but it is far better, fairer, and more effective than its counterparts in most dictatorships. We need to let the rest of the world see it in action.

Of course, after the wheels of justice have turned, we ought to execute the lawbreakers who have attacked our country and our fellow citizens. This, too, is fair. I am not advocating appeasement or surrender here. Rather, I am advocating liberty and justice for all, a traditional American set of ideals we sometimes forget to practice in the heat of the moment.

----------------------------------------------------------

See more of my writing and videos at roblimo.com

Need a snazzy promo or instructional video? Check out my screencast samples.

 

User Journal

Journal Journal: Yet Another Example of Socialism in My Neighborhood 3

So here I am, reading newspapers online and preparing for another day of boring video editing, and a noise out front captures my ears. It is the sound of socialism in action -- in the form of a county-owned street cleaning truck coming up our street.

Socializing health care would obviously be an evil move. Just ask any recipient of Social(ist) Security or Medicare around here, and they'll tell you in detail why only the "Greatest Generation" deserves government help with living expenses and medical care. But age-discriminating welfare and medical treatment are not the only bits of government socialism against which we must fight if we want to return America to the way it was when Our Founders walked the land.

Do you think Samuel Adams advocated socialist, government-paid street cleaning? No way! He lived in cities full of horse poop and liked it. George Washington never spoke out in favor of public sewer systems. Thomas Jefferson didn't talk about taxpayer-supported ambulance service.

Fellow Americans, government takes away far too many of our rights. Back in the good old days we had the right to buy tainted meat, take drugs that had opium as their main ingredient, and to live on garbage-strewn, poop-littered dirt roads that didn't have sidewalks.

Sidewalks are another bit of socialism. Believe me, Our Founders didn't write the need for them into the Constitution for good reason.

And let's not forget traffic signals. They are yet another way the government tries to take away our rights and regulate our everyday behavior.

It is time for all right-thinking Americans to band together to reclaim our country. We must protest socialist streetcleaning and waste removal. We must lay down in front of socialized ambulances and fire trucks. We must fight against socialist public-option health care, socialist police, socialist schools, socialist roads and sidewalks, socialist food and drug regulations, and all the other ways government intrudes in our lives.

We must take back America. To arms, fellow citizens! To arms!!!

read more of my mutterings @ roblimo.com

User Journal

Journal Journal: Just testing out some journal submission changes 8

I don't actually have anything to say. Kathleen is due any day, and I'm looking forward to a few weeks of staying home, getting poor sleep, and changing diapers.
But mostly I'm testing to see if journal saving works properly.

User Journal

Journal Journal: The sorry state of calendar sync on Linux

All I want to do is synchronise my Google calendar with my computer, so I can read and add entries even when I don't have an internet connection. That shouldn't be so hard, should it?

Apparently it is.

Google's own Google Gears is read-only. Useless.

The only Linux calendar client that Google supports is Mozilla Sunbird. Yeah, the discontinued one. It does do CalDAV, but it's online-only; if I'm offline, the only way to get my calendar is to use the scary "EXPERIMENTAL!!!111" cache option, and that's read-only and buggy to boot. Useless.

Evolution supports CalDAV. Unfortunately, Evolution wants to take over my entire computer. I had to put in a fake email account before it would even let me look at the calendar options. The UI is frankly horrible. There is apparently no way to get rid of the irrelevant "task" pane; I can shrink it to take up no space, but then when I resize the window, all the extra space is given back to the task pane instead of to the calendar itself. It also insists on trying to add all new entries to the non-deletable "Personal" calendar, even though I have hidden this and set my Google calendar to be the default calendar. I'm not surprised it's useless, of course; all the development effort will be going into supporting Microsoft Exchange, in line with Novell's usual policy of preferring Microsoft lock-in over open standards.

KDE's calendar program looks quite nice. It supports all kinds of synchronisation options. Er... that is, apart from the single useful standard, CalDAV. The absence of which, people have been complaining about literally for years. Apparently they're waiting for opensync (aka Godot; see below). Or possibly something called Akonadi (Godot's little brother). It looks like someone else has recently got sick of waiting and started actually writing some code to fix this gaping hole, which is a pleasant surprise, but their project doesn't actually work yet. Good luck to them anyway.

So, what's left? There's a promising project called opensync that claims to be able to synchronise any sort of calendar I like. This sounds like exactly what I'm looking for! Oh, wait: the last stable release is ancient; the last couple of years have been spent completely breaking the whole API; the Google Calendar plugin is unmaintained and is broken even in the stable version; there is no CalDAV support at all. The current status report labels everything as either alpha-quality or totally broken. Good stuff. Enjoy gazing at your navels, opensync developers! I'm so glad you decided to rearchitect your project instead of making it useful.

Which leaves only one option: GCalDaemon. I refuse to touch this with a bargepole. Not because it's unmaintained, not even because it's written in Java, but because its developers seem to have been totally clueless, and I will not trust their code on my computer. They expect me to put user-specific configuration files under /usr/local/sbin? Um... no.

Never mind, I'll write my own. Sigh.

User Journal

Journal Journal: Privitization Ideologues

First, read my comment, now look around at the other comments.

This is what happened:
* The guv'mint hands over development of this service to private parties.
* Those private parties rip off the guv'mint, it's extremely wasteful.
* People at a public institution (part of the guv'mint) pointed out that this could've been done way cheaper, by the guv'mint without private parties involvement.

  This is what everyone says which gets modded as insightful:
* The guv'mint is wasteful!
* We should let private parties handle stuff instead, they're more efficient.

  You have a large group of people who are so blinded by their "Capitalist" ideology that even events *directly contrary* to their thesis are interpreted as validation of it, instead. This would be like saying that the fall of the Soviet Union proved the soundness of state socialism - which even advocates of state socialism do not say! It's off the end of the crazy spectrum.

GNU is Not Unix

Journal Journal: BASH SCRIPTING: My Crude Function 'resleep' 6

How many times have you used the 'sleep' command interactively only to realize that the amount of time you initially specified wasn't enough and you wanted to reset it? Or how many times have you had something sleeping for quite a while but you wanted to know where it was in the sleep countdown? Never? Good you can ignore this. I've found myself in these situations quite a few times when recording a TV show or ripping a live stream from the web. So I wrote the 'resleep' functions (which wrap around 'sleep') below which can then either be included in scripts where you'd normally use sleep by itself, or dotted into your environment and run as commands. It's not polished and I'm sure the logic isn't clean, but it's working for me so far. One thing I still need to add is the ability to pass a time reference to the wrapped 'sleep' command itself so that the "time units" can be something other than "1 second". For example it would be nice to be able to set it to 30 minutes and then three time units would be 90 minutes. But that will come later... For now, enjoy, pick it apart, call me an idiot or tell me how this could be accomplished with 'sleep' if I'd RTFM ( I did).

# 'resleep' is a resettable sleep countdown timer. You specify the initial
# count of time units (in this case seconds). Then if you need more time
# you echo the new time unit count to /tmp/.dtime which resets the count
# to whatever you specify.

function resleep()
{
echo $1 > /tmp/.dtime
dur=$1

while ((dur > 0))
do
# cat /tmp/.dtime
    sleep 1
    dur=`cat /tmp/.dtime`
    countdown=$(($dur-1))
    echo $countdown > /tmp/.dtime
done

rm /tmp/.dtime
}

# The 'setsleep' function is used to reset your time unit count. Example:
# 'setsleep 30' will reset the count to 30 seconds.
# If the countdown is over an error message is presented.
function setsleep()
{
if ! [ -e /tmp/.dtime ]
then
    echo "No countdown file present"
    return
fi

echo "Current countdown: `cat /tmp/.dtime`"
echo $1 > /tmp/.dtime
echo "Reset countdown: `cat /tmp/.dtime`"
}

# The 'getsleep' function is used to see where you are in the countdown.
# If the countdown is over an error message is presented.
function getsleep()
{
if ! [ -e /tmp/.dtime ]
then
    echo "No countdown file present"
    return
fi

echo "Current countdown: `cat /tmp/.dtime`"
}

User Journal

Journal Journal: Updates to Journal System 13

We've made some significant updates to the submission/journal system. Visiting Submissions and Journals yields a new form that allows stuff like tags to the data types. There are a number of annoying bugs, but for the most part the dust is starting to settle. More notes will be coming, but this journal entry is really just me putting the final test on the new Journal form.

It's funny.  Laugh.

Journal Journal: Socialist Firefighters Are the Face of Tyranny

I am sick and tired of Socialist Firefighters and how they have taken away my liberty.

You think I'm kidding? I'm serious as a heart attack. I just got a $137.44 tax bill for firefighting services. This is unconstitutional and unfair. It's unconstitutional because nowhere in the constitution does it say government should provide firefighting services. It's unfair because I don't smoke in bed or use unventilated kerosene heaters or overload electrical circuits or do anything else that's likely to set my little place on fire. I'm so fire-safe that I light my charcoal grill with paper in a chimney, not with dangerous lighter fluid. So why, in the name of God and Ron Paul, am I forced to pay for my neighbors' carelessness?

Mind you, if a neighbor's house catches on fire, I'll run over with my fire extinguishers (I have two of them, ready to use) and my garden hose and try to put it out. We Americans are like that: neighborly and helpful. But we do not want firefighting service shoved down our throats, especially if it's controlled by government bureaucrats instead of honest, profit-making American businesses.

Not just socialism. Tyranny, too

Imagine a government bureaucrat coming onto your property whenever he or she wants and telling you how many people you can have over at any given time. Fire inspectors do this all over America, day in and day out. Worse, they can force honest business owners to spend thousands of dollars on sprinkler systems, smoke detectors, and emergency exits. They can do this to churches, too. Imagine that! A uniformed government official has the power to shut down a church because it is so popular that it attracts standing-room-only crowds. This is anti-Christian. It is against the First Amendment. It is Tyranny.

We must stop the evil of socialist firefighting and go back to the days when a fire victim would negotiate with private fire companies to put out fires on his or her property. Yes, once upon a time, America had private firefighting companies that competed with one another for business. The father of our country himself, George Washington, belonged to a private volunteer fire company. I say, if competing, privately-run fire companies were good enough for George Washington, they should be good enough for us.

We must hold town hall meetings. We must confront our local, state, and federal officials about the horror of socialist firefighting and tell them why it is evil and must be stopped, even though the firefighters' unions and the profiteers who make firefighting equipment will spend millions to lobby in favor of gouging taxpayers -- and increasing their tyrannical hold on us -- a little more every year.

To the barricades, brothers and sisters! And don't forget your teabags!

See more of my commentaries (along with videos and other natterings) at Roblimo.com

Slashdot Top Deals

The last thing one knows in constructing a work is what to put first. -- Blaise Pascal

Working...