Economists – Bearded or Not – So Totally Given the Shaft

Pay no attention to the man behind the beard.

Pay no attention to the man behind the beard.

No one yet has satisfactorily answered the question, why do all high-profile economists have beards? I know they’re hiding something under those whiskers. I just know it. There’s the nobel prize-winning Dr. Beardy. And Beardy, Jr.. And friend of the show, Dean Beardy. One of these days I’ll get to the bottom of all that facial hair but in the meantime, I’d be satisfied with simply hearing what these men have to say about our economy.

Too bad for me, because it seems that the beards are also keeping the fiscally erudite off the TV.

Maybe they can’t quite get the lighting right, but according to a new report by Media Matters for America economists have made scant appearances on television to talk about the economic recovery plan. Studying the Sunday talk shows as well as 12 cable news programs from January 25 through February 8, MMFA found that:

During 139 1/2 hours of programming in which the economic recovery legislation was discussed, economists made 25 guest appearances out of a total of 460 — only 5 percent.

There’s no doubt that opinion, whether follicly-gifted or not, has its place. But a healthier balance of ideologically-driven opinion and learned opinion would better serve the public’s interest. If you’re going to flood your congressperson’s office with calls, shouldn’t they be about something more than a manufactured story about the forbidden love of a house speaker and a harvest mouse?

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The House just passed the Economic Stimulus legislation by a score of 246-183. The Tennessee delegation voted along party lines. U.S. Rep Jim Cooper (D-TN, The Fightin’ 5th!) explains his vote:

“For the past few weeks I’ve said that we need to pass an economic stimulus package and we need to stay close to President Obama’s request. Today’s compromise bill is better and more targeted than the original House bill, and it is much closer to the president’s original request.

“Congress has a lot to learn from President Obama about transparency, accountability, and bipartisanship, but this is a vote to keep that dialog open. We have even bigger challenges ahead of us, and we have to build trust and legislative capacity as soon as possible.”

Seven Democrats voted no: Bright (AL), DeFazio (OR), Minnick (ID), Griffith, Peterson (MN), Shuler (NC), Taylor (MS). DeFazio, a Democrat from Oregon, voted on his objection to the tax cut portion of the bill. No Republicans voted Aye.

*He used to let us call him that. OK, no he didn’t.

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Here’s what I just heard on Supertalk 99.7 WTN’s Michael DelGiorno Show:

DelGiorno: Barack Obama’s economic stimulus package is evil incarnate and every member of Congress who votes for it is trying to ruin the country and should be run out of office with pitchforks and torches.*

Random Callers: Get them! Get the bastards!

Delgiorno: Be right back with more intellectual dishonesty and fearmongering right after this commercial break!

Commercial Break (paid for by America Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees and Americans United for Change):

Cha-ching, WTN. Cha. Ching.

*Rough translation

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Run Along Now, Little Fairness Doctrine. Shoo!

Don’t those people up there in those shiny white marble buildings have media consultants? In Tennessee, for instance, we have a Democratic governor who continues to use frames constructed by the opposition for the sole purpose of controlling the political debate. In this week’s State of the State, Governor Bredesen twice described responsible and sound fiscal policy as “conservative”:

First, the principle of the “family budget”; that we honestly appraise how much money is coming in, and spend that much and no more. This is a common sense and conservative approach, and is particularly needed when we’re in a recession that may yet go deeper and last longer than we expect….I’m going to send you a budget in March that is conservative and we’re going to use any money the federal government sends us carefully and wisely.

In both of these instances “conservative” could have easily been replaced with “fiscally responsible” or “fiscally sound.” Tin political ear, indeed. Unless he used that term on purpose, in which case, thanks for abandoning the Democratic wing of the Democratic party again, Governor.

The Fairness Doctrine is giving me the fisheye.

The ol' hairy eyeball.

And there are those in the U.S. Congress who don’t yet know enough to shut up about the Fairness Doctrine, which is the juiciest of red meat for rabid right-wing broadcasters. Red meat they use to play the victim and whip their audience into a frenzy about “free speech” and the First Amendment.

But the Fairness Doctrine argument is a red herring (which must be why the mendacious Limbaugh, Hannity, et. al. like it so much.) The real issue is one brought forth by a yet-to-be outdated 2007 study written by the Center for American Progress – there are serious questions about whether the companies licensed to broadcast over the public airwaves serve the listening needs of all Americans.

The top 5 commercial station owners would be upholding the responsibility to the public trust that comes with their broadcasting license if:

  • 91 percent of the total potential U.S. radio listening audience were conservative
  • 76 percent of the total potential listening audience in the top 10 radio markets were conservative (but with the top 10 markets including most major metropolitan areas, that doesn’t seem likely).
  • Broadcasting 2,570 hours of conservative talk compared to 254 hours of progressive talk every weekday (10 times as much conservative talk as progressive talk) served the needs of all their listeners (see the first bullet point).

So why the imbalance? Well, it’s the repeal of the Fairness Doctrine in 1987, of course! Yeah, well, not so much. Then it’s ol’ supply and consumer demand, then! Not that either. Sorry.

As the report CAP reports states, “neither of these reasons adequately explains why conservative talk radio dominates the airwaves.” The real reason is the deregulation that followed in the wake of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which amended the Communications Act of 1934 and eliminated most media ownership regulations and continued the industry consolidation begun by President Reagan. In 1983 there were 50 major media companies. In 1996 there were 10. And now there are 5.

But the 1996 act kept some key provisions of the 1934 act, namely that any reduction of barriers be within the confines of acting in the public’s interest.

When station owners are granted a broadcast license, they become the trusted guardians of a limited resource. And with that trust comes a responsibility to broadcast in the public’s interest – all the public’s interest, not just a select few. When large corporations that could care less about this responsibility – and are not held accountable to it – are able to gobble up a majority of the most powerful stations in the country, we end up with a vast network of talk radio hosts all hitting the same note.* In addition, the relaxation of the station ownership rules effectively shut out local ownership and local management requirements. And who knows better than a local what would serve the local interest?

In an interview yesterday with the unlikely outlet CNSNews, acting Federal Communications Commission commissioner, Michael Copps, addressed the Fairness Doctrine kerfuffle best:

“That’s kind of yesterday’s fight,” Copps told CNSNews.com. “I understand the goals behind it. I understand that the legislative intent is still there to make sure that our airwaves serve the public interest. (But) I don’t think the best way to get there is to just to rehash something nobody agreed about, even back in the 1950’s….How do we ensure true localism in our broadcast environment, especially in light of the damage that has been inflicted upon that environment by two decades of excessive media consolidation and mindless deregulation of the public interest?…I think we have a tremendous opportunity going forward to reinvigorate our media…to ensure that the public airwaves truly deliver the kind of news and information that we need to sustain our democratic dialogue and to reflect the great diversity of our country; its races and ethnic groups and culture and music and arts.”

UPDATE: THe Huffington Post’s Craig Aaron has a cure for Fairness Doctrine Panic (FDP), just say no:

BILL PRESS: Isn’t it time to bring back the Fairness Doctrine?
DEMOCRATIC POLITICIAN: No.
BILL PRESS: Don’t we need it? But isn’t this the only way to keep progressive voices on the air?
DEMOCRATIC POLITICIAN: No.
BILL PRESS: Is the Fairness Doctrine ever coming back?
DEMOCRATIC POLITICIAN: No. Nope. Not. Nyet. Never.

*By the way you run into the same problem if you listen to the radio for music – the same top 40 hits are played over and over again in market after market.

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Jon Stewart is done with laughing at old ladies slipping on ice and has moved on to kicking old men. And by kicking old men we mean exposing the blatant and ever-unexplained hypocrisy of Bill O’Reilly.

The question is, is O’Reilly aware of his hypocrisy and he just doesn’t care (i.e. “I do what I do for ratings and money, intellectually honesty be damned”), or is he just that delusional?

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I was going to start this post by saying that I can understand economic policy differences between Republicans and Democrats but, well, actually, no I can’t, considering where we’ve found ourselves after the last eight years of tax cuts and non-existent regulation of financial services.

And, as if the last eight years were a figment of our collective imagination, House and Senate Republicans have created, with the help of flacks Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, and Tennessee’s own Steve Gill, an echo chamber of misinformation criticizing President Obama’s economic recovery plan. Most egregiously, is that the misinformation in this particular echo chamber is getting bounced around to a mainstream media that refuses to fact check instead choosing only to regurgitate talking points :

During the Senate debate, between Feb. 2 and Feb. 5, Republican lawmakers outnumbered Democratic lawmakers 75 to 41 in interviews. During the House debate the week earlier, cable outlets hosted a 2 to 1 ratio of GOP to Democratic lawmakers.

Media Matters is on the case, however, offering red meat to those of us in the reality-based community:

CLAIM: Recovery package is “spending,” not “stimulus”

REALITY: The notion that “spending” is distinct from “stimulus” and the claim that the bill is not “stimulus” have been challenged by economists. CBO director Douglas Elmendorf stated in congressional testimony that the House legislation, H.R. 1, “would provide massive fiscal stimulus” and that the CBO, along with “most economists,” believes that all of the spending in the bill “provides some stimulative effect.” Additionally, Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, has said, “[S]pending is stimulus. Any spending will generate jobs. It is that simple.”

CLAIM: Spending after beginning of recovery is ineffective stimulus

REALITY: In his January 27 written testimony, CBO’s Elmendorf said: “Because most periods of economic weakness are fairly short-lived, it is generally preferable that stimulus policies be short-lived. Currently, however, CBO projects that economic output will remain significantly below its potential for several more years, so policies that provide stimulus for an extended period of time may be appropriate. Indeed, a fiscal stimulus that ends before the economy has started to regain its footing runs the risk of exacerbating economic weakness when the stimulus ends.”

CLAIM: Illegal immigrants receive tax credits under stimulus plan

REALITY: A January 29 Associated Press article cited a single anonymous “top Republican congressional official” in reporting that the stimulus bill “could steer government checks to illegal immigrants,” as it “would allow people who don’t have Social Security numbers to be eligible for” tax credits. The claim, however, is false. In fact, the recovery bill specifically precludes from eligibility for the Making Work Pay tax credit of $500 per individual and $1,000 per family “any individual unless the requirements of section 32(c)(1)(E) are met with respect to such individual.” Section 32(c)(1)(E) of the Internal Revenue Code specifies requirements for individuals to qualify for the Earned Income Tax Credit which include having a social security number issued by the Social Security Administration. The AP later revised its January 29 article to make that clear.

CLAIM: The New Deal failed, prolonged Great Depression

REALITY: Such claims have been flatly rejected by prominent economists, including Nobel laureate Paul Krugman, who has said that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt did not go far enough to end the crisis and that it was actually Roosevelt’s reversal of New Deal policies — in an attempt to balance the budget — that hindered recovery.

CLAIM: Fiscal stimulus in Japan failed during the “lost decade” of the 1990s

REALITY: Prominent economists have stated that economic conditions did improve when Japan undertook fiscal stimulus policies but that reversals of those policies hindered Japan’s recovery. On February 6, for example, Krugman said: “[I]t’s clear. The Japanese — when they were really pushing hard, when they had strong programs, when they spent a lot on trying to buck-up their economy — it actually did grow. What happened was they chickened out very early in the process, said, ‘OK, let’s cut back, let’s raise interest rates, let’s raise taxes, let’s cut back on those public works.’ And they lost momentum, and they never got it back.”

CLAIM: Economic recovery bill amounts to spending more than $200K per job created

REALITY: By calculating the per-job cost by dividing the estimated total cost of the recovery bill by the estimated number of jobs created or saved — and thus suggesting that the sole purpose of that package is to create jobs — Hannity and Limbaugh joined other media figures in ignoring other tangible benefits stemming from the package, such as infrastructure improvements and investments in education, health, and public safety.

In a January 24 post on The American Prospect’s Beat the Press blog, Baker wrote: “The Republicans have become fond of saying that President Obama’s stimulus package will cost $275,000 for every job created. The media have been typically derelict in simply reporting this number without making any assessment to evaluate it — as though readers in their spare time are supposed to determine whether it is accurate or not.” So Baker did their work for them:

“First, where do the Republicans get this number? They divide the the $825 billion cost of the stimulus by 3 million jobs that President Obama had originally pledged. Their arithmetic is right but both numbers are wrong. First, the projections from the Obama team is that their package will create 4 million jobs, not 3 million. Furthermore, it is important to note that this over 2 years, not one year. The cost is also wrong, or at least misleading. If we assume that the stimulus will work as planned, then it will boost GDP by approximately 1.5 times the amount of spending or $620 billion a year. If GDP rises by this amount, then it will translate into roughly $155 billion a year in higher taxes/lower spending than if we didn’t do the stimulus. This is money that should be subtracted from the cost to the taxpayers. So, if net out the increased revenue from the growth generated by the stimulus we end up with a 2-year cost of $515 billion which will generate roughly 8 million job-years. That comes to about $65k per job year, less than one-fourth of the Republicans’ number.

CLAIM: $4 billion for ACORN

REALITY: The bill does not mention ACORN or otherwise single it out for funding, and it requires that the $4.19 billion it allocates for “neighborhood stabilization activities” be distributed through competitive processes. Moreover, ACORN CEO Bertha Lewis wrote on The Huffington Post that “ACORN isn’t getting any of this money” because “we aren’t eligible for it in the first place.”

CLAIM: Corporate tax rate cuts and capital gains tax rate cuts would provide substantial stimulus

REALITY: Many economists do not view corporate tax rate cuts and capital gains tax rate cuts as particularly effective methods for stimulating the economy. Mark Zandi — the chief economist and co-founder of Moody’s Economy.com, who was reportedly a McCain campaign economic adviser — included in 2008 written congressional testimony a table stating that every dollar spent through a “Cut in [the] Corporate Tax Rate” produces a GDP increase of only $0.30 — the third least-efficient provision of the 13 he studied. A 2003 Congressional Research Service (CRS) report stated that a “capital gains tax cut appears the least likely of any permanent tax cut to stimulate the economy in the short run; a temporary capital gains tax cut is unlikely to provide any stimulus.”

CLAIM: Bloomberg’s Betsy McCaughey, falsely claimed that under provisions in the economic recovery bill passed by House Democrats, “[o]ne new bureaucracy, the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology, will monitor treatments to make sure your doctor is doing what the federal government deems appropriate and cost effective. The goal is to reduce costs and ‘guide’ your doctor’s decisions.”

REALITY: The language in the House bill that McCaughey, a former lieutenant governor of New York, referenced does not establish authority to “monitor treatments” or restrict what “your doctor is doing” with regard to patient care, but rather addresses establishing an electronic records system such that doctors would have complete, accurate information about their patients “to help guide medical decisions at the time and place of care.”

And then there’s my personal favorite:

CLAIM: On this morning’s Steve Gill show, Steve and a listener had a grand old time comparing President Obama to Hitler because, like Hitler, President Obama and his economic stimulus plan want to kill old people.

REALITY: It’s beyond time for us to stop comparing our elected officials to Hitler. That, and both the House and Senate versions of the bill have kept in $87 billion to help states with Medicaid, the joint federal/state program that covers medical services for the elderly and the needy.

Additional misinformation that’s being spouted by national media is also of a more general kind: that the President is “losing [the] stimulus message war.” They get that from the wishful thinking of El Rushbo. The reality is much different.

As a Gallup poll released yesterday noted, “The American public gives President Barack Obama a strong 67% approval rating for the way in which he is handling the government’s efforts to pass an economic stimulus bill.” Despite conservatives’ vocal opposition to the recovery bill, 52 percent favor a roughly $800 billion package, while 38 percent are opposed. Independent voters favor the progressive priorities set forth by Obama: 50 percent independents favor “increased government funding of projects” in the recovery package, compared to only 36 percent who favor “tax cuts for individuals/businesses” promulgated by conservatives. Congressional Republicans, who see political gain from their “party of no” status, have a “staggeringly high” disapproval of 58 percent. Their approval rating is at 44 percent compared to 60 percent for Democrats.

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Summary: Guests include Chip Forrester, newly elected chair of the Tennessee Democratic Party.

Part 1 – It’s all Fun and Games on Valentine’s Day Until Somebody Loses an Eye – This week’s Liberadio(!) “To Do” list – Stand For Schools Rally, The NAACP Centennial, Tennessee Equality Day on the Hill, and Charles Darwin’s Birthday – is supplemented by the Liberadio(!) “I Do” list. Don’t miss your chance to get hitched by John Arriola and the romantic County Clerk staff! Plus, one state Representative was for free and fair elections before he was against them, and a caller, who apparently just woke up out of an 8-year coma, accuses “liberals” of ignoring history. [36.9 MB 23:00 download MP3]

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Let’s Get it On – Marvin Gay
Love to Love You Baby – Donna Summer
Fever – Peggy Lee

Part 2 – Interview with Chip Forrester – Chip. The Chipster. Chipinator. He’s the newly minted chair of the Tennessee Democratic Party and he’s answering our questions about fundraising, reaching out to the old bulls, encouraging the grass roots, the 95-county strategy, welcoming new ideas, staffing decisions, the income tax, feeding the trolls, expanding the base, technology, and “I probably shouldn’t be telling you this but…”. [37.3 MB 23:15 download MP3]

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Je T’Aime Moi Non Plus – Serge Gainsbourg & Jane Birkin

Part 3 – Affairs of the State and Affairs of the Heart. And never the ‘twain shall meet – unless Senator Stanley’s adoption bill passes (SB0078), in which case he goes to heaven while Tennessee’s parentless children languish. Plus, more comments on blog commentors and the world famous Dave Cloud is back to assure us that he’s not the Marquis de Sade. [44.8 MB 27:57 download MP3]

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Can’t Get Enough of Your Love Baby – Barry White

Part 4 – Bumpers Ugly – Councilman Eric Crafton has some explaining to do – have all his fundraising sources been disclosed? – and some realizations to come to – dude, you have a constituency, you know. Plus, should public policy be guided by religious faith and what the hell is a small d democrant? [46.7MB 29:07 download MP3]

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Theone – Lambchop (Album: How I Quite Smoking)

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David Berman, Nashville music scene fixture and, until very recently, the front man for The Silver Jews, has a famous dad. He is Rick Berman, who, according to a recent article in PR Watch, “has perfected the art of setting up non-profit ‘charitable’ groups to advance corporate interests:”

The groups have deceptively helpful-sounding names, like “Guest Choice Network,” the “Employment Policies Institute” or the “Center for Consumer Freedom,” but really serve as well-funded attack dogs for the tobacco, alcohol, chain restaurant, tanning and other industries. The groups’ non-profit status makes their funding hard to trace, which has permitted Berman to operate in the shadows for decades while pocketing millions from unpopular industries for his work thwarting public interest legislation….

[Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington] Web site outs Berman’s “charitable” groups as the lobbying tools they are, and describes how he uses them to run attack ads and implement other tactics to fight Mothers Against Drunk Driving, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals and other public interest groups’ efforts to raise awareness of obesity, secondhand smoke, drunk driving, mad cow disease, and other causes.

David’s pain over his dad’s chosen profession is clear in a post he made recently to his message board:

Now that the Joos are over I can tell you my gravest secret. Worse than suicide, worse than crack addiction:

My father.

You might be surprised to know he is famous, for terrible reasons.

My father is a despicable man. My father is a sort of human molestor.

An exploiter. A scoundrel. A world historical motherf*****g son of a bitch. (sorry grandma)

You can read about him here.

www.bermanexposed.org

Previously I thought, through songs and poems and drawings I could find and build a refuge away from his world.

But there is the matter of Justice.

And i’ll tell you it’s not just a metaphor. The desire for it actually burns.

It hurts.

There needs to be something more. I’ll see what that might be.

What David has done in severing his relationship with his father and posting his hurt and anger publicly takes unimaginable bravery. One can only hope that his honesty has the desired effect – to throw back the curtains and let the sunlight expose this most egregious aspect of the lobbying industry.

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Rattled by the Rush Fans

I’m shocked, shocked, I tell you that, according to a recent Gallup poll, 60% of Republicans nationwide view Conservative talk-show host Rush Limbaugh favorably. Seriously, I am flabbergasted that the number is that high.

But if we use the Republican “guilt-by-association” blueprint – they sit in their cars or offices or homes listening to him for hours everyday for years! – that means 60% of Republicans think it’s OK to lie, misrepresent themselves, commit fraud, be a hypocrite, make fun of those with debilitating and life-threatening diseases, be on welfare, and hope that the United States weakens and continues its economic decline.

(H/T: Post Politics)

“All Rush wants it for the Republican Party to return to core principles, and the core principle that Rush follows is: follow Rush.” -Stephen Colbert

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YouChip

The new Tennessee Democratic Party chair, Chip Forrester, will be our guest on Monday’s show. Here’s a preview:



Also, the TNDP gets a new homepage for their website – complete with links to The Facebook, The Twitter, The YouTubes and a new email address for you to submit your ideas – ideas@tndp.org.

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