Tuesday, December 20, 2022

FOCUS: Paul Krugman | Why Petulant Oligarchs Rule Our World

 

 

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Elon Musk attends the 2022 Met Gala. (photo: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty)
FOCUS: Paul Krugman | Why Petulant Oligarchs Rule Our World
Paul Krugman, The New York Times
Krugman writes: "Some years ago - I think it was 2015 - I got a quick lesson in how easy it is to become a horrible person."   

Some years ago — I think it was 2015 — I got a quick lesson in how easy it is to become a horrible person. I was a featured speaker at a conference in São Paulo, Brazil, and my arrival flight was badly delayed. The organizers, worried that I would miss my slot thanks to the city’s notorious traffic, arranged to have me met at the airport and flown directly to the hotel’s roof by helicopter.

Then, when the conference was over, there was a car waiting to take me back to the airport. And just for a minute I found myself thinking, “What? I have to take a car?”

By the way, in real life I mostly get around on the subway.

Anyway, the lesson I took from my moment of pettiness was that privilege corrupts, that it very easily breeds a sense of entitlement. And surely, to paraphrase Lord Acton, enormous privilege corrupts enormously, in part because the very privileged are normally surrounded by people who would never dare tell them that they’re behaving badly.

That’s why I’m not shocked by the spectacle of Elon Musk’s reputational self-immolation. Fascinated, yes; who isn’t? But when an immensely rich man, accustomed not just to getting whatever he wants but also to being a much-admired icon, finds himself not just losing his aura but becoming a subject of widespread ridicule, of course he lashes out erratically, and in so doing makes his problems even worse.

The more interesting question is why we’re now ruled by such people. For we’re clearly living in the age of the petulant oligarch.

As The Times’s Kevin Roose recently pointed out, Musk still has many admirers in the technology world. They see him not as a whiny brat but as someone who understands how the world should be run — an ideology the writer John Ganz calls bossism, a belief that the big people shouldn’t have to answer to, or even face criticism from, the little people. And adherents of that ideology clearly have a lot of power, even if that power doesn’t yet extend to protecting the likes of Musk from getting booed in public.

But how is this possible?

It’s not really a surprise that technological progress and rising gross domestic product haven’t created a happy, equitable society; downbeat visions of the future have been staples of both serious analysis and popular culture for as long as I can remember. But both social critics like John Kenneth Galbraith and speculative writers like William Gibson generally imagined corporatist dystopias that suppressed individuality — not societies dominated by thin-skinned egomaniac plutocrats acting out their insecurities in public view.

So what happened?

Part of the answer, surely, is the sheer scale of wealth concentration at the top. Even before the Twitter fiasco, many people were comparing Elon Musk to Howard Hughes in his declining years. But Hughes’s wealth, even measured in today’s dollars, was trivial compared with Musk’s, even after the recent plunge in Tesla stock. More generally, the best available estimates say that the top 0.00001 percent’s share of total wealth today is almost 10 times what it was four decades ago. And the immense wealth of the modern super-elite has surely brought a lot of power, including the power to act childishly.

Beyond that, many of the superrich, who as a class used to be mostly secretive, have become celebrities instead. The archetype of the innovator who gets rich while changing the world isn’t new; it goes back at least as far as Thomas Edison. But the big fortunes made in information technology turned this narrative into a full-blown cult, with wannabe or seem-to-be Steve Jobs types everywhere you look.

Indeed, the cult of the genius entrepreneur has played a large role in the rolling debacle that is crypto. Sam Bankman-Fried of FTX wasn’t selling a real product nor, as far as anyone can tell, are those of his former competitors who haven’t yet gone bankrupt: After all this time, nobody has come up with significant real-world uses for cryptocurrency other than money-laundering. What Bankman-Fried was selling, instead, was an image, that of the mussy-haired, scruffily dressed visionary who grasps the future in a way normies can’t.

Elon Musk isn’t in quite the same category. His companies produce cars that actually drive and rockets that actually fly. But the sales and especially the market value of his companies surely depend at least in part on the strength of his personal brand, which he can’t seem to help himself from trashing ever more with each passing day.

In the end, Musk and Bankman-Fried may end up doing a public service, by tarnishing the legend of the genius entrepreneur, which has done a great deal of harm. For now, however, Musk’s Twitter antics are degrading what had become a useful resource, a place some of us went for information from people who actually knew what they were talking about. And a happy ending to this story seems increasingly unlikely.

Oh, and if this column gets me banned from Twitter — or if the site simply dies from mistreatment — you can follow some of what I’m thinking, along with the thoughts of a growing number of Twitter refugees, at Mastodon.


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Trump issues deranged response to criminal referrals

 


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Tell the Justice Department to bring charges against Trump!

Today’s Action: Host or donate to a winter coat drive in your area!


Daily Dose of Democracy:

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Trump gives pathetic response to Jan. 6 criminal referrals

The criminal ex-president responded to the House 1/6 committee officially calling for his prosecution for insurrection by absurdly claiming that it would only "strengthen" him before unloading a deranged stream of consciousness.

Take Action: Demand Merrick Garland punish Trump and his fans for threatening Jan. 6 witnesses!


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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Jan. 6 committee slams Trump with worst news possible

For some time now it has been painfully clear that the disgraced ex-president broke numerous laws during his failed coup attempt. Now the House 1/6 committee is finally taking steps to hold him accountable.

Take Action: Tell your congressmember to co-sponsor the Billionaire Minimum Tax bill!


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Trump caught scamming his OWN supporters

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: Unreal.


Jan. 6 committee reveals that Ivanka Trump was not "forthcoming" during her testimony
The committee said that Trump’s daughter and adviser Ivanka “acknowledged” that she had agreed with then-Attorney General Bill Barr that there wasn’t evidence of election-altering fraud, that Trump pressured Pence over his powers on the morning of Jan. 6, and that the president watched the Capitol violence unfold on television in real time. Yet the panel suggested that she knew more than she was letting on. Such dishonesty clearly demands that she be dragged back in front of Congress and grilled till she spills the truth.

Take Action: Don't let Republicans starve critical investments in children and healthcare!


Chief Justice Roberts pauses lifting of Title 42, keeping migrant policy in place for now
In just the latest incident of the Republican-controlled Supreme Court prioritizing right-wing activism over honoring the Constitution, Chief Justice John Roberts has temporarily blocked the Biden administration from ending the pandemic-era Title 42 immigration policy, leaving in doubt whether officials will continue to expel migrants over concerns about public health risks.

Take Action: Tell the Senate to investigate the corruption in the Supreme Court!


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Gay MAGA Rep.-elect George Santos allegedly lied about his entire past

Calls are quickly growing for a newly elected Republican congressman to be denied his seat in Congress after it was revealed that he likely lied about his education, about working for Citigroup and Goldman Sachs, and about running a successful animal charity that does not appear to exist. He even lied about having his employees killed in the Pulse club massacre. There are no depths to the shamelessness of GOP politicians.

Take Action: Tell Congress to break up Big Tech's monopolies!


Lee Harvey Oswald, the CIA, and LSD: New clues in newly declassified documents
While Donald Trump's criticisms of our nation's intelligence agencies over the past few years have been nothing but bad faith efforts to save his own neck, that doesn't mean that we should suddenly grant the clandestine organizations undue benefit of the doubt. Newly released JFK documents in particular indicate that the CIA may have had some sinister interactions with the Kennedy assassin — including possibly using him as an LSD test subject — that seem to lend credence to what would have once been considered conspiracy theories.


Elizabeth Warren warns Tesla shareholders may be at risk from Elon Musk
As the man formerly known as the world's richest person continues to flame out spectacularly as CEO of Twitter, the noted progressive senator is sounding the alarm that he might be taking down more than his incredibly expensive social media toy with him.


Marjorie Taylor Greene declares war on Walmart over dildos
Always on the lookout for a new target to lob inane culture war attacks at, the unhinged QAnon congresswoman has now taken aim at the retail behemoth. Specifically, she is feigning outrage over a Walmart supposedly selling vibrators and lubricant in her congressional district.


Jan. 6 panel refers McCarthy, 3 other Republicans for ethics violations
The panel referred the lawmakers for a review by the bipartisan House Ethics Committee, which is seen as unlikely to take action against the members, a frankly unacceptable outcome given the flagrantly immoral and clearly criminal behavior of the GOP figures involved.


Judge strikes down California gun law modeled on Texas abortion measure
A federal judge has blocked a California gun law that emulated a controversial Texas abortion ban that essentially declared open season on anyone even tangentially connected to an abortion. The injunction from Judge Roger Benitez sets California’s law, which enables private citizens to sue manufacturers of illegal guns, on a potential path to the US Supreme Court. That could set up a test of both laws — an outcome that California Gov. Gavin Newsom has sought.


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Today’s Action: Host or donate to a winter coat drive in your area!

As we move into winter, and subzero temperatures settle in across large swaths of the country, it’s imperative that we remember our neighbors experiencing homelessness and those struggling with housing insecurity. Approximately 700 at-risk or already unhoused people die from hypothermia and winter weather-related incidents in the United States each year, and many will struggle to find shelter from the cold this winter, as anti-homeless “street-sweeping” operations and hostile architectural “deterrent” strategies are both sadly on the rise.

One simple, effective way you can help right now is by organizing a winter coat drive, or supporting an existing coat drive in your area. Something as simple as an old coat that you’ve outgrown or no longer use could be the difference between a neighbor staying warm and getting sick this winter. And with this weekend’s expected “arctic blast” set to threaten much of the United States with life-threatening temperatures, there’s no better time to act.

One Warm Coat can help you find coat drives in your area, as well as the resources to plan and promote your own. Check out their map of coat drives and make plans to donate and promote an event! If there aren’t any coat drives already underway in your community, follow One Warm Coat’s six steps to hosting a successful drive! No matter how you participate, your community will be better — and warmer — for it.

PS — Please don't forget to sign the petition to tell the Justice Department to bring charges against Trump, and be sure to follow us on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.

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Criminal Referrals

 

Criminal Referrals

The January 6 committee speaks to history and the present

(Photo by Al Drago/Getty Images)

With a final historic hearing, the work of the January 6 committee came to a dramatic end. It has also only just begun. What we have learned should horrify us. Where we go from here should contend with that horror. 

Thanks to the committee’s work, we have a far better understanding of the cascade of events that brought us to the point where American democracy was put in grave peril. The congresspeople and their staff have put their indelible stamp on the narrative that history will record, and all who care about the continuation of this nation as a democratic republic governed by the rule of law owe these public servants a profound debt of gratitude. They refused to let this assault on our nation occur without repercussions, and in doing so they served their country well.  

Now others must pick up the baton for a final reckoning. 

There has always been a sense that this committee represented a sort of play within a play — a completely realized drama that was simultaneously encapsulated in a much broader narrative. We are contending with a former president who willfully and premeditatively worked to destroy the constitutional order that is meant to govern this country. His path was one of autocracy and chaos. And he came close to realizing his nefarious plan. 

The role of this committee was to gather evidence of these misdeeds and present it to three important audiences. 

First is the general public, who need to know what the former president and his enablers wrought so we can make informed decisions at the ballot box. 

Second is the Department of Justice, in whose hands the final decision of whether to try the former president and others ultimately rests.

And finally, the generations yet to come. It is vital that the history books contain a complete accounting of what transpired leading up to and in the aftermath of the violent insurrection of January 6. 

After collecting reams of evidence and conducting scores of interviews with those who had front row seats to the former president’s machinations and state of mind, there was little surprise that the committee ended its tenure with criminal referrals of the former president to the Department of Justice on multiple serious charges. A lack of surprise, however, should not be confused with acceptance or complacency. We should never lose our shock or outrage that these events occurred, and we should never forget those who were responsible, from the instigators to the foot soldiers storming the Capitol. 

Looming over it all is the former president, whose self-serving lies and unquenchable thirst for power at all costs set the insurgency into motion. He stoked and then cheered the violence. That it didn’t get even more destructive is a testimony to the bravery of law enforcement and their determination to protect members of Congress and the peaceful transfer of power. If the former president had had his way, there is no telling what would have transpired. But it would have been much, much more. 

Will this man, who has avoided accountability his entire life, finally be forced to answer for his actions? The committee used all of its persuasive power — and it was considerable — to argue before the nation that the answer must be yes. 

Now the former president confronts legal jeopardy from multiple directions, but the work of the committee stands apart. Their job was to lay the groundwork for the law but also to tell a story that everyone could understand, even if it is the stuff of nightmares. They did not shy away from the truth. They were not cowed. They spoke with force and unity.  

Hopefully enough people were listening. 







'The Hunt' And The Moral of the Story is one most of US, Kindred Spirits, Vehemently Live by...♥️🐾♥️🐾

 

December
I'm told this endearing, old story-tale was portrayed on a
Rod Sterling episode of
Twilight Zone...✨️🐾✨️
'The Hunt'
And The Moral of the Story is one most of US, Kindred Spirits, Vehemently Live by...♥️🐾♥️🐾
"A man and his dog were walking along a road. The man was enjoying the scenery, when it suddenly occurred to him that he was dead.
He remembered dying, and that the dog walking beside him had been dead for years. He wondered where the road was leading them.
After a while, they came to a high, white stone wall along one side of the road. It looked like fine marble. At the top of a long hill, it was broken by a tall arch that glowed in the sunlight. Standing before it, he saw a magnificent gate that looked like mother-of-pearl, and the street that led to the gate looked like pure gold. He and the dog walked toward the gate, when he saw a man at a desk to one side.
He called out, “Excuse me, where are we?”
“This is Heaven, sir,” the man answered.
“Would you happen to have some water?” the man asked.
“Of course, sir. Come right in, and I'll have some ice water brought right up'”
The gate began to open.
“Can my friend come in, too?” the traveler asked, gesturing towards his dog.
“I'm sorry, sir, but we don't accept pets.”
The man thought a moment, turned back toward the road, and continued on his way.
After another long walk, he came to a dirt road leading through a farm gate that looked as if it had never been closed. As he approached the gate, he saw a man inside leaning against a tree and reading a book.
“Excuse me!” he called to the man. “Do you have any water?”
“Yes, there's a pump over there, come on in.”
“How about my friend here?” the traveler gestured to the dog.
“There should be a bowl by the pump.”
They went through the gate, and sure enough, there was a pump with a bowl beside it.
The traveler filled the water bowl and took a long drink himself, then he gave some to the dog.
When they were full, he and the dog walked back toward the man who was standing by the tree.
“What do you call this place?” the traveler asked.
“This is Heaven,” he answered.
“Well, that's confusing,” the traveler said. “The man down the road said that was Heaven too.”
“Oh, you mean the place with the gold street and pearly gates? Nope. That's hell.”
“Doesn't it make you mad for them to use your name like that?” the traveler asked.
“No, we're just happy that they screen out the folks who would leave their best friends behind.”
❤️🐾🐾
Author unknown.
May be an image of outdoors and tree


Episode Summary

Hyder Simpson lives with his wife and his hound-dog Rip in the backwoods. Mrs. Simpson does not like having the dog indoors, but Rip saved Hyder's life once, and Hyder won't be parted from him. Mrs. Simpson has seen some bad omens recently, and warns Hyder not to go raccoon hunting that night. When Rip dives into a pond after a raccoon, Hyder jumps in after him, but only the raccoon comes up out of the water. Next morning, Hyder and Rip wake up next to the pond. When they return home, Hyder finds that neither his wife, the preacher, nor the neighbors can hear him or see him—they seem to think that he and Rip are dead. Walking along the road, he encounters a fence he doesn't recognize, and decides to follow it. Presently, both come to a gate tended by a man. Simpson asks him if he is Saint Peter. Explaining only that he is a gatekeeper, the man explains that Simpson can enter the Elysian Fields. Simpson is appreciative, but disheartened to hear that there is no raccoon hunting there, nor are there any of his other usual pleasures. When he is told that Rip can't enter and will be taken elsewhere ("up the road"), he declines and angrily goes on down the "Eternity Road" rather than enter the gate without his beloved dog. Simpson states, "Any place that's too high-falutin' for Rip is too fancy for me." Later, after stopping to rest, Simpson and Rip are met by a young angel whose job is to find and bring them to Heaven. Simpson tells the angel about his experience at the first gate, commenting "Son, that'd be a helluva place without Rip!" The angel replies "Mr. Simpson, you ain't far wrong - that is Hell! Heaven's up yonder a piece," pointing up Eternity Road. When asked by Simpson why the gatekeeper at the gate to Hades wouldn't let him bring Rip inside with him, the angel explains that the reason Rip was not allowed in was because the dog would have been able to smell the brimstone and alert Simpson that something was wrong. The angel says, "You see, Mr. Simpson -- a man, well, he'll walk right into Hell with both eyes open. But even the Devil can't fool a dog!" The angel also tells Hyder that there will be a raccoon hunt in Heaven that night, "right after the square dance," and assures him that his wife, who will be coming shortly, will not be misled into entering Hell.

Closing Narration

"Travelers to unknown regions would be well advised to take along the family dog. He could just save you from entering the wrong gate. At least, it happened that way once—in a mountainous area of the Twilight Zone."



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BLACK IN AMERICA

 


May be an image of 3 people, child and body of water


"My husband is 31 years old. My husband can proofread a paper to perfection. He makes the best pork chops and neckbones. My husband was raised in an extremely wholesome home where they were not even allowed to watch Harry Potter. My husband has never tried any drugs, not even weed. He has never stolen from anyone, not even a corner store. My husband treats me and our sons like royalty. He serves at our local church faithfully and helps anyone he can. None of this stopped my husband from becoming a suspect in Semmes.
My husband wanted to do me a favor one night when he got home late from work. He got my keys and drove around the corner to fill my tank at the gas station. While there, an older white woman was at a pump across from him and he noticed she appeared very nervous and stared at him. He said she got in her vehicle and got on her phone and pulled off to an area near the gas station. Within minutes, police cars pulled in and surrounded him. He was questioned about why he was out. He was questioned about his activity earlier in the day. He was told he fit a description. They asked who's car he was driving. He was told he could not leave. He was told the description was simply a black man. Not a 5 ft 7 inch black man of around 220 lbs who loves WWE, macaroni and cheese, and the Temptations. Just black.
The older woman was now watching and the cops revealed she had called in his suspicious behavior of pumping gas. And now he was a suspect because he fit the description of being black. He was humiliated. He was emasculated. He was angry. He was helpless. He was on his way to being cuffed when a white man stepped in. An older white man told the officers they were wrong and that my husband had come from a different direction than the robbery they had mentioned. The officers released my husband after this. Not because my husband told them multiple times he was innocent. Not because there were two car seats in the back of my car. My husband's voice meant nothing. The only voice that penetrated those badges was a white one.
My hard working, kind-hearted, silly husband was guilty because of his skin and there was absolutely nothing he could do about it. The sight of him caused a woman to call the police. He said he wanted to scream. He wanted to fight. He wanted yell at the top of his lungs that he was a man and he mattered. If he had, he would be deemed aggressive. He would be resisting so he said he kept telling himself he had to make it home to me and the boys. He knew these men could kill him and justify it.
He came home a changed man. I am a changed woman. We cried. We prayed and we have healed since this took place but it changed us. Issues that once felt somewhat distant became our reality. So, when you dismiss the plight of black men in America, you diminish the ever present fear within our community. You are willfully ignorant. If you think people make this up or are only apprehended by the police when they deserve it... you are part of the problem. Open your eyes but more importantly open your hearts to the reality of being black in America. We don't get the luxury of ignoring it because we live it. This picture of my precious family looks threatening to some people. My boys are cuddly and cute until they aren't anymore and then they become a threat, too. My heart aches for our country and I feel so helpless. Lord, please heal the hearts and minds our land!"
Story by: Deltha Katherine Harbin




What I'm telling my graduating students

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