Stunning Quote – Larry Summers to Elizabeth Warren in 2009: “Insiders Don’t Criticize Other Insiders”

A couple of weeks ago, Princeton and Northwestern released a very important study that proved statistically what many of us already knew about the American political process. It is nothing more than an oligarchy. 

It’s one thing to read an academic study showing how cancerous the political system is, it’s quite another to hear a description of how things work from one of the biggest crony weapons of mass societal destruction himself, Mr. Larry Summers.

A recent review in the New York Times of Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren’s new memoir “A Fighting Chance” recalls a stunningly despicable quote by Summers. In the spring of 2009, when the banker handout, I mean bailout, was a heated topic of discussion, Elizabeth Warren attended a dinner with Mr. Summers who at the time was the director of the National Economic Council and a top economic adviser to President Obama. This is what transpired:

After dinner, “Larry leaned back in his chair and offered me some advice,” Ms. Warren writes. “I had a choice. I could be an insider or I could be an outsider. Outsiders can say whatever they want. But people on the inside don’t listen to them. Insiders, however, get lots of access and a chance to push their ideas. People — powerful people — listen to what they have to say. But insiders also understand one unbreakable rule: They don’t criticize other insiders.

What is so incredible about the quote above is that it essentially proves correct everything I and many others have been saying about how “things work” in America these days. The statements above describe a petty, childish oligarchy of arrogant fools. This small club of people call all the shots and do not listen to “outside” ideas whatsoever. This is why nothing changes. This is why the same people are recycled through positions of power over and over again no matter how badly they screw up and how many millions of lives they ruin. This is why there is a two-tiered justice system in which the rich and connected never go to jail, while the average citizen can have his home raided by police for a parody Twitter account. This is why the 0.01% have been able to loot all of the nation’s wealth while median inflation adjusted wages have been declining for 40 years.

The reason is because the “status quo” in America consists of a deranged, immoral, arrogant, selfish fraternity of inept children who protect each other at the expense of everyone and everything else. Until the status quo gets the boot, this nation will continue to decline. Forget reforms, the entire status quo needs to be tossed aside once and for all. The insiders must be turned into outsiders.

In Liberty,
Michael Krieger

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Stunning Quote – Larry Summers to Elizabeth Warren in 2009: “Insiders Don’t Criticize Other Insiders” originally appeared on A Lightning War for Liberty on April 29, 2014.

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GOP Michigan State Rep Bolts Party Over Gay Rights; Joins Libertarians

MLive
reports
that former Michigan state Rep. Lorence Wenke has
dropped the Republican Party and taken up with the Libertarian
Party. He will run for U.S. Senate as a Libertarian in the
fall.

In a statement dated April 25, the long-time Southwest
Michigan Republican cited the party’s “discrimination” against gay
citizens and what he characterized as “taxpayer abuse,” which he
said has created “an elite class” of government employees, as the
reasons behind his decision.

“I support the constitutional right of our gay family members to
enjoy the same rights as our heterosexual family members,” Wenke
wrote, citing his record as one of just two Republican legislators
to vote against the Marriage Protection Amendment to the Michigan
Constitution in 2004. …

Saying that Republicans encouraged churches to support political
efforts to discriminate against gays by condemning them for “what
they perceive as a sinful lifestyle choice,” Wenke added, “These
same people often ignore the clear teachings of Jesus and Paul
stating that remarriage after divorce is committing
adultery.”…

Wenke is upset at spending patterns too:

With regards to out-of-control government spending, Wenke cited
as examples Kalamazoo’s Early Retirement Initiative, which resulted
in lifetime pensions of $110,000 and $87,000 a year for the former
city manager and assistant city manager.

“Our spending of taxpayer dollars has been immoral and is
leading our country to bankruptcy,” he wrote.


More here.

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This Is What a Government Going Broke Looks Like

Revenues vs. SpendingDo you ever get
the impression that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is trying
to tell us something?

The CBO publishes numeous reports on matters financial regarding
the government. Many of the recent ones have been full of fairly
downbeat verbiage, with the word “unsustainable” appearing
a lot. As in, the federal government spends a whole lot more money
than it collects, and that continuing nasty habit is
unsustainable.

But we’re simple folk. People of the land. You know, morons. So,
the CBO releases its
information in picture-book format
, too (they nicely call it an
“infographic”).

Take a look at the image at the above right. It shows 2013
revenues at $2.8 trillion, and spending at $3.5 trillion.

There’s a gap between those numbers. It’s a big gap. And while
it varies in size, it appears year after year with little respite.
(Click image for full-size version.)

Federal deficits

And because the federal government keeps spending more than it
takes in, year after year, federal debt has “reached 72% of GDP,
the highest level in more than 60 years. Such debt could have
serious negative consequences, including restraining long-term
economic growth, giving policymakers less flexibility to respond to
unexpected challenges, and eventually increasing the risk of a
fiscal crisis,” as the CBO puts it.

And the government can’t start paying that down while continuing
to spend more than it takes in.

But wait! Let’s try the whole thing in pictures. Scary
pictures. (Click image for full-size version.)

Budget and deficits

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David Stockman RuinsThe Perennial Myth Of Crumbling Infrastructure

Submitted by David Stockman via Contra Corner blog,

Whenever the beltway bandits run low on excuses to run-up the national debt they trot out florid tales of crumbling infrastructure—that is, dilapidated roads, collapsing bridges, failing water and sewer systems, inadequate rail and public transit and the rest. This is variously alleged to represent a national disgrace, an impediment to economic growth and a sensible opportunity for fiscal “stimulus”.

But most especially it presents a  swell opportunity for Washington to create millions of “jobs”.  And, according to the Obama Administration’s latest incarnation of this age old canard, it can be done in a fiscally responsible manner through the issuance of “green ink” bonds by a national infrastructure bank, not “red ink” bonds by the US Treasury. The implication, of course, is that borrowings incurred to repair the nation’s allegedly “collapsing” infrastructure would be a form of “self-liquidating” debt. That is, these “infrastructure” projects would eventually pay for themselves in the form of enhanced national economic growth and efficiency.

Except that the evidence for dilapidated infrastructure is just bogus beltway propaganda cynically peddled by the construction and builder lobbies. Moreover, the infrastructure that actually does qualify for self-liquidating investment is overwhelmingly local in nature—-urban highways, metropolitan water and sewer systems, airports. These should be funded by users fees and levies on local taxpayers—not financed with Washington issued bonds and pork-barreled through its wasteful labyrinth of earmarks and plunder.

Nowhere is the stark distinction between the crumbling infrastructure myth and the factual reality more evident than in the case of the so-called deficient and obsolete bridges. To hear the K-Street lobbies tell it—-motorist all across American are at risk for plunging into the drink at any time owing to defective bridges.

Even Ronald Reagan fell for that one. During the long trauma of the 1981-1982 recession the Reagan Administration had stoutly resisted the temptation to implement a Keynesian style fiscal stimulus and jobs program–notwithstanding an unemployment rate that peaked in double digits. But within just a few months of the bottom, along came a Republican Secretary of Transportation, Drew Lewis, with a Presidential briefing on the alleged disrepair of the nation’s highways and bridges. The briefing was accompanied by a Cabinet Room full of easels bearing pictures of dilapidated bridges and roads and a plan to dramatically increase highway spending and the gas tax.

Not surprisingly, DOT Secretary Drew Lewis was a former governor and the top GOP fundraiser of the era. So the Cabinet Room was soon figuratively surrounded by a muscular coalition of road builders, construction machinery suppliers, asphalt and concrete vendors, governors, mayors and legislators and the AFL-CIO building trades department. And if that wasn’t enough, Lewis had also made deals to line up the highway safety and beautification lobby, bicycle enthusiasts and all the motley array of mass transit interest groups.

They were all singing from the same crumbling infrastructure playbook. As Lewis summarized, “We have highways and bridges that are falling down around our ears—that’s really the thrust of the program.”

The Gipper soon joined the crowd. “No, we are opposed to wasteful borrow and spend”, he recalled,”that’s how we got into this mess. But these projects are different. Roads and bridges are a proper responsibility of government, and they have already been paid for by the gas tax”.

By the time a pork-laden highway bill was rammed through a lame duck session of Congress in December 1982, Reagan too had bought on to the crumbling infrastructure gambit. Explaining why he signed the bill, the scourge of Big Government noted, “We have 23,000 bridges in need of replacement or rehabilitation; 40 percent of our bridges are over 40 years old.”

Still, this massive infrastructure spending bill that busted a budget already bleeding $200 billion of red ink was not to be confused with a capitulation to Keynesian fiscal stimulus. Instead, as President Reagan explained to the press when asked whether it was a tax bill, jobs bill or anti-recession stimulus, it was just an exercise in prudent governance: “There will be some employment with it, but its not a jobs bill as such. It is a necessity…..(based) on the user fee principle–those who benefit from a use should share its cost”.

Needless to say, none of that was remotely true. Twenty percent of the nickel/gallon gas tax increase went to mass transit, thereby breeching the “user fee” principle at the get-go, and paving the way for endless diversion of gas taxes to non-highway uses. Indeed, today an estimated 40% of highway trust fund revenues go to mass transit, bicycle paths and sundry other earmarks and diversions.

More importantly, less than one-third of the $30 billion authorized by the 1982 bill went to the Interstate Highway System—the ostensible user fee based national infrastructure investment. All the rest went to what are inherently local/regional projects—-state highways, primary and secondary roads, buses, and mass transit facilities.

And this is where the tale of Madison County bridges to nowhere comes in; and also where the principle that local users and taxpayers should fund local infrastructure could not be more strikingly illustrated.

It seems that after 32 years and tens of billions of Federal funding that the nations bridges are still crumbling and in grave disrepair. In fact, according to DOT and the industry lobbies there are 63,000 bridges across the nation that are “structurally deficient”, suggesting that millions of motorists are at risk for a perilous dive into the drink.

But here’s the thing. Roughly one-third or 20,000 of these purportedly hazardous bridges are located in six rural states in America’s mid-section: Iowa, Oklahoma, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota. The fact that these states account for only 5.9% of the nation’s population seems more than a little incongruous but that isn’t even half the puzzle. It seems that these thinly populated country provinces have a grand total of 118,000 bridges. That is, one bridge for every 160 citizens—men, women and children included.

And the biggest bridge state among them is, well, yes, Iowa. The state has 3 million souls and nearly 25,000 bridges–one for every 125 people. So suddenly the picture is crystal clear. These are not the kind of bridges that thousands of cars and heavy duty trucks pass over each day. No, they are mainly the kind Clint Eastwood needed a local farm-wife to locate—so he could take pictures for a National Geographic spread on covered bridges.

Stated differently, the overwhelming bulk of the 600,000 so-called “bridges” in America are so little used that the are more often crossed by dogs, cows, cats and tractors than they are by passenger motorists.  They are essentially no different than local playgrounds and municipal parks. They have nothing to do with interstate commerce, GDP growth or national public infrastructure.

If they are structurally “deficient” as measured by engineering standards that is not exactly a mystery to the host village, township and county governments which choose not to upgrade them. So if Iowa is content to live with 5,000 bridges—one in five of its 25,000 bridges— that are deemed structurally deficient by DOT, why is this a national crisis? Self-evidently, the electorate and officialdom of Iowa do not consider these bridges to be a public safety hazard or something would have been done long ago.

The evidence for that is in another startling “fun fact” about the nation’s bridges.  Compared to the 19,000 so-called “structurally deficient” bridges in the six rural states reviewed here, there are also 19,000 such deficient bridges in another group of 35 states–including Texas, Maryland, Massachusetts,  Virginia, Washington, Oregon, Michigan, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, New Jersey and Wisconsin, among others. But these states have a combined population of 175 million not 19 million as in the six rural states; and more than 600 citizens per bridge, not 125 as in Iowa.

Moreover, only 7% of the bridges in these 35 states are considered to be structurally deficient rather than 21% as in Iowa. So the long and short of it is self-evident: Iowa still has a lot of one-horse bridges and Massachusetts— with 1,300 citizens per “bridge”— does not. None of this is remotely relevant to a national infrastructure crisis today—any more than it was in 1982 when even Ronald Reagan fell for “23,000 bridges in need of replacement or rehabilitation”.

Yes, the few thousands of bridges actually used heavily in commerce and passenger transportation in American do fall into disrepair and need  periodic reinvestment. But the proof that even this is an overwhelmingly state and local problem is evident in another list maintained by the DOT.

That list would be a rank ordering called “The Most Travelled Structurally Deficient Bridges, 2013″. These are the opposite of the covered bridges of Madison County, but even here there is a  cautionary tale. It seems that of the 100 most heavily traveled bridges in the US by rank order, and which are in need of serious repair, 80% of them are in California!

Moreover, they are overwhelmingly state highway and municipal road and street bridges located in Los Angeles, Orange County and the Inland Empire. Stated differently, Governor Moonbeam has not miraculously solved California endemic fiscal crisis; he’s just neglected the local infrastructure. There is no obvious reasons why taxpayers in Indiana or North Carolina needed to be fixing California’s bridges— so that it can continue to finance its outrageously costly public employee pension system.

And so it goes with the rest of the so-called infrastructure slate. There is almost nothing there that is truly national in scope and little that is in a state of crumbling and crisis.

Indeed, the one national asset—the Interstate Highway System—is generally in such good shape that most of the “shovel ready” projects on it during the Obama stimulus turned out to be resurfacing projects that were not yet needed and would have been done in the ordinary course anyway, and the construction of new over-passes for lightly traveled country roads that have happily been dead-ends for decades.

One thing is clear. The is no case for adding to our staggering $17 trillion national debt in order to replace the bridges of Madison county; or to fix state and local highways or build white elephant high speed rail systems; or to relieve air travelers of paying user fees to upgrade local airports or local taxpayers of their obligation to pay fees and taxes to maintain their water and sewer systems.

At the end of the day, the ballyhooed national infrastructure crisis is a beltway racket of the first order. It has been for decades.

Here is the bridge data in all its splendid detail!

bridges-deficient-map

The following table shows the ranking of states according to number of deficient bridges (left hand side) and percentage of bridges defective (right hand side):

Click to enlarge

State Bridge Rankings from artba

The nation’s 250 most heavily traveled bridges in need of repair are ranked in the following table:

Click to enlarge




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Time For More Costs? Pro-Russian Forces Storm Luhansk Police Buildings – Live Feed

The East Ukraine city of Luhansk has seen its police headquarters over-run by pro-Russian activists (with machine guns and greande launchers evident):

  • *GUNSHOTS HEARD AS POLICE BUILDING STORMED IN LUHANSK: IFX
  • *PRO-RUSSIAN PROTESTERS STORM LUHANSK POLICE BUILDINGS: IFX

In the immediate aftermath, the police chief has resigned over the separatist demands but as France24 reports, Ukraine’s president has slammed police ‘inaction’ and ‘criminal treachery’ as rebels storm state buildings in Luhansk.

 

As The BBC reports,

Pro-Russia activists have stormed several official buildings in the eastern Ukrainian city of Luhansk.

 

They seized the regional government’s headquarters and the prosecutor’s office. Armed men later attacked the main police station.

 

Interim President Olexander Turchynov criticised local police for their “inaction” and “criminal treachery”.

Live Feed:


Live streaming video by Ustream




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WHooPie KeRRY…

This bloviating bag of gaseous humdrum is a consummate loser. According to the script, he is supposed to be busy playing Neocon Tony Atlas in the Ukraine. Instead he is busy pronating himself before his Israeli masters. Called to the carpet for daring to imply Israel’s treatment of Palestinians is a form of apartheid.

Pft….




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The Most Interesting Man in Buzfeed’s Paul Ryan Profile Is Not Paul Ryan

Not Paul RyanMcKay
Coppins’ new profile
of Paul Ryan, which focuses on Ryan’s recent attempts to explore
the issues around poverty, has
aggravated
some Democrats by treating the congressman’s
interest in the topic as sincere. Republicans meanwhile might not
care for ways the piece paints Ryan as uncomfortable, even
clueless, as he tries to make sense of poor people’s worlds.

Me, I think the most fascinating figure here isn’t Ryan but Bob
Woodson, the man who’s been serving as Ryan’s guide to the inner
cities. Woodson is an old civil rights activist whose decentralist,
neighborhood-based approach to public policy has allowed him to
make connections on the right—he even had a post at the American
Enterprise Institute for a little while in the late ’70s and early
’80s—but who doesn’t fit the standard profile of a “black
conservative.” (Indeed, the one time I met him, it was at an event
with a rather left-wing vibe.) He’s an independent-minded man whose
commitment to poor people’s well-being is undeniable; he clearly
sees this as a chance to get a high-profile Republican to adopt
some of his issues, whether or not that politician is deeply
commited to the cause.

But that adoption process can be tricky. A few months ago I

blogged
John McClaughry’s comments contrasting the conventional
GOP approach to poverty (“Republicans typically do not understand
what life is like in a lower-income or minority community, and are
uncomfortable with spontaneous grassroots efforts which seem to
them to be potentially subversive of the existing order”) with the
view from the ground (“People at the grassroots, faced with
collective problems, usually want the tools, resources and
opportunities to solve their problem themselves,” a perspective
that frequently leads them to “view government and other
institutions as part of the problem”). In Coppins’ piece, Ryan
comes across as a man who may be trying to break free of that old
Republican frame of reference but has trouble getting his head
around the grassroots point of view. One passage in particular
embodies the dynamic:

Not Bob Woodson“I
plagiarize your sayings all the time,” Ryan tells Woodson as we
drive. “Like, we have a poverty management system for the benefit
of the managers.”

“It’s provider-driven,” Woodson says.

“Provider-driven,” Ryan repeats. “Not outcome-based.”

Woodson nods, and supplies an example. “There are issues that are
very pedestrian but very important,” he tells Ryan. “Like, helping
people like this keep more of the money that they earn. For
instance, my daughter lives in Costa Rica. It costs me practically
nothing to call her. It costs me a dollar a minute to call to
federal prison.”

Woodson waits for a response, but none comes, so he reiterates the
point. “These families pay a dollar a minute, Paul.”

“Just to call into prison?”

“Yeah!” Woodson says. “I mean, there’s a huge rip-off of people in
prison, families of people in prison. I have to give my credit card
to a company and they come and tell me, ‘You have $100 on your
account, you have talked for X number of minutes, this is what’s
left on your card.’ And it’s about a dollar a minute. I’m telling
you, it’s crazy!”

“Geez,” Ryan mutters.

For a moment, it seems as though this will mark the end of the
conversation, but Woodson keeps pressing. “So, that is something,
Paul, that we really need to look into. It would reach thousands
and thousands of families around this country.”

As it turns out, the Federal Communications Commission last year
actually banned price-gouging by private companies that provide
telephone service for inmates, though prison reformers remain
concerned that the same shady practices could be applied to email
access and video chat services. But Ryan isn’t aware of that now,
and while he clearly wants to move on, Woodson seems intent on
pushing him just a little bit harder, making him just a little bit
more uncomfortable.

“I mean, this is the kind of issue that politicians just don’t pay
attention to,” Woodson says.

“Or even know about,” Ryan adds.

“But it would have a profound impact if you were to come out and
get interested in advocating for fairness to these families to say
they need to keep more of the money they earn.”

“That’s why we spend so much time on these marginal tax rate
issues,” Ryan offers, weakly.

Bonus link: An old Reason story about
Woodson.

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Libertarians Should Take Over the GOP, Not Create 3rd Party

Libertarians’ best opportunity to succeed lies in taking
over the GOP, says Matt
Kibbe
 president of FreedomWorks and
author of the new book Don’t
Hurt People and Don’t Take Their Stuff: A Libertarian
Manifesto

The New York Times bestseller defends the
importance of individual liberties while providing a
political-action plan to shrink the size and scope of the federal
government.

 

View this article.

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Scalia Decries ‘Unelected Agency Officials Exercising Broad Lawmaking Authority’ in EPA Case

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-2 this morning in favor of the
Environmental Protection Agency in a case testing the EPA’s powers
to interpret and enforce an “ambiguous” provision of the Clean Air
Act. According to the majority opinion of Justice Ruth Bader
Ginsburg, “we read Congress’ silence as a delegation of authority
to EPA to select from among reasonable options.”

The case originated with the problem of regulating air pollution
that travels from “upwind” states to “downwind” states. According
to the Court, “EPA must have leeway in fulfillng its statutory
mandate” to combat this problem. “We routinely accord dispositive
effect to an agency’s reasonable interpretation of ambiguous
statutory language,” declared Justice Ginsburg, in a ruling joined
by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Anthony Kennedy, Stephen
Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan (Justice Samuel Alito was
recused).

Writing in dissent, Justice Antonin Scalia, joined by Justice
Clarence Thomas, fired back at the majority’s deference to the EPA.
“Too many important decisions of the Federal Government are made
nowadays by unelected agency officials exercising broad lawmaking
authority, rather than by the people’s representatives in
Congress,” Scalia declared.

The opinion in EPA v. EME Homer Air City Generation is
available here.

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Gunmen Storm Libyan Government, Start Shooting

When it comes to expressing democratic opinion, one can wait for one’s corrupt congressional critter to do something, which will never happen if that something is against the will of the largest lobbying client, or one can take matters into their own hands. The latter is what disgruntled Libyans did moments ago. From Reuters:

  • GUNMEN STORM LIBYAN PARLIAMENT, START SHOOTING AND FORCE LAWMAKERS TO ABANDON VOTE ON NEXT PM -SPOKESMAN
  • SEVERAL PEOPLE WOUNDED BY SHOOTING AT LIBYA’S PARLIAMENT, GUNMEN ARE ALLIED TO ONE OF THE DEFEATED PM CANDIDATES -SPOKESMAN

It may not be the most polite way to get one’s views across but it gets the job done. But more importantly, when it comes to the epic chaos that is post-CIA intervention Libya, what difference does it make if parliament is stormed by enraged vigilantes?




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