Saturday, November 29, 2008

Black Friday, Indeed

A WalMart employee was trampled to death on Black Friday by a crowd of bargain hungry shoppers. Here is an excerpt from an article in the Times about the violence and desperation of Christmas Shoppers:

"At a Wal-Mart store in Columbus, Ohio, Nikki Nicely, 19, jumped onto a man’s back and pounded his shoulders when he tried to take a 40-inch Samsung flat-screen television to which she had laid claim. 'That’s my TV!' Ms. Nicely shouted. 'That’s my TV!'

A police officer and security guard intervened, but not before Ms. Nicely took an elbow in the face. In the end, she was the one with the $798 television, marked down from $1,000. 'That’s right,' she cried as her adversary walked away. 'This here is my TV!'

Charisma Booker, also on the hunt for a television, said she had been shopping at Wal-Mart every Black Friday for nearly a decade. 'There are fewer people here this year, but they’re more aggressive,” she said. 'I’ve never seen anybody fight like this. This is crazy.'"

Monday, November 17, 2008

Phil Gramm, Architect of Catastrophe

A Deregulator Looks Back, Unswayed is a New York Times profile of Phil Gramm. It explains how Congress was swayed and bullied into easing banking regulations that enable our current financial meltdown.

A notable quotation from the article:
"Speaking at a bankers’ conference that month, Mr. Gramm said the problem of predatory loans was not of the banks’ making. Instead, he faulted 'predatory borrowers.'"

Sunday, November 16, 2008

at the risk of sounding like an apologist

Leslie and I were sitting on the patio of an Austin coffee-spot at a communal table near a couple in their mid-thirties. They were good liberal Democrats. They leaned over their early morning coffee and caught up with each other's lives.

"So the girl you were dating. She dumped you?" The woman asked.

"It was aaah . . . mutual. I just couldn't get over her Republicanism."

"I thought your dad was a Republican?"

"Well, yes. But he said he thought Bush, on a scale of one to ten, was a two. Nixon was a five."

"Well," the woman said, "at least he's being honest with himself."

There was a smugness in her voice that gave me a queasy feeling. It was the tone that bad winners have when they're gloating.

Our country has been at the mercy of a lot of misguided Republican Group-Think. Bush and the Neo-Cons have been the advocates of the rich, of the torturers, of the bullies. They trumped clear public discourse, reason and logic with ideological arrogance, greed and incompetence. But the Bush administration represents an extreme that has led all of us astray.

The failures of the past eight years do not justify our own brand of Democratic Party Group-Think. We have to be careful not to slip into believing we have the one "true" way and those who don't follow it are deceiving themselves.

Here is our situation: We're all screwed. The economy is worse than it has been in eighty years. We're losing two expensive wars. The environment is degrading around us. There are no quick fixes for any of the problems that confront us.

It is going to be tempting to settle some old scores now that we, the Democrats, are in charge. But we don't have time to waste on petty politics. The truth is that we'll have to entertain every good idea regardless of its origin -- and the Republicans are going to have a few of them -- to pull out of the mess we're in. All of us are going to have to work in concert to put things back in order.