Oh Come On, the Man is Dead!

Today, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that gruesome pictures of Vince Foster’s body at the scene of his suicide did not have to be released to the public. The actual ruling is 17 pages long, but can adequately be summarized in this single sentence from Justice Anthony Kennedy: “”Family members have a personal stake in honoring and mourning their dead and objecting to unwarranted public exploitation that, by intruding upon their own grief, tends to degrade the rites and respect they seek to accord to the deceased.”

I realize that the tin-foil hat crowd is saying I forgot the word “so-called” when discussing Mr. Foster’s suicide. That last link even asserts that the Bush Administration is complicit in covering up “alleged” misdeeds of the Clinton Administration, a charge that on it’s face seems far-fetched. Even Special Investigator Kenneth Starr, the man whose job was to find dirt on the Clintons, declared Mr. Foster’s death a suicide. Don’t you think if the actual evidence had been the least bit credible, Starr would have investigated it more thoroughly?

Mr. Foster has been dead over 10 years. The Supreme Court made the right decision, but frankly they have more important things to do than consider decade old crime scene photos. Perhaps the resources wasted here could be better put to use investigating the outing of Valerie Plame. Instead of continually hammering on the death of one man, help these people find out how almost 3,000 people were allowed to die.

Father Knows Best

Bear with me. It seems the rest of the world has just recently discovered that electronic voting may not save democracy from oblivion after all, that sending personal information overseas may not be a good idea, that Congress may inadvertently make most networks illegal to prevent illegal file sharing (putting Time-Warner in the uncomfortable position of either defending their media copyrights or defending AIM and AOL chatrooms), and just because President Bush can dish out the Bible verses doesn’t mean he can take it.

But today, I’d like to talk to you about the patronizing attitude the current administration has about darn near everything. It has gone far beyond for-us-or-against-us my-way-or-the-highway attitudes about everything from Social Security to condoms. Outside input is neither solicited nor desired. Public statements have stopped just short of “Now, now, these are the advisors your elected President has selected and they know best.”

Would you like examples? We can go back to Dick Cheney’s claim that he does not have to release information about those Energy Task Force meetings because of executive privilege. If you’d like something more recent, try Condi Rice refusing to publicly testify under oath about September 11. This last instance is particularly hypocritical in light of her appearance on the news TV show 60 Minutes.

The Administration is even telling Republicans what they should say about the environment on the campaign trail. And it would seem they don’t like it. After all, they are elected officials too.

If you are unfamiliar with the ideas of George Lakoff, now is as good a time as any to become acquainted. One of his central theories is that conservatives in general work on a “strict father” model. The Boss/Dad/President is in charge, he knows best, you should do what he says. You wouldn’t dream of questioning items on Dad’s credit card bill; nor should you question your leaders who say we need to spend money on the special important project of the day. If you would like to learn more about this controversial fellow and his ideas, here is his official faculty page at UC Berkeley, assorted articles and interviews, and his Amazonography.

Another Brick in the Wall

Unless you have been living in a box, you know there is great consternation over the state of education in the United States. This is despite the decades of reforms and theoretical improvements since 1983’s landmark document, “A Nation At Risk,” which famously stated, “If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war.”

The latest item in the war on educational mediocrity is the now 2 year old “No Child Left Behind” Act. It is built on two lofty ideals: that all schools can improve, and that all children can succeed. In fact, any public school receiving Title I funds that fails to improve the performance of children in every sub-group, any school that fails to submit test scores for 95% of children in every sub-group, is labeled as failing. Yes, this means that if there is a school with 10 Latino kids and one is sick on test day the school is failing no matter how good it is. That is one of several reasons many at the state level feel NCLB needs new standards. Frankly the two lofty ideals it is built upon are flawed. We don’t like to admit that there are children who cannot succeed, whether it is because of profound mental deficiencies, or because of a home-life that is hostile to the educational system, or because the child simply has no desire to learn. As for improving schools, when the only standard for school performance is “better,” you have the underlying assumption that all schools are failing.

Critics point out that even good schools can improve, and even in good schools there is often a gap between various groups of students. Furthermore, they point out that even good American students lag behind foreign students. This problem is not addressed by simply demanding “better.”

A new report even cites the state of the American educational system as a reason for overseas outsourcing by “failing to provide strong science and math education to students.” The organization publishing the report “called for tech businesses to support math and science education in schools, with donations of both money and time.” They support the idea of educating and inspiring kids by sending scientific professionals out into public schools. Unfortunately, NCLB prevents this. The act requires “highly qualified” teachers in every classroom by Fall of 2005. The government definition of “highly qualified” includes first and foremost having a teaching license, which in most states presupposes having a specialized degree in education. This prevents many “highly qualified” individuals from teaching. Bill Nye cannot teach a science class; Norm Abram cannot teach wood shop; John Williams cannot conduct the high school honor band.

American society, parents, and employers have a reasonable expectation that schools will produce graduates who can take their places in society, who know certain facts, who have skills in areas such as reading and math. Instead of simply demanding “better,” let’s set forth attainable goals and standards. These standards should not be written in private by intellectuals, but with public input from the people who will interact with the graduates of the future.

Here is a start: a high school graduate should be able to read and understand a newspaper, VCR instruction book, or IRS tax form; he or she should be able to use math to balance a checkbook, tabulate an order form, determine whether he/she received correct change, or calculate square footage or yardage of a room; he or she should know enough about American history and government to know how we elect public officials, that Social Security is not a savings plan, and what the Bill of Rights says; he or she should know enough about science to realize that Dihydrogen Monoxide is not a threat, he/she should be familiar with basic facts and generally accepted theories about the world around us, and should be able to determine when something is bogus by comparing claims with reality.

Your Other Right

Did you ever think Arlen Specter would be “not conservative enough”?

It is symptomatic of how very far to the right the NeoCons are that Specter — and for that matter John McCain — seem moderate.

It seems that Senator Specter faces a tough primary battle for his own Senate seat. Although he officially has the White House nod, the fact of the matter is that if he truly had White House backing — and by extension the support of the Republican Party — there would be no primary. His nomination would be all sewn up. Instead, he is a mere 9 points ahead of his also-Republican competition in the polls, and must spend millions of dollars of campaign money just to be allowed to play in the November elections. Conservative mouthpiece Fox News points out his so-called liberal streak.

You know, this could have something to do with his statements yesterday that there was “a lot of blame to go around” for allowing 9/11 to happen. And yes, he did say it was preventable.

I have two recommended news items today. First, from CNN. Scroll down towards the heading “Jobs ‘Not Happening'”:

Michigan’s tour representative, Laura Tropea, 26, moved home after graduating from law school in New York in June and failing to find a job. She lives with her mother in South Lyon while working at a deli part-time, earning $8 an hour despite having passed the Michigan bar exam.

For the record, since she did not lose a full time job, she was never counted as unemployed. And if she loses this part time job, she will still not be counted as unemployed. Never mind that she is a licensed attorney who is making sandwiches for a so-called living. Never mind that she did the right thing and got a good education.

Finally, Robert Marcin of TheStreet.com tells us how the price of everything seems to be going up while the official inflation rate does not. It’s alright to be angry when you are done reading.

Hello everybody

Greetings, and welcome to all readers. In particular, Thanks and Welcomes to new referrers, LeaderLog and Elisa Camahort.

A special thanks to some of the folks who have linked to me, and the folks who have clicked through. This includes Renpro, Paxtonland, Jay Currie, foomart, Fecundity, and Jerry Kindall.

I’d also like to extend a special welcome to those who clicked through from Google, Blogdex, Technorati, and Weblogs.

Tying Alan’s Hands

It seems like just yesterday we were told that the Federal Reserve would keep interest rates low for a while, that they could afford to be “patient.” Oh wait, that was yesterday! Although the Fed rate takes a while to trickle through to effect mortgage rates, mortgage rates are down too.

But there is a fly in the ointment. It seems that inflation is starting to rear its ugly head, buoyed by oil prices at $38 a barrel. Oil futures — bits of paper people buy to bet on or protect themselves from future oil prices — are at an all-time high. Remember, oil prices are at these levels because OPEC cut production levels, because the dollar is weak, which the Administration allows because they think it will help the trade deficit.

The other potential wrinkle is that low mortgage rates are contributing to a rise in housing prices. In some areas, it is more noticeable than others. Greed and speculation rule in some regions. This is aside from any consumer debt bubble which may exist.

The bottom line is that inflation is beginning. Yes, the food and energy sector had the highest rise. Oil prices will have an impact on the price of other goods you buy within six months. After all, as a friend of mine put it, “If you’ve got it, a trucker brought it.”

Alan Greenspan cannot be patient forever.

Finally, I’d like to point out that President Bush is probably sorry he told Kerry to put up or shut up regarding the endorsement of world leaders. Kerry has the support of Spanish Prime Minister-elect Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, who says “We’re aligning ourselves with Kerry. Our allegiance will be for peace, against war, no more deaths for oil, and for a dialogue between the government of Spain and the new Kerry administration.” On the other hand, Mr. Bush has dragged down an endorsement from none other than Al Queda, in a statement which said “Kerry will kill our nation while it sleeps because he and the Democrats have the cunning to embellish blasphemy and present it to the Arab and Muslim nation as civilization. Because of this we desire you (Bush) to be elected.”

Which endorsement would you rather have?

That’s one way to create jobs

If you know anybody in the computer business, he knows somebody who has been out of work. Maybe out of work quite a long period of time. The Information Technology field lost over half a million jobs in 2002 alone. IT is particularly susceptible to outsourcing because, frankly, it doesn’t matter whether you type code in Seattle or New Delhi. In fact, the true unemployment rate among computer professionals is subject to being masked by calling oneself “self-employed” or a “consultant.” Waitresses and cashiers just can’t do that.

Have no fear, the Department of Defense is working on a plan to solve this problem. They would like to institute a “targeted draft” of computer experts and linguists. Of course they would need Congressional approval, but this proposal solves several problems. First, it gives the military technical expertise they desperately need. Second, it puts out of work experts in jobs. Remember, this will positively effect the unemployment rate and the payroll figures.

Oh, and then there is the final benefit. By and large, computer programmers are smart people. And many of them are opinionated. And the unemployed ones have plenty of time to blog and participate in online communities and be politically active. Putting them to work in the military effectively limits what they can spout off about, if nothing else by keeping them busy. Want to know what genuine geeks think of this? Check out the Slashdot commentary, where I initially learned of this story.

There is already loose talk of needing to reinstitute the draft. It is not a big stretch to add a special provision for the draft of skilled professionals. The fact that we are talking about skilled professionals in a field where there have been job losses is strictly gravy.

Remember to vote this fall.

Mad Cow, Crazy Salads

I like beef.

Alright, more accurately I used to like beef. I don’t eat the stuff anymore. Apparently I am not the only one, either.

People are worried about “Mad Cow” disease. In fact, several foreign nations are worried about it too, enough so that they won’t import American beef. Granted, this is probably only a very tiny part of the reason the trade deficit reached record highs in the month following the discovery of a Mad Cow infected animal in Washington State. The experts have done a poor job of convincing us that American beef is safe to eat. And the stakes are too high for most of us to be willing to take chances.

The USDA is planning to double — no, make that triple! — current testing levels. This sounds impressive until you realize that they are talking about testing 120,000 of the 35 million cattle slaughtered annually in the United States. That’s about a third of one percent. I do believe that is what most scientists would call a not statistically significant sample. There are of course many issues involved in deciding how many animals to test.

Most Americans support the idea of doing a lot more testing than the USDA proposes. As many as 60% think all slaughtered cows should be tested, and 70% are willing to pay more in beef prices to cover the cost of testing. The USDA not only opposes this, they are preventing one meatpacker from having all the animals they process tested. Creekstone Farms of Kansas has proposed doing such testing, at their own expense, so their beef can be certified for export to Japan. Needless to say, they may also be able to charge a premium for “Certified BSE Free” beef here in the States, too.

Does this sound strange to you?

Alright, so much for a burger. Maybe you should just have a salad. You wouldn’t be alone if you said that. Maybe it’s the Mad Cow thing, maybe you are among the 59 million Americans who could stand to loose some weight. Don’t worry, dieting is becoming popular again, and McDonalds wants to help you. No, I’m not talking about eliminating the Super Size Fries.

Before you say “I’ll just have a salad,” you need to think about what it really contains. You probably heard yesterday’s buzz about how the new “‘Caesar salad with Chicken Premiere’ contains 18.4 grams of fat compared with 11.5 grams of fat in a standard cheeseburger.” Unfortunately, they neglected to provide any other nutritional information. Choosing a food solely on the basis of its fat content is like buying a car based solely on its horsepower. Another article with somewhat more detail tells us that “A grilled chicken caesar salad without dressing or croutons has 3.2 grams of fat per 100 grams. However, a crispy chicken caesar salad with dressing and croutons has 8.1 grams of fat per 100 grams.” Imagine that, fried chicken bits with dressing have more fat than grilled chicken bits without dressing. Alert the media.

The nutrition facts are all right here. If you scroll down, you will find that McDonald’s entrée sized salads range from 6.7 oz. to 10.9 oz., meaning the largest of them weighs in at over 2/3 of a pound all by itself, before adding a single crouton or a drop of dressing. For reference, Dole considers 3 oz. of their salad bags to be a serving. As for the calories, they don’t seem bad until you add meat. Then you are talking about 200 to 370 calories. Add fifty for croutons. Add another 290 for the packet of ranch dressing! From a calorie standpoint, you are better off putting a McDonalds ice cream cone on your salad.

If you think these salads are tasty, that’s fine. Just don’t pretend you are eating healthy. You aren’t going to lose weight eating these salads, regardless of your diet paradigm. A sack lunch is seeming awfully appealing now.

Aggregating Reality

Some people like to have one or two primary, presumably trustworthy news source from which they derive the overwhelming majority of their information about the world. Maybe they watch one particular news show, or read one particular newspaper. I prefer to consult as many sources as I can get my hands on. I feel this mitigates any bias that might be inherent in a single source. I also feel this gives me a much better feel for “the big picture.” Thank goodness for Google news and RSS readers.

Oh yeah, and I occasionally read the Sunday Paper.

And that is how I came to a startling discovery. When even Dave Barry thinks the Budget Deficit is a concern, we are all in trouble.

Also from the morning paper, evidence that if there is a housing bubble, it is real close to going off. Low income housing is increasingly hard to find Oh, and getting harder to find thanks to the Bush Administration. The ability to find affordable housing is even more strained in areas where real estate has already been expensive, such as Southern California.

This is one singular area where I think Fannie Mae is actually helping keep prices from accelerating even more rapidly, by regulating the maximum loan amount they will repurchase from other lenders.* If you want to finance more than this amount, you will have to either break it into multiple mortgages, or get a “super jumbo” (or “non-conforming”) mortgage. Because the mortgage holder can’t sell this debt to someone like Fannie Mae, you will pay a higher interest rate. So, by saying they won’t buy a mortgage of more than $333,700, and assuming you have a 20% down-payment, they are effectively putting a lid of $417,125 on housing prices in most areas. There is also anecdotal evidence that appraisers are helping put a lid on housing prices by refusing to rubber-stamp high valuations. Yes, they are saying “that house is not worth that much money,” and mortgage companies are refusing to put in a first mortgage for more than the appraiser says it is worth.

Finally, a follow-up. I said months ago that high-handed TSA tactics would result in more business charter flights, more privately owned aircraft, and less traditional air travel. From the New York Times: “The number of corporate jet flights is on the rise as the economy rebounds, in planes owned by major corporations or shared through fractional ownership, sold somewhat like time-share condominiums. And manufacturers of private planes are planning new “microjets” — small, relatively cheap planes designed for flying at the altitudes, if not the speeds, of the big airliners.”

In summary, Private Jet ownership is up. The three big players appear to be Bombardier, Raytheon, and Cessna, but it seems like there is plenty of room for an upstart, particularly one that can offer some economic advantage.

* What does this mean? Well, when Local Bank of America sells their mortgages to someone like Fannie Mae, that frees up money they can loan to someone else, making a nice origination fee in the process. Fannie Mae will still get all the money, but they may have to wait 30 years until the loan is paid off. Search my site for “Fannie Mae” to get more links and information.

Beating the Drum Again

The official United States employment numbers for February have come out, along with figures revised downward for both January and December. Although I think by far this Reuters story is the best coverage, here is the Associated Press version. This one from CNN includes a pretty graph. This one from The New York Times admits some of their “reporting” was contributed by the Associated Press. For the hard core financial news junkies, don’t forget Bloomberg. In short, 21,000 jobs were created — an average of 420 per state — falling far short of the 125,000 jobs that economists expected.

Both sides of the political spectrum are concerned about these numbers. Democratic heir apparent John Kerry says there is one more guy who needs to lose his job, and that man is George W. Bush. On the other side, we have Treasury Secretary John Snow, who called the number “disappointing.” He went on to say this was why we needed to make the Bush tax cuts permanent.

Do not be fooled by those who say “Unemployment is still only 5.6%. Back in the Clinton Administration we considered that low. What is your problem?” Problem one is that the unemployment rate doesn’t really mean that much. It only measures those who had a full time job, lost it, are looking for a full time job, are receiving unemployment benefits, aren’t going back to school, aren’t temping, aren’t taking part time work to make ends meet, aren’t giving up, aren’t declaring themselves an independent contractor. Think about the adults you know. Would you say more or less than one in twenty is unemployed? How many of them are underemployed? Even Alan Greenspan says it is more accurate to measure the people actually getting paychecks.

These disappointing jobs numbers are important for several reasons, which are outlined particularly well in the Reuters and CNN articles above. First, in order to keep up with people just entering the job force, the economy needs to add roughly 150,000 jobs each and every month. Yes, if we don’t add those jobs, the new people don’t count as unemployed because they never were employed in the first place. In fact, the experts would really like to see a consistent 200,000 to 300,000 jobs created monthly before they declare the job market “good.” Even at that rate, it will be a long while before the 2.3 Million jobs lost over the last 3 years are replaced.

Not only were there 24,000 fewer construction jobs. Manufacturing jobs declined for the 43rd month in a row. Even the much ballyhooed service sector, the sector that would save us all, has not produced the expected jobs. In fact, the second paragraph of the Reuters article above points out that private job growth was flat; the 21,000 new jobs were all in Government.

Oh, and the 8.2 million unemployed people — and I hope they are all registered voters — have on average been unemployed over 20 weeks, the highest level in decades. Think about that. On average, 5 months unemployed by the very strict Government definition. Many of these people are close to exhausting their unemployment benefits and perhaps their savings too. This is to say nothing of how demoralizing it is to be out of work for months on end. No wonder there are so many “discouraged workers,” people who no longer count as unemployed because they have given up looking for work.

As if that were not reason enough to consider this number important, it also means that Greenspan cannot raise interest rates. The Fed Funds rate sits at 1%, the lowest level since 1958, a rate the Fed has already said is unsustainable. For reference, the Bank of England has rates set at 4%. This low, low interest rate helps anyone looking for a mortgage, anyone with debts they can refinance, but has been almost completely ineffective at it’s stated goal: spurring business investment.

The final reason this number matters may have escaped your attention altogether. You will hear it glossed over in the news, with statements like “The Dollar dropped against the Yen/Euro on sluggish jobs data.” The Administration is letting the Dollar drop against other currencies, on the theory that it will make American goods cheaper overseas, thus stimulating job growth. Of course, the fact that it makes imported goods more expensive in the middle of a huge trade deficit just means we will all have incentive to “buy American,” right? Wrong. One of several reasons gas is so expensive these days is that crude oil is bought and sold in dollars. With the dollar this low, the members of OPEC have trouble making money on oil, as they have to pay their oil-field workers in local currencies. Therefore, they are cutting production and forcing prices up. As a strict aside, oil and oil services companies (such as Halliburton) have historically made more money when crude oil prices are high.

It’s tough to fill up the car to get to a job interview with gas prices near record highs.