I say yes, you say no, OR People are Strange
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A poetic parody by Jason Linkins:
I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: This vast and clueless slab of derp
Stood in the Senate. Heard him on the stand,
Half sunk, in rather ornate lies, his frown
And twitching lip and sneer of cold command
Tells that this orator of eggs and ham read
As to connive, vamped on such senseless things,
To the pols that mocked him and the Reps that fled.
And on the news chyron these words appear:
`My name is Cruzymandias, Bat of Dings:
Look on my works, John Boehner, and despair!'
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that abysmal dreck, boundless with blare,
The multitude of LOLs stretch far away. -
Hi Friends,
Off topic ... but it's already too damn cold. Only 66 degrees here today. I already hate winter. Thinking of Athena and how much she would love this weather. Has anyone heard anymore about the lion cubs at the zoo on Oregon? Was so hoping one of them could be named in honor of Athena.
The leaves are falling off the trees already. Colors are going to change early this year.
I have really great news ... in two weeks I'm going to San Diego to see my family. I haven't seen my son, DIL and wonderful grandsons in a year. I'm going for a little longer than a weekend this time ... my mom will stay home with the dogs so that Tim doesn't have to take time off work. The boys will be on vacation while I'm there, but mom and dad will still be teaching ... so ... I get to babysit for two whole days! I hope the weather is great when I'm there .. would love to take the boys to the beach.
Hope everyone is enjoying football Sunday!
hugs,Bren
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Here is some news on the triplet cubs (3 females). A cute pic of the smallest who is having some difficulty nursing:
http://www.oregonzoo.org/news/2013/09/vets-begin-caring-smallest-lion-cub-triplets
Older stories can be found here, but I don't see anything about the name contest:
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Good news, Bren. Surely the weather in southern Cal will cooperate!
After our monsoon yesterday we are picking up a couple more boxes of hardwood since the weather is being much more cooperative today.
Yesterday I met with some BCO ladies. It was horrible weather and still everyone made it. What a hardy bunch we are. I guess anyone who's made it through BC won't let a little inclement weather stop them!
RL loved your rant! -
Yes! A truly powerful rant.
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About the lion cubs- I did send my letter,twice, to the zoo asking them to consider naming one Athena. I have not had any response from them. I'll let you know if I hear anything.
I thought of Athena when DD and I were looking at some of the pictures of the Milan fashion shows. I'm sure she would have made a few pithy remarks on what was called "fashion". -
Thanks juliaanna for taking the time to write the letters. There are 3 female cubs, so ..... Next time I'm in Portland to see my surgeons I will try to visit our dear Athena's namesake (I'm thinking positively).
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Bren - Happy CA, hope you get all the warm weather you want - getting to babysit all day - CHEERS. Great planning.
Tried, really I did, to watch whatzizname on MTP this am, but had to use the mute button a lot. LOVE the Clinton pic & quote Jackie posted - he said the same thing to George S. on This Week this am. Also Chris Matthews was wonderful. Hope some got to read the article from his new book on Reagan & Tip O'Neill.
Ah, the Asian ladybugs - yes, all those awful things - esp. the yellow stain and SMELL if you accidently crush one, yucky. They live in south facing walls of all the houses around here, and come out in SWARMS in Feb. or warly Mar when the sun starts to warm up the walls of the house. No amount of insulation stops them - never thought I'd dislike a ladybug, but I do.
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Hi Everyone,
Tim is home today ... yay! We're having bbqed pork ribs. Along with a salad and bisquits. Got to have bisquits ... this IS the south y'know. Tim is a great cook.
Julianna .. thanks for keeping us posted on the lion cubs. Sure hope you hear something from the zoo.
Sunnyflower .. talked to my son last week and the temps were great in San Diego ... 80's and the sun was shining. When I visited last October, it was really warm and we spent one day at the beach. I wish Luke and his family could come out here and visit me. I don't think I'll ever get him out of San Diego.
Libby .. very strong post. Thank you.
hugs,
Bren
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Here is the actual text from the Pali Canon of Buddhism. http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/soma/wheel008.html
"It is proper for you, Kalamas, to doubt, to be uncertain; uncertainty has arisen in you about what is doubtful. Come, Kalamas. Do not go upon what has been acquired by repeated hearing; nor upon tradition; nor upon rumor; nor upon what is in a scripture; nor upon surmise; nor upon an axiom; nor upon specious reasoning; nor upon a bias towards a notion that has been pondered over; nor upon another's seeming ability; nor upon the consideration, 'The monk is our teacher.' Kalamas, when you yourselves know: 'These things are bad; these things are blamable; these things are censured by the wise; undertaken and observed, these things lead to harm and ill,' abandon them."
Here is a comment from a monk on the above quote. "Translator's note: Although this discourse is often cited as the Buddha's carte blanche for following one's own sense of right and wrong, it actually says something much more rigorous than that. Traditions are not to be followed simply because they are traditions. Reports (such as historical accounts or news) are not to be followed simply because the source seems reliable. One's own preferences are not to be followed simply because they seem logical or resonate with one's feelings. Instead, any view or belief must be tested by the results it yields when put into practice; and — to guard against the possibility of any bias or limitations in one's understanding of those results — they must further be checked against the experience of people who are wise. The ability to question and test one's beliefs in an appropriate way is called appropriate attention. The ability to recognize and choose wise people as mentors is called having admirable friends. According to Iti 16-17, these are, respectively, the most important internal and external factors for attaining the goal of the practice. For further thoughts on how to test a belief in practice, see MN 61, MN 95, AN 7.79, and AN 8.53. For thoughts on how to judge whether another person is wise, see MN 110, AN 4.192, and AN 8.54."
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THANK YOU notself love what I learn from reading your posts.
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Bren, that is wonderful news about your upcoming visit. You must be so excited!
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A cartoon that is DEAD serious.

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Sadly, so true!

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http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/opinion/56888224-82/cancer-breast-early-komen.html.csp
Hi Everyone!
I'm posting a link to an article written by one of the Stage IV gals here on BCO. It is an excellent article, and I think, important to read. She sheds light on MBC and also the failure of Komen.
PiP ... I am so happy to be going to see my family! I dread the flights, but it's worth it to be with them, even for only 4 days.
hugs,
Bren
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Bren, I hope you have an awesome time!
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Today's discussion on default from The Atlantic:
(edited to replace wrong link)
Not Raising the Debt Ceiling: A Crisis, If We're Lucky, a Historical Calamity If We're Not
Matthew O'Brien Sep 29 2013If we don't raise the debt limit, we know we would get mega-austerity and maybe a new financial crisis. But just how bad could it get?It's what Donald Rumsfeld would call a known unknown.We know that we don't know what would happen if we don't raise the debt ceiling before we run out of cash to pay all our bills on time. It might "only" crush consumer confidence, send markets cliff-diving, and slow down our already slow recovery -- if not push us back into recession. Or it might be a historic blunder that not only flattens the economy today, but also forever raises our borrowing costs and lowers our standard of living tomorrow. So the stakes are fairly high. We just don't know how high. And that, as my colleague Derek Thompson puts it, is the most terrifying thing of all.
But there are a few things we do know. We do know what will determine whether this is a self-inflicted wound to the foot or to the head. That's whether we outright default on the debt or not. Remember, the debt ceiling doesn't stop us from borrowing more to pay for new spending. It stops us from borrowing more to pay for old spending. And it only stops us from borrowing more, because we say so. See, it's not that lenders don't want to lend to us anymore; after inflation, they're still paying us to borrow for 5 years. No, it's that we've said we won't borrow anymore, just because. It's a self-imposed limit.
And if we don't lift that self-imposed limit, we enter a world of economic pain. We couldn't borrow more to pay for the spending Congress has already authorized. We'd have to pay what we owe out of tax receipts and rolled-over debt instead. But as the Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC) points out, tax receipts and rolled-over debt would only cover 68 percent of our bills. So we'd have to cut the rest. This immediate 32 percent austerity could hit anything from Social Security checks to food stamps to the debt itself. Now, this last one is unlikely, but not impossible. How unlikely depends on whether the Treasury can prioritize its payments. Let's think about what would happen if it can and if it can't.
Scenario #1: Treasury can prioritize the debt, so we get austerity but not default. Suppose the government doesn't pay its bills as they come due. Suppose instead it pays back the debt before anything else. In that case, interest rates wouldn't rise -- they'd fall. At least longer rates. Now, short-term term rates on debt due to be paid back right after the debt ceiling hits would rise. But that's it. After all, investors flee to the safety of U.S. government debt (which pushes down rates) anytime things look grim.
And cutting 32 percent of federal spending overnight would certainly make things look real grim real fast. Indeed, that much austerity would cost us millions of jobs at an annualized pace. If a debt ceiling showdown somehow lasted much more than a few days, the economy's heart palpitations would turn to cardiac arrest -- which, as long we were still paying the interest on it, would mean much more demand for our debt. It's paradoxical, but threatening to default on our debt might make investors want our debt more than ever. You know, as a safe haven.
But this optimistic case isn't much of one. Even forgetting the austerity. For one, the spectacle of House Republicans once again debating whether or not to light the fuse on an economic bomb would be enough to crater consumer confidence. As Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers point out, that's what happened the last time Republicans weren't so sure we should pay our bills back in 2011 -- and it took households awhile to get over their shock. For another, introducing any possibility of defaulting on the debt would be enough to make the financial system seize up.
But wait. Isn't prioritizing payments supposed to mean we pay all the interest on the debt on time? Why would markets still worry about a default? Well, something might go wrong. And if it did, the financial system would not be in good shape. In fact, just the risk that it might is enough to make the financial system in not-so-good shape already. That's because our debt isn't just debt; it's money, too. Or at least close enough to money that we can say it's "money-like."
Now let's translate that into English. All sorts of financial institutions fund their day-to-day operations with ultra-short-term borrowing. Repurchase agreements (or "repo") are the most common type. Here's how it works. A bank "sells" something for cash, but agrees to buy it back at the end of the day -- hence, repurchase -- for a little more than it got. So, for example, say a bank sells a Treasury bond for 95 cents on the dollar, and buys it back for 96 cents at the end of the day. Again, notice the difference between what it gets and what it pays for the collateral. That's the interest rate on what is really a secured loan. Okay, but what does this have to do with the debt ceiling? Well, the repo market isn't set up to tell if a Treasury bond has defaulted or not (because if Treasury bonds are defaulting, the world must be ending, right?). That means it only takes the hint of the possibility of a Treasury bond defaulting for the repo market to go into paroxysms. As you can see in the chart below, via Cardiff Garcia of FT Alphaville, that's exactly what happened during the last debt ceiling crisis in 2011: repo rates spiked when it looked like the debt ceiling wasn't going to be lifted in time. It'd obviously be worse if it actually wasn't lifted in time.

In other words, interest rates would rise for financial institutions. And those financial institutions might not get as much help from the Fed as they need. The central bank's clearing system also isn't set up to tell if a Treasury bond has defaulted or not, so it could seize up too. And, of course, banks can't use defaulted Treasury bonds as collateral at the Fed.
These are all very bad things.
So, to sum up, if everything goes as well as it could, the recovery would only get a vicious knee-capping. There'd be the insane austerity. Interest rates would fall for the government, but rise for the financial system. And households would be scared for months, if not longer, about a political system exhibiting what my colleague James Fallows calls 1860s-style dysfunction.
Scenario #2: Treasury can't prioritize the debt, and the world really ends. It sounds so easy to pay the debt back first. But prioritization is a legal and logistical nightmare. There's just little legal basis to justify paying some bills, and not others. Everyone we owe money to -- bondholders, military personnel, Social Security recipients, etc. -- has a good claim on whatever money we do have. Good luck getting whoever we stiff to go along with that.
But even if we could legally choose who and who not to pay, we might not be able to do so technically. As BPC points out, the Treasury makes 100 million payments a month. It would have to reprogram its computers to pay the most essential ones first each day -- and it would have to do this fast. It's touching that Republicans so believe in the efficacy of government that they think the Treasury could pull this off without a hitch. But I'm not so sure.
If it turns out the Treasury can't prioritize payments, then our world of economic pain will end very quickly -- because it will be the end of the world as we know it. Now, it's almost too awful to be worth contemplating, but let's give it a shot. There would be the same austerity. And an even worse collapse in consumer confidence. But instead of falling, interest rates would rise across the board as investors dump Treasuries that might default. The financial system might not have another Lehman moment, but then again maybe it would. At best, credit markets would freeze for awhile.
But we haven't gotten to the worst part yet. The worst part comes after the crisis has passed. It's that interest rates wouldn't come back down to where they were before the crisis. Investors would decide that our 200-year long experiment with republican government had turned into one of the banana variety. In other words, they would decide to invest their money in countries that don't periodically threaten to default for no good reason. Interest rates would be forever higher than they would have otherwise been, and that would drag our standard of living forever lower than it would have otherwise been. (emphasis mine)
That's some expensive political grandstanding.
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And it is grandstanding. Remember, the Republicans aren't threatening economic calamity, because they want to rein in spending. They're threatening economic calamity, because they want to stop poor and sick Americans from getting health insurance. (emphasis mine) That is, they want to stop Obamacare. But that obviously isn't happening as long as someone named Obama is living in the White House. The Republicans had their chance to make sure someone named Obama wasn't living in the White House in 2012, and they did not succeed. Throwing a temper tantrum won't change that, even if that temper tantrum involves holding the world economy hostage.
Now can we please leave the hostage alone?
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It is entirely possible, as the article says, to break the system so badly that the Republic will effectively end. It is entirely possible that the regressives in Congress will so blatantly and egregiously violate the Constitution and the packed, regressively activist Supreme Court will allow it, that they break the Constitution and the safeguards built into it. They have shown themselves willing to use the Constitution they profess to love as toilet paper when it suits their purposes.
If they shut down the government until the debt limit ceiling must be raised (October 17, which is about the time of the next bond auction), the President could, at that time, declare that he is invoking Section IV of the Fourteenth Amendment (Section 4. The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned. But neither the United States nor any State shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave; but all such debts, obligations and claims shall be held illegal and void.) Emphsis added. If he does that, the regressives are left with a government that they shut down and nothing else. I hope he does that. I sincerely hope he will not allow the United States to default and destroy the world's economy. As it is, the regressives' dangerous game of chicken has roiled world financial markets and has pushed the United States further along the road to becoming a second-tier economy. Who will want to invest in U.S. bonds if the legislature of the United States is composed of insane people who violate the laws and the Constitution of this country and refuse to honor their debts, the results of their elections and their obligations?
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This is a rather priceless piece. I was almost rolling in the floor by the time I finished this read. After I put this link here....I'm going back for more.
http://www.addictinginfo.org/2013/09/29/4-republican-favorites-who-would-despise-republicans/
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And don't let the door hit you on the way out Dana .
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It is amazing how history is rewritten to suit ones agenda.
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Forgot to mention....RL --- another very appropriate piece that spells it out loud and clear.
Jackie
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And tonight's James Fallows piece on how a minority - in truth, a bunch of losers - is holding the country hostage. Yes, they are terrorists. They are threatening to destroy the full faith and credit of the United States and plunge the world economy into chaos if they don't get their way ... a way that was, in fact, roundly rejected by a MAJORITY of voters in November 2012.
The AtlanticWhy This Is Not Just 'Washington Breakdown,' in 3 Graphs (and 1 Story)
Tea Party members say they are expressing the public's will. Gee, if only there were some way to judge popular sentiment in a democracy.James FallowsSep 29 2013From the Washington Post this morning:
An unfortunate story that leads the WaPo today, with the photo and headline shown here, represents a step back from an increasing mainstream-journalistic willingness to discard reflexive "isn't gridlock terrible" hand-wringing so as to explain what is really going on now.
For instance, in the past few days we have seen headlines like this one in the Wall Street Journal, emphasizing that the shutdown and debt-ceiling threats arise not from usual party divisions but from a war within the Republican party:

And this one as the front-page lead in the WaPo itself just two days ago:

Today's WaPo story, by contrast, rolled out every "fair"-seeming sentiment you might have expected from a talk show in some bygone age:

Here's why talk of "primitive, leaderless village" problems blurs rather than clarifies what is going on.
In essence, the hard-line faction of the House GOP is demanding the following, as recent NYT, WSJ, and WaPo articles, apart from today's, have made clear:
- EITHER the Administration must undo the main legislative accomplishment of the president's time in office, which he passed despite filibuster resistance four years ago and which the Supreme Court has since held constitutional;
- OR ELSE all other business of the government will be halted, and the full faith and credit of the United States will be called into question, with unknown but likely bad world-financial consequences.
This is not what either John Boehner or Mitch McConnell says he stands for. I have no doubt that Obama could ultimately strike some compromise with even McConnell's filibuster-happy Senate Republicans and any kind of normal Republican majority in the House. In the end Democrats would complain that Obama had caved, Republicans would complain about Beltway insiderism, but some deal would result.
Yet enough of today's absolutist House members think in exactly these Either/Or terms that normal compromise is simply impossible. Compromise is nearly as much their stated enemy as is Obamacare. If you're urging a search for "common ground," please tell me where you see between these views. I argued recently that the closest parallels in our history were to the John C. Calhoun era before the Civil War. If you think that's unfair, please tell me another case in which a dissatisfied minority threatened to shut down the entire government, and possibly renege on the national debt, unless a sitting President agree to reverse his hardest-won policy accomplishment.
And, yes, a dissatisfied minority. This brings us to the part of the struggle that gets far less ink than it should.
What's the basis for the GOP claim that the time has come to "defund Obamacare" and threaten default and shutdown to get their way? Their passion and legitimacy comes from their contention that the public has turned against this program. Thus, they are doing no more than reflecting popular will.
Hmmm, are there any other ways in which a democracy might assess the people's will? I can think of three -- which we're all aware of but which are worth revisiting:
1) Just last year, a presidential election was fought over this exact issue, along with economic policy more broadly. When the votes came in, Barack Obama scored a runaway Electoral College win -- and became the first person since Dwight Eisenhower to get more than 51% of the popular vote twice. (my emphasis added)

The 51% figure is something of a trick comparison -- Ronald Reagan got just over 50% (but not 51%) in 1980 because of the third-party candidate John Anderson. Bill Clinton never got even to 50% because of Ross Perot. Still, we very recently had the most formal test a democracy offers of a president's policies, rather than some set of push-polls, and Obama won in a walk. (my emphasis again added - in other words, GET OVER IT. YOU LOST. YOU ARE IN THE MINORITY AND YOU.DO.NOT.REPRESENT.THE.WILL.OF.THE.MAJORITY!)
2) In that year's elections for the Senate, the Democrats increased their majority by two seats and overall received 10 million+ more votes than all Republican candidates.

3) And last year even in the elections for the House, Democrats -- who for better or worse were forced to run on Obamacare and the president's economic policies -- gained 8 seats and received 1.7 million more votes than did all Republican candidates combined. (again, my emphasis added)

Yes, the "total House vote" figure also has its trick-question oddities. Close races bring higher turnout for both sides, as compared with safe-district incumbents. Still, all evidence suggests that without post-2010 gerrymandering, the Democrats might well control the House right now, along with the Senate and White House. For instance: Obama easily beat Romney in Pennsylvania, but post-2010 gerrymandering means that Republicans now hold 13 House seats there, versus only five for Democrats.
In short, we have a faction making historically unprecedented demands -- give us everything, or we stop the government and potentially renege on the national debt. And it is doing so less than a year after its party lost the presidency, lost the Senate (and lost ground there), and held onto the House in part because of rotten-borough distortions.
You can call this a lot of things, but "gridlock" should not be one of them. And you can fault many aspects of the President's response -- when it comes to debt-default, I think he has to stick to the "no negotiations with terrorists" hard line. But you shouldn't pretend that if he had been more "reasonable" or charming he could placate a group whose goal is the undoing of his time in office.
The real question now is what Boehner, McConnell, et al. can do about their hard-liners. A lot depends, for Americans and many others, on their success or failure.
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Yes. No negotiating with terrorists. Not even the home-grown kind. They lost. They are in the minority. They do not represent the will of the people. Their ideas were roundly rejected by a majority of the voters in this country. And still they are taking hostages and trying to impose by coercion -- BY FORCE, FOLKS -- their will on people who REJECTED THEM A YEAR AGO. What does that sound like? Insurrection? A coup attempt? Subverting the Constitution? Subverting the WILL OF THE MAJORITY. Terrorists indeed.
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HL.....another outstanding piece that cuts right to the chase and lays things out where even the less bright should be able to comprehend. I must say I think some of this came up today on MTP where not so crafty Carnival was using the phrase "will" of the people and I sat there thinking......what people. Not too many that I'm aware of so most must be slanted towards the right. Falling RIGHT over actually.....because no one in their right mind would agree with that statement.
Jackie
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