Sign up and call your representative on this important initiative:
Living Without Health Insurance
I have a new piece at Lew Rockwell, with some tips for people who might be interested in doing without health insurance for a couple of years:
(Legal Disclaimer:
I am not a medical or legal expert and anything written in the article should not be construed as medical or legal advice. Readers should consult their own physician and attorney before making a decision about their insurance or about self-medication.
I am not in anyway responsible for any harm or injury that might come to a reader as a result of reading this article or from following therapies mentioned in it.
Neither I nor any publisher of this piece on a website or in print form, is in any way liable for any injury or harm sustained from following any recommendation whatsoever in this article (or any recommendation arising from it) in this country, or any other, now, or in the future).
“I stopped carrying health insurance over five years ago for many reasons that I won’t get into here. It wasn’t a big decision, because I’d done without it for a couple of years when I was between jobs
In any case, when I had it, it was never much use. I was misdiagnosed on a couple of things and ended up having to treat myself. I got to resenting the way some doctors never really listened. I bridled at having my questions treated like the uninformed babble of a simpleton.
And since I had to pay most of the bill for “maintenance” items like vision and dentistry anyway, dropping insurance altogether seemed like the logical thing to do.
That doesn’t mean it will work for you, though. Especially if you have an on-going illness, be sure to do your own due diligence.
Still, if you’re a relatively healthy person, if you’re cash-strapped or need to pay off a debt, or if you want to strike out in a new direction on your own, you might find my tips useful in helping you go insurance-free for a couple of years.
Or even longer.
You’ll worry less about doing without those “bennies” you’ve got used to for so long. And the less worried you are over going it alone, the more you’ll be able to stand up to the big lie of modern life – that people need the government to survive.
Dollar Surprise
From Chris Gaffney, Vice-President of Everbank:
“As most would predict, the Mexican peso (MXN) has dropped significantly, moving down almost 3% versus the U.S. dollar overnight. Fears of a global pandemic have driven investors out of the high yielding currencies of New Zealand (NZD), Australia (AUD), and Brazil (BRL). Risk aversion seems to be back in vogue, with investors moving funds back into U.S. Treasuries and the Japanese yen (JPY).
I read a story over the weekend that suggested the U.S. dollar would continue to strengthen no matter what happens in the global economy. The story said that the U.S. dollar would increase if the administration’s efforts to stimulate our economy worked, and that we would lead the rest of the globe into the recovery phase. On the other hand, it said that the U.S. dollar would also strengthen if the global economy continued to weaken, as investors would purchase U.S. Treasuries as a safe haven.”
My Comment:
This insight about the performance of the US dollar has also been mine.
De-leveraging (which is the collapse of asset values as they’re sold to pay off debt) is going on now all over the world in different asset classes. And de-leveraging mostly needs the US dollar.
In spite of a few sharp corrections downward, that’s what has held the dollar index (DX) up for a bit longer than dollar bears had anticipated.
Holding up, of course, is not the same as “bull market”.
The dollar’s fundamentals are still bad.
I don’t have hopes for any currency tied to a government behaving so recklessly. I hesitate to write this, but some of the high-level corruption we’ve seen is actually beyond third-world.
I say this with no schadenfreude. It’s deeply, traumatically, disturbing to find so much rot at the heart of the global financial system. At the very core of the “international community, ” if you will.
The worst criticism of imperialism, or of statism, or of financial corruption didn’t prepare me for this.
And it makes me very afraid.
What example does such behavior set? What message does it send to a world which takes its cue from the West, and from the US in particular. Can we really expect better from other governments?
NY Times Wises Up to Banking Cartel (Update)
Finally. The New York Times is on the case.
(About a decade too late. But we’ll take an awakening whenever it comes and wherever, as we’ve said before).
At The Times, criticism of Tim Geithner’s insider status:
“A revolving door has long connected Wall Street and the New York Fed. Mr. Geithner’s predecessors, E. Gerald Corrigan and William J. McDonough, wound up as investment-bank executives. The current president, William C. Dudley, came from Goldman Sachs.
Mr. Geithner followed a different route. An expert in international finance, he served under both Clinton-era Treasury secretaries, Mr. Rubin and Lawrence H. Summers. He impressed them with his handling of foreign financial crises in the late 1990s before landing a top job at the International Monetary Fund.
When the New York Fed was looking for a new president, both former secretaries were advisers to the bank’s search committee and supported Mr. Geithner’s candidacy. Mr. Rubin’s seal of approval carried particular weight because he was by then a senior official at Citigroup.”
More at “Geithner, Member and Overseer of Finance Club,” Joe Becker and Gretchen Morgenson.
My Comment:
Here at The Mind-Body Politic, your diligent commentator makes it a point to cite people, even if they don’t reciprocate, so we will note appreciatively that Ms. Morgenson did the leg work that outed Goldman Sachs for its presence at the AIG bail-out (September 30, 2008). She deserves every credit for it.**
But that said, it still remains true that mainstream journalists today are moved less by the need to keep the public informed at the critical time than to bolster their reputations. That is really too bad and it’s why, increasingly, so many people disdain the press. Imagine doctors who watched the patient bleed and didn’t share information about his condition so they could “break” the case for themselves? What sort of professional ethic would that be?
Blogging and writing down intuitions as they occur is the only way of putting valuable information out into the public realm as fast as possible, so as many people can push back from as many angles as possible. That’s the only way to keep up the pressure on public officials. I could not ethically hold back on my insights, just to avoid having other people take them without acknowledgment. You’d think better positioned journalists would act with equal public spirit, especially as they – unlike bloggers – are paid rather well to do so.
Writing critically about Tim Geithner in 2009, after the milk’s been spilled, and when it’s public knowledge is one thing. Much better for the Times to have written about Geithner a few years ago, when it counted.
This is precisely why the reputation of the mainstream media among people who follow such things is a little below that of a loan officer at Fannie Mae.
Update:
Apparently, this piece provoked reaction elsewhere in the blogosphere, with Yves Smith at Naked Capitalism claiming that the piece is too kind to Geithner and Paul Kedrosky finding no smoking gun in all of it. Over at Portfolio.com, Ryan Avent sees it as evidence of Geithner being much less of an establishment figure, much less timid, than people think.
My own sense is that Geithner is more of a scape-goat, a convenient prop to beat up on. It’s the figures behind him, Rubin, Summers, Volker, (and a few others whom I’ll post on later), who are the important players.
As a further aside:
Note this sidebar from The Times (September 28, 2008):
The Reckoning: A Spreading Virus: Articles in the series are exploring the causes of the financial crisis
In the last two years, NRR , The New York Times , and a few other places, have repeatedly used the word “reckoning” for the financial crisis, as well as a a few other terms. They sound strangely reminiscent of my co-author’s very popular newsletter, The Daily Reckoning – well known to DC and NY financial circles. I’ve seen arguments from said missive (as well as from “Mobs”) lifted wholesale….
No one owns words or phrases or ideas. Or leads. There is no monopoly on them. And all writers are only too happy to have people read them, no matter what.
But political journalism is not simply any journalism. It plays a vital part in the creation and preservation of public memory. And that memory, that record, is essential to monitoring the state – which is the role of the fourth estate. Journalistic ethics, which cannot be enforced in the courts alone, demands a degree of personal integrity to function as it should in creating and preserving that record.
With notable exceptions, this integrity is not much in supply any longer.
So, while stoning the banking cartel for its sins, let’s keep a few chunky pebbles for the media cartel.
Footnote:
**[I wrote a piece on AIG and Goldman Sachs the week before Morgenson’s piece. My piece was widely disseminated in the blogosphere (and to members of Congress, I learn from readers) and since Morgenson had never written critically about Goldman’s insider ties with AIG before, I have more than a suspicion she took the lead from that piece — “Lipstick On An AIG” (Counterpunch, September 18-19, 2008)].
PS. I wrote both Morgenson and Jim Pinkerton (who mentioned Morgenson’s story on TV the following weekend), requesting correct attribution. There was no reply.
To the reader who writes to me that such imitation is a form of flattery, I wish….
It has nothing to do with flattery. It’s an attempt to co-opt language. It’s a way of muddying the waters. It’s revisionism. And its goal is to steer your mind the way that opinion-makers (who only voice choices within a carefully vetted spectrum) would have it go. Don’t be misled by the apparent opposition between the left and the corporate class. Communists and capitalists have always colluded when necessary. Certain kinds of capitalists (corporatists) love the state and they love communism — for you.
They know they’re always going to get the perks and privileges of the ruling class, while equality for everyone else makes for a pliable, governable body politic…
Bernanke and Paulson Pressured BOA-Merrill Merger
More evidence of behind-the-scenes string-pulling in the banking crisis:
NEW YORK (Reuters) –
Bank of America Corp CEO Kenneth Lewis testified under oath that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson pressured him to keep quiet about losses at Merrill Lynch & Co, which the bank was buying, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Testifying before New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo in February, Lewis said “it wasn’t up to me” to reveal Merrill’s fourth-quarter losses as they were becoming apparent in December, the newspaper said, citing a deposition transcript.
Shareholders of Merrill and Bank of America voted to approve the merger on December 5, and the transaction closed on January 1. Bank of America subsequently reported that Merrill lost $15.84 billion in the fourth quarter.
At Bank of America’s April 29 annual meeting, shareholders will vote on whether to force Lewis to step down as chairman of the largest U.S. bank or leave its board, because of Merrill and a falling share price…”
Read more at Reuters
My Comment
Why do people think nationalization will improve matters?
We’ve nationalized already…. unofficially.
Making it official won’t improve anything. It will just get people to accept what’s going on and legitimize the swindle.
We’re like bystanders at a mugging fighting over who ought to get the money the mugger left behind when he fled.
No. See mugging, call cops.
That’s how it’s supposed to go.
IMF: G-20 Fiscal Stimulus On Target
In the news:
The IMF says the G-20 fiscal stimulus will reach its 2% target.
Bloomberg reports on the figures spent so far:
“The G-20 countries will spend $820 billion on stimulus measures in 2009, up from a March estimate of $780 billion, and will spend $660 billion in 2010, the fund estimated.
The IMF also revised its forecast for budget deficits in G- 20 countries as a result of fiscal expansion. Today’s report calculates that budget deficits in the G-20 this year will increase by 5.5 percentage points of gross domestic product relative to 2007 and 5.4 percent in 2010. In March, the fund forecast a 4.7 percentage-point rise this year and a 5.1 percentage-point jump next year.
Strauss-Kahn said yesterday that governments should start to discuss “exit strategies” from the emergency spending once the crisis passes.
The fund’s estimate for financial-sector support also increased today to 32.1 percent of GDP, up more than 3 percentage points from the March estimate….”
My Comment (check back for more):
Domininique Strauss-Kahn, a member of the Socialist party and a former finance and economy minister in Lionel Jospin‘s “Plural Left” government became the new managing director of the International Monetary Fund on September 2007, replacing Spain’s Rodrigo de Rato.
Interesting things to note about Strauss-Kahn:
- He’s part of the European Council on Foreign Relations, launched in October 2007 (i.e. just after DSK became IMF chief), which in an expression of pan-Europeanism in world affairs. Rubbing shoulders with DSK, according to Source Watch are such notable globalists as George Soros (Chairman of the Open Institute), Stephen Wall (Chairman of the influential PR firm Hill & Knowlton, advisor to Tony Blair), and Timothy Garton Ash (whose influential book, The Magic Lantern, cheered on the 1989 revolutions in Eastern Europe). Note: Hill & Knowlton was the outfit that concocted the story about Iraqi soldiers killing babies that became a provocation for the 1991 Gulf War.
- Strauss-Kahn has been linked to the financial scandal around ELF Aquitaine, a state-owned oil giant through which former President Francois Mitterand allegedly channeled money to Germany’s Christian Democrats. Strauss-Kahn’s wrong-doing was apparently less serious than some of the fraud and corruption with which other French government officials and company heads were charged (including money-laundering, influence peddling, falsification of documents, and bribery)
- Money from the ELF oil company, as well as from the Taiwan frigates scandal, passed through “unpublished accounts” at Clearstream Banking, the clearing division of Deutsche Bourse, based in Luxembourg. The ELF affair and the Taiwan frigates scandal were the two major financial scandals that hit France in the 1990s. And in both, Clearstream was a platform for money-laundering and tax evasion.
Indian Business Students Drive Sales Of Mein Kampf
“Sales of Mein Kampf, Adolf Hitler’s autobiography and apologia for his anti-semitism, are soaring in India where business students regard the dictator as a management guru.
Booksellers told The Daily Telegraph that while it is regarded in most countries as a ‘Nazi Bible’, in India it is considered a management guide in the mould of Spencer Johnson’s “Who Moved My Cheese”.
Sales of the book over the last six months topped 10,000 in New Delhi alone, according to leading stores, who said it appeared to be becoming more popular with every year.
Several said the surge in sales was due to demand from students who see it as a self-improvement and management strategy guide for aspiring business leaders, and who were happy to cite it as an inspiration.
“Students are increasingly coming in asking for it and we’re happy to sell it to them,” said Sohin Lakhani, owner of Mumbai-based Embassy books who reprints Mein Kampf every quarter and shrugs off any moral issues in publishing the book.
“They see it as a kind of success story where one man can have a vision, work out a plan on how to implement it and then successfully complete it”.
More at The Telegraph, UK”
My Comment
April 20 was Hitler’s birthday and I suppose the anniversary provides the justification for stories like these. Mein Kampf is a book that I’ve never read myself and haven’t felt curious enough to read, either . It’s apparently selling briskly to Indian students, not for its anti-semitism but for the inspiration it provides management students.
More mischievously, the article goes on to insinuate a link between Gandhi and the Nazis.
There was one, but nothing that would please any Nazi-hunter. Gandhi was not unusual in seeing the European war as intra-imperial and seemed to think that satyagraha would work on the Germans as well as it had done on the British.
He went so far as to advise Jews to let themselves fall before the Nazis as a kind of sacrificial gesture that would turn the consciences of their oppressors. Many scholars have – unsurprisingly – reacted to this with repugnance, but the advice was more a symptom of Gandhian quixotry than anti-Semitism – conscious or unconscious.
Solzhenitsyn On Conscience
Alexandr Solzhenitsyn on developing a point of view:
“In First Circle, the young diplomat Innokenty Volodin lived a life of prosperity and comfort. As the privileged child of a hero of the Revolution he had married into a prominent family and advanced in the Soviet diplomatic service. But he became alienated from it all: he “lack(ed) something: he didn’t know what” (p. 341).
Upon examining the old fashioned ideas of his deceased mother in her diaries, his perspective on life changed from one of an Epicurean pleasure-seeking to one of ethical regard. He developed a “point of view”: Up to then the truth for Innokenty had been: you have only one life.
Now he came to sense a new law, in himself and in the world: you also have only one conscience. And just as you cannot recover a lost life, you cannot recover a wrecked conscience [p. 345]
Moral choices are often the consequence of accumulated culture, happenstance or social institutions, and as such judging others’ moral choices must be done with compassion and humility. Solzhenitsyn contemplates rather extensively his rejection of an offer to join the Soviet internal police force, the NKDV, when he was a young communist in Rostov in the late 1930’s:
“The NKVD school dangled before us special rations and double or triple pay …
It was not our minds that resisted but something inside our breasts. People can shout at you from all sides: “you must!”… inside our head can be saying also: “You must!” But inside your breast there is a sense of revulsion, repudiation. I don’t want to. It makes me feel sick. Do what you want without me; I want no part of it …. Without even knowing it ourselves, we were ransomed by small change in copper that was left from the golden coins our great-grandfathers had expended, at a time when morality was not considered relative and when the distinction between good and evil was very simply perceived by the heart.” —
[Gulag Archipelago, p. 160].
This leads to a rather subtle and non-judgmental view of good and evil. Evil is very real and very wrong, but no human being is authorized to become too self-righteous in its condemnation: but for the grace of God go I.
In Gulag Archipelago Solzhenitsyn says quite emphatically:
“So let the reader who expects this book to be a political expose slam its covers shut right now. If only it were all so simple! If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds, and it were necessary only to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them. But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart? During the life of any heart this line keeps changing place; sometimes it is squeezed one way by exuberant evil and sometimes it shifts to allow enough space for good to flourish. One and the same human being is, at various ages, under various circumstances, a totally different human being. At times he is close to being a devil, at times to sainthood. But his name we ascribe the whole lot, good and evil.
Socrates taught us: Know thyself!
“Confronted by the pit into which we are about to toss those who have done us harm, we halt, stricken dumb: it is after all only because of the way things worked out that they were the executioners and we weren’t.” [p. 169]
“To do evil a human being must first of all believe that what he’s doing is good, or else that it’s a well-considered act in conformity with natural law. Fortunately, it is in the nature of the human being to seek a justification for his actions. Macbeth’s self-justifications were feeble – and his conscience devoured him. Yes, even Iago was a little lamb too. The imagination and the spiritual strength of
Shakespeare’s evildoers stopped short at a dozen corpses. Because they had no ideology.
Ideology – that is what gives evildoing its long-sought justification and gives the evildoer the necessary steadfastness and determination. That is the social theory which helps to make his acts seem good instead of bad in his own and others’ eyes, so that he won’t hear reproaches and curses but will receive praise and honors.”
Guantanamo Detainees Are Not “Persons”
From Raw Story, Friday, April 24, 2009
“A Court of Appeals for the Washington, D.C. Circuit ruled Friday that detainees at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, are not “persons” according to it’s interpretation of a statute involving religious freedom.
The ruling sprang from an appeal of Rasul v. Rumsfeld, which was thrown out in Jan. 2008. “The court affirmed the district court’s dismissal of the constitutional and international law claims, and reversed the district court’s decision that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) applied to Guantanamo detainees, dismissing those claims as well,” the Center for Constitutional Rights said….”
A Depression Ditty
Alan G, the banker’s man
Cut the rate and away he ran
The books were cooked,
The thieves have booked,
Now Ben Bernanke’s
On the hook…
I’ve decided that treating this whole business as a tragedy/calamity doesn’t do it justice. Ridicule, taunting, and scorn are the proper responses.
And some of that needs to be directed at our own selves.
We’ve lived comfortably in a society where “branding” and “image” are everything – substance is nothing.
We’ve lived comfortably with a two-tier education where brilliant people are routinely overlooked in favor of empty suits with friends in high places.
We were comfortable with millions of people all over the world subsidizing “free markets”..
We were comfortable with the morals and manners of the gangsters who are our elites, as long as the pendulum was swinging our way.
Now that it’s stopped and hit us, we’ve changed our tune.