An Ice Cube for Inhofe

 Posted by at 1:36 am  Politics
Aug 102010
 

Let a single snowflake fall and James Inhofe, along with most of his Republican  colleagues, will claim that climate change does not exist.  Greenland has donated an ice cube that should have his name carved on it.

10ice University of Delaware climate researcher Andreas Muenchow said in a statement last week that, according to NASA satellite data, a massive ice shelf four times the size of Manhattan has broken off from north-western Greenland. Within hours, the Canadian Ice Service confirmed the report. “The new ice island has an area of at least 100 square miles and a thickness up to half the height of the Empire State Building,” Muenchow said.

The Hill reports that on Saturday, Rep. Ed Markey (D-MA), who has been leading the legislative effort to confront climate change, used the occasion to chastise his obstructionist colleagues:

“An iceberg four times the size of Manhattan has broken off Greenland, creating plenty of room for global warming deniers to start their own country,” Markey said in a statement. “So far, 2010 has been the hottest year on record, and scientists agree arctic ice is a canary in a coal mine that provides clear warnings on climate.” […]

He said it was “unclear how many giant blocks of ice it will take to break the block of Republican climate deniers in the US Senate who continue hold this critical clean energy and climate legislation hostage.”

Indeed, the giant ice island highlights the need for Congress to act. An expert report on Arctic temperatures published in Science magazine last year found evidence “that the most recent 10-year interval (1999–2008) was the warmest of the past 200 decades”:

During the late 20th century, our proxy-inferred summer temperatures were the warmest of the past two millennia, with four of the five warmest decades of our 2000-year-long reconstruction occurring between 1950 and 2000. In recent years, the magnitude of the warming seems to have emerged above the natural variability, consistent with the sharp reduction in summer sea-ice cover.

According to a recent National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration report, 2010 Arctic sea ice extent was the lowest on record for the month of June:

Arctic sea ice continued its annual decline, typically reaching a September minimum. Similar to May 2010, the Arctic sea ice continued to decline at a record rapid rate. … June 2010 Arctic sea ice extent was 10.9 million square kilometers (10.6 percent or 1.29 million square kilometers below the 1979–2000 average), resulting in the lowest June sea ice extent since records began in 1979—the previous June record low was set in 2006.

And he National Snow and Ice Center said last week that “Arctic sea ice extent averaged for July was the second lowest in the satellite record, after 2007″ and the trend is continuing downward… [emphasis original]

Inserted from <Think Progress>

There is no doubt that climate change is happening now.  Keith Olbermann and Dr. Jay Zwally discuss it.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Sadly this is not just a Republican problem.  The normal set of DINOs is goose-stepping with them, in addition to normally reliable Democrats from oil and coal states.  Eventually we can oust the Republicans and replace the DINOs, but will it be in time?  I fear it will not.

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Are You Obsolete?

 Posted by at 1:35 am  Politics
Aug 102010
 

The economic landscape of the United States has changed.  For many years the middle class shared in our nation’s prosperity and we provided an adequate (usually) safety net for the poor.  That is no longer true.  We need to take a look at why this is, and what we must do to change it.

10obsolete Have the American people outlived their usefulness to the rich minority in the United States? A number of trends suggest that the answer may be yes.

In every industrial democracy since the end of World War II, there has been a social contract between the few and the many. In return for receiving a disproportionate amount of the gains from economic growth in a capitalist economy, the rich paid a disproportionate percentage of the taxes needed for public goods and a safety net for the majority.

In North America and Europe, the economic elite agreed to this bargain because they needed ordinary people as consumers and soldiers. Without mass consumption, the factories in which the rich invested would grind to a halt. Without universal conscription in the world wars, and selective conscription during the Cold War, the U.S. and its allies might have failed to defeat totalitarian empires that would have created a world order hostile to a market economy.

Globalization has eliminated the first reason for the rich to continue supporting this bargain at the nation-state level, while the privatization of the military threatens the other rationale.

The offshoring of industrial production means that many American investors and corporate managers no longer need an American workforce in order to prosper. They can enjoy their stream of profits from factories in China while shutting down factories in the U.S. And if Chinese workers have the impertinence to demand higher wages, American corporations can find low-wage labor in other countries.

This marks a historic change in the relationship between capital and labor in the U.S. The robber barons of the late 19th century generally lived near the American working class and could be threatened by strikes and frightened by the prospect of revolution. But rioting Chinese workers are not going to burn down New York City or march on the Hamptons.

What about markets? Many U.S. multinationals that have transferred production to other countries continue to depend on an American mass market. But that, too, may be changing. American consumers are tapped out, and as long as they are paying down their debts from the bubble years, private household demand for goods and services will grow slowly at best in the United States. In the long run, the fastest-growing consumer markets, like the fastest-growing labor markets, may be found in China, India and other developing countries.

This, too, marks a dramatic change. As bad as they were, the robber barons depended on the continental U.S. market for their incomes. The financier J.P. Morgan was not so much an international banker as a kind of industrial capitalist, organizing American industrial corporations that depended on predominantly domestic markets. He didn’t make most of his money from investing in other countries.

In contrast, many of the highest-paid individuals on Wall Street have grown rich through activities that have little or no connection with the American economy. They can flourish even if the U.S. declines, as long as they can tap into growth in other regions of the world.

Thanks to deindustrialization, which is caused both by productivity growth and by corporate offshoring, the overwhelming majority of Americans now work in the non-traded domestic service sector. The jobs that have the greatest growth in numbers are concentrated in sectors like medical care and childcare.

Even here, the rich have options other than hiring American citizens. Wealthy liberals and wealthy conservatives agree on one thing: the need for more unskilled immigration to the U.S. This is hardly surprising, as the rich are far more dependent on immigrant servants than middle-class and working-class Americans are.

The late Patricia Buckley, the socialite wife of the late William F. Buckley Jr., once told me, "One simply can’t live in Manhattan without at least three servants — a cook and at least two maids." She had a British cook and Spanish-speaking maids. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg recently revealed the plutocratic perspective on immigration when he defended illegal immigration by asking, "Who takes care of the greens and the fairways in your golf course?"

Wealth 2004 The point is that, just as much of America’s elite is willing to shut down every factory in the country if it is possible to open cheaper factories in countries like China, so much of the American ruling class would prefer not to hire their fellow Americans, even for jobs done on American soil, if less expensive and more deferential foreign nationals with fewer legal rights can be imported. Small wonder that proposals for "guest worker" programs are so popular in the U.S. establishment. Foreign "guest workers" laboring on American soil like H1Bs and H2Bs — those with non-immigrant visas allowing technical or non-agriculture seasonal workers to be employed in the U.S. — are latter-day coolies who do not have the right to vote.

If much of America’s investor class no longer needs Americans either as workers or consumers, elite Americans might still depend on ordinary Americans to protect them, by serving in the military or police forces. Increasingly, however, America’s professional army is being supplemented by contractors — that is, mercenaries. And the elite press periodically publishes proposals to sell citizenship to foreigners who serve as soldiers in an American Foreign Legion. It is probably only a matter of time before some earnest pundit proposes to replace American police officers with foreign guest-worker mercenaries as well.

Offshoring and immigration, then, are severing the link between the fate of most Americans and the fate of the American rich. A member of the elite can make money from factories in China that sell to consumers in India, while relying entirely or almost entirely on immigrant servants at one of several homes around the country. With a foreign workforce for the corporations policed by brutal autocracies and non-voting immigrant servants in the U.S., the only thing missing is a non-voting immigrant mercenary army, whose legions can be deployed in foreign wars without creating grieving parents, widows and children who vote in American elections.

If the American rich increasingly do not depend for their wealth on American workers and American consumers or for their safety on American soldiers or police officers, then it is hardly surprising that so many of them should be so hostile to paying taxes to support the infrastructure and the social programs that help the majority of the American people. The rich don’t need the rest anymore… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Salon.com>

I have been aware of this situation for some time.  I have just never done as good a job at tying it all together as this author has.  In 2004, the bottom 40% of Americans own only 0.2% of the wealth.  That was before Wall Street banksters engineered the housing bubble that sucked up the last reservoir of middle class wealth, the value of our homes.  The only thing we have left tp protect ourselves is our votes.

The rich no longer derive benefit from the social contract that provided them with their vast wealth, so they have quietly discarded it and us with it.  They are no longer willing to share the prosperity we provided them.  Therefore we need a new social contract, one that alters the manner in which our society allocates resources.  Since Americans are no longer needed to meet the wants and needs of the rich, we must earn our living meeting each other’s needs.  To do that, we must break the stranglehold money exerts on out political processes, and recover part of the wealth that the rich have torn from us, with mostly Republican assistance.

What do you suggest?  My initial suggestion is obvious.

Corporations are NOT people! Money is NOT speech!
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Aug 102010
 

Yesterday I replied to outstanding comments, but did not get to return visits, because I got tied up in household chores that took longer than anticipated, because I had a bad air day. I hope to catch up today.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today it took me 5:30.  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Short Takes:

From TPM: It’s not like Republicans needed any help screwing up in Colorado. They were doing just fine on their own. But Tom Tancredo’s third-party gubernatorial bid has pretty much sealed the deal. Polls — and even some Colorado Republicans — suggest that barring some highly unforeseen circumstance, Tancredo’s presence in the race will all but hand victory to Democrat John Hickenlooper.

Every conservative should consider third parties.  The sooner the Republican Party goes the way of the Whigs, the sooner we can replace it with a progressive party.

From McClatchy DC: In an effort to deter potential budget cuts by Congress and streamline a burgeoning Defense Department, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates Monday proposed to cut spending on contracting, to close a command stationed in Norfolk, Va., and to reduce the number of flag officers and civilian leaders.

The proposed changes would lead to the elimination of thousands of jobs.

As much as I hate to lose the jobs, we need to stop spending more on war that all the other countries in the world combined.

From Alternet: Former US vice president Dick Cheney left the hospital Monday, some six weeks after being admitted for his latest heart problems, and is now recovering at home, his spokesman said.

I’m shocked that the bastard is not at an undisclosed location.

Cartoon: from Cagle.com

10parker

What matters most to you today?

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Aug 092010
 

LeftyBloggersPlus I have moved our fantasy football league to open it to the public.  All lefties are welcome. The live draft is Saturday (8/14) at 9 AM Pacific (Noon Eastern).  We have four spots left.  If you want to join, log into Fox Sports, go to Fantasy football public leagues and search for Lefty Bloggers Plus, or if you prefer, email me for an invitation.  Here are a few tips for the draft.

Your starting lineup will consist of nine players, as follows:

1 quarterback (QB)

2 running backs (RB)

2 wide receivers (WR)

1 flex player (Flex) (can be a running back or wide receiver.  I recommend using a running back.)

1 tight end (TE)

1 place kicker (K)

1 defense/special teams unit (DST)

You will draft fifteen players (your starting lineup plus six reserves.  I recommend 2 quarterbacks, four running backs (including the flex player and one extra), 3 wide receivers, 2 tight ends, 2 place kickers and two DSTs.

Every pro team (and therefore every player drafted) gets a week off during the season called the bye week.  Your players cannot earn points on those days.  So to have enough to fill all your starting spots, make sure you do not draft ant two players of the same kind with the same bye week.  For example, your 4 RBs should have 4 different bye weeks.  Injuries will play hell with your scheduling anyway, but at least you’ll start from a good place.

Because you need the most running backs, and the best ones are in short supply, get a couple good ones early in the draft. Next go for a quality QB, next go for your starting WRs,  reserve QB and RBs, and starting DST.  Finally your reserve WRs, both TEs, both Ks and and reserve DST.  I will break this order to get a truly exceptional player if the opportunity arises.  Don’t draft Bret Favre unless he comes out of retirement again.

Now, I don’t claim to be an expert here.  I’ve only been in a dozen fantasy football leagues, of which I won four.  I haven’t won one in two years.  Some may say that my advise here is as brainless as a Teabagger on election day.  I won’t argue the case, but it’s here if you want it.

It’s a good idea to go to the site and participate in a mock draft between now and draft day.  It’s a dummy draft with real people, but it doesn’t count.  It will get you familiar with the draft room and how to find information there.

The site does a pretty good job at rating players, unless you want to do your own research.  Look for players with high FP/G (fantasy points per game ratings).

Most of all, have fun, and I hope this helps.

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Aug 092010
 

I keep hearing accusations from the right that Democrats are engaging in class warfare because of our tax and regulatory policies.  Are we starting a class war?  We are in the same way that America attacked the Japanese at Pearl Harbor.

Here are Mitchell Bard’s ideas

GOP-Shit Conservatives routinely paint Barack Obama as a socialist looking to redistribute wealth in the United States. (Or worse, as Rep. Bob Inglis (R-S.C.) reported that tea party leaders, during a meeting, espoused paranoid delusions of a totalitarian takeover of the U.S. by Obama.) This charge is cynical and outrageous, not just because it is false and a naked attempt to use fear mongering to drum up votes, but because there is actually a group of Americans actively engaged in wealth redistribution, and they have been for quite some time.

Who are these people looking to move massive amounts of assets from one subsection of Americans to another? The conservatives themselves.

Beginning with the Reagan administration, and reaching its fullest realization during the presidency of George W. Bush, conservatives have systematically been acting to redistribute wealth from the middle class upward. The result has been the steady decay of the middle class, and it’s all a result of conservative policies, specifically involving taxes and deregulation.

Bush successfully pushed through accelerated deregulation and massive tax cuts for the highest earners. The result was that while the wealthiest Americans saw substantial income gains, real income for the middle class was static (and far below the robust growth of the middle class during the Clinton administration). And when, in the absence of regulation, Wall Street’s reckless bets nearly brought ruin to the financial industry, the result was a massive recession that severely hit the lower, working and middle classes.

As I lamented last month, middle and working class Americans have every right to be angry now, but that anger shouldn’t be directed at the Democrats in November, but at the Republicans, whose policies created the economic mess the country finds itself in. Which is why I was so happy to see Paul Krugman’s annihilation of the economic plan advanced by the so-called "intellectual" star of the Republican party, Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin. Krugman exposed Ryan’s plan for what it is, a replay of the Bush economic policies, only this time on steroids: A massive tax break for the wealthiest five percent of Americans that would cost the country $4 trillion over the next ten years, a tax increase for the other 95 percent of Americans, and monumental cuts in government spending that would cause catastrophic pain for the lower, working and middle classes (while having little effect on the wealthy, the primary beneficiaries of Ryan’s plan). Oh, and Ryan’s plan would add to the deficit, pushing it far beyond the current projections for 2020. (Of course, Ryan is touting the savings of his spending cuts without accounting for the costs of his tax cuts for the rich.)

RepublicanPlatform I thought Krugman’s exposure of the realities of the Ryan plan provided a solid summing up of current Republican ideology. On the surface, Ryan appears more reasonable than the more vocal leaders of his party. He tends to avoid the outrageous pronouncements of his fellow conservatives (think Sarah Palin, Rep. Steve King (R-IA) and his talk of "velvet revolution," Rep. Michelle Bachman (R-MN) and House Minority Leader John Boehner, not to mention the lies and vitriol spouted by pundits like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck, as well as the consistent national security fear-mongering of Newt Gingrich, and the out-and-out insanity on parade daily in the media, like the recent charge by Colorado gubernatorial candidate Dan Maes that his Democratic opponent encouraged bike use as mayor of Denver as part of a plan to convert the city into a "United Nations community," not to mention the possible Queen of the wackos, Nevada GOP senate candidate Sharron Angle, including her claim that the press should ask the questions she wants to answer.).

Ryan is the young, normal-looking and sounding face Republicans would like to send out in front of the public, but, as Krugman comprehensively laid out, his policies are no more mainstream or plausible than those of his more obviously extreme colleagues. No, Ryan, just like the others, is completely dedicated to policies that empower corporations and transfer wealth upward, at the expense of the middle class.

In short, Ryan and the rest of the conservatives are at war with lower, working and middle class Americans.

The Republicans would like to frame the November midterm elections as a matchup between a socialist party looking to redistribute wealth and engineer a government takeover of the private sector (the Democrats) v. a party defending traditional American values of free market, capitalist economics (the Republicans). Such a framing of the two parties is a Republican fantasy, as accurate as the charge that President Obama was not born in the United States (which, according to a recent CNN poll, nearly two in five Republicans believe to be true).

But one look at the reality of the Bush years and the behavior of Republicans during the Obama administration paints a very different picture. On issue after issue, the Republicans have sided against the middle class, whether it was opposing financial regulation (even after GOP-touted deregulation resulted in the near financial collapse that plunged the country into deep recession), pushing for an extension of the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, opposing any kind of job-creating stimulus (that didn’t involve more tax cuts for the rich), opposing and delaying the extension of unemployment benefits to those out of work (and painting the unemployed as lazy), opposing state aid that would preserve the jobs of teachers, police officers and firefighters (even though it would decrease the deficit), opposing health care reform (except to protect private insurance companies), and even opposing aid to workers sickened by the toxic fumes at Ground Zero after the 9/11 attacks.

The smoking gun of GOP dedication to the wealthy at the expense of the middle class (and the revelation that the party’s supposed fanatical opposition to deficits is a facade) came when one Republican after another lined up to back Sen. John Kyl’s position that it was okay to add to the deficit for tax cuts for high earners (something even conservative stalwart Alan Greenspan could not support)… [emphasis original]

Inserted from <Huffington Post>

Trickle down” economics was a lie to cover up the Republicans’ only successful program: No Millionaire Left Behind.  Nothing ever trickled down, it gushed up.  As far as class warfare is concerned, we have been under attack for many rears.  As for socialism, we are trying to end the inequity to the poor and middle classes brought on by socialism for the rich.  As for redistributing wealth, we are trying to recover wealth for the poor and middle classes already redistributed by Republicans to the rich.  Republican claims of class warfare are a false flag.  They are accusing us of what they are doing.

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Aug 092010
 

More and more, Churches are violating the establishment clause in the First Amendment and the 501(c)(3) tax code, from which they derive their tax exempt  status, by endorsing Republican candidates for public office.  The Bush Regime simply ignored the complaints about this.

church-state When South Dakota gubernatorial hopeful Gordon Howie put out a call for pastors to endorse him from the pulpit, the Rev. H. Wayne Williams was quick to respond.

Williams, pastor of Liberty Baptist Tabernacle in Rapid City, endorsed the Republican candidate during a church service on May 16.

An ecstatic Howie, the self-professed “Tea Party” favorite, quickly issued a press release praising the action.

“Last week, Howie challenged South Dakota churches and their pastors to become more politically active in the stretch run to the June 8th primary election, urging pastors to endorse candidates and advocate specific issues from the pulpit,” read the Howie media statement. “Reverend H. Wayne Williams, Pastor of Liberty Baptist Tabernacle in Rapid City, became one of the first to accept the challenge, adding an official endorsement of Gordon Howie for Governor to a message delivered during his Sunday night services.”

The release quoted Williams, who said, “I believe Gordon Howie has clearly demonstrated the courage of character and conviction to take a position that has long been forgotten and lost in this country. I’m glad that this issue has been brought to the forefront of public conversation. It is high time that churches return to the role that they’ve occupied historically in guiding their flocks in making election decisions.”

But not everyone agrees with this kind of blatant church electioneering. Williams seems to have been the only pastor to endorse Howie from the pulpit, and several South Dakota religious leaders spoke out publicly against pulpit partisanship.

Among them was Howie’s own pastor, Bishop Lorenzo Kelly of Faith Temple Church in Rapid City.

“I have encouraged our people to be participants in the political arena and showed them the scriptures that back it up,” Kelly told the Rapid City Journal. “But I have not from the pulpit endorsed him. I wouldn’t do that. I wouldn’t put my church in jeopardy of anything.”

South Dakota voters were also not impressed. On Election Day, Howie, a state senator running against four other Republicans, took fourth place with just 12 percent of the primary vote.

The church endorsement scheme was also legally problematic. Federal law prohibits all non-profit organizations that hold 501(c)(3) status from intervening in elections by endorsing or opposing candidates for public office. The Internal Revenue Service has repeatedly reminded churches to stay out of elections.

Nevertheless, some pastors continue to insist they have a right to tell their congregants which candidates to vote for or against. They are often aided and abetted by the Alliance Defense Fund (ADF), an Arizona-based Religious Right legal group founded by right-wing television and radio preachers in 1993.

Alerted by members in South Dakota, Americans United began investigating the Williams affair. In early June, an Americans United staffer contacted Williams. He not only admitted that he had endorsed Howie during a church service but brazenly asserted that the IRS has no authority over him or his church. He was defiant and argumentative.

On June 10, Americans United filed a formal complaint with the IRS over Williams’ actions.

Americans United Executive Director Barry W. Lynn pointed out that Williams has admitted that he violated the law by endorsing Howie.

“Furthermore, he asserted that the IRS has no authority over his church and that he has a legal right to endorse candidates from the pulpit,” wrote Lynn to the federal tax agency. “Liberty Baptist Tabernacle appears to be in clear violation of federal law. Accordingly, I am asking the IRS to investigate this matter and enforce the law as necessary.”

Although Williams had been combative when he talked with Americans United, the complaint may have given him pause. The minister quickly began backpedaling after the IRS complaint became public, and his story suddenly became fuzzy.

“I simply preach from the pulpit principles, and when someone stands with our principles, I say this person is standing with the same principles we stand on and are worthy of our consideration,” Williams told the Associated Press. “I told them vote on the basis of your own conscience.”

In an interview with the Journal, Williams took an even more curious tack: He insisted that his church never sought 501(c)(3) status, and, although he admitted the church is tax exempt, he claimed the IRS has no power over him… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Alternet>

Many of you have read that I do volunteer work and am on the board of a small nonprofit corporation that helps prisoners learn to change into law abiding citizens and help them transition to community life when released.  I often discuss it here in general terms, but never give specifics.  If you have wondered why, our group is also a 501(c)(3).  Since I regularly endorse and oppose candidates for public office here, I must keep the group I represent completely separate from my political blogging.  I respect the law.

Why won’t the the followers of Supply-side Jesus (the Republican abomination, not the real one) do the same?  They do not respect the Constitution, the law, or even the biblical injunction to render unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s.

I hope the Obama administration will strip such churches of their tax exempt status.

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Aug 092010
 

Yesterday I dozed through most of my religious service, but the Dallas Diocese defeated the Cincinnati Diocese 16-7.  Preseason fully begins this week, and one month from today, we celebrate the High Holy Day celebrating the miraculous return of the Ellipsoid Orb on opening day.  I stayed up to date on comments and returning comments and should have no trouble doing so today.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today it took me 3:42.  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Short Takes:

From Crooks and Liars: Bloody Bill-I’m-always-wrong-about-everything Kristol continues his track record on Fox News Sunday this week when he predicts that the Republicans will play a game of chicken with President Obama and decide its better for them politically to block extending the Bush tax cuts for the middle class if they can’t keep them for the upper earners as well.

Rather than cave in to the Republicans, only to be blamed for the resulting increase in deficit, we should force them to either relent or raise taxes for millions of poor and middle class voters during an election year.  If all the cuts expire in January, because of their actions, we can pass tax relief for the poor and middle classes only early next year using the same budget reconciliation process Bush used to pass his tax cuts for the rich.

From NY Times: A two-year study by a group of academics on American Muslims and terrorism concluded that contemporary mosques are actually a deterrent to the spread of militant Islam and terrorism.

No religions support or are responsible for terrorism.  The blame rests with extreme fundamentalism, regardless of the religion in which it occurs.

Cartoon: from Cagle.com

9fitzsimmons

OGIM!

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Aug 082010
 

Most of the problems in the recently passed financial reform bill resulted form Chris Dodd pandering to Republicans.  It would have been far weaker than it turned out, had not more progressive Democrats amended Dodd’s version on the floor before passage.  Dodd is caving in again, advising against the appointment of Elizabeth Warren as head of the CFPB.

8warren When it first looked like Harvard Law professor Elizabeth Warren might stand a serious chance of getting appointed at the first director of the newly-created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — a regulatory agency which she was the first to suggest — Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd (D-CT) poo-pooed the notion, saying there’s a “serious question” about whether Warren is “confirmable.”

The New Republic’s Noam Scheiber wrote that “after surveying a dozen insiders over the last few days — congressional aides, industry officials, progressive activists, and a few administration officials — I’ve concluded that the odds are good that Warren would be confirmed if nominated by the White House.” And Dodd now seems to have shifted his rhetoric, saying that even if Warren is confirmable, it’s not worth a potential fight to get her the job:

What you don’t need to have is an eight-month battle for who the director or the head or chairperson of this new consumer financial protection bureau will be.

Watch it:

 

Dodd pretty clearly would prefer that current Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chair Shelia Bair receive the nod, but Bair has said that she’s not interested in the job. “I did some checking on Sheila Bair and I was going to have very little difficulty getting Sheila Bair confirmed,” said Dodd. “I’d probably confirm her in a couple of days. That’s how strongly people felt, Democrats and Republicans.”

Bair certainly has the credentials to do the job, as she was one of the first federal officials warning about the proliferation of subprime loans during the buildup of the housing bubble. But she’s doing very important work at the FDIC, and as The Wonk Room explains, there’s simply no reason for passing over Warren.

Leaving aside Warren’s qualifications, it makes little sense that Dodd feels a political fight here isn’t worth it. Warren is an unabashed, articulate consumer advocate, and her nomination would set up a clear choice: consumers or the banks… [emphasis original]

Inserted from <Think Progress>

I have nothing against Sheila Bair, but she’s a great fit for her current post at FDIC.  Warren is a better fit for the CFPB.  Dodd is wrong.  Elizabeth Warren is worth the fight, and the fight is worth having.  Let the Republicans side with the banksters as the midterms approach.  Let them show voters who they represent.  The link below is a White House form for emailing the President.  Spread this around, please.

Tell Obama to ignore Dodd and appoint Warren!  CLICK HERE

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