Dan Kervick's picture

    Hapless Days Are Here Again

    Our dominant zombie political culture has gone full-spectrum Hoover.  Now even prominent Democrats try to one-up Republicans on who can do a better job drowning the New Deal in a bathtub.

    Here's Howard Dean going batshit crazy and doubling down on deficit hawkishness and the Hooverite deficit commission:

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/40838855#40838855

    cmaukonen's picture

    The Ghost of the Free Market Economy Myth

    "Mercy!" he said.  "Dreadful apparition, why do you trouble me?"

    "Man of the worldly mind!" replied the Ghost, "do you believe in me or not?"

    "I do," said Scrooge.  "I must.  But why do spirits walk the earth, and why do they come to me?"
    David Seaton's picture

    New Year’s 2011… singing in Grover Norquist’s bathtub

    Singing in the bathtub
    Happy once again
    Watching all my troubles
    Go swinging down the drain

    Singing through the soap suds
    Life is full of hope
    You can sing with feeling
    While feeling for the soap.

    “Singing in the Bathtub”

     

    It’s New Year’s; this is when we are supposed to look over the past and think about the future. With the USA the situation is pretty simple: a large percentage of Americans are batshit crazy and the state itself is in tatters.

    Simple concept, but how it might play out could get complicated.

    WAG THE BANKS

    Does Dodd-Frank's requirement that TBTF banks submit "funeral plans" open the door to dismantling the banks?

    This morning I listened to the interview on Bloomberg of Jason Cave, head of the FDIC's new Office of Complex Financial Institutions. The jist of it was that the Fed and FDIC now have authority to delve into the complex structures of TBTF banks (others like Insurance,etc., to be named) and that the institutions must provide "Resolution Plans" to show how they would be broken up in the event they were judged to be in default or in imminent danger of defaulting.

    Donal's picture

    Hacking, Phreaking, Carding and ... Leaking?



    WikiLeaks is still hot, and the top story at the New Republic today is Game Changer - Why Wikileaks will be the death of big business and big government. Noam Scheiber predicts that WikiLeaks will both survive and will shrink overbearing organizations until they are no longer Big Anything.

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    Narcissism. Stealing a look into the unconscious.

    The term Narcissism got a bad rap from the beginning when Freud published his classical paper on the subject in 1915.

    Michael Maiello's picture

    Whiny, Whiny, Centrists

    The mushy middle has spoken and the bipartisanship that we saw during the extraordinarily productive lame duck congressional session just won’t do.  Yes, that’s right.  The very people who have been agitating for both parties to “reach across the aisle” are not happy with the way in which it was done.

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    Elusive Trope's picture

    Just Another Day

    And so another Christmas has passed.  The twenty-sixth of December.  Just another day.  Yet the New Year approaches.  Time to look back on the year that was, make the lists and debate over the most memorable moments, the greatest achievements, the best movies, the worst commercials.  A seemingly collective effort not to forget, to ensure some shared memory of what has actually passed, and which is now fading like a dream, is somehow captured, made permanent and enduring.  A time, too, of looking forward, to ponder one’s resolution for the new year, the one thing not to drag along into the f

    Elusive Trope's picture

    My Christmas and Shabbat Offering

    Christmas and the whole holiday season stretching back into my teens has not always been exactly my favorite time of the year.  This is neither the time nor the place to go into all the reasons for this.  I would say this has something to do with the fact that I am not religious, and spiritual only through a lifetime of struggle to rise above the militant atheism of my youth.   I can remember one particular moment when this affliction born of a teen’s anger toward God began to finally melt.

    SleepinJeezus's picture

    My Christmas of the Broken Wing

     Santa Claus was only one of the characters in the regular group of customers at my father’s tavern. This was a secret, however, that was kept from me. I knew him as Lemoyne Doucette, a house painter and a Frenchman of large girth and a robust laugh. His father had worked winters as a lumberjack in the northwoods and in one of the many sawmills in town during the summers. The lumbering boom had long since gone bust, and so Lemoyne had inherited little more from his father than a boyish sense of humor as well as a taste for good brandy.

    Ramona's picture

    The Quiet Joy of Christmas

    December 25, Christmas Day, is reserved by Christians as the day they celebrate Jesus Christ's birth.  There is no real indication that the Christian Messiah was actually born on that day, but it was decided long ago, and there it is.   But little by little the reason for the season was crowded out; St.

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    Barth's picture

    Merry Christmas

    This is not my holiday, but it is hard to miss the signs that it is one celebrated by many others in this country, though Bill O'Reilly and his colleagues think otherwise. Oddly, by mystical coincidence, Shabbat and Christmas coincide this year. To many confused people, Chanukah is a supposed equivalent holiday to Christmas, but it's not. Shabbat, on the other hand, means Jews and Christians will be praying at roughly the same time.

    Watt Childress's picture

    Baby, it's cold outside

    The rich inner experience of Christmas is coated with a sweet nutty blend of pop culture. Features for the holiday range from angels to elves, from wise men to talking snowmen, from Jesus, Mary, and Joseph to Rudolph, Prancer, and Vixen. Believers bask in the starry wonderment of Christ’s rustic birth while decking the night with merriments as bright as Las Vegas.

    Howdy Babe!

    Michael Wolraich's picture

    Facebook Like Buttons

    Hello folks, you've probably noticed the new Facebook Like buttons at the top of each post. We added these to facilitate social sharing of dagblog content. If you click a post's Like button, your recommendation will appear on your Facebook news feed, and hopefully, a few of your friends will check it out. Ideally, if the piece is really good, some of your friends will also click the Like button, and it will go viral.

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    Doctor Cleveland's picture

    Beliefs (Or, the Ghost of Christmas Present)

    So, in my last post, I talked more specifically about my Christian beliefs than is my blogging habit. I doubt I'll do it more often; I don't think that you should believe something just because I do, and so I try to write from the assumption that you don't. But I did mention my own beliefs, and it's Christmas, so let me come clean a bit, because it's an important holiday for me, and because it's such a bitter season:

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