Friday, July 30, 2010
Fivethirtyeight.com: Introducing Partisan Propensity Index (PPI)
At least that's what I think it predicts. I'm always amazed at Silver's ability to crunch numbers and I generally digest them pretty well but this new index makes me wish I did better than a B+ in College Statistics.
Blue Jersey has a pretty good explanation of Nate Silver's new metric and how it impacts Congressional races specifically in New Jersey.
Why do I feel like Glenn Beck is secretly proud of this guy?
Thursday, July 29, 2010
"It takes a thief to catch a thief."
"It takes a thief to catch a thief."
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Corporate Profits = Jobs? No, not really (but CEO's want you to think that's true.)
“Corporations are using their pile of money to pay dividends to their shareholders and buy back their own stock - thereby pushing up share prices.”
This is something I have noticed for years. I always wondered why companies that reported consistent quarterly profits from 2004-2007 always tended to have more downsizing periods than hiring periods. They're boosting the income of their higher end shareholders at the expense of their much lower-end employees that have to scrape by to make ends meet in this job market of exploited employees.
This has always been my personal argument against the Bush Tax Cuts as well. I have no problem with wealthy individuals getting a tax break so long as they’re creating jobs with those tax breaks. If a job is being created, let them get the tax credit for it. I still don’t get the argument that tax cuts spur job growth and tax revenue through the actions of that multi-millionaire takes the extra $50,000 or $60,000 in his pocket each year and buys his 2nd or 3rd yacht with it rather than hire a new employee for $30,000 a year.
President Wyclef Jean?
Monday, July 26, 2010
Update on the Indian-Americans Running in 2010
Also, Politico recently ran an article about the Indian American Leadership Initiative. It wasn't a very long or detailed article about the IALI but I'm sure the publicity from a major Washington publication can't hurt!
Some good-natured fun at the expense of Democrats and Republicans
E N J O Y ! ! !
Sunday, July 25, 2010
News and Political Highlights of the Week
Since I haven't had a chance to blog in the past few days, here are some key highlights of the week (except Shirley Sherrod, who should just be left alone by everyone that threw her under the bus this week):
- President Obama signed the Dodd-Frank Bill, enacting one of the largest regulatory reforms of the financial sector since the Great Depression. This post on New York Times' Dealbook blog has a great breakdown of the Dodd-Frank Act. If you want an interactive explanation, this interactive at the Washington Post is fun, easy to understand, and the pictures are too cute to ignore. (My favorites are the Derivatives panic people and the Regulators raising their hands to be picked.) Also on financial reform, Zach Carter writes in The Huffington Post about "Wall Street Reform: Five Key Fights After the Bill Is Signed"
- Elana Kagan passed the Senate Judiciary vote this week, with only one Republican, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, voting for her confirmation. The Hill has the text of Sen. Graham's statement. What's more telling though are the hateful comments from the readers at the bottom of the page. If you want an idea of how extreme our politics have gotten, read Graham's gracious statement and the venomous replies to them from readers.
- Some fantastic opinion pieces worth reading this week:
In Politico this week, Robert Borosage had an excellent opinion piece about the lack of leaders in DC, from the perspective of leadership as a personality trait rather than a formal position of authority. Here is an especially poignant excerpt:
"This country must build a new economic foundation — revive cutting-edge manufacturing, modernize infrastructure, revitalize education and training, invest in research and development, find ways to shackle speculation and drive private investment into longer-term horizons and empower workers to gain a fair share of the productivity they help generate."
Anne Applebaum of The Washington Post wrote about how people's words and actions can be in direct conflict with each other in a column titled, "A government of the people's every wish?"
Hopefully I can blog during the week. Otherwise, I'll check in next weekend! Have a great week!!!
Thursday, July 15, 2010
The "New" Indian Rupee
Congratulations Indian Rupee! And welcome to the international community of depressed currencies!
Monday, July 12, 2010
NYTimes: The Class War We Need by Ross Douthat
One nice piece of criticism he levies on Republicans is the following:
"...conservatives need to recognize that the most pernicious sort of redistribution isn’t from the successful to the poor. It’s from savers to speculators, from outsiders to insiders, and from the industrious middle class to the reckless, unproductive rich."
Happy reading!
Saturday, July 10, 2010
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Can we ever develop a culture of responsibility?
The quote from this piece that stands out is the one that essentially sums up our problem in a nutshell:
Yet [CEO of Applied Materials Michael] Splinter’s critique contained its own contradictions: on one hand, he called on the government to spend more on R&D and education, but his chief complaint was that “frankly, our tax rate is not competitive” and that it was likely to increase.
Unless we change our culture from one of entitlement to one of responsibility, the fear of America turning into Brazil, which was raised in the article, will become a reality. It was harsh to use Brazil as an example, considering Brazil has a booming economy and Brazilian companies are buying American companies very aggressively. That said, there is known to be a wide income gap between rich and poor in Brazil (as I’ve witnessed firsthand in India, the other country mentioned in the Slate article.) I’m not knowledgeable enough about it to discuss the culture of responsibility in Brazil but I know whenever there is any talk of communal responsibility versus individual liberties in the United States, we hear misplaced screams of socialism and communism from the right. I’m all for individualism but we have to develop a mindset that we hold our individual pursuits in check if they come at the expense of the society in which we live.
This requires ethical standards, that cannot be applied by a government policy, to become the social norm. Unfortunately ethics are usually not profitable and therein lies the rub. Thoughts?
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
I'm on my high-speed rail bandwagon again...
- Chris Matthews writes about how high-speed rail construction can help improve our crumbling infrastructure and provide vital construction jobs at the same time.
- John Robbins writes about how we Americans tend to thumb our noses at public transportation, which is a phenomenon created by automakers and oil companies conspiring to drive people from the rails to publicly subsidized and built roads and highways.
Indian-Americans on the 2010 American Political Scene
I guess when Varadarajan wasn't paying attention, the Boston Globe and Christian Science Monitor were both paying attention. The Boston Globe ran this article titled Record number of Indian-Americans seeking office, while the Christian Science Monitor ran The rise of the Indian-American candidate, as Nikki Haley and others run. Contradicting Varadarajan's claim of how the Democrats "don't get it", the articles point out that there are actually SIX Democratic candidates for the United States House of Representatives and an organizations like the Indian American Leadership Initiative and US India Political Action Committee are actively promoting Indian-Americans on the political scene.
The Indian-Americans running for Congress are:
Dr. Manan Trivedi (PA - 6th District)
Reshma Saujani (NY - 14th)
Raj Goyle (KS -4th)
Dr. Ami Bera (CA - 3rd)
Ravi Sangisetty (LA - 3rd)
Surya Yalamanchili (OH - 2nd)
Also, one of the rising stars in the Democratic Party, Kamala Harris, is considered the favorite to win as California's Attorney General. Harris is the daughter of a Black father and Indian mother and has often been spoken of as a future presidential candidate in Democratic circles.
So even though the two most prominent Indian-American politicians are Republicans, they are clearly outnumbered by the Democrats this year. And regardless of your political affiliation, it is important to see Americans of all shapes and stripes making their own impact on our great American democratic experiment that has existed for 234 years and counting!
Saturday, July 3, 2010
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Alaska Republican Congressman: Time to get moving on high-speed rail
Stephen Colbert's "Tryout" with the New York Knicks - Part Deux
The Colbert Report | Mon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c | |||
Basketcase - Stephie's Knicks Hoop-De-Doo Pt. 2 | ||||
www.colbertnation.com | ||||
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