Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Economy’ Category

You all know I was in construction. As a production waterproofer and roofer in the Bay Area, I, at one time held union cards for both roofers and bricklayers, because in the Bay area waterproofing can overlap both these trades. So, you would think I would be very appreciative of Bernie Sanders’s plans to put us all to work. I want to be, but I can’t.

Now, I absolutely think our infrastructure has gone to hell in a hand basket. Sanders states that we need 3.6 trillion just to get back to good repair. Having worked in the production and managerial ends of building rehab, I can tell you that there are always unknown and hidden conditions that can and will likely increase costs astronomically over projected figures. When we start this proposed building boom we should be prepared for what will be much larger costs. Even so, we need it.

However, I feel bound to point out who will be working in this new building boom. As of 2010, just into the Great Recession, there were 800,000 women working in the field of construction. Of that amount only 200,000 were actually in production. The rest were secretarial, architectural, managerial, etc. This total equated at that time to around 9% of the construction population. In my field it was less than 2%.

Many women began in the trades because of affirmative action, required by work done on public facilities. Numbers were increasing up through 2007 but dropped dramatically when building began to fall off in the same sector as the recession hit. We all know how few jobs there were out there and women, like many men had to look elsewhere.

I want you to comprehend just how little 9% of 3.6 trillion is to women. It’s 324,000,000,000, or 324 billion. Of course that figure represents each woman as a cost of construction overhead, not what they will earn, which will be considerably less. Compare that to the 2012 procurement costs of the F35C at 93.3 million each, of which the Navy alone intends to buy 280. This is but one toy in the military’s vast arsenal. That doesn’t include the development costs, which are inching up around 160 billion. In the scheme of government costs, Sander’s implied 324 billion for women is a sop; it’s worse, it’s an insult.

This is not equality. Without activism, training, and affirmative action it is not equal opportunity. Sanders entire jobs list is based on rebuilding our infrastructure. We women can do these jobs, but our society has many other urgent needs that women do as well and should be paid for. This is a male oriented “lift all boats” plan that will leave some women indirectly but only relatively better off, and only till the construction money runs out. Also, there is no mention of how many of these jobs will be union or in what states, or how they will be prioritized, or whether they will take into account our new global warming fossil fuel constraints.

See below a cut and paste from Bernie Sanders web site, done today. (more…)

Read Full Post »

I don’t think I’ve ever spent a holiday season like this where I have been so betwixt and between. I can barely see in my mind the marker of this week, much less absorb it. I have little sense of accomplishment and am overwhelmed with the demands the new year will bring. The little rituals that the season asks were not done. The ground is not ready. The finances are not there.

I’m falling.

I’m hoping the light in the hole in which I land will be bright enough to gather all those straws I have been grasping. Then, I can weave a Nordic star to light my way out. Appropriate, since I will soon be living in the land of straw.

And wind and dust.

My brain wants to plan and manage, but the truth is my future is unknowable right now. I don’t know if I have the energy for what is coming. I’m whining; and, that is ridiculous because my favorite places have always been in the waste zones.

Waste zones are a land of opportunity. They are the underrated property, the space where imagination takes root and can grow a sparkling new entity. They are a land of mental uncertainty too.

I just have to trust that this hole into which I am falling is a waste zone of opportunity.

As for all of you, I hope you have avoided the hole, or have landed well and are happily on your way to your new year. We have passed the shortest day and a new life is budding. If there is that, there is more.

Read Full Post »

Reblogged from Reality Check:

It’s not a contradiction to believe that gun control is good while abortion restrictions are ineffective violations of basic human rights. Abortion access improves society, whereas the proliferation of guns simply leads to more violence.

Source: Time to Stop Restricting Abortion and Start Restricting Assault Weapons

Read Full Post »

Here find the transcript for the Iowa Democratic debate: Democratic debate transcript

Read Full Post »

Update: I was able to access this first link below, again, around 3:00 PT.

In searching for information on Paris I found that another terrible event had occurred. Why didn’t I know? Where was the outrage? I watch the news yet I missed it-including the part where ISIS claimed responsibility for the attack […in the southern Beirut suburb of Burj al-Barajneh, a predominantly Shia community which supports the Hezbollah movement. Not counting Israel’s assaults on Lebanon, the slaughters represent the deadliest bombings in Beirut since the Lebanese civil war ended more than two decades ago…]

Paris Attacks Highlight Western Vulnerability, And Our Selective Grief And Outrage

The above page, along with the whole website, has been removed from the web. I don’t know if this is temporary, if it’s been hacked or? However, the Wayback Machine says the Australian page is here:

Library of Congress.

As with al Queda, if we blinker ourselves to see just part of what is happening with IS, we are going to miss the story. Should I care, when the victim nation itself, has muddied its own pond of refuge? Human Rights Watch provides a synopsis:

Lebanon: Deadly Attack Kills Dozens

Why is so much hatred and violence emanating from Syria?

Rather than politics, maybe it’s useful to review some geography about Syria. The CIA produces a geography book on countries. Here is what the CIA’s “The World Factbook” says about  Syrian refugees:

[…refugees (country of origin): 526,744 (Palestinian Refugees (UNRWA)) (2014); undetermined (Iraq) (2015)
note: the ongoing civil war has created nearly 4.3 million Syrian refugees – dispersed in Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, and Turkey – as of November 2015
IDPs: 7,632,500 (ongoing civil war since 2011) (2015)
stateless persons: 160,000 (2014); note – Syria’s stateless population is composed of Kurds and Palestinians; stateless persons are prevented from voting, owning land, holding certain jobs, receiving food subsidies or public healthcare, enrolling in public schools, or being legally married to Syrian citizens; in 1962, some 120,000 Syrian Kurds were stripped of their Syrian citizenship, rendering them and their descendants stateless; in 2011, the Syrian Government granted citizenship to thousands of Syrian Kurds as a means of appeasement; however, resolving the question of statelessness is not a priority given Syria’s ongoing civil war
Trafficking in persons:
current situation: due to Syria’s political uprising and violent unrest, hundreds of thousands of Syrians, foreign migrant workers, and refugees have fled the country and are vulnerable to human trafficking; the lack of security and inaccessibility of the majority of the country makes it impossible to conduct a thorough analysis of the scope and magnitude of Syria’s human trafficking situation; Syria is a source and destination country for men, women, and children subjected to forced labor and sex trafficking; Syrian refugee women and girls are forced into exploitive marriages or prostitution in neighboring countries, while refugee children are forced into street begging domestically and abroad; the Syrian armed forces and opposition forces are using Syrian children in combat and support roles and as human shields
tier rating: Tier 3 – the government does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking and is not making significant efforts to do so; increasing violence undercut any law enforcement efforts in 2013; the government failed to protect and prevent children from recruitment by government forces and armed opposition groups; a new law passed in 2013 criminalizing the recruitment of children under 18 by armed forces was not enforced; authorities did not make efforts to investigate and punish trafficking offenders, including complicit government employees; no trafficking victims were identified or provided with protective services; the government did not attempt to inform the public about human trafficking or to provide anti-trafficking training to officials (2014)…]

Despite the presence of the Euphrates River, Syria is water poor with mostly degraded land. With one of the highest growth rates in the world, 34% of it’s population is under 14. It’s products are: petroleum, textiles, food processing, beverages, tobacco, phosphate rock mining, cement, oil seeds crushing, and automobile assembly. There is concern, as we gardeners know, generally, that phosphates, required for agriculture, will be in very short supply by 2020, and is projected to lead to worldwide food shortages. Industry is state owned.

Under increasing desertification, it’s 17% of agricultural land is devoted to: wheat, barley, cotton, lentils, chickpeas, olives, sugar beets; beef, mutton, eggs, poultry, and milk. Though the CIA doesn’t say, I would speculate with 9-12 inch of rain or less, that most of the land is in dryland wheat farming. The exception is the coast, which receives more rain. This is not enough to sustain a country that is one and half times the size of Pennsylvania.

I have read right sided discussion about why Syrians don’t stay home and fight for their homeland. Why emigrate?  From a numbers perspective, 160,000 refugees AND their children were declared stateless by Syria itself. Although that order was rescinded for many, its not clear how long that will last. What do you do when you aren’t allowed to work, obtain medical help if you are shot, or even eat? How long will your family funds last? Other Syrians themselves can attest to the insecurity of living. It’s clear that under these brutal conditions that there isn’t generally enough sustenance. The photos of refugees I have seen are of thin humans.

In order to fight a war, the first thing that is needed is food and water to support troops. There isn’t enough without import. In order to fight a war the second thing needed is arms. From whence are those to come? What strings are attached? Who controls these things in Syria?

What about Money?

The EIU reports that the current banking system is in urgent need of reform. The system is criticized by business leaders for being inefficient and offering only basic services. There are, for example, no ATMs, checks, or credit cards in Syria. Commercial loans are hard to obtain without using political party or government connections or traditional patronage relations (a system of relations in which government or any other sectarian, tribal domineering authority distributes the sources at its expense to its supporters as rewards). The new Syrian government has acknowledged the need for reform of the financial system and these new moves show that progress is being made. Some modernization efforts have been initiated with the computerization of the Central Bank and other commercial banks.

The government has also announced that foreign banks will be allowed to open branches in Syria for the first time. Banks with at least US$11 million in capital will be permitted to operate in the country’s free zones (an area where goods may be landed, handled, manufactured, reconfigured, and re-exported without the intervention of the customs authorities) to finance commercial and industrial activity. In August 2000 3 Lebanese banks were issued licenses while some non-Arab international banks expressed their wishes to enter the full international market rather than be restricted to the small free zones. The United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) has estimated that Syria would gain US$8 billion in foreign investment if it allowed the establishment of private banks, opened a stock market, and unified exchange rates .

Read more: Syria

Whether it’s France or Lebanon who sends support to fight IS, while struggling to provide sanctuary for refugees, we are all affected.  While we mourn for those lost, we need to pay careful attention. It is not acceptable to become tone deaf to the struggles in the Middle East. Nor is it acceptable to be ignorant to it’s nuances. Neither is it okay ignore strife elsewhere. Westerners don’t live in a safe little cubby where nothing bad happens and they are somehow better. Mightiness and technology might contain hate, but only other values will change it.

Aleppo, a “World Heritage Site

Three Teams of Coordinated Attackers Carried Out Assault on Paris, Officials Say; Hollande Blames ISIS

Death toll mounts after terror attacks in Paris

French officials warned that austerity increased security peril

Paris Attack Spurs Search for Unity in Syrian Peace Talks

Syrian passport at Paris attack scene belonged to asylum seeker: Greek minister Read more:

Kerry says no agreement in Syria talks on Assad’s future Read more:

Paris attacks a ‘violation of all religions’: Saudi FM Read more:

State Dept: Americans wounded in Paris attacks

150402 – 147 dead, Islamist gunmen killed after attack at Kenya college

Read Full Post »

Update. Utube purported to post the full debate. It it not. If you want to send your cookies to uTube and bear the inserted adds for a portion of the debate wander on over there.

Update. What do you know! WaPo posted a transcript:

The third Republican debate transcript, annotated – The Washington Post

We are at the point in the presidential election process where I point out  how our rights and obligations as voters are obliterated by corporations and their political party’s shenanigans, who require that we hook into their matrix, pay them a ridiculous monthly sum under a year long contract, to observe and evaluate presidential political debates.

If I can find a transcript afterwards I will post it. however, with the lock CNBC has on this fiasco, I’m not hopeful.

In case you missed my viewpoint from earlier posts, it’s that debates should be hosted by the League of Women Voters, or the like, on CSPAN, for free. CSPAN should be paid for by the Government, rather than as a tax deduction for corporate media. It should be on free TV, and freely available on the web.

Read Full Post »

Below find the transcript for the first 2015 Democratic debate:

The Democratic presidential candidates met in Las Vegas for a primetime debate on CNN.

Read Full Post »

If you don’t get CNN, or missed them, below find the annotated transcripts of the undercard and main debates as provided by WAPO:

Full transcript: Undercard GOP debate – The Washington Post

Wednesday’s GOP debate transcript, annotated – The Washington Post

Frankly I’d always rather read the transcripts. They might have actually said something you missed in the show.

Read Full Post »

Yep, worth a read:

Hurricane Katrina: Lessons Not Learned by Walter Brasch.

Read Full Post »

Reblogged From Dandelion Salad. A reminder; the TPA/TPP House discussions are going to start on Monday all over again. Call your Representative!

The Alice in Wonderland World of Fast-tracked Secret Trade Agreements by Ellen Brown.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »