Leaving The Left, Ctd

A reader writes:

In defense of the “loud mouths on the left” as your other reader nicely put it, we need these people to continue to be as loud and vocal as possible.

We’ve seen how the right in this country gets things done today.  They get on TV and scream out “DEATH PANELS DEATH PANELS KILLING GRANDMA”, and you know what happens?  Rather than trying to explain themselves, the Democrats remove a perfectly reasonable part of their bill.  Like it or not this is how it works. 

This is why you have Democrats ceding huge parts of health care legislation without even debating their merits. Before this debate even started Democrats told us that Single Payer was not even on the table and we already know Obama has cut a deal with Pharmaceutical companies to make sure their prices don’t go down too much (consequently this year has also seen one of the largets rises in pharmaceutical prices ever).   This is why you have Democrats in the Senate willing to change large parts of the bill just to get one, I repeat, ONE Republican to vote for it (which will never happen). Negotiations are a compromise between 2 sides, but from my vantage point it just looks Democrats keep taking things out of the bill chasing that elusive “bi-partisanship” that just isn’t there.

In all fairness this probably has more to do with the Senate than Obama but they both need to feel heat from their base to match the decibel level of the Republicans.  As Obama is fond of saying, “don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.” Well, usually in a negotiation you begin negotiating for the perfect and settle for the good.  In this debate it seems that they started with the good and are now settling for the even less good.  And if the left stopped “bothering” them, they’d gut this thing even more.

Many years ago a voter approached FDR urging him to act on a cause that he felt was important.  In response FDR said “I agree with you, I want to do it, now make me do it."  Obama needs a vocal left to get this done.  If for nothing else to point them out to the public and say, “look, these crazy people want single payer, but I’m going to meet with you in the middle and pass a public option instead.”

Another writes:

The discussion on your site regarding the left's reaction to Obama is very interesting. I like that subsequent commenters have brought up their support for Obama, but perhaps I could lay out the left's case that our 'defection' from Obama is not equivalent to the right's automatic rejection of Obama is nearly every way, shape, and form.

I did not expect to get everything out of Obama that I wanted, and while surely those who are crashing the most in his eleventh month in office are those who invested him with the full measure of their hopes and dreams for a better America, I don't think that this characterizes the left as a whole. Those people (and I speak from the gut here) are more likely to be ones who are not familiar with politics, who either chose not recognize to or were ignorant of the inherent limitations in the system that would prevent Obama from sweeping in and achieving his goals.

But by the same token it is difficult even for those of us who on the left demanded no more than good governance to not be disappointed with Obama. The most basic things that we demanded are also the easiest to fix in procedural terms, the closing of Guantanamo, the repudiation and prosecution of torture, and the ending of Abu Ghraib like practices at Bagram. Surely these things are not in reality easy and carry with them a very real political cost, but Obama as commander in chief and the executive has the power to do these things (and indeed has pursued some of them) without entering the political landmine of Congress. This is an area where one would think Obama's strengths would give him an advantage of his opponents, his ability to speak to the better nature of America, to rally his supporters and given one heckuva speech.

Yet Obama chose not to. He refrained from the battle. To get back to the commenter's point I brought up, Obama has refused to lead, and the democrats in general have refused to govern.

I use 'war on terror' issues merely as an example. I appreciate that you believe that Obama is playing a longer game against opponents trapped in short term thinking (meep meep), but those of us on the left are rather uneasy with Obama's apparent hands-off strategy. Liberals are harsh on Obama not because we are selfish or because we are cry babies, endlessly demanding all or nothing, but because we recognize that the country is at a critical moment that demands a kind of leadership and activism that has been missing in Obama's early presidency. If not now, when? If not Obama, then who?

Face Of The Day

RajendraKumarPachauriMiguelVillagranGettyImages

Rajendra Kumar Pachauri, Chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, looks on during a press conference at the second day of the United Nations Climate Change Conference 2009 on December 8, 2009 in Copenhagen, Denmark. Politicians and environmentalists met for the United Nations Climate Change Conference 2009 that runs until December 18. By Miguel Villagran/Getty Images.

“It Gives Me A Different Perspective”

A reader writes:

Just got my copies of your book.  FAB-U-LOUS!  Love it.  One copy is for my dad for Christmas.  He's a retired foreign service officer with the State Department and has been to many of the locales pictured.  Truly, a strangely mesmerizing "read."

Another writes:

I have been anxiously awaiting this book, since the daily feature on your blog is one of my favorites.  In March, while on my honeymoon, I found myself taking pictures of views out of windows constantly.  We visited Milan, Venice, Florence, Amalfi and Rome.  I would take COVER-front pictures of views from museum windows, hotel windows, anywhere there was a window my camera would get a shot.  It gives a different perspective and I like how it makes me look twice at that picture.  It is real life, no staging.

The book itself arrived a short while ago, and I'm happy to see how small it is, since I will be able to put in my enclosed front porch – more like a sun room, since it is all windows and glass.  No matter where you sit in that room you must look through a window, or glass door, making every view from that room like the pictures you post daily.  It is my favorite room, and this book is perfect for it.

Thank you so much, this brightened my day.

Another:

I got my book yesterday, a gift for my brother. But I was very disappointed! The reason? It's wrapped in plastic, so I can't look inside before I give it to him!  I just know I won't be able to stand the suspense and will open the plastic for a peak before I gift-wrap it. I should have gotten myself one too.

Preview the book online here. Buy it here. But do so quickly; only 41 copies remain at the crowd-sourced price of $16.25, after which it will cost $29.95, the regular price.

As I Feared

The neocon camp is demanding that the exit from Iraq be delayed indefinitely if the sectarian melt-down that could be looming seems imminent:

All we can know for sure is that the presence of U.S. troops provides a vital stabilizing element that prevents Iraq from going off the rails entirely. That is why it is so important that the Obama administration continue to show flexibility in its troop drawdown and not get locked into a premature exit that could jeopardize all the progress that has been made so far.

The hardest thing in Obama's presidency, in my view, could be withdrawing from Iraq as that country descends into a fresh bold piece of hell. The only silver lining is that Iraq's looming chaos could help destabilize the military junta now running Iran. Of course, I could be wrong, and everything will be peachy in the election and after. After all, we've already been told that the Iraq war has ended in victory. But it seems to me worth remembering that Iraq was constructed by the Brits precisely to facilitate sectarian tension – divide and rule – and that its borders have not changed.

Not Home In Time For Christmas

U.S. Army infantry captain Tim Hsia quotes his counterpart in the unit who was returning home as Hsia was shipping out:

He told me he had a feeling his unit would be extended but that despite it all, his unit handled it better then the unit it had replaced. “When they were told they were extended, some of the soldiers had already flown back home. The Army made those soldiers come back after hugging their families, and extended them another three months. Well, what do you think? A lot of people in that unit just mentally gave up. They were physically here but mentally and spiritually elsewhere."

Mousavi In Their Sights

The AP reports:

Up to 30 men on motorcycles, some in masks, swarmed outside Mousavi’s office on Tuesday. They blocked him as he tried to drive out of the garage and chanted slogans against him, two opposition Web sites said, citing witnesses. Mousavi got out of his car and shouted at them, ”You’re agents. Do whatever you’ve been ordered to do, kill me, beat me, threaten me!” before aides rushed him inside, the Gooya News Web site reported. The men left several hours later and Mousavi was able to leave.

When asked at a press conference if the judiciary will pursue Mousavi, [Iran’s top prosecutor, Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejehi] said, ”We will not tolerate anyone who commits actions against security, and we will confront them,” according to the Fars news agency.

Basij also assaulted his wife yesterday.

16 Azar: Not Over Yet

Enduring America sounds the alarm:

Students in Tehran University were viciously attacked today by security forces and Basijis today as they tried to demonstrations.

There are two conflicting reasons for the tensions and clashes. The first scenario is that students walked out of classes to protest in front of the Technical Faculty of the University against the arrest of their classmates yesterday. With the expectation of another day of protests in light of student calls for a fresh round of dissent, security was already tight, with the university besieged by thousands of security forces. As the students tried to gather in front of the Faculty, security forces stormed the campus.

The second scenario is that security forces stormed the university first and started beating students as they sat in classes. So far, the first scenario seems to have more eye-witness support.

More here. The NYT reports:

Iran’s broadest and most violent protest in months spilled over into a second day on Tuesday, as bloody clashes broke out on university campuses between students chanting antigovernment slogans and the police and Basij militia members.

As the scale of Monday’s demonstrations became clearer, Tehran’s police chief announced that 204 people had been arrested in the capital, the semiofficial Mehr news agency reported. The clashes took place on campuses in cities across the country, as students and opposition members took advantage of National Student Day to vent their rage despite a lengthy and wide-ranging government effort to forestall them.

The violence continued Tuesday on the campus of Tehran University, where security forces were using tear gas and arresting students, according to reports and video clips relayed through Twitter and Internet postings. There were protests at large squares near the university as well, witnesses said. Iran’s official IRNA news agency reported that the clashes began after groups of pro-government students carrying pictures of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, clashed with protesters on campus.

The new violence came as Iran’s chief prosecutor, Gholam Hossein Mohseni-Ejehi, warned of even harsher measures if the protests do not cease.

(Hat tip: Robert Mackey)

Your Own Landlord

Adam Ozimek counters Daniel Indiviglio and Felix Salmon over housing as an investment:

Overall, a housing investment is more like buying a small business than it is like a security investment. In fact, it is buying a small business; the business is being your own landlord. Being a landlord is more likely to be a profitable venture if you have reliable renters who you can trust. As a landlord, you’re the best renter you could ever want, which makes being your own landlord less risky than being someone elses landlord.  This is because being your own landlord solves the principal agent problem inherent in the rental relationship; the owner/renter interests are exactly aligned.