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Friday, July 27, 2012

Olympics Preview


What will be the top sporting story of the 2012 Olympics?  It's not an easy question; I will give five possible views that I see being likely to emerge, and where I think it will end up.

5) The American women (and especially the gymnastics team)--I think the big USA story this time could be the overall competitive leadership, and frequent dominance, of American women in major sports.  In basketball, there will be no doubt, soccer should be a good story, track and field appears unusually strong, Serena Williams should have an Olympic triumph of definitive nature, and gymnastics looks primed for a US breakout performance.  What I am less certain about is the expectations we should have/may have in swimming and diving, which by contrast could highlight--

4) Michael Phelps vs. Ryan Lochte.  This will be the story that the network will beat us over the head with, and it shows the possibility of being as truly dramatic as Phelps' successful quest for eight gold medals in the Beijing Olympics.  There's no question that Phelps will show up, time after time, so the pressure, and the opportunity, is all upon Lochte.  If he can bring real, consistent danger of toppling Phelps a bit, he will make a huge name for himself.  

3) The multiplicity of countries bearing world-leading talent.  Although Americans are competitive in a wide range of sports,  the story may be more about all the events in which we didn't win this time, entirely due to the quality, and breadth, of the competition. There will be a strong Chinese performance in a number of skill sports (table tennis being the clearest example), the Japanese will have their moments, and the Australians will find some areas in which they can excel.  Do not overlook the significance of the Jamaican sprinters and the Ethiopian and Kenyan distance runners. When it comes to sports like weightlifting, fencing, boxing, wrestling, the winners come from all over. Europeans (and we can define them as competitors from European Union states, plus former Soviet ones) will win more medals than any other continent's, I'll wager. Above all, this will be the United Kingdom's opportunity to show what they can do, with large-scale funding and commitment. This multinational storyline will be showcased from the beginning on network TV, starting with the opening ceremony, and it could stick.

2)  The USA Men's Basketball Team--It would become a really big story if USA did not win the championship; I haven't seen the odds quoted, but I would guess that the chances are about 1 in 3 that it will happen--it's hardly farfetched.  There was a lot of talk in the last month about how this team was as good as the Magic/Michael/Bird Dream Team of 1992.  This squad has no need to be timid about its level of talent, and I don't even think it will be a big problem how the team develops.  The threat to certain victory is the quality of the opposition, particularly from Spain and Argentina.  Besides some NBA-star level talent, these teams have players well-suited to the Olympics game, which I would describe as "rough big men who can hit from the outside".

The USA team, for all its flair, scoring ability, and strength, does not have that kind of player beyond LeBron James; a lot of the pressure will be on him, and it will be another big downer on LBJ's current good vibe if the team falls short.  The game which is most likely to work against us is to clog it up, play dirty-- (besides lots of grabbing underneath, diving, groaning), and rely on good ball-handling and some timely outside shooting.  Timely means high percentage 3-pointers off plays underneath, and preventing turnover-driven fast breaks.  If the USA gets into trouble, you will know it when they need for some reason to rely on Chris Paul as point guard and pre-rookie Anthony Davis as shot-blocker.  That would mean the LeBron/Carmelo/Kobe/Kevin Durant shooting gallery has failed to produce the easy victory,  and it's getting dangerous.

1)  The English are big, fat cheaters.  I viewed the Olympics on British TV's in the year 2000.  I recommend the experience of watching the Olympics on something-other-than-American TV, once in their lifetime, to all Americans (I'll even count watching the Winter Olympics).  It broadens the mind. One thing I noticed during that experience, time after time, was the excitement, followed by the disappointment, of hearing the local competitors finishing fourth.  (In America, they would low-play such results in prime time.)  The British love to compete, and they show up to do so in basically every sport, but they are particularly dying to win, and they are thinking this might be the time to do it.  I see them lining up every possible advantage this time--all within the rules, mind you. It is entirely normal that the host country gain a higher share of the medals than it usually does; I am talking about something more substantial in result, and about a pattern of just nosing out everyone this time, getting that little edge in the scoring, or whatever.  And that becoming a perception that a lot of countries get, and some of the teams going a bit public with that feeling.

So, I don't know what that countdown was all about, but for me, the biggest story will be 2)--partly because I will have more access to TV in the last week of the competition; in US event coverage, I would guess the biggest story in general coverage (from the US, at least) will be 4), though it should be 5) or 3).   Do I think the English are "big, fat cheaters"?  Definitely not, though I do predict it will be discussed: There will be, as Pink Floyd might have described it, "a lot of it about".

The Olympics and Affairs Among Nations
Most of us lived through the Cold War politicization of the Olympics--particularly the Summer Olympics--as USA vs. USSR, so the concept of Olympics as symbolic carriers of nationalistic destiny should not be unfamiliar.  In fact, it has been present almost since the earliest days and, despite being so contrary to the concept of the original Greek Olympics, the peculiar nation-state focus of the Olympics remains the greatest drawback to an exceptional global event.

It is no accident that the modern-day Olympics organization as a contest of states basically was an Anglo-French project which the Americans picked up quite easily and quickly.  History tells us that the basic concept of the modern nation-state was developed first by the French, then, after the Spanish experiment of global empire flamed to glory and consumed itself, was perfected by the British.  The Americans drew upon the Europeans' initial innovations and drew them out and broadened them (the Aussies use a similar approach, but do not have quite the population base of the USA).  The British and French states used the advantages their precocious national development gave thm in the forms of superior industry and organization to conquer most of the world, but the torch passed.

The Olympic history follows that pattern, but it moved more quickly, and the "power" spread more broadly.  The English and French have receded from the front ranks as it became US-USSR, with the East German and Cuba variations, and now China emerges as a leader.  The French may need to wait for another shot (I would be particularly interested to see their take on this year's event, to see whether the jealousy oozes out), but this is the English (or British, to be accurate) chance to re-establish itself; they aim to be the international sport beauty pageant's version of "Queen for a Day" this year.

In terms of international/Olympic relationships, I don't want to dwell too much on Mitt Romney's rude crashing of the party; the Summer Olympics bring innumerable visitors of all types who must be tolerated--it's simply the price you pay for hosting. Romney's actions speak for themselves, and they speak quite clearly that he is a novice in international affairs with no sense of finesse whatsoever.

A River Runs Through It
When looking at a map of the event locations (I like this one best), two things are particularly noticeable about the venues: First is the huge, transformative development of the Olympic Village, with the Olympic Stadium, in East London.  The selection of the most rundown section of the city to be the locus of construction, creation of permanent value, and jobs, was a particular accomplishment that I think goes to the credit of the Labor governments headed by Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.   It will be interesting to see how close those two are to the event itself, whether their role in securing the bid (Lord Coe--the Olympic middle-distance runner and loyal member of the current ruling party--will get most of the credit for that) and doing the planning will be recognized.

The second is the ingenious use of London landmarks for events all around town.  The main axis along which so many of them lie near is the Thames River and its West-to-East sweep through the heart of the city.  I'm particularly impressed by such decisions as the inclusion of the Triathlon event itself (to be held in Hyde Park), the Mall and Hampton Court Palace (for Road cycling, which, with British Tour de France winner Bradley Wiggins competing, could be the single event which draws the greatest interest from locals), Wimbledon for tennis, Wembley for "football", Lord's Cricket Ground for archery (well, if they couldn't get the addition of cricket...), and the "North Greenwich (O2) Arena" a/k/a the Millennium Dome for rhythmic gymnastics and the basketball finals.
As is often the case with London, the nearest bridge is the landmark reference point for most of the events.  The Olympic Village itself is one exception, as it's removed some miles from the Thames, but the planning of the village has emphasized a stream, the River Lea (also known as the Lee), which runs through its center and on down to the Thames.  I believe that its reclamation was another major accomplishment in the planning.  

With those locales, getting around could be a lot of fun.  OK, not so much fun going to Wembley, but if you are visiting and remember one simple rule, it could be all right:  do not, under any conditions and no matter what they say, drive your car to any Olympic venue!  Find another way to get there:  train (best), underground or bus (if you've got all day), walk (if you're near--distances can be very long), taxi (for a bit of color), or something along the river, if you can find it.

I'm going to be curious how the two-wheeled conveyances--bicycle and motorcycle--play out in this context.  Bicycling has become a large-scale endeavor in London, for very good reasons, so if the bikes can be secured properly, it could be a very good experience to ride to the scene.  Motorcycles are the ones that really have the potential for a breakthrough; literally, they are the only things that can break through some of the traffic jams, so they will be the vehicle of choice for support units (and potentially for high-ranking passengers, in urgent situations).

The other thing about London, of course, is to be prepared for rain to occur at any time.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Just Can't Leave It Alone

It's only been three weeks since my last comprehensive election post, but the news in recent weeks has increased in level of interest, and I see movement that may prove to be decisive. 

President Obama and his allies may be outspent, but their ads seem to be carrying more weight, to be cutting more deeply.  The framing of Mitt Romney as a rich exploiter has occurred, without much fanfare, and it may be very difficult to undo.  Romney and his allies cried "Unfair!", but this is an election, not tiddlywinks, and Obama's team plays for keeps.  Lest anyone forget, the combination of Obama the candidate and Axelrod/Plouffe as campaign directors produced the most stunningly successful results in the history of all electoral campaigns in 2008--taking a little-known first-term Senator, and a mixed-race black to boot, all the way to a substantial electoral college victory, and those folks are all back, in full force.  If nothing else, Romney and his allies should realize by now that they are playing in the major leagues, and they will need to raise their game, which has been all duck-and-dodge since clinching the Republican nomination.

Romney's problems, which seem surprisingly insoluble, center on two issues. First is the mendacious position that he "retired retroactively" from Bain Capital in 2002, so is not responsible for the unseemly activities (outsourcing/downsizing) which that organization completed in the 1999-2002 period, when he was still CEO and sole shareholder of the company.  The quote comes from Ed Gillespie, a prominent Republican spokesman on one of the talk shows, and I would say it was more "retired radioactively", because Romney's Bain tie is now glowing with danger.  The second is his refusal to release more than a year or two of his tax returns; it is not a legal issue, and I doubt that his earlier returns, once revealed (as they probably will be, one way or another), will show any illegalities.  It's more that it fits into the picture being formed of Romney as a 1-percenter, a guy who has profited during our lost decade of economic stagnation through the worst kind of unproductive, but lucrative, trickle-up cashing in and has stashed it all away in innumerable tax dodges.  One can only guess that the reason he can't talk his way out of his difficulties is because there is too much truth behind the accusations.

Romney will still have chances to put the ball back into Obama's court:  he can undermine the level of support from those leaning toward the incumbent through attack ads (just what Obama & Co. have done recently, though Romney's haven't quite hit the mark yet), and he may be able to exploit certain issues that will work against Obama from the point of view of true independent voters through ads, speeches, debates.   To name a few names, "Fast and Furious" (guns), "Solyndra" (government waste), Barclay's (individuals in the English bank informed Tresury Secy. Geithner about the company's complicity in efforts to fix the price of the critical Libor benchmark rate too low in 2008, but he took no steps to end it), and "Occupy"/ "Medical Marijuana" (some of Obama's unsavory fellow travelers); these themes could resonate with conservative white swing voters and put Obama on the defensive.

In the meantime, though, my sense is stronger than before that Obama holds a lead, particularly in the Electoral College, that is just as likely to grow as to shrink.  His rating vs. Romney's on intrade.com has moved up to about 58-38, with about 4% for various chaotic outcomes.

The Other, Very Important Stuff
I continue to believe that the most significant outcome of this election will be a broad, non-partisan rejection of the unlimited spending on negative campaign ads, and the corrupting and poisonous effect all the fundraising has on our political environment. The movement that excites me most is a push for the Fair Elections Act (which would provide effective public financing of Federal campaigns), combined with a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United.  I urge that voters demand a Norquist-type pledge from the candidates to support these changes.

Meanwhile, the most suspenseful national electoral contest of the year, the battle for control of the Senate, appears to be taking a turn in the Republicans' favor.  In general, the problem is that the Democrats have to play defense in too many states, and they have too few chances to pick up seats. Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Missouri, Wisconsin, and Virginia are all states in which the Democrats' chances of holding their seats are 50-50 or worse, and there are several more in which the Republicans can mount a credible threat, while there are really only two states (Nevada and Massachusetts) in which there is a good likelihood of picking up a seat (and one more--Indiana--in which they have an outside shot at it). In Nevada, that chance is fading with the Democratic candidate, Rep. Shelley Berkley, fending off ethics allegations. Recent polling results indicate that two seats the Democrats absolutely must hold, Ohio (Sherrod Brown) and Florida (Bill Nelson), are not looking safe under heavy Republican spending pressure.

In terms of the Intrade.com quotes for the nine different possible outcomes in Washington (Dem vs. Republican control of President/Senate/House, with Independents caucusing with the parties for control counting in the results--the ninth is some sort of chaos in which one or more of the outcomes is unclear), the two outcomes considered most probable are a Republican sweep (30% likelihood) and Democrats holding the Presidency and the Senate but not the House (29%). The one on the rise, though, going up from 17.5% to 20% in the last two weeks is a Democratic President but Republican control of both houses of Congress. At this point, that would be the one on which I would put my money.
The final subject I want to bring up is the shaggy-dog story of Romney's search for a running mate. There was a strong rumor last week that he would name that person early, to break up the negative buzz about his plutocratic ways, but that was unfounded. Instead, Romney is taking a short international tour and will try to reset the general election campaign upon his return. The two leading candidates in the "veepstakes" are midwestern brothers in boredom, Tim Pawlenty and Rob Portman. My longer-shot pick would be another Midwestern white guy, the slightly-less-boring Paul Ryan, who would bring some interest to the issues debate (though it would not assist Romney's pivot to the center); the real game-changer would be the presentation of a revitalized Marco Rubio candidacy as a strong bid to capture Florida, without which Romney's campaign is doomed.

To summarize, my dear reader, it's basically about three states: Florida, Virginia, and Ohio, and the Presidential and Senate races in those three. If the Democrats sweep the six contests it will be a good--or great--result; if the Republicans sweep them, it will be a huge result (though technically it may still be very possible for Romney to lose the election even if he takes all three, I'd suggest that other states--like Iowa, or Colorado, or New Hampshire, or one of the upper Midwest--would also be coming along in that case, enough for him to win). The most likely outcome will be a split decision in those six, which won't be a great result for anyone, including the American people.



Sunday, July 22, 2012

The Usual

The suspect in the killing of 12 people at a Colorado screening of the new Batman movie had colored his hair red and told police he was "the Joker," according to a federal law enforcement source with knowledge of the investigation. Police say James Holmes, 24, was dressed in protective gear and set off two devices of some kind before firing from an AR-15 rifle, a 12-gauge shotgun and at least one of two handguns recovered. A source said Holmes carried a magazine capable of holding more than 100 rounds and that his guns were purchased legally in the past six months.
Watch the latest now on CNN TV and follow updates on CNN's mobile apps and http://cnn.com/thisjustin. Anderson  Cooper will anchor "AC360" from Colorado tonight at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. ET. --CNN 
"Watch new blood on the 18-inch screen....The corpse is a new personality....Each day new dead."  Gang of Four
President Obama's visit to Aurora (and the other comments/visitations by other high and mighty folks) doesn't do a thing for me.  Of course, I'm not the victim. or a family member of a victim of the latest lunatic gun freak--maybe it does something for those poor individuals, but I doubt it.

Not to be cynical, but Obama isn't going to say anything which will rile up the gun owners, at least until after the election.  He's got some misguided notion that some of those who are single-issue opponents of any and all gun restriction are somehow going to vote for him.  It's true that his grade as President, from the point of view of the Brady Center, the one group willing to stand up and oppose indiscriminate sale of guns all over the country, is a flat "F"--which means he's done nothing to restrict guns, everything that he could do to support their sale--but, really?  Obama?  I don't think so.

After the election, when the next (inevitable) crazed lunatic with his cache of automatic weapons, infinite supply of ammunition, and whatever else he (I was going to say "he/she", but I will say that there has never been a gun-toting lunatic mass-killing woman, credit be to thy gender) can amass pops up and blows away a few or a few dozen innocent unarmed civilians, what will Obama say then, I wonder?  Will he have the guts to stand up and say "Enough!"  Will anyone in high office have the guts?  Again, I doubt it,  but in the meantime, I'd bet that paranoid gun nuts all over the country are stocking up (once again) right now, just in case.

What is needed is the equivalent of a credit bureau for guns--it doesn't have to be run by the Federal government, but it needs to have full participation--by law--of all gun dealers, gun show participants, and private sellers.  A nut case pops up--buying too much of the wrong weapons, with the wrong frequency, in the wrong places--he gets the equivalent of the "full cavity search, no-fly" treatment.   That would be my solution, along with reinstating rules found in all other civilized countries (or I should say, all civilized countries?)  that civilians may not bear arms in public without a license.  That's asking far too much, I know.

It seems that everyone is resigned to the fact that there will always be these odious, hate-filled, insane monsters that will emerge every so often in American society (it's running about once a year, if the minimum standard is double-figure deaths), and they will kill until someone brings them down, and nothing will or should be done to stop them. or at least make it more difficult for them to assemble their arsenals of insanity.  I have not given up to that extent yet.

Sunday, July 15, 2012

No Common Thread, Except They're Dead

In the 3-4 years since I started labeling posts "Obit Dept.", I'd only done 12 posts prior to this one.  Many of those were to commemorate individuals that I knew and just had to comment (for my own desire, to let my memory of them rest in peace).  As I grow older, though, (to what else can I ascribe it?) I find that I have reason more often to comment on the lives of  recently-departed famous people, even if I don't know them. One of the critical benefits/drawbacks of fame is that the memory of these people lingers beyond their lives, for good or ill. In these obits for celebrities and the like, I will try to balance a little respect with saying That Which Must Be Said, particularly with how these individuals will be remembered (by me, it should go without saying).

Marie Colvin, Extreme War Correspondent -
I did not know Marie, though I believe I met her at some point.  Seeing pictures when she was younger, her features look familiar. She was the friend of one or more of my acquaintances, so that's just one degree of separation (or is that two?)

Marie Colvin's life story is clearly one of the bravest one could ever imagine in these days.  She had a string of having reported from the front lines of most of the worst, ugliest, most chaotic conflicts of the last three decades:  Iran-Iraq, Libya, Tahrir Square, East Timor, Afghanistan, Kosovo, Bosnia, Chechnya, Sri Lanka, and the one that got her, finally:  Syria (I'm probably forgetting some.  For a brilliant, heartbreaking accounting of her last days and anecdotes recounted by her friends, see Marie Brenner's article in this month's Vanity Fair.) Most of her career, she was an American reporting for newspapers based in other countries, so she was not as well known here as she might have been.

In Sri Lanka, she was seriously wounded and lost an eye--she wore an eyepatch after that, which surely only added to her legendary bravura.  Those who knew and worked with her insist that she was not without fear, that she was very aware of the danger, but she always went back to the front again.  After the Sri Lanka injury (2001), she showed signs of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, which should have disqualified her from further war reportage, but they (and I'm talking about her employers, the Times of London and other Murdoch rags) could not stop her, so they acquiesced--now, somewhat to their shame.

Marie's mission was to report on the brutality of war, from the point of view of the ground-level participants, particularly of the non-combatants caught in the struggle.  A noble endeavor, but one that requires taking ridiculous risks, getting the story out, then somehow getting oneself back out.

The Syrian adventure was a particularly--excessively--dangerous one, and she and her colleague companions knew it.  She was snuck into a besieged (i.e., surrounded) town through a tunnel--once she arrived, she realized that the Syrian authorities, who had forbidden journalists to go into the town, were monitoring her communications and were more or less continuously shelling targets of opportunity.  She was trapped, and she knew it. 

She stayed overnight, and that was the decision which compounded her initial risk and led to her death, when the building where they were hiding out was hit repeatedly by artillery.  Those who survived (her photographer, who was seriously injured) are certain that the targeting of the journalists (a French journalist was also killed) was deliberate.  They saw her dead, but were unable to remove her body from the quagmire.

What more can be said?  She was clearly of the old school, the Ernest Hemingway/George Orwell/Martha Gellhorn one, and the point is that the danger and bloodshed of war are still as real as ever in this time.  She courted danger one time too many; those who brought her in, and helped her get out of these jams, surely appreciated what she was doing.  I am not sure that we in our easy chairs did.

In the same Vanity Fair issue, they had a short update on Christiane Amanpour, one of my all-time favorite TV reporters.  Amanpour has a long history of war reporting; she gave it up to marry, have kids, and do the ABC Sunday talk show, but clearly it was not her cup of tea.  She's going back to the grindhouse, but she claims she's going to stay out of the line of fire.  Let's hope so.


Ray Bradbury, Sci-Fi Visionary
Bradbury died June 5 at the age of 91.  I had wondered what had happened to him; it turns out he had severe strokes which basically ended his ability to write.  In his prime, in the sixties and seventies, he was very prolific.  His short stories had a great range--some were of the old Twilight Zone style, punchy with a snappy ending that "made you think"; others were more like character studies of individuals, of human nature, in unusual, extreme circumstances.   He stands out from the other greats of sci-fi  for emphasizing the human element, for his efforts to describe his visions, and for the irony or poignancy of the way he told his stories, not for the science of them, or their prophetic nature.  I read them all, and they influenced my thinking quite deeply. 

I don't have the (cheap paperback) volumes any more, but I'll mention a few titles that stick in my memory:  The Martian Chronicles (novella in episodes), "A Sound of Thunder" (the classic short one about tourists going back in time to see dinosaurs; one steps off the path and future history is broken), "The Wonderful Ice Cream Suit" (not sci-fi at all, Latinos sharing the splendor of a fancy suit), and "The One about the Americans in the Third-World Country when the A-Bomb war wipes out their civilization and they know they're on their own in an unfriendly world" (my title).

Thank you, Ray!

Yitzhak Shamir, Prime Minister and Patriot/Terrorist
Shamir's long life story goes well beyond the beginnings of the Israeli state; he came as a youngster with his family to Palestine, then an unruly British protectorate populated overwhelmingly by Arabs.  He was part of the original settler movement, the ones who prepared the ground for the reverse of the Diaspora that came later after the Holocaust.

He became a leader in one of the more radical front groups working for the creation of Israel.  His crew helped move some Palestinians aside, blew up a hotel with some British mucky-mucks (an inspiration to the IRA in the '80's, maybe); then he went "legit" when Israel became a state.

Shamir had some things in common with Menachem Begin:  armed rebellion against the British (they hung with different "gangs"), a founding father of modern-day Israel, Likud party leadership, a stint as Prime Minister.  What he didn't do was make any peace deals, with anyone.

To spell out the obvious moral:  If you can live long enough (don't strap the suicide belt on), it's possible for a young radical to succeed, be recognized and honored, and die in one's bed.  Terrorism can be in the eye of the beholder.

Andy Griffith of Mt. Airy, NC
I probably haven't seen it in 20 years, but I remember "The Andy Griffith Show" from my youth--I was roughly contemporary with Opie (the director Ron Howard).  It was a show that was only kind of funny--Don Knotts as Deputy Barney Fyfe (sp?) was slapstick--he got most of the laugh track response;  Aunt Bee was charming in a down-home, old fashioned way;  Opie was a cute kid, and Andy?  He was just a nice sheriff, friendly, with a sense of humor, but really never said anything that one could consider "funny".  At some point I figured out (looking at a map) that Mayberry, NC was really Mt. Airy, a town with a great name, but I guess they couldn't use it.  Griffith, no doubt, was from some even smaller hamlet nearby.

The idea of the show was to make you feel good about (white, Southern) people, not just evoke a laugh.  If you have a chance to see it, you'll see how much things on TV have changed since then.  For one thing, though Griffith was in the majority of the scenes, the story was not really all about him, but about his community and his place within it--respected, admired. It would be impossibly cornball today, but there's something to be said for "not funny, but makes you feel good" vs. much of our current-day humor which "extracts laughter, but doesn't make you feel good afterward".

Griffith had a long career afterwards, in Andy of Mayberry--the spinoff, with only a few of the same characters (was Gomer Pyle's character perhaps introduced in that one?), and the unremarkable, long-lived cops-and-robbers show Matlock, which no doubt made him definitively wealthy.  I can't begrudge him it, and I'm sure no one else did, either--he was such a nice guy.


Five Really Short Mentions
Ben Davidson--the handlebar-mustachioed, chopper-riding Oakland Raiders defensive end from the '60's.  He was one of the reasons I thought the team was cool back then.  Eventually I was disabused of the notion.
Pedro Borbon--Cincinnati Reds reliever, from the glory days of the Big Red Machine. He was the closer, more or less, in a couple of years. He had a son who made the majors, was a bit wild and crazy himself in a Santeria kind of way.
Teofilo Stevenson--Cuban heavyweight boxer, he destroyed Duane Bobick in the Olympics.  I think he won twice. He could've been Muhammad Ali--he had his style, his skill, his looks--if Ali hadn't gotten there first, and if Stevenson hadn't been a stuffy Cuban Communist lackey who positively refused to defect.
Henry Hill--Like Yitzhak Shamir, another great survivor.  This guy was the reformed mobster/stool pigeon who wrote the story upon which they based the hit movie Goodfellas (based on Hill's life, or so he says).  About Hill, you have to wonder:  first, how he came to survive the mob stories of the movie, like being around "the character played by Joe Pesci" all the time; second, how come they didn't bump him off later when he came out with the story; and third, isn't the Witness Protection Plan forever?
Bob Welch--A member of the original Fleetwood Mac, their early lead guitarist and a succesful songwriter for the group. I actually liked his playing style quite a lot, and his songs were simple but charming (a formula they ditched later), but apparently the bandmates didn't care for him personally; they thought he was "a bummer", and they replaced him with Lindsay Buckingham (of "What Up With That?" fame, for you young SNL-watchers).  I remember seeing Welch hosting a rock variety show later (that would be late '70's/early '80's, I guess); he was coping, but seeming a bit rejected. The report is that he committed suicide last month; I hope he got over it at some point.

Saturday, July 14, 2012

First Serious Threat to Bashar

Syria has risen to the top of the rankings of the most heinous regimes in the world.  It has disregarded U.N.-Security Council mandates to end massacres of civilians, utilizing bloodthirsty militias and Iranian forces to augment its own readiness to besiege its cities and towns and shell them into submisson. All the international spokesmen seem to agree that Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad must leave power, but there hasn't been a serious (syrious?) suggestion of how that was going to come about--until the past few weeks

The international community has had difficulty developing its response.  U.N. Secretary-General Moon has taken a strong position against the depredations, but there has been considerable resistance from two nations in particular.  Russia is a trading partner and patron of Syria, and both Russia and China take the view "on principle" against interference in the internal affairs of sovereign states, no matter how ugly they may be.  Of course, the reason why they support the "sovereign right to kill our own civilians" (my term) is because they have exercised that right in living memory (Chechnya, Tienanmen) and may need to do so in the future.  The only formula the intl.comm. has been able to develop so far--either in the Security Council, or in the nine-nation Moscow discussions--is one with proposals essentially calling for unilateral disarmament and surrender of power, not something that Assad's side, which knows that so far it is still winning the military conflict, is going to consider seriously.  Instead the Assad spokesmen blame their massacres on rogue elements and international terrorists, in defiance of  reports from eyewitnesses (which they do their best to forcibly eliminate, see Marie Colvin).

It's not going to be some kind of coalition of the western democracies either that will take action to remove "The Basher".  A Libya-style no-fly zone assistance-at-a-distance approach is not even on the table, and, if it were, it wouldn't work.  The rebel elements in Syria are brave, committed, but far from being armed enough, cohesive enough, or strategically powerful enough to combat directly against the Syrian military, which has so far held together, for a very good reason.

The top leaders of the Syrian regime are overwhelmingly from a small, Shiite group called the Alawites.  They still pay some lip service to the principles of the Baath party--remember this name from Iraq and Saddam Hussein's reign of terror?  Baath stands for unity, specifically pan-Arab unity, and helped propel Bashar's father, the equally brutal, even more devious, Hafez al-Assad, into power.   The Assad family has promoted its own and sloughed off the non-Alawite elements, particularly the majority Sunnis, whom they have had no compunction about killing, on a very large scale if necessary, in order to keep power.  (Somehow, the Baath concept of unity became "minority rule" in both Iraq and Syria, with the Sunni minority coming on top in the first and the Shiite minority in the latter.)  So, the Alawites have a very good reason to stick together:  if they fall, they can expect major reprisals, again, like Iraq, but in reverse. It's kill or be killed, as far as they are concerned. There have been defections, both at the high levels and, more frequently, among the predominantly Sunni conscripts, but the military has held together. 

So, what has changed--what can change?  A credible counterforce has emerged.  Not Syria's neighbor Israel:  much as they would love to take on Syria and thumb Iran in the eye, anything they would do would be counter-productive. It's Turkey; the Turks have a long border with Syria and not a particularly friendly one.  During the decades-long Kurdish rebellion against Turkey, Syria was accused by the Turks of giving safe harbor to the rebels.  Turnabout is fair play, and Turkey seems inclined to provide safety to Syrian refugees from the fighting, and it has clearly sided with the international community and with the rebels in calling for Assad's ouster. 

Beyond that, there was a serious danger of escalation last week, when a Turkish fighter jet performing reconnaissance was shot down by Syrian surface-to-air arms.  Whether the plane was in Syrian air space or not is an aspect upon which the two forces did not agree, but there was no doubt that the incident raised tensions and threatened to escalate to direct military confrontation.

That kind of danger would force Syria to step back--the Turkish military would likely be capable of defeating Syria's military on its own, and if the Syrians were to be foolish enough to take offensive action against Turkey, it could bring the full weight of NATO against it.   Under the current circumstances, I could see an area being carved out at and around Syria's Turkish (northern) border which would remain beyond Damascus' power, and that could lead to progressive loss of control of the north and Assad's eventual defeat.

 

Wednesday, July 04, 2012

Special July 4 Election Update

It's been a couple of months since my last general post on this year's election.  So, if a week is eternity in a campaign, that's a good long time indeed.  In spite of which, there is only a moderate number of new developments in that time.  The struggling recovery is up, then down, then back up--as is Europe's problem--but I look at that whole scenario as basically the backdrop of gloom and doldrums in which the entire campaign will be run.  It's a background equally for both parties, as the Republicans haven't proposed any solutions to the jobless recovery, either, but that background is not, for me, the salient issue.  For me, that is campaign finance itself (see below). 

In the meantime, other issues have popped up and then receded.  The latest to do that is healthcare;  both the Obama and Romney campaigns seem willing to let the Supreme Court's ruling stand and not make a big campaign issue out of it.  I thought there might be some mileage out of "Obamacare is a job-killer" for the Republicans because it imposes some additional burden on employers, particularly large ones. (The exit ramp I'd suggest for that issue, if it becomes a significant one, is to encourage part-time employment, with employers inventing some kind of bonus/subsidy for healthcare for those who need to purchase their own.)  It doesn't seem to have occurred to the Republicans to make that an issue, though, and the realization is gradually sinking in to our generally uninformed public that the "Obamacare is a tax" line really doesn't apply to about 95% of us. Meanwhile, of course, Romney/Obamacare is an issue that doesn't work at all for Mitt, though it may do some good  further down the food chain.  In the long run, the current bloom of states rejecting the additional Medicaid assistance to bring up their insured population will be a spectacularly bad issue for the red-state Republicans; it only works for no-hopers, someone like (Fla. governor) Rick Scott who has no electoral future (in any sane world), anyway.

Previously, and since my last election-related post, the issue of the week was the bomb bursting over the Republicans' heads in the form of Obama's executive order establishing key terms of the legislatively unrealized Dream Act.  The order would protect from deportation those youngsters who'd come here with their families and illegally overstayed but had meanwhile followed certain American Dream prescriptions like get a job, get a degree, get enlisted in the military, etc.  This was a huge win for Obama and basically locked down the Hispanic vote for 2012, a major box-checking in the To Do list for the incumbent.  Previous Obama moves have shored up support from some other key constituent groups, like women (the birth control issue from the spring), gays (Obama's opinion in favor of same-sex marriage), and college students (support for increased Federal financing)--blacks were pretty much always on board.  So the battle is being fought on Romney's most favorable turf, the interests of middle-class white men; it's a tough slog, but if Obama can successfully close the gap there, the popular vote in the re-election will essentially be won.

Some Quantitative Easing for the Mind
As we learned in 2000, though, regardless of the national Election day polling numbers, the only sure way to close the deal is in the Electoral College.  The numbers look good right now for Obama, but there are many close states.  A swing of a few percent in a few states could make things look very wrong, and there are huge volumes of money being thrown at those states, in the forms of advertising and grassroots organization, to try to produce some leverage.  By both sides, to be sure.

When it comes to putting the lights out in the EC, Obama's "two-shots-in-the-back-of-the-head" are Florida (29 electoral votes) and Ohio (18).  If he wins both of those, it's over; if he wins one, with the current alignment of state probabilities, it's close to being clinched.  The third potential bullet is Virginia (13), because every indication is that it will be extremely close.  The thing that is amazing to me, though, is that, once all the other close states are allocated according to how they are leaning or likely to go, Obama would get 272 electoral votes without any of the three!

To get to understanding this, we build up the numbers patiently.  Start with the locked-in states for both parties, which number 186 EV for Obama, 181 for Romney.  I won't bore you with the details, but if you went through it, I'm sure you'd see there's not that much doubt:  on the margin, it's states like Washington, Oregon, and New Jersey for the Dems; and Texas, Montana, Arizona, Indiana, Georgia for the Reps. Next, three states that are polling rather decisively in favor of Obama this year:  New Mexico, Minnesota, and, crucially, Pennsylvania.  That takes it to 221-181, which is where Real Clear Politics--the clearinghouse for latest electoral news and polling results--leaves it.  (RCP, I will say, does not seem too much into the race this year--they have a nice do-it-yourself electoral map, but watch out to make sure some of the other maps have been updated for the 2010 census!  One easy check is whether Florida has all its 29 EV shown...)

To complete the picture from this point I draw directly from 538.com's current assessment of probabilities in the closely-contested states.  Nate Silver's Nov. 6 forecast utilizes current polling averages, factors inherent state tendencies, and estimates the chances (based on the statistics of how significant the current gap is, and how much these numbers tend to move over the remaining four months) that the current leader will hold the state, as follows:

Leaning Romney (50.1-80% probability of his winning):  Missouri 10 EV (76.3%); North Carolina 15 EV (71.3).
Leaning Obama (50.1-80% for him):  New Hampshire 4 EV (74.5%), Nevada 6 EV (67.6), Colorado 9 EV (67.4), Iowa 6 EV (66.8).  That brings it to 246-206.
Throw in Wisconsin 10 EV (86% Obama probability!) and Michigan 16 EV (80.2%) and you get to 272 electoral votes for Obama, without the three big target swing states:  Florida (53.5% Obama probability), Virginia (60.9% ), and Ohio (64.8%).

A couple more points:  while Intrade.com has the betting on the winner of the election at 55-41 Obama vs. Romney, Silver's probabilities are 68-32; if you're playing Intrade, I'd say Obama is a buy all the way up to the low 60's.  Allocating all the states by the most probable 538.com outcome, the electoral vote would end up 332-206, which is also shown as the most probable specific outcome.   The "expected value" number Silver cites--applying the probabilities for each state--is 299-239; the difference reflects the greater number of relatively-low probability states currently in Obama's column.

My conclusion:  it's not over yet, by a long ways.  The conventions look to be pretty non-eventful; the respective party bases already well mobilized, but there are plenty of possible events that could disrupt the current pattern.  I disagree that most of them are negative for the incumbent, but some  clearly are.  One example is the gun-running-to-the-Mexican-cartel scandal that Atty. Gen. Holder is working "fast and furious"-ly to contain; also working against Obama's fortunes will be any mention of the unemployment rate or the number of unemployment benefit claims, and it seems as though there are a couple of those announcements per month.  On the other hand, I don't see the race currently to be quite as close as many would suggest.   In order to win, Romney will either need to achieve a breakthrough in Wisconsin, Michigan, or Pennsylvania, or something close to  a sweep of the swing states in which he's currently trailing along with, in particular, at least two of the big three of FL/OH/VA,.

Today is Independence Day; November 6 is Independents' Day 
As is almost always the case, the prize will go to the party that can get more of the unaffiliated to show up and support it.  A true independent--one who is equidistant from both parties--is hard to find, but the large percentage of potential voters who call themselves independents (a number greater than those who identify with each of the parties) shows great variation from election to election in how many actually vote.  The courting of the independents is the true art of the party's electoral campaigns; it involves going beyond just organizing its own base; it's about drawing out into discussion those not registered for either party, figuring out which way they are leaning, and getting the ones on your side to commit.

What more can we say about this uncommitted, often uninformed, mass of some 35-40% of eligible voters?  One important fact is that Hispanics are disproportionately represented among them; the way this plays out is that, while there is a clear tendency among them to lean Democratic, their turnout is not certain, and a Democrat who ignores their interests--immigration, yes, but also jobs, education, religion, and equal opportunity generally--can be deserted by them, at great cost. 

A second interesting bit comes from a survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation just after the Supreme Court decision on healthcare.  They asked the question whether people want to continue the political battle about the healthcare act, or if it's time to move on to other topics.  The profile of the positions by party and tendency showed a very sharp contrast among the independents:  those who tended Democratic had almost the exact same percentage as party regulars in their preference to move on (some 80%); those who tended Republican, the same tendency in the opposite direction (69% want to continue the battle).  There is a middle group, though--generally estimated at somewhere between 5-10%, though that amount is not shown here--who do not tend clearly toward either party's position, and that group's leanings went 35-51 toward moving on, and that made the difference in the overall survey result.

I would suggest that this group--weary (and bored) of the partisan bickering--is the true swing vote in the electorate, though they may not find a home this time around.  If--and it's a big if--one of the parties could clearly convince these people that they are the reasonable ones, the ones who rise above the pettiness and the special interest corruption, that party would be in a position to gain political dominance.  In the absence of which, I think there's still a big opportunity for some movement, which I will get to momentarily. 

First, though, I need to discuss where the real action is this year--in the battle for the Senate.

The War for Congress
Pay attention to this name:  Angus King.  He could end up being the man of the moment--the unofficial King of the Senate--in January, 2013, when the lame duck session of this Congress is over and voting for control of the Senate and House for the new one will play out. King is the former governor of Maine, an independent, and the heavy favorite to win the Senate seat being given up by Republican Olympia Snowe.  Both parties are running candidates against him, but they expect King to win, and are making their plans accordingly.

To go over the facts very quickly which lie behind the contest for control of the Senate:  the Democrats currently have a 53-47 advantage (counting independents Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who will win re-election easily, and outgoing Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, for whose seat a Democrat is favored).  The Republicans would gain control of the Senate if they get a net gain of four seats, or three seats with the vote of their newly-elected Vice President, if that should happen. Control in the Senate is not the complete stranglehold on the legislative agenda that occurs in the House, but it offers the rights to name the committee chairs, to hold majorities in the committees, and to participate in executive discussions as the leader of the Senate.

The Democrats are mostly in a defensive position in this battle, because the majority of seats up for election this year are currently held by them.   This is true also of the close, competitive races:  increased by retirements of incumbents; there are a whole bundle, and many of them were held by Democrats this year.

To make any sense of the chaos, one has to assume that there will not be a wholesale rejection of incumbents among a number of Democrats who have held office for full terms and are running for re-election in contested races. These people include Bob Casey in Pennsylvania, Bob Menendez in New Jersey, Sherrod Brown in Ohio, Maria Cantwell in Washington, Bill Nelson in Florida, Debbie Stabenow in Michigan, and Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota.  A loss by any of them would be a major disaster, crippling to the Democrats' hopes--so all those Senators are busy raising money out there and campaigning with unfeigned urgency. Next, you add to the Democrats' column two part-term Senators favored to win big--Kirsten Gillibrand in New York and (Democrat in little more than name-only) Joe Manchin of West Virginia, along with wins in open, but favored, seats in New Mexico and Hawaii.  All those wins, plus the seats they carry over and a couple more projected as easy wins, only get the Democrats to 47 seats of the needed 50/51. 

After that, the going gets dicey. Democratic retirements in the two red states of North Dakota and Nebraska put those states' seats in serious jeopardy:  the Democrats are running good candidates, but they are definitely underdogs. Indiana, which rejected long-time incumbent Republican Dick Lugar for a right-wing extremist, should be a candidate for a Democratic pick-up (the Dems are running a good candidate, moderate Representative Joe Donnelly), but T.P.'er Mourdock is leading in the polling. If I pencil those in for the Republicans, that brings them to 46, +2 so far, with seven seats remaining in doubt (current party and "I" shown for incumbents):

Missouri (D-I)--Claire McCaskill is running furiously, but independently of Obama. Iin this red-trending state; she will be an underdog to her opponent (who has not yet been named);
Nevada (R-I)--Dean Heller was appointed Senator to replace John Ensign, who resigned in disgrace; Heller is a narrow favorite against Democratic Rep. Shelley Berkley;
Wisconsin (D)--Herb Kohl is leaving a seat he would have been favored to win; Democrat Tammy Baldwin (progressive, self-declared lesbian) will be an underdog if she faces former Gov. Tommy Thompson, a moderate and a strong candidate (his nomination is not yet secured);
Montana (D-I)--Jon Tester has been a moderate Democrat in the Senate, and we know how tough that is, particularly in a red state;
Massachusetts (R-I)--the high-profile race between short-timer and former male model Scott Brown, who has been able to toe a treacherous line in the current Congress to establish himself as a moderate, vs. progressive favorite Elizabeth Warren;
Virginia (D)--the most consistently close race (in the polling) of them all, for the seat being vacated by Jim Webb, between two former Govs.:  former Democratic National Committee head Tim Kaine and "Macaca" George Allen--this one is guaranteed to go down to the wire; and finally, the Maine seat (R) for which King is the favorite. 
There are 2-to-the-sixth ways (64) the first six seats named above could end up; all are definitely possible, though not all equally likely.  If I had to guess, I would give four of them (MO, NV, WI, and MT) to the Republicans and two (MA and VA) to the Democrats, which would make the tally 49-50 in favor of the Republicans.

This is where King becomes Kingmaker. If Obama wins, King's support (with Joe Biden's vote as tiebreaker in the Senate) would give control to the Democrats (and his failure to do that, to the Republicans); if Romney wins, they wouldn't need his support, unless it ends up 50-49 Dems, in which case he's once again in the catbird seat (the side he picks wins).  King has been pressured to say which way he will go; he has not done so, saying only that he might be inclined to give his vote once to a party to establish their control, then to resume an independent stance.  His history is that he was once a Democrat, broke from the party to run for Governor against a Democrat (and win), he supported George W. Bush in 2000 (!), and he has the money, influence, and popularity in his state which allow him to pick his own path.

(I have to give credit to Washington Post blogger Aaron Blake (on Chris Cilizza's "The Fix") for nailing this story- in -the- making, way back in March. )

And the House of Representatives?  There's some doubt about the outcome, but not nearly so much as in the Senate.  The Democrats need to gain 25 seats of the 435 to regain control.  Former Speaker and Minority Leader Pelosi claims to believe it will happen, but the odds are strongly against it.  Like with the electoral votes above, there are something like 175-185 votes locked in to the current parties, districts very heavily skewed to one party or the other.  The Democrats currently have few more than that minimum, the Republicans have close to their potential maximum.  There are clearly some seats that the Republicans won in 2010 that are likely pickups this year, but they are just a handful--some 5-10.  In order to win back the House, the Democrats would have to win almost all the seats considered toss-ups today, and not give up any of the ones leaning their way.  What we're talking about, really, is a landslide victory, with coattails, for President Obama; nothing else will be quite so decisive.

The Opportunity for a Third Force
My honest opinion is that there is room for a third party in the US, one that would be focused on breaking up the partisan gridlock in Congress and fighting the good fight against the special interests and excessive campaign spending. In the Northeast, it would run moderates who would challenge the Democrats (and displace the fatigued and demoralized moderate "RINO" Republicans); in the South it would run slightly right-of-center candidates who would challenge Republican extremism (and displace the fatigued and demoralized right-of-center "Blue Dog" Democrats). 

The national platform would be fairly simple:
  • Reduce partisan extremism, oppose all filibusters, and produce common-sense short-term and long-term solutions to our problems of slow growth and ballooning national debt;
  • Amend the constitution to eliminate the Electoral College and the pernicious effect of the Supreme Court's Citizens United ruling; and
  • Candidates for the parties would only accept direct contributions from individuals within the limits of the campaign laws (explicitly renouncing Super PAC's).
In the meantime, they would need to avoid the typical third-party-killing trap of running candidates for President.  There is no possibility of winning in today's system--even Ross Perot, the most successful national 3rd-party candidate in decades, got zero Electoral votes despite winning 20% of the popular vote in 1992.  To be honest, a third party which could actually win significant numbers of states and electoral votes would create an incredibly messy, possibly insoluble, chaos in the Electoral College and a constitutional crisis of historic dimensions.

Our new third party--working name is the "Fix Congress Party"--would have a few natural supporters in both Houses of Congress, and by electing a few dozen Congresspeople or Senators it could have a crucial influence in breaking the deadlock.  They might also be able to get the support of some influential people not excessively tied into the parties, like Michael Bloomberg, which was not forthcoming for the disastrous attempt to nominate a moderate third-party Presidential candidate this year. This movement would earn the respect, if not the direct support, of reasonable elements across the spectrum--I might even support it!

Curse You, Sheldon Adelson!
In the meantime, we have to deal with the ugly mess which is the clear legacy of the Roberts Supreme Court's Citizens United decision.  I just endured the quarterly deadline deluge of pleading, requests, demands for money from dozens of candidates, party organizations, and the like.  I mostly abstained from all gifts, although I am starting to give a little since July 1 in some strategically significant races (see above for clues).  What I wanted to get across to these party organizations and candidates through my abstention is that we out here in the hinterlands do not give a good expletive whether you meet your funding targets and give off the sweet smell of success to your opponents and the press covering the fund-raising reports.

To the extent our side gets a lot of money, it just encourages the other side to raise more, sort of like the nuclear arms race.  Adelson's money seems to be drawn from a bottomless well; though he has been avid in prosecuting/persecuting those who suggest corrupt motives for him, you have to wonder why it is worth so much money to him to get the outcome he wants/needs.  Let's leave it at that, though I will suggest that his financial interests could be penalized by the free-will choice of those of us who disagree with his objectives, tactics, and methods:

Sands Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas
Sands Expo and Convention Center, Las Vegas
Sands Casino Resort, Bethlehem, PA
The Venetian (Macao)
Sands Macao
Marina Bay Sands, Singapore
Las Vegas Sands Group of Companies
Ha Yom newspaper, Israel
All of these entities have very good alternatives that I would recommend.  In Nevada, his sworn enemy is Rep. Berkley, the Senate candidate I mentioned above.
Finally, if you made it this far, I congratulate you and wish you a happy, healthy Fourth.  Wherever you may be, you have a stake in our elections (even if you can't participate) and deserve to share in our patriotic gore....