09.17.10

But What About Bob?

Posted in Rock 'n' Roll, Stumble and Fail at 7:14 am by George Smith

More Tea Party music, this time set to Bob Seger tracks “Like a Rock” and “Turn the Page.”

“They Liked Barack” is the better of the two. It had me laughing — sometimes by real intent. Whatever the reason, the softer approach than usual Tea Party material works.

“Change the Change” — hmmm, could’ve used a better central lyric. “Unemployed again …” is good, even though it confuses the crashed economy for the middle class with the arrival of Obama.


More! Much better than Worley’s “Keep the Change.”

Chuck Eddy and Myonga (two of my pals on ILM) will s—.

Note standard Tea Party obsession with Obama/Bill Richardson/Hillary Clinton photograph. He doesn’t have his hand over his heart!

Nb: The ChangetheChange fellow also rebrands Paul Simon’s Fifty Ways to Leave Your Lover as Fifty Ways to Save Our Country. The karoake track betrays him a little when the background singers come in. But it’s made up for by his swimming pool shot.

09.16.10

Eat Shit Farms, LLC (continued)

Posted in Bioterrorism, Predator State, Stumble and Fail at 1:10 pm by George Smith

Some additional notes from today’s hardcopy Los Angeles Times, including a frank admission that the food regulatory system is broken.

Completely, DD might add.

It’s more proof that nobody in power is really interested in doing anything about the Dickensian characters from US agribusiness who emerge as threats to the general welfare.

But they are always ready to throw immoral amounts of money at bioterrorism research and defense into protecting against an outside threat.

“[While] most policy-makers and food safety experts agree the regulatory system is broken, they also agree that chances of a significant overhaul anytime soon are dwindling,” reported the newspaper here.

Unintentionally telling lines, an excuse, actually:

“In what FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg recently termed an ‘unfortunate irony,’ new FDA rules governing egg safety went into effect July 9, too late to prevent the current salmonella outbreak.”

Another unfortunate irony is that when Margaret Hamburg was installed at the FDA by the Obama administration, she was lauded for her focus on bioterrorism.

That has certainly worked out well.

In a sidebar piece, Eat Shit Farms Wright County Egg in Iowa was announced as the target of a civil suit including sickened people from six states.

“Self-policing doesn’t work,” said the lawyer representing them, during a press conference announcing the suit. “The farms failed to follow US regulations to prevent contamination,” reads the newspaper.

The Wright County Egg salmonella distribution “is the largest instance of salmonella poisoning since the Centers for Disease Control began tracking cases more than thirty years ago.”

In the last installment of Eat Shit Farms, I contrasted Austin “Jack” DeCoster’s Iowa tainted egg farms with the case of the Rajneeshee cult in Oregon in which the group instigated deliberate salmonella contamination.

In 1984, the Rajneeshee sickened 751 people with Salmonella typhimurium.

DeCoster’s firm is responsible for 1,519 diagnosed cases of salmonellosis.

The lawyer representing the plaintiffs in the suit estimated the number much higher.

09.15.10

Why the ‘war on terror’ needs defunding

Posted in Stumble and Fail, War On Terror at 2:54 pm by George Smith

Particularly at the grass roots level, it needs a drastic haircut.

From my old homestate of Pennsyltucky, this bit of found humor, courtesy of the Associated Press:

Information about an anti-BP candlelight vigil, a gay and lesbian festival and other peaceful gatherings became the subject of anti-terrorism bulletins being distributed by Pennsylvania’s homeland security office, an apologetic Gov. Ed Rendell admitted.

Rendell, who claimed he’d just learned about the practice, said Tuesday
that the information was useless to law enforcement agencies and that
distributing it was tantamount to trampling on constitutional rights.
In recent weeks, several acts of vandalism at drilling sites spurred the
inclusion of events likely to be attended by environmentalists and the
bulletins began going to representatives of Pennsylvania’s booming natural gas industry.

A Philadelphia rally organized by a nonprofit group to support Rendell’s push for higher spending on public schools even made a bulletin, as did drilling protests at a couple of Rendell’s news conferences this month as he toured the state to boost support for a tax on the natural gas industry.

And who was getting the funding for this valuable intelligence on the state of homegrown terrorism?

Something called the Institute of Terrorism Research and Response, in Philadelphia, to the tune of $125,000.

It’s website is here, listing a POB in Philadelphia as well as a branch in Jerusalem.

It emits a bit of an unpleasant odor.

For example, to collect intelligence for its clients is relies, it says, on something called its Ground Truth Network.

And apparently the company’s Ground Truth Network, or analysts, have been eying the protest movement against gas drilling (and even a public showing of the documentary “Gasland,” a scathing look at the industry nationwide), now commonly called “fracking” in Pennsylvania.

In “Gasland,” the rural Pennsylvania community of Dimock is profiled. In great detail, it shows how the place was ruined and its water contaminated by drilling.

The intelligence document came to light when it was posted on a pro-drilling forum on the web, whereupon it was also seized by anti-drilling groups.

The company distributes its intelligence product to the Pennsylvania director of homeland security, law enforcement and gas drilling companies.

James Powers, the Pennsy director of homeland security was quizzed by the Harrisburg Patriot-News and that article is here.

PA governor Ed Rendell indicated to the Associated Press that James Powers would not be fired even though he was “appalled” by the news.

“I think I would have said `no’ to this contract before we ever spent a dime and before we sent out any information that was wrong and violative of, in my judgment, the constitution,” the governor said.

“Which public meetings the anti-drilling folks were planning to attend was supplied by the Institute of Terrorism Research and Response, a Philadelphia firm contracted with the state Office of Homeland Security to provide information for the intelligence briefings,” reported the Patriot News.

“When asked if ITRR was tracking groups — specifically, people opposed to drilling in the Marcellus Shale or attending showings of ‘Gasland’ — [James Powers, PA director of homeland security] replied, ‘I don’t know, I haven’t asked them.’

“Powers did indicate that someone — either ITRR or state employees, he wouldn’t specify which — was monitoring the ‘Web traffic’ of anti-drilling groups.”

Rendell said the firm’s contract would come to an end.

“Gasland” has also recently been showing on HBO and it has gained many favorable reviews.

Erik Miller, “the Director of Security Studies at the Institute of Terrorism Research and Response (ITRR), where he serves as project-manager, case officer, researcher, and intelligence writer,” has an article in the recent issue of Counter Terrorism magazine.

On Sweden and alleged radicalism in that country, it begins:

To many, Sweden is a leading model for what a modern, liberal democracy should be; an exemplar of tolerance, humanitarianism, and diplomacy. To those who monitor global jihadism, however, Sweden has shown a severe lack of leadership in confronting the growing problem of Islamic radicalization within its own borders.

Even as newly-emerging evidence continues to expose this process of radicalization; the Swedish establishment fails to face the problem directly. In the name of multiculturalism and religious equality, leading Swedish figures have chosen not only to deny the issue but to seemingly embrace their homegrown Islamists.

This phenomenon is a new form of nationwide “Stockholm Syndrome” that is self-deceptive, self-defeating, and ultimately, suicidal.

That article is here.

And here is what looks like one of the company’s reports — originated perhaps from its Jerusalem office, posted on another website.

A sample ITRR intel briefing booklet from 2009 is posted here, on the company website.

It is not particularly insightful, seemingly only a .pdf collection of bits anyone interested in terrorism could assemble from sifting public news.

But it is probably the type of briefing book discussed by the AP and Harrisburg Patriot News.

The AP, on the material included in the ITRR intel report distributed by Pennsylvania’s homeland security office says:

It listed demonstrations by anti-war groups, deportation protesters in Philadelphia, mountaintop removal mining protesters in West Virginia and an animal rights protest at a Montgomery County rodeo. It also included “Burn the Confederate Flag Day,” the Jewish high holidays and the Muslim holy month of Ramadan as potential sources of risk.

On page 11 of the Institute of Terrorism Research and Response’s sample May 2009 briefing book, the organization lumps a number of equally surprising activities under the topic “Domestic/Eco-Terror Alerts.”

Among these, “the Rainforest Action Network is holding training at campuses across the [continental United States]. The training is designed to inspire ecological activity — from legitimate canvassing to illegal direct actions.”

The very legit Rainforest Action Network is here. It looks like a happy place.

In another posting, the ITRR bulletin reads: “Ecological activists in [San Francisco, Phoenix, Tuscon and Sonora} will be protesting the intent of Mexico to build a toxic waste dump on land belonging to the O’odham Indians.”

Other “domestic/eco-terror alert” entries include notes on protests of the Bank of America bailout scheduled for Senator Dianne Feinstein’s office, “a protest march … held by people opposed to the closing of some schools in New York City, “eco-activists” from Earth First! holding a summer training camp, institute analysts monitoring “anarchists” who might protest an appearance by Karl Rove, as well as a variety of anti-war and anti-cruelty-to-animals protest events.

The intelligence booklet makes a practice of classifying people, groups and non-profits who protest corporate activities as “anarchists.”

“Working with organizations that refuse to surrender their domestic or international operations to terrorism,” reads the pamphlet.

Terrorism, in this case, seeming to broadly rope in constitutionally protected activities contrary to the interests of corporate and government clients.

Another article by ITRR experts, this time on al Qaeda’s use of the Internet is here.

It is, many will agree, a trifle underwhelming as an example of this type of counter-terrorism literature.

Pennsylvania’s director of homeland security, James Powers, characterized the leaked ITRR briefing .pdf in one embarrassing e-mail as “sensitive information” only for “those ‘having a valid need to know.’ ”

09.14.10

What can’t be outsourced to China? Guess!

Posted in Crazy Weapons, Stumble and Fail, War On Terror at 9:32 am by George Smith

“I bought a new toilet! It was made in China. That’s where all the jobs went. Nothin’ could be finer!” — live verse from ‘China Toilet Blooz‘ and I do play the harmonica.

Ahem, the New York Times has run a bit asking the question: Are there any jobs that can’t be outsourced?

Well, yeah, menial cleaning, restaurant work, anything that requires a face-to-face connection. I’m willing to bet that overuse of robots and telepresence will cause the same resistance and disgust the phenomenon does on help and corporate telephone lines.

But to the quote for repeating, first from a professor at UC-Irvine:

The best jobs program is trade reform with China. Since China joined the World Trade Organization in 2001, it has used a potent set of mercantilist and protectionist policies to shift millions of American manufacturing jobs offshore.

America can compete in the international environment if “free trade” is also fair.

America’s unemployed skilled manufacturing workers – both white-and blue-collar – can only trade down …

Regrettably, the current generation of unemployed workers is lost until the White House and Congress find backbones to stand up to Chinese trade policies.

In an aside, if you’re wondering why I’ve shifted increasingly away from security discussions that are purely on weird weapons lobbies and fear-mongering, it’s because the security of the country ultimately lies within. If rot and economic unfairness cleans out the middle class, there is no security.

As it stands, the US is unstable. And it can easily become moreso. An unstable US is not good for the rest of the world.

Irrational leadership leads to war and hardship inflicted on others, not just on ourselves. And if there is anyone who thinks that putting the Republican Party in control in Congress won’t lead to greater national instability, they need to get away from this blog. Nothing for you here.

Another professor called upon by the the Times has something to say about science and engineering prowess in the US. It’s not from the little Tommy Friedman class of punditry:

Moreover, there is neither a shortage of U.S. students who are world-class in their educational performance nor of college graduates with science and engineering degrees. The U.S. can claim the lion’s share of the world’s highest performing (domestic) science students and continues to graduate more than two times the number of scientists and engineers than are hired each year. Meanwhile, we produce an astounding number of very low performing students. Improving education is important but focusing on top tier skills is not a panacea for unemployment or poor economic performance …

Job growth requires a coordinated policy response that includes some protection for U.S. workers as well as stimulating demand for domestic products and services.

I would add to these assessments that there can’t be any changes until American business is harshly penalized for deindustrializing to slave labor work nations. Others have called for a democracy tariff, a price put on imports at the border for those things coming from such ‘beggar-they-neighbor’ living spaces.

It’s not like we need a place, ours, where even more snobs can have iPods whose parts are made by workers driven to suicide.

Thanks, Steve Jobs. The iPad commercial with someone playing the virtual piano on their slave-labor gadget is so great! I could never make a video that good!

I’ve said that the Obama administration’s tax incentives are essentially bribes to American business. Instead of hiring the unemployed directly, the president resorts to trickle-down efforts, hoping that some manner of payoff will juice American business into hiring.

The frontpage of yesterday’s hardcopy (no link) Los Angeles Times had, as its headline: R&D effort may yield scant jobs.

The part worth excerpting, which is pretty obvious:

Over the last two decades, US scientists and engineers have discovered or pioneered the science behind one blockbuster product after another — from flat-panel screens and robotics to the lithium batteries that run next generation power tools and electric cars.

Yet, in almost every case, production, jobs and most of the economic benefits that sprang from those breakthroughs have ended up overseas.

===

And new reports show that during the recession American companies ramped up investment overseas for plants and new hires, as well research and development — even as they cut back domestically.

So what didn’t get outsourced in the Great Recession?

Census jobs. It required face to face work and an enterprising, ad hoc, self-motivating mass workforce. I kinow. I was part of it.

The US government could change things by choosing to hire people directly for national reclamation. There would be the usual business outcry that by putting itself in competition with the private sector for such work, it was being bad in all the usual ways. Anti-competitive, socialist, communist, etc.

But when you have an American business culture that’s already accustomed to just taking the bribe money and using it to hurt the US labor force even more, there would seem to be little downside to actually putting people to work without private sector help.

Paradoxically, the Sunday LA Times’s hardcopy headline was on the growth of the Predator drone manufacturing business in southern California.

It did not paint this part of the weapons industry as a boon. Building flying robot assassins employs only 10,000. It’s a relative drop in the bucket for a southern California economy that’s bigger than most world nations.

And while 10,000 do have jobs in it, it’s an industry that generates little worth to the middle class. Other than stimulating the local economy where workers presumably spend much of their pay.

Robot assassins don’t build roads, they don’t improve the infrastructure, they don’t do anything for universal healthcare, they don’t fight disease, they don’t coach high-school wrestling teams, they don’t spread goodwill overseas. And it’s not an industry that is theoretically open to everyone for a good living regionally, like Detroit in its heyday.

The Times article also addressed all the downside associated with the industry. Its political lobbying, the legalized political bribery, the association with scumbags like Randy “Duke” Cunningham.

It wrote about the fact that as technology, the drones pretty much suck. They are not miraculous things.

They’re expensive and not useful against any country that has an air defense. They were a joke over lowly Bosnia, it was said, and no one wanted them prior to 9/11.

Which again only shows the war on terror as a growth opportunity for those parts of the American economy which very little to do with a healthy middle class.

There was a Mexican sci-fi movie which a few of the same points, if rather depressingly. It was called Sleep Dealer and is probably not worth the money Amazon is asking for the DVD.

In it, drones are used to bump off poor people — “terrorists” after drinking water — in Mexico, their video footage used as entertainment in reality show American programming.

Just prior to 9/11, the Times writes of a Predator sales pitch:

The Predator could be used to spot wildfires, [the General Atomics salesman] told his latest prospects. It could monitor global warming.

The audience listened politely — then scattered quickly when the demonstration ended. There were no takers.

Despite the constant braying about it, “[The drone business is] still not big enough to single-handedly restore the Southland aerospace industry to its former glory,” concluded the Times.

These are the jobs that are not outsourced. Wow.


Thanks heavens they’re as nasty as everyone thinks

From CNBC, billionaires bum out at esatz Davos over US and Obama administration:

“They saw the United States in a long-term slow growth environment with the near-term risk of recession quite real,??? said Wien, in a commentary to Blackstone clients. “The Obama administration was viewed as hostile to business and that discouraged both hiring and investment. Companies and entrepreneurs were reluctant to add workers because they didn’t know what their healthcare costs or taxes were going to be.???

A massive reduction in the consumer debt load, a workforce without the right skills for the jobs of tomorrow, and too high labor costs relative to other countries “are not problems that are likely to be solved any time soon,??? wrote Wien of the attitude of the people at the lunches, which took place in two groups on successive Fridays last month. “Only a few investors thought the Standard & Poor’s could reach 1200 next year.???

So what are the billionaires buying if this environment continues? Wien said “vacant office building,??? “farmland??? and “Africa??? were some of the ideas thrown out.

09.13.10

Even the Chinese are dismayed

Posted in Made in China, Stumble and Fail at 12:40 pm by George Smith

Coincidentally, in the news today from Associated Press:

China’s plans to vaccinate 100 million children and come a step closer to eradicating measles has set off a popular outcry that highlights widening public distrust of the authoritarian government after repeated health scandals.

It stems from distrust of the central government and its response to the regular appearance of poisoned food and health products in the Chinese consumer chain, among other places worldwide.

AP reads:

“The lack of trust toward our food and health products was not formed in one day,” said the Global Times newspaper. “Repairing the damage and building credibility will take a very long time. The public health departments need to take immediate action on all fronts.”

In recent years, government agencies have dragged their feet or withheld information about the spread of SARS, bird flu and, last month, an outbreak of cholera. China’s slow response to SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, was widely blamed for causing the outbreak that swept the globe in 2003, and led to deep mistrust both internally and internationally.

Milk products contaminated with industrial chemicals are still found despite mass recalls and several criminal convictions, including
executions, after tainted infant formula sickened 300,000 babies and killed at least six two years ago.

Contrast it again with the absurd rot one infrequently reads, generated by Western sources, on Chinese superweapons and science. (Here, where my piece from last week is mirrored at GlobalSecurity.Org.)

Or pass it over to read even more rot from little Tommy Friedman, again off on his current jag about how the middle class is spoiled and lazy. And it will have to sacrifice even more in the coming years (probably true, but not because of anything he thinks is the reason):

Who will tell the people? China and India have been catching up to America not only via cheap labor and currencies. They are catching us because they now have free markets like we do, education like we do, access to capital and technology like we do, but, most importantly, values like our Greatest Generation had. That is, a willingness to postpone gratification, invest for the future, work harder than the next guy and hold their kids to the highest expectations.

In a flat world where everyone has access to everything, values matter more than ever. Right now the Hindus and Confucians have more Protestant ethics than we do, and as long as that is the case we’ll be No. 11!

Not enough Protestant work ethic, prole slobs!

Values do matter more than ever. And Friedman surely doesn’t have them, either. In fact he’s the cigarette smoker so addicted he forgets he has two hanging out of his mouth when he tells ya to quite smoking.

Friedman needs to be one of the first to go in any long overdue turn of the tide in the class war.

In the same edition of the newspaper, Paul Krugman publishes a more hostile piece toward China, while dragging in US business a little bit.

China is beggaring the west by manipulating its money and subsidizing exports, which readers will have noted American businesses which have deindustrialized are only too happy to take advantage of at everyone else’s expense.

Krugman writes:

And in a depressed world economy, any country running an artificial trade surplus is depriving other nations of much-needed sales and jobs. Again, anyone who asserts otherwise is claiming that China is somehow exempt from the economic logic that has always applied to everyone else.

There is an American passivity in response to this, writes Krugman, partly caused by “business fear of Chinese retaliation.”

“So this is a good time to remember that what’s good for multinational companies is often bad for America, especially its workers … Will U.S. policy makers let themselves be spooked by financial phantoms and bullied by business intimidation? Will they continue to do nothing in the face of policies that benefit Chinese special interests at the expense of both Chinese and American workers?”

I’ve edited it down a bit so you should read the entire thing. It makes a much finer argument than you’ll ever read here.

I’ll stick to the blunt: I bought a new toilet! It was made in China!

09.10.10

Made in China (more timely than ever)

Posted in Crazy Weapons, Made in China, Stumble and Fail at 1:06 pm by George Smith


Good news, lads! Good news! The Mojo Deluxe harmomica could have lead or cadmium in it! Just remember to only stick it in your mouth a little.

From today’s Los Angeles Times business section:

“[Pieces of jewelry] meant for little girls, they hung on simple faux silver necklaces and cost as little as $8.00.

And they were potentially deadly, according to consumer advocates. This type of cheap costume jewelry made with the metal cadmium, which can be toxic at high levels, is at the heart of the latest ‘made in China’ scare.

Since January, the Consumer Product Safety Division has targeted more than 200,000 pieces of cheap jewelry from China that were made with cadmium and sold at numerous national retail chains, including Wal-Mart and Claire’s.

The story informs when the US virtually banned toxic lead from Chinese toys in 2008, the factories in the country simply moved to cancer-causing cadmium.

“Because entry into low-end jewelry manufacturing in China is inexpensive, competition is tough and factories do all they can to stay afloat, even if that means using toxic materials,” reads the newspaper. “The US EPA labels cadmium a ‘probable human carcinogen.””

Inevitably, it’s the Dickensian nature of US business practice which must take much of the blame.

The story interviews Chinese manufacturers who could make non-toxic jewelry. But it costs more and the pressure is tremendous for the cheapest goods. To sell in the US — presumably at Wal-Marts.

Again, the image of US de-industrialization, the shipping of jobs making things overseas where American businesses can exert pressure on the manurfacturers for the cheapest goods, playing one against the other, not having to worry about any environmental or labor laws. Until an understaffed US regulatory agency catches up years later.

At which point something else conveniently cheap and bad is found as a substitute.

Contrast this particular story with this laugh-out-loud one at TIME magazine on the potential futuristic threat of Chinese quantum communications.

The Chinese will use quantum teleportation to communicate with their new submarine fleet, using blue lasers!

“China is now at the cutting-edge of military communications, transforming the field of cryptography and spotlighting a growing communications arms race … While the People’s Liberation Army won’t be beaming up objects Star Trek-style anytime soon, the new technology could greatly enhance its command and control capabilities,” it reads.

Or one can consider the equally hilarious stories, based on shreds of hard information and gasbags full of speculation, on the allegedly very threatening supermissile which will kill our supercarriers.

“The Chinese could even destroy their opponents’ electronic control systems – critical to the operation of ground vehicles and aircraft – by producing damaging current and voltage surges with the help of electromagnetic pulse bombs loaded into the DF-21D [supermissile], reported the Asia Times. “Yet another option would be to fit a missile with a thermobaric fuel-air bomb.”

Every Chinese weapon or threat — from quantum teleportation to supermissiles to the ever present stories on that country’s cyberwarriors — never suffers from any taint of intimation that they might be afflicted with the same fundamental essence of crap associated with that nation’s consumer products.

Everyday Americans have experience with Chinese-made products, even if they regret it. There’s no escape, no way out. US business de-industrialized for the sake of leveraging slave work over expensive American labor and regulation.

So in everything from toilet seats to stub wrenches to socks, all goods are ersatz, inferior and often surprisingly dangerous in interesting ways. But cheap.And — of ultimate importance — not made by Americans. Because that would be bad for the bottom line.

From old DD blog in early 2009:

We’re getting a dose of what security means [these days]: A fallen over economy and mass-firings. In the past eight years, our leaders were good at making us look the other way. See the Islamic terrorists! They want to destroy our way of life!

But underneath our noses a different story unfolded, one of a place that made no sense, a land that worked hard at crushing a Middle Class way of life all by itself.

Let’s employ a bit of a fable to define it: The tale of the broken stub wrench, pictured above.

In southern California, everyone has embedded lawn sprinklers. And sometimes, the sprinkler heads are damaged, like when your neighbor runs over one with his SUV. When that happens, you have to replace the fractured sprinkler. And that job requires that you remove a broken piece of it, called a stub, from the water pipe outlet which serves the sprinkler.

There is a tool for doing this and it is called a stub wrench.

DD did not have a stub wrench when this happened to a sprinkler in his yard last summer. So I went to the hardware store on Colorado Street in Pasadena to buy one. That stub wrench is pictured above. It was made in China.

For a stub wrench to work, it has to be a little like a corkscrew. That is, you have to be able to twist it into the broken plastic stub of the sprinkler head. Burrs on the tip of it dig into the stub, allowing you to untwist the broken piece from the outlet coupling, thus removing it. Then you can screw in a replacement sprinkler.

This stub wrench had no burrs and DD didn’t notice until he got home. No matter how I tried to make it work, no dice.

So DD went back to the hardware store and marveled at an entire shelf of ‘made in China’ stub wrenches, all the same, all guaranteed not to work, all with the name of an American company on them. But they were cheap, only about three dollars a piece.

It was an astounding display, not just because of the broken-before-buying quality of the goods, but also because it was obvious that people who bought them never complained. So these non-working items just stayed in stock and were never removed, a Ponzi pay-and-get-ripped-off scheme on the micro-scale, a metaphor for the entire economy, now collapsed but still sitting on the shelf in its polystyrene shrink wrap — broke.

And whenever I read about whatever wonder weapon the Chinese are said to come up with, I laugh, because it’s invariably delivered by US sources in one of the parts of the economy which doesn’t really care if there is a Middle Class, the national security complex. It’s only important to find a trivial menace to inflate until it’s a suitably sized horror.

Socks, under the American name of Hanes (which also used to be an American-made brand until that company purged its workers, too, in favor of the cheap), which become moth-eaten looking after three trips through the washing machine never figure in these stories.

That China can’t make socks which don’t sprout holes after a few weeks isn’t notable.

How does DD know? I thought it would be a good idea to buy some socks before heading out on the downtown Pasadena census-taking trail this summer. I learned my lesson.

It’s worth repeating an excerpt from an earlier post on Chinese manufacturing and US de-industrialization:

The Pentagon often worries about fighting a regional war with the Chinese military. DD never worries about that. Chinese manufacturing has serious systemic quality control issues. The evidence on the national table is that the country simply can’t produce anything that is robust, up-to-standard or poison free. A lot of the time, this doesn’t matter. For instance, it’s not really of major issue if their blues harps and toilet seats really eat it.

However, their jet airplanes, their ships, their rockets and missiles? Heh-heh. C’mon now, seriously.

09.09.10

Bedbugs and Decay

Posted in Census, Stumble and Fail at 1:39 pm by George Smith

Bedbugs are having a party in the US. If you could own them as an appreciating asset, they’d be better than gold.

Which is sort of what a New York Times story had to say on the pests a few days ago.

In hard times, the only people doing well are the rich and bedbug exterminators.

“Bedbugs gave Linda Develasco of Des Plaines, Ill., a new career when she was laid off from her job as a new-accounts manager at Verizon two years ago,” reported the Times. “Having learned about bedbugs in the hospitality industry from her fiancé, who was general manager of a hotel, she bought a bedbug-sniffing beagle named Scooby for $9,700. She recouped the expense within three months by doing one to three inspections each week.”

That story is here.

You will want to read to the part where one exterminator is so happy over bedbug infestation he has to pull over to the side of the road and do a little jig. Bedbugs meant his ship came in big time.

For every story like this there have been at least a dozen on what to do about bedbugs and why they’re multiplying.

The New York Times story gives some inkling and it jives with DD’s thinking and experience.

Keep in mind, bedbugs live with people. And when people are forced to move bedbugs move with them.

The Times story informs that in the catastrophe economy, many apartment managers cut back on exterminations, hoping to save money. And if you’ve been living in an apartment complex, you know the Great Recession has caused a great deal of churn. People move in — a month or two later, they’re gone.

In the short term, apartment managers probably thought they were saving money. But they never counted on bedbugs hitching a ride in inside the packaging and mattresses of the displaced moving in from other places. Or resurgence of the insects once a spraying regime wasn’t suppressing them.

DD worked enumerating downtown Pasadena for the census. It is the most densely populated part of town with most of the people living in apartments, ritzy condos and older homes subdivided into boarding room flophouses.

During the time of the census it was quite apparent to me and a friend working the same beat that the Great Recession was having a real impact. And none of it was good.

There were people moving in and out everywhere. And there was a good amount of vacancy and noticeable deterioration, even in the most outwardly upscale-looking complexes. In such places, the corporate management often fought hard to impede the US Census. They did not readily disclose the number of vacancies in their buildings.

In fact, often they had to be forced into cooperation with the government, either by firmly telling them it was the law that they comply, or by simply going into the places and doing it the hard way — knocking on the doors of all the tenants next door to units which did not respond and questioning them until a complete picture on the address block was assembled.

Corporate property management’s often surprising and dismaying opposition to the federal mandate is a topic for greater discussion in another post. But in the context of this one on bedbugs, some of it had to do with bosses trying to cover up their rates of vacancy arising from the Great Recession.

Scientists are, naturally, keenly interested in why bedbugs have become such a problem. Some have ventured to say that it’s because they have achieved a surprising resistance to pesticides. This is true but also probably not the entire story, which will only emerge in a few years.

DD reckons bedbug success is due, in part, to US fail. The economic slump has ripped up a lot of lives and thrown them into the wind. And those who are renters who have lost lodgings, along with the cut back in sprayings at the same places, have created a great environment in which bedbugs can breed freely and hitch rides on the dislocated.

If you read the New York Times story, bedbug extermination isn’t cheap. In fact, it’s priced as a scarce commodity in a time of need.

No standard renter is going to pay $500 or up for a Terminix man to come to their place and get rid of bedbugs.

They’ll try to do it themselves with insecticides from the hardware store and keep quiet about it. And learn to battle or live with the pests until better days come around.

If they ever do. In the meantime, bedbugs will be doing fine.

09.08.10

Quotes from the day’s class war

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Stumble and Fail at 2:42 pm by George Smith

We’re still losing.

Republicans, and some Democrats, argue that the fragile state of the economy makes this a poor time to raise taxes on anyone — and that increases could stifle wealthier people’s appetite for spending. — AP

Heavens! The ritzy mansion set won’t spend and we’ll all die if their tax cuts aren’t refreshed.

They’ll take all their moolah and go somewhere else to play!

And you can always count on corporate America to pitch in when times are hard:

Firms say Obama tax write-off not enough

The business community likes President Obama’s proposal to accelerate tax write-offs for companies buying equipment and other big ticket items. But it is clamoring for more — extension of all the soon-expiring Bush tax cuts.

“Far and away the most important policy item on the agenda is what to do about the expiring tax cuts.” — the Los Angeles Times

Do I have any bets on the likelihood of corporate America taking Obama’s bribes to US big business tax write-offs, pocketing the money and/or compelling the current workforce to just do more under threat of being fired?

In the end, DD’s prediction is that the Obama tax cuts will become an example of how and why the government should have directly hired workers — the GOP and corporate America be damned — for national reclamation work, rather than doling it out to the usual recipients in the the private sector.

Once it was called the New Deal. Now it’s always the Raw Deal.

A California health insurer got the green light Tuesday to raise premiums an average of 16 percent for 38,000 policy holders who buy insurance on their own … The go-ahead from the state Insurance Department comes less than two weeks after it approved double digit hikes by Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield of California. — the LA Times


Applying at Harvard easier than getting a job in retail sales in the Dickensian corporate sector

Getting hired at Raleigh’s new Container Store takes a lot more than simply going on-line and filling out an application.

The lucky few who are offered one of the store’s 55 to 60 positions will have to make it through an on-line application, a phone interview, a two-hour group interview and as many as three additional one-on-one meetings. (This for a shit job that pays $10 hour for part-time/temp/seasonal work, no benefits.) — the LA Times

What DD can’t show you is the godawful picture in the hardcopy newspaper, a shot of “recruiting manager Beth Paparhonis” leading “job applicant Keri Jackson in a role-playing exercise.”

It looks suspiciously like making the job hunter sing a happy song. Sing, sing, you must sing for your supper!

Sorry, miss, you’re happy singing was off a bit. We want only the best sales people and only those who sing most happily can pass this test. Next!

Especially poignant because the store sells miscellaneous plastic boxes and container-ware made in China. Cabbage could do the job. But the story suggests that in business America, only the best and the brightest are fit for this work now.

“Many stores and restaurants now use recruiters to find managers,” the newspaper adds.

A few years ago DD made a wry joke that soon corporate America would require every potential employee to have an agent, like the entertainment industry. I never thought people were seriously considering it.


And last, an opinion piece in the LA Times, one entitled “Making the economy work for workers,” by Thomas A. Kochan of the MIT Sloan School of Management, an essay that looks suspiciously like Ted Nugent’s anti-labor Labor Day piece in the WaTimes. Only much nicer, of course.

“Adverserial unions” = bad. “Expand job creation tax credits: “Current policy limits such credits to firms that hire the currently unemployed.”

Yes, it’s so bad to be only able to hire the unemployed for your bribe. You should be eligible for a bribe tax credit for poaching workers from other companies, too. And everyone knows the already employed worker is always better than the one who has been unemployed. It’s only common sense.

“Meanwhile, unemployed Americans stop even looking for work and allow their human capital to further depreciate,” says Kochan.

Yes, you’re allowing your human capital to depreciate!

“Labor Day is the perfect time for all Americans to call for bold actions — backed by research [mine] — like these to solve the jobs crisis,” the man proclaims.

We’re gonna pull ’em outta cars
And dip ’em in some tar — The Patriotic Class War Song

Job Story Funnies

Posted in Predator State, Rock 'n' Roll, Stumble and Fail at 10:17 am by George Smith

Since DD blog is on Yahoo, I get a daily dose of the sites “news department.”

Everyday there’s stuff on “hot jobs,” or “how to get a job,” or how you probably f—– up your resume, your interview and life. And after being out of work so long you’re hardcore unemployable, so pay someone for ersatz reintegration and skills training now.

It’s part of an industry of parasitism, one designed to make money from those who have little but who also happen to be looking fruitlessly for work in a wrecked economy.

One facet, for example, is the current job fair.

“Job fairs” are now places where you go to find an opportunity to give your money to an assortment of lampreys and hagfish. Five hundred dollars down and we’ll train you to be able to work in an insurance office, no guarantee of work or placement though, buddy.

What years ago started out as a way to launch people into work is simply turned over to parasite businesses which thrive on unemployment and desperation, psychologically and financially chiseling the afflicted.

Believe it or not, there are even state government training courses to teach the unemployed how to be unemployment counselors.

But back to Yahoo. Today’s topic is hot jobs — the story is here.

However, even the readers know it’s a joke. In the broke economy, the jobless are not actually able to run out and invest in a four-year college degree for Yahoo’s hottest jobs. Over the weekend, the hot jobs were financial analysts (you know, the bankster industry) and teachers.

Today, it’s nurses, accountants and software engineers.

Tomorrow it will be bedpan technicians or windmill repairmen. Do you like mucous and/or great heights?

The best quotes are in the comments, where nobody is really buying the horseshit as practical or even good.

My favorite is the one on how to be a penny ante vulture at the carcass. The yard sale business is glutted in Pasadena these days, and he’s absolutely right:

The fastest growing market in the recession is in the market of buying lots of goods at bargain basement prices. I have a 6 month leave from my employer, and had the means to move and just shop for the time being. This guy at the table next to [me] bought a T-shirt at OLD NAVY for 49 cents. For the consumer with means the recession [is] like a permanent sale.

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Americans do not appreciate their industrial heritage. Their shrinking industrial base. We have invented massive numbers of products and inventions now taken for granted. What happened?

What our kids see on TV is models, lawyers, cooks, entertainment elite, sports rich. They do not see reality.

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We now have a government that is closer to the labor unions than any government in the last 50 years. You show me one industry other than government employees that is heavily unionized and survives and grows jobs. It dont happen.

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If you buy foreign cars and foreign refrigs and other high ticket items you are part of the problem. You are not the greedy corporation sending jobs overseas.

If you want prosperity for your children – then understand that we need a industrial base. Right here in the USA

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Well that is great for a young person…What Jobs are avilable for people between 50 and 62 ( before the Republicans raise the retirement age ) supposed to be avilable???

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My grandfather worked in the mines. My father was a life long dairy farmer. What happened to these jobs?

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I do not know where they got the information. I do not see any hiring for accountants and auditors. I have been looking work as an accountant for two years, and I have not heard the word, you are hired. Companies have been shipping work to overseas.

And here, another fitting musical one-minute interlude from US of Fail:

Free Man in the Morning.

It’s the live intro to China Toilet Blooz which you should click up for me on YouTube. Pretty please with sugar on top?

08.31.10

Eat Shit Farms, LLC

Posted in Bioterrorism, Predator State, Stumble and Fail at 2:43 pm by George Smith

The daily newspaper is now always loaded with Dickensian characters.

The country has a class of people, a club that hated the last two thirds of A Christmas Carol.

Often they have truly negative security implications for the general welfare.

Take Austin “Jack” DeCoster, the man behind the biggest egg recall in US history, profiled in the Los Angeles Times last week.

As the head of Wright County Egg Farms in Iowa, the paper couldn’t have painted him more poorly. If there was something evil Decoster hadn’t done in food production in the last few years, one can’t imagine what it might have been.

Decoster caused child labor laws to be rewritten in Maine, was sued by neighbors for “beetle infestation,” had eggs his company produced banned in New York, and was declared a “habitual violator” of environmental regulations in Iowa for “mishandling of hog waste.”

And in 1997 he was fined by the feds for “numerous egregious safety and health violations” in Maine.

But the US system just can’t get a guy like this off the street, even after he’s directly responsible for sickening 1,500 with Salmonella enteritidis.

DD has covered this before.

During the Bush administration it was like this:

In the predator state, the bad company led by bad men will literally poison the public. And they won’t stop until people are killed. In the predator state system, still that’s not even enough to get them [dragged off].

A year ago Baxter International and another US company it did business with killed people by selling tainted heparin. Heparin is a necessary drug in US medicine and it used to be made here. But in the rush for profits, like many other US businesses, both companies subcontracted their formerly in-house work to China, where there were people willing and malicious enough to deliver a cheaper counterfeit substance, a derivative of chondroitin sulfate, used to mimic heparin. The counterfeit material sickened hundreds and killed a number of people outright. There were news stories and vows of reform. And then nothing happened; it was back to business as usual in the predator state. It was no time to get in the way of commerce!

Today readers have the spectacle of the house hearings in which Peanut Corporation of America’s CEO, Stewart Parnell, is seen as willfully urging his employees to get his salmonella-laced peanuts out the door.

“[Parnell] gave instructions to nonetheless ‘turn them loose’ … ” reports the Atlanta Journal & Constitution. At the time, Parnell was engaged in finding a laboratory that wouldn’t return a positive salmonella test, kind of like fishing through a high school bundle of failed exams, looking for the lone good one, the coincidental exception, that could be waved around to show what a diligent student you were.

However, despite making hundreds ill and killing a handful, Parnell’s still on the street and the bulldozers haven’t been called. Literally, months go by — sometimes years — and the US government just will not remove such people.

In the predator state, this is the way things work, or — don’t work.

In the predator state, it is important to look the other way, to pretend to be concerned, but to actually remain indifferent to such things as long as humanly possible. Because to take action would be to interfere with the business of predators, the making of profit at everyone else’s expense.

Two years later, and despite lots of noise from the Obama administration about making regulation stronger and revamping the FDA with someone named Margaret Hamburg — someone at the time of appointment alleged to be great — it’s the same old story.

Not enough regulations, or regulations put in place too late, or ignored, or any other miscellaneous excuse from a bottomless grab-bag to explain why we have the trouble we do.

At least the Chinese government has the stones to actually execute a couple businessmen every once in awhile for poisoning or sickening a mass of people.

The Los Angeles Times profile of DeCoster had someone attesting he was at least good for local tax revenues. This because in desperate times people will accept anything really bad as long as there’s a bit of money that comes with it.

And one of his old attorney’s added: “I know Jack pushes the envelope because he’s growth oriented.”

Growth-oriented and envelope-pushing to the extent that today newspapers read:

Federal investigators found piles of manure up to eight feet tall, live mice, pigeons and other birds inside the hen houses at two egg farms suspected of causing a nationwide outbreak of salmonella illness, officials said Monday.

Investigators made public their observations of Wright County Egg and Hillandale Farms, two massive egg producers who have recalled nearly 500 million eggs since Aug. 13.

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FDA officials said Wright County Egg and Hillandale Farms appeared to violate federal regulations for egg safety that took effect July 9, as well as voluntary industry standards for sanitation. Company officials have said they were in compliance. — the WaPost

On its blog, the LA Times explained salmonella had been virtually eliminated from state egg production by institution of a rigorous program of sanitation.

But it gets in the way of profit.

The program, which includes vaccinating hens and testing barns regularly for bacteria, has essentially wiped out salmonella on California farms, industry officials say. Yet only nine other states have enacted similar government-sponsored efforts.

In other words, protecting the public has impacted business and that we cannot abide:

One reason, the Armstrongs and other California farmers contend, is cost. Injecting chickens and swabbing cages takes money — not a fortune, but enough to send egg distributors searching for lower-cost sources.

“We have lost contracts over pennies a dozen,” Ryan Armstrong said. “They want cheap eggs.”

One obvious answer to this is for the US government to regularly destroy a business and ban its bosses for causing mass illness through negligence and cost-cutting. And to do it swiftly.

Not to just talk about putting a bootheel on some company’s throat but actually crush its windpipe. And then throw the leftover garbage in a hole.

Sadly, I doubt this will ever happen in what’s left of our lifetimes. You’re going to regularly see more and more of this type of thing.

Hand in hand with it — almost unnoticed, however — will go regular increases in expenditure to increasing food security against attack from terrorists.

The article from old DD blog continued:

In the predator state, it is critical that attention be diverted from real liabilities to the external menace, potential threats which can even be trumped up in the absence of proof that such things exist in a practical sense. In the case of tainted food and drugs, it has been the radical Islamists under Osama bin Laden who have been passed around as those who would easily poison and contaminate American food and drugs.

Terrorists might put botulism in milk, killing hundreds of thousands.

Terrorists might put anthrax in beef, rice or orange juice. (It was an American, an insider, working from a biodefense lab, who put anthrax in the mail, killing five. But only recently has research on dangerous agents been suspended at the lab where the insider, Bruce Ivins, worked so that the military-run disease house can be internally put in order.)

Osama bin Laden might even poison meals at school!

In fact, one famous example always used to squeal about what terrorists can do to food was also an American example, the work of the Rajneeshee cult in The Dalles, Oregon. And while it was intentional, it still was not as effective at creating illness, monetary loss and disruption as the recent egg recall.

From a paper posted at the Centers for Disease Control:

Bioterrorist attacks could be covert or announced and could be caused by virtually any pathogenic microorganism. The case of the Rajneeshee religious cult in The Dalles, Oregon, is an example (1). The cult planned to infect residents with Salmonella on election day to influence the results of county elections. To practice for the attack, they contaminated salad bars at 10 restaurants with S. Typhimurium on several occasions before the election. A communitywide outbreak of salmonellosis resulted; at least 751 cases were documented in a county that typically reports fewer than five cases per year. Although bioterrorism was considered a possibility when the outbreak was being investigated by public health officials, it was considered unlikely. The source of the outbreak became known only when FBI investigated the cult for other criminal violations. A vial of S. Typhimurium identical to the outbreak strain was found in a clinical laboratory on the cult’s compound, and members of the cult subsequently admitted to contaminating the salad bars and putting Salmonella into a city water supply tank. This incident, among other recent events, underscores the importance of improving preparedness at all levels.

There’s a way of logically looking at these problems. But the US government doesn’t do it and corporate interests work to discourage it.

History shows that bioterrorism as a mechanism for causing illness and disruption is not nearly as frequent, effective, or motivating as the combination of greed, lack of regulation, and an utter disregard for the public welfare.

That’s just a fact.

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