Matt Taibbi, How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the OWS Protests

In November 2011 Matt Taibbi wrote one of the finest political/cultural commentaries I can recall.  Here’s an excerpt:

We’re all born wanting the freedom to imagine a better and more beautiful future. But modern America has become a place so drearily confining and predictable that it chokes the life out of that built-in desire. Everything from our pop culture to our economy to our politics feels oppressive and unresponsive. We see 10 million commercials a day, and every day is the same life-killing chase for money, money and more money; the only thing that changes from minute to minute is that every tick of the clock brings with it another space-age vendor dreaming up some new way to try to sell you something or reach into your pocket. The relentless sameness of the two-party political system is beginning to feel like a Jacob’s Ladder nightmare with no end; we’re entering another turn on the four-year merry-go-round, and the thought of having to try to get excited about yet another minor quadrennial shift in the direction of one or the other pole of alienating corporate full-of-shitness is enough to make anyone want to smash his own hand flat with a hammer.

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Thought for the Day: 25 January 2013

Our political system was founded on the principles of a transparent government, a vigilant press, and a citizenry entitled to a reasonable protection of its private affairs. What we have at present looks like a shifty manipulation of the three: a government that cloaks itself in secrecy, a press that confuses our “right to know” (what we require for self-government) with our itch to know (what we desire for self-abuse), and a citizenry sanctimoniously congratulating itself on its openness and transparency. The monkeys are wearing one another’s hats. And the plutocratic zookeepers are quite amused to see them do so.

Garret Keizer

Thought for the Day: 18 January 2013

“…government is neither the problem nor the solution.  It’s a critical component of a functional society, and when the market fails, it must step up.  To ignore that is to lose the ability to self-correct, and systems that cannot self-correct are systems that cannot survive.”

– Jared Bernstein, 1/31/2012

Thought for the Day: 2 January 2013

“Keynesianism, in particular, is not about chanting “big government good”. It’s about viewing recessions through the lens of an economic model under which temporary increases in government spending can, under certain circumstances, help reduce unemployment. Indeed, not all recessions call for fiscal stimulus; it’s the special conditions of the liquidity trap that make it essential now — which is why the Bush deficits, run under non-liquidity trap conditions, say nothing at all about the desirability of deficits now.”

-Paul Krugman, 12 Aug 2011

Words To Live By

Quotes attributed to the late John Tukey:

The combination of some data and an aching desire for an answer does not ensure that a reasonable answer can be extracted from a given body of data.

Far better an approximate answer to the right question, which is often vague, than an exact answer to the wrong question, which can always be made precise.

Those statements, in the context of his body of work, suggest that he was a very modest man.

(I need to find a permanent home for those quotes somewhere on this blog.)