How to Save the Democratic Party | The Nation


The time has come for a showdown between the reformist and accommodationist wings of the Democratic party.

American progressives and principled liberals need to face an essential truth: the Democratic Party, as now constituted, is no longer an agency for realizing their ideals.

Alan Frederick Fogelquist‘s insight:

Another alternative would be for all progressives in the activist base and in party leadership positions to pull out and create a new democratic party oriented exclusively to the interests of the working class majority. These interests include investment in real economy infrastructure, sustainable productive capacity, environmentlly sustainable growth, and equitable distribution.


See on www.thenation.com

EconoMonitor : Ed Dolan’s Econ Blog » US CPI Drops Sharply in November; Inflation Expectations Remain Well Anchored


US CPI Drops Sharply in November; Inflation Expectations Remain Well Anchored

Author: Ed Dolan · December 14th, 2012 ·

U.S. Consumer price inflation, which has been unusually volatile over the past year, turned sharply negative in November. According to data released today by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the all-items CPI fell at an annual rate of 3.7 percent during the month of November. That was the most rapid rate of decrease since the worst months of recession in late 2008.

Much of the recent volatility in the CPI has come from the energy sector, particularly gasoline. Consumer inflation spiked at the end of the summer when gasoline prices rose 8.6 percent in August and 6.7 percent in September. Gas prices then fell by 0.5 percent in October and by 6.9 percent in November.
See on www.economonitor.com

Bicycling to Work in Rio de Janeiro

Global News Blog / IPS

Fabiana Frayssinet

RIO DE JANEIRO, Dic 14 (IPS) – The cyclists riding in the bicycle lanes along the beachfront avenue of this Brazilian city pass the car drivers stuck in rush hour traffic.The Rio de Janeiro city authorities are encouraging this simple, cheap and non-polluting solution for the growing problems of urban transport.

The sight of commuters on bicycles is increasingly common in Rio because of strong economic growth, easy credit and incentives designed to boost auto sales.

"I sold my car because it was so difficult to park, parking lots were expensive, I couldn’t cope with the traffic any more, and I was stressed out," physical education teacher Teresa Moreira, who sold her car and now cycles to work, told IPS.

"When I drove to work I was under stress and I was rude. Now, on the bike, I’m not," said Moreira, who commutes daily along the seafront drive between the neighbourhoods of Leme and Leblón, in the south of the city.

Traffic jams occur in any part of the city and at any time. They are worse when unanticipated events happen, such as an accident, the visit of a president or a rock star, a big international event, or simply Christmas shopping season.

"Originally the focus was on building cycle lanes for recreation, but now our priority is to find ways of fomenting bicycle use as a means of transport for short and medium distances, complementing the mass transport system," María Lúcia Navarro, manager of the "Rio, Capital da Bicicleta" (Rio, the Bicycle Capital) programme of the city government’s environment secretariat, told IPS.

Rio de Janeiro, home to some 12 million people, is the second largest city in Brazil after São Paulo further to the south.

Special bicycle lanes began to be built in the late 1980s. Today they extend for nearly 300 kilometres, including lanes marked on roads and bicycle paths on sidewalks shared with pedestrians. These efforts put the city in first place in Brazil for kilometres of cycleways, and second in South America after Bogotá, Colombia.

Bicycles do not emit greenhouse gases that cause global warming, and they ensure fast journeys, are low cost, and provide health benefits "because pedalling is an aerobic exercise," Navarro said.

If the cycle route network is integrated into high quality public transport, "its efficiency will spread throughout the city," Zé Lobo, head of Transporte Ativo (Active Transport), an NGO that promotes alternative means of transport, told IPS.

The city government’s keen interest can be seen in the appointment of Carlos Roberto de Figueiredo, the city’s former secretary of conservation, to head the transport secretariat, said Clarisse Cunha Linke, deputy head of the Brazil office of the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP), a New York-based NGO working for sustainable transport.

As a result of his appointment, she expects more policies to foment bicycle use.

Navarro said progress is being made compared to the last 20 years. Today, close to four percent of short and medium distance trips – approximately one million journeys a day – are made on bicycles. Bike users already outnumber train and boat passengers.

The 2009-2012 municipal plan emphasised the importance of sustainable urban mobility, and of maintaining and expanding the bicycle path system, integrating it into other forms of transport, and providing cycle storage shelters and bicycle rental sites.

For the period 2013-2016 the plan is to add 150 kilometres of cycle lanes and paths, as well as bicycle parking lots, with the aim of having a network of 450 kilometres of cycle routes by 2016, when the Olympic Games will be hosted by Rio.

The cycle route network "is still very disconnected from the transport system," Linke told IPS.

"We’ll have to think about how to integrate the service sites and the bicycle storage units into the mass means of transport – the metro, trains, and fast bus lanes," she said. "We have to start thinking about bicycles not only as a form of recreation but as a means of transport."

Navarro discussed meeting this goal through plans for a bus rapid transit (BRT) system with cycle storage facilities at bus stops and with space on the buses for bicycles. The BRT buses are envisaged to spread into densely populated areas, like the west of the city.

ITDP is working with the city government, providing technical advice and evaluating, together with other organisations, a bicycle system for the centre of the city.

"Shops, for instance, still don’t see bicycles as something that could help them draw more customers. It’s important for the private sector to start to participate more," said Linke.

She said more bike paths are needed, because most of them are concentrated along the coast. "If people can start and finish their journey on bicycle, the system will work better," she said.

Moreira approves of some of the measures that have already been implemented, like being able to take bicycles on the metro at weekends. But "on weekdays the metro is already crowded. Imagine if everyone decided to take their bikes into the carriages."

The private sector is contributing with 600 shared bicycles, rented mainly in tourist areas. Linke said this system should be further encouraged.

The new transport plan will put out to tender the supply of 200 cycle stands and 2,000 bicycles in less privileged and more remote zones.

Bicycle parking lots also need to be expanded.

"The total quality of the infrastructure should be attended to, and not just its extent," Lobo said.

Solange Medeiros, a law student and sports cyclist, believes it is important to develop respect between cyclists and pedestrians.

"Sometimes pedestrians walk where they’re not supposed to on the cycle routes, creating problems and the risk of accidents," she told IPS.

Moreira suggested that the authorities carry out traffic campaigns, especially for drivers of electric bicycles, who "move at 40 kilometres per hour, faster than is allowed, and knock over elderly people.”

As in all things, "what matters is respect," she said.

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2012.

This article may not be republished, broadcast, framed, or redistributed without the written permission of IPS – Inter Press Service. Republication of this material without permission from IPS, the copyright holder, constitutes a violation of United States and international copyright laws and may result in legal action.

Why Is Washington Obsessing About the Deficit and Not Jobs and Wages?



A month after the election Obama was on Bloomberg Television saying business leaders need “a deal on long-term deficit reduction” before they’ll increase hiring. That’s just not true. Before they’ll increase hiring they need customers.


See on www.huffingtonpost.com

A Giant Statistical Round-Up of the Income Inequality Crisis in 16 Charts


An annotated guide to the most important economic trend of our time

Now we are engaged in a great tug-of-war over a few points in the top tax rate in Washington. But even if the White House pulls hardest, it won’t amount to much of a victory for the long-suffering middle class. The sources of their income stagnation are too deep, too varied, and too long-term for Clinton-era tax rates to cure them.

“There is a huge amount of focus on progressive taxes in our policy world but progressive taxes are not much of a solution to this,” said Lawrence Mishel, president of the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute. “We need to get unemployment down rapidly. We need to greatly change our labor standards. We need to raise the minimum wage.”

He’s right: The middle class crisis — and its resulting income inequality — is the most important economic story of our time. There are a million ways to tell it, and here’s another: an annotated slide show, culled from the amazing 2012 edition of the State of Working America from EPI.

Here we go:
See on www.theatlantic.com

Why did Obama and Cameron save a Criminal Enterprise like HSBC?

By William K. Black

Why is HSBC still in operation?

Why is HSBC still in operation? On the same day (December 10, 2012) that the Obama administration leaked the story of the HSBC settlement a story ran in the New York Times that was full of self-praise by the Obama and Cameron (U.K.) governments for their “cooperative approach” to cracking down on systemically dangerous institutions (SDIs). SDIs are treated as “too big to fail” because they pose a global systemic risk when they fail. The HSBC settlement puts the lie to the Obama/Cameron crack-down on the SDIs for it revealed a disgrace – Obama and Cameron treat the SDIs as too big to prosecute. Indeed, HSBC demonstrates that the SDIs’ senior officers are treated by Obama and Cameron as too elite to prosecute. The propaganda meme of the NYT story – that the SDIs would never again be given special favors due to reforms being adopted by Obama and Cameron – lasted four hours before it was destroyed by the disgraceful reality of the Obama and Cameron governments’ refusal to prosecute HSBC and its officers for their tens of thousands of felonies.

The NYT article begins by accepting the Obama/Cameron framing of the SDI issue, without any critical analysis. “It is one of the thorniest problems hanging over the financial system: how should authorities deal with the collapse of a sprawling global bank to protect the financial system at large?” The reporter’s implicit assumption is that we must have banks that are systemically dangerous when they fail.
See on neweconomicperspectives.org

Could You Survive on $2 a Day?



Nearly 1.4 million American households live on that much per person. Gabriel Thompson reports from one of the nation’s poorest areas.


See on www.motherjones.com

Obama’s rosy view of manufacturing overstates progress – Washington Examiner



Obama’s rosy view of manufacturing overstates progressWashington ExaminerTo hear President Obama tell it, the United States is enjoying a manufacturing renaissance that was largely fueled by his policies.


See on washingtonexaminer.com

Brazil: Rousseff Should Condemn Russian Crackdown – Human Rights Watch

Brazil: Rousseff Should Condemn Russian CrackdownHuman Rights Watch“Brazil walked away from its authoritarian past long ago, but the same can’t be said about Russia,” said José Miguel Vivanco, Americas director at Human Rights Watch.


See on news.google.com

Toronto cuts $128 million from housing and homelessness investments budget | rabble.ca



RT @johnb98: Toronto cuts $128 million from housing and homelessness investments budget | rabble.ca http://t.co/YAvC2gNs


See on rabble.ca