Friday, August 31, 2012

@23:00, 8/31/12 2

.

Paul Krugman presents:


Health Systems and Health Costs

Related to today’s column: Suppose that you were really, really concerned about the long-run federal budget, and understood correctly that rising health care costs are the biggest source of rising spending. What you might do in that case is look around the world to see what kinds of health care system appear to be best at containing costs. And you wouldn’t have to look far, because there’s a pretty dramatic contrast just north of the border:
Data here.
So, Canada has a single-payer insurance system — actually called Medicare. Four decades ago, Canada spent about the same share of GDP on health care as we did. Since then, however, Canadian spending has risen far more slowly than spending in the US, which relies much more on private insurance. Meanwhile, despite the scare stories opponents of reform like to tell, Canadian health care appears on average to be as good as or better than US care; polls indicate that Canadians are more satisfied with their health care than Americans.
So, given this kind of evidence, the GOP insists that the way to control health costs is … to dismantle the single-payer part of our own system and turn the whole thing over to private insurers."

Bernanke in the Hole

Jackson Hole, that is.
My quick summary:
1. Things are really, really bad.
2. The damage is cumulative; the longer this goes on, the worse the prospects for the future.
3. The Fed has the power to do a lot to help the economy.
4. While you can argue that there are costs to action, the case for major costs is quite weak, and in particular much weaker than the case for major benefits.
5. Therefore, what we at the Fed will do is, um, sit on our hands some more, and think very seriously about maybe, someday, doing something."

Credibility

Eric Cantor explains Paul Ryan’s position on Medicare cuts:
Attacking Obama’s health care reform law, Ryan said its “biggest, coldest power play of all” targeted seniors for $716 billion in cuts. But Ryan’s own budget counted on those same savings, which in fact would be squeezed from reimbursement payments to hospitals and insurers. Asked about the inconsistency of Ryan attacking cuts his own plan embraced, Cantor begged off. “The assumption was that, um, the, the, ah, again — I probably can’t speak to that in an exact way so I better just not,” he said.
And, on a less important front (via Talking Points Memo):
In an interview with radio host Hugh Hewitt last week, Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan said he’s run a sub-3:00 marathon.

Runner’s World has been unable to find any marathon results by Ryan. Requests for more information from Ryan’s Washington and Wisconsin offices, and from the Romney-Paul campaign, have so far gone unanswered.
I know, the second thing sounds trivial. But I remember the 2000 campaign, when Al Gore was constantly hounded by claims of fibbing on trivial issues — claims that, by the way, were all, as far as I could tell, fabricated. These alleged fibs supposedly showed some deep defect in his character. So if Ryan is making false claims about his physical prowess, this is absolutely fair game."

The telegraph would like to panic:

Ireland 'may have to cut public sector wages'

The Irish health minister warned that the Irish coalition government may be forced to cut public sector wages if spending targets under its EU bailout are to be met.
31 Aug 2012
| Comment

TPM has Obama leading by two percent.

.

@13:52, 8/31/12

.

The world spent yesterday on hold.
Greece seems about to loose its temper.
Spain is hanging paper.  
Financial conditions have been so disturbed that I can't guess timing.

More on that later.   Krugman is watching it.
Leslie (storm) The track is still a guess.

I have not done the prep work on telephone interfaces.
The firm ware is under end user control.  I can play with how it does things.

The question becomes what things should a cell phone do?
It is a portable connection to the internet which is the phone net.
Portability requires that it be physically small and light.
It does not need to be continuously connected.
That will save on battery.
People do tasks that should not be interrupted. 
Voice mail takes incoming calls. 
An outgoing call displays the voice mail file. after seeking the connection.
Time is an outgoing call.  Time is that at the nearest available cell tower.
Data entry: Mechanical on/off switch, touch screen,  sms, 411 directory assistance,  SMS will support banking, Twitter up link only and USB with power in.  The internal directory stores incoming call numbers from voice mail and from the external local device (laptop, pad, or other computer).  Search by pull down menu, Local only.
Amusements: Internet radio.  Games on the server, text only.  There should be a scientific calculator. it can be on the central server.  The entire net is available through the USB port. 
The device is a network connection with enough on board interface to serve as a phone.  There is no need for GPS or camera.  Search, edit, compose, video and music play, store and record are all done with an external device.
Carlos Slim should love it.

Things are getting really nasty but are not in the news as yet.

.

@0:53, 8/31/12

Europe is debating internally.  
I don't have a clue as to when things will break.
Probably not this week.
Greece is awake again.
They are not happy.


Stournaras forges ahead

Finance Minister Stournaras meets with his German and French counterparts, as well as the minister of shipping and Ombudsman Diamandouros within the next week.

30 Aug 2012

Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras will go to Berlin on Tuesday, where he will meet with his German counterpart Wolfgang Schaeuble.

Stournaras will brief Schaeuble about the latest decisions that have been made regarding the 11.4 billion euro spending cuts. He may meet with the French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici afterwards as well.

Full story

Finance Minister Stournaras meets with his German counterpart Schaeuble on Tuesday (Eurokinissi)


State expenditures under scrutiny


Published 30 Aug 2012



The Financial Affairs Committee is considering the reduction of politicians' allowances and the abolishment of special secretaries








Farmer assaulted claiming stolen livestock


Published 30 Aug 2012



A farmer and his wife were assaulted when attempting to reclaim stolen livestock across the Albanian border








Syriza cries 'bankruptcy lobby'


Published 30 Aug 2012



Syriza accuses New Democracy of marketing catastrophic austerity measures under the name of patriotism and duty








Papandreou shares secrets of success

by Costas Papachlimintzos
Published 30 Aug 2012



Want someone special for an after-dinner speech? Why not consider George Papandreou?








News bites @ 5

by Dioni Vougioukli
Published 30 Aug 2012



 This evening's news in bite-sized chunks








Greek deposits in Switzerland to be taxed


Published 30 Aug 2012



Government prepares to tax the estimated 20 billion euros of Greek money held in Swiss banks








Samaras heralds progress


Published 30 Aug 2012



Samaras promises to cut down on bureaucracy and tax evasion, predicts growth in two years








DEI suffers under austerity


Published 30 Aug 2012



 Unpaid bills, increased taxes, and rising energy cost punished DEI's profits this half, bringing them to 18.3 million.







Hellenic Petroleum profits slide


Published 30 Aug 2012



Net profit stood at 86m euros, down 7.5 percent from the previous year

Japan could run out of money in a month

Japan's government is planning to suspend some state spending as it could run out of cash by October, with a deficit financing bill blocked by opposition parties trying to force Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda into an early election.
31 Aug 2012
| Comment


Endangered Currency

First Greece -- then Ireland, Italy, Spain and Portugal: The European common currency has come under pressure from large national debts and the effects of the global financial crisis, ultimately requiring a rescue package close to a trillion euros.
Euro Charm Offensive: Merkel Acts to Polish Poor Image Abroad

Euro Charm Offensive Merkel Acts to Polish Poor Image Abroad

SPIEGEL ONLINE - August 30, 2012 Iron lady, leader of the Fourth Reich, lacking compassion: Chancellor Angela Merkel's image has suffered during the euro crisis. Suddenly, though, she is all smiles and full of praise for the efforts made by indebted euro-zone states. But will her charm offensive be enough to transform Germany's battered image in Europe? By Philipp Wittrock more... Forum ]
Hope in the Euro Zone: Crisis-Hit Countries May Have Turned the Corner

Hope in the Euro Zone Crisis-Hit Countries May Have Turned the Corner

SPIEGEL ONLINE - August 29, 2012 The euro zone's crisis-hit countries are becoming more competitive, according to a new German study. Wage costs are down, and the countries are reducing their trade imbalances. Painful reforms appear to be slowly bearing fruit, and the euro zone might even return to growth next year. more... Forum ]
Bundesbank President on ECB Bond Purchases: 'Too Close to State Financing Via the Money Press'

Bundesbank President on ECB Bond Purchases 'Too Close to State Financing Via the Money Press'

SPIEGEL ONLINE - August 29, 2012 Jens Weidmann, the 44-year-old head of Germany's central bank, has made a name for himself by championing price stability and opposing bond purchases by the European Central Bank. In a SPIEGEL interview, he criticizes the ECB's latest plans and insists he only wants to secure the euro's long-term future. more... Forum ]

The 6am Cut London

Asian stocks fell as investors awaited Ben Bernanke’s speech later on Friday, and reports showed an unexpected decline in Japan’s industrial output and manufacturing activity contracted to the lowest level in 16 months. South Korea’s second consecutive month of decline in industrial output also dampened exporters there (BloombergFinancial Times).
The ECB would have sweeping powers over all eurozone banks under draft plans drawn up by the European Commission, although Germany and the ECB itself have urged more decentralised steps towards a eurozone banking union. The EC plan, which is still being drafted and will be unveiled on September 12, would strip national supervisors of almost any authority to shut down or restructure their countries’ failing banks, handing this power to a new ECB board separate to its governing council (Financial Times).
China has indicated it will keep buying eurozone bonds, but held off indicating it would provide meaningful aid, with premier Wen Jiabao saying purchases would require “fully evaluating risk”. (Wall Street Journal).
Angela Merkel faces a clash with the EU over the solar trade dispute. During a visit to Beijing, Merkel said the dispute between Germany and China should be resolved via negotiations, in contrast to EU trade commissioner Karel du Gucht who is expected to open a formal investigation next week into whether Chinese manufacturers are dumping their products (Financial Times).
JP Morgan “is reviewing its dealings with dozens of brokerages that use the bank to settle trades, according to people familiar with the bank.” The bank started the review, which aims to assess client risks versus profits they generate, six months ago (Wall Street Journal).
Outgoing HMV chief Simon Fox is set become Trinity Mirror’s new CEO. Sly Bailey stepped down from Trinity Mirror in May amid shareholder anger over her £1.7m pay package and the company’s performance. Fox will be paid a basic annual salary of £500,000 plus a £75,000 cash allowance in lieu of a pension, with a potential bonus of £375,000 split equally between cash and shares (Financial Times).
Fast-growing technology companies would be allowed to float as little as 10 per cent of their business on the LSE under proposals being weighed up by Downing Street. Senior government officials are backing the proposals, as the government is keen to avoid losing tech IPOs to the US (Financial Times).


http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/31/opinion/Krugman.html?_r=1&hp

The Medicare Killers

"Paul Ryan’s speech Wednesday night may have accomplished one good thing: It finally may have dispelled the myth that he is a Serious, Honest Conservative. Indeed, Mr. Ryan’s brazen dishonesty left even his critics breathless. Some of his fibs were trivial but telling, like his suggestion that President Obama is responsible for a closed auto plant in his hometown, even though the plant closed before Mr. Obama took office. Others were infuriating, like his sanctimonious declaration that “the truest measure of any society is how it treats those who cannot defend or care for themselves.” This from a man proposing savage cuts in Medicaid, which would cause tens of millions of vulnerable Americans to lose health coverage.
And Mr. Ryan — who has proposed $4.3 trillion in tax cuts over the next decade, versus only about $1.7 trillion in specific spending cuts — is still posing as a deficit hawk.
But Mr. Ryan’s big lie — and, yes, it deserves that designation — was his claim that “a Romney-Ryan administration will protect and strengthen Medicare.” Actually, it would kill the program.
Before I get there, let me just mention that Mr. Ryan has now gone all-in on the party line that the president’s plan to trim Medicare expenses by around $700 billion over the next decade — savings achieved by paying less to insurance companies and hospitals, not by reducing benefits — is a terrible, terrible thing. Yet, just a few days ago, Mr. Ryan was still touting his own budget plan, which included those very same savings.
But back to the big lie. The Republican Party is now firmly committed to replacing Medicare with what we might call Vouchercare. The government would no longer pay your major medical bills; instead, it would give you a voucher that could be applied to the purchase of private insurance. And, if the voucher proved insufficient to buy decent coverage, hey, that would be your problem.
Moreover, the vouchers almost certainly would be inadequate; their value would be set by a formula taking no account of likely increases in health care costs.
Why would anyone think that this was a good idea? The G.O.P. platform says that it “will empower millions of seniors to control their personal health care decisions.” Indeed. Because those of us too young for Medicare just feel so personally empowered, you know, when dealing with insurance companies.
Still, wouldn’t private insurers reduce costs through the magic of the marketplace? No. All, and I mean all, the evidence says that public systems like Medicare and Medicaid, which have less bureaucracy than private insurers (if you can’t believe this, you’ve never had to deal with an insurance company) and greater bargaining power, are better than the private sector at controlling costs.
I know this flies in the face of free-market dogma, but it’s just a fact. You can see this fact in the history of Medicare Advantage, which is run through private insurers and has consistently had higher costs than traditional Medicare. You can see it from comparisons between Medicaid and private insurance: Medicaid costs much less. And you can see it in international comparisons: The United States has the most privatized health system in the advanced world and, by far, the highest health costs.
So Vouchercare would mean higher costs and lower benefits for seniors. Over time, the Republican plan wouldn’t just end Medicare as we know it, it would kill the thing Medicare is supposed to provide: universal access to essential care. Seniors who couldn’t afford to top up their vouchers with a lot of additional money would just be out of luck.
Still, the G.O.P. promises to maintain Medicare as we know it for those currently over 55. Should everyone born before 1957 feel safe? Again, no.
For one thing, repeal of Obamacare would cause older Americans to lose a number of significant benefits that the law provides, including the way it closes the “doughnut hole” in drug coverage and the way it protects early retirees.
Beyond that, the promise of unchanged benefits for Americans of a certain age just isn’t credible. Think about the political dynamics that would arise once someone born in 1956 still received full Medicare while someone born in 1959 couldn’t afford decent coverage. Do you really think that would be a stable situation? For sure, it would unleash political warfare between the cohorts — and the odds are high that older cohorts would soon find their alleged guarantees snatched away.
The question now is whether voters will understand what’s really going on (which depends to a large extent on whether the news media do their jobs). Mr. Ryan and his party are betting that they can bluster their way through this, pretending that they are the real defenders of Medicare even as they work to kill it. Will they get away with it?"

Sooner is better.  As soon as you can is best.

 I will continue here as long as you allow.  So far I can deal with it.
.

Thursday, August 30, 2012

.



http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/30/opinion/the-vacuum-behind-the-republican-political-slogans.html?ref=opinion

Editorial

The Vacuum Behind the Slogans


"The party that claims to have all the answers on Medicare seemed to have no interest in sharing them with the American people at its convention on Wednesday. The session, devoted to the theme of “We Can Change It,” never went any deeper than that slogan or a few others: Reform Medicare. Strengthen Medicare. Protect Medicare. All without the slightest hint of how that supposed reform or strengthening would take place, regarding that program and many others. “We will not duck the tough issues; we will lead,” said Representative Paul Ryan, in his speech accepting the vice-presidential nomination. “We will not spend four years blaming others; we will take responsibility.”
Sounds great, except that the speech ducked the tough issues and blamed others for the problems.
Mr. Ryan, who rose to prominence on the Republican barricades with a plan to turn Medicare into a voucher system, never uttered the word “voucher” to the convention. He said Medicare was there for his grandmother and mother, but neglected to say that he considers it too generous to be there in the same form for future grandmothers (while firmly opposing the higher taxes on the rich that could keep it strong). He never mentioned his plan to abandon Medicaid on the doorstep of the states, or that his budget wouldn’t come close to a balance for 28 years.
The reasons for that are clear: Details are a turn-off, at a boisterous convention or apparently in a full campaign. A New York Times poll last week showed that the Medicare plan advocated by Mr. Ryan and Mitt Romney was highly unpopular in the swing states of Florida, Ohio and Wisconsin. As soon as voters find out that the Republicans plan to offer retirees a fixed amount, they disapprove, clearly preferring the existing system.
The Romney campaign knows this, of course, so it has developed a counterstrategy that was fully on display at the convention for those who might have missed it on the trail: Don’t change the plans, but don’t talk about them, either. Instead, invent a phony attack on President Obama’s policies, which are public in full detail, and hope that voters get so confused that they throw up their hands and cast their vote on some other issue or on emotion.
The tactic was on display on Wednesday when Senator Marco Rubio of Florida solemnly told CBS News that Medicare will have to look different for a new generation. “Anyone who’s in favor of leaving it the way it is now is in favor of bankrupting it,” he said. Yet Mr. Ryan tried to frighten beneficiaries that evening by denouncing Mr. Obama for cutting $716 billion out of Medicare to pay for health care reform.
He didn’t say that the money would come out of hospitals and insurance companies, not benefits, and that he proposed exactly the same cut. He didn’t say that reform provides popular benefits to retirees, like the end of the prescription doughnut hole and improved preventive care. But the effect is clear: voters say in surveys that while they don’t like a Medicare voucher program, they don’t necessarily associate that with the Romney/Ryan ticket and are no less angry with Mr. Obama for his Medicare cuts. So far, the Democratic critique of Mr. Ryan’s plans has not substantially changed a very close race.
Mr. Ryan said he wouldn’t blame others, but the message was lost at a convention where the Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell, tore into Mr. Obama for spending too much time on his golf game and discussing his food preferences.
Did Mr. McConnell realize others were listening when he said that the country doesn’t know how the president would deal with the coming expiration of the Bush tax cuts? Mr. Obama has been explicitly clear about his plans: preserve the cuts for the middle class but not for the rich. Not mentioning that fact, and pretending that there is some doubt about it, is central to the Republican Party strategy of inventing an alternate reality.
Republicans also aren’t mentioning that their proposal to eliminate federal control of the Medicaid program for the poor would not only damage the health care of millions of struggling Americans but would also affect middle-class families who have relied on the program to pay for nursing home care. The Romney/Ryan plan would eliminate the protection that keeps a married couple from impoverishing itself to qualify for nursing home coverage.
The party platform mentions a few Medicaid details, but not a word of the real plan has been uttered at the convention microphone. The best way to duck the tough issues, apparently, is simply to claim very loudly that you are doing the opposite."























.

23:55, 8/29/12

The spam channel is choked with other hacked contacts.

Most of Europe and the US appears out of money.
Consumer buying is at an end.

The net is very quiet.

Nobody wants to start the avalanche of financial collapse.

Short of a crash there will be no resolution.

I read quiet panic among the cautious.

The next hurricane is forming in the mid Atlantic.

Conditions may look different in the morning.

Gas is over four dollars a gallon locally.

I have family showing up over the holiday.

The election is engendering almost no excitement.

The way on is well marked.  There is no way back.

We can all prosper or we can enter an age of faith and chill darkness.

Vote for the Democrats as the better deal.

















.

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

11:22, 8/29/12

.
Again I did not get the button pushed.

Issac downgraded.

Victory for me is your presence in my life.


Hayek considers goals.  He gets them wrong.
Keynes considers means and finds his General Theory.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_General_Theory_of_Employment,_Interest_and_Money

Most of government policy is executed through tax law.

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/29/unconventional/

"August 29, 2012, 9:40 am

Unconventional

No, I didn’t watch it. In the immortal words of Barbara Bush, why should I waste my beautiful mind on that?
Still, I get the essence. The GOP campaign is based on five main themes, three negative and two positive.
Negative:
The claim that Obama denigrated businessmen, saying that they didn’t build their own firms — which isn’t true.
The claim that Obama has gutted Medicare to pay for the expansion of health insurance — which isn’t true.
The claim that Obama has eliminated the work requirement for welfare — which isn’t true.
Positive:
The claim that Ryan has a plan to balance the budget — which isn’t true.
The claim that Romney has a plan for economic recovery — which isn’t true. (The Economist: “The Romney Programme for Economic Recovery, Growth and Jobs” is like “Fifty Shades of Grey” without the sex).
It seems to me that there’s a pattern here, but I can’t quit figure it out. The editorial page has some ideas.
Also, Robin Wells on health care and women, and Matt Miller on Christie.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/aug/28/mitt-romney-flipflops-healthcare-woo-back-women1

Mitt Romney flip-flops on healthcare to woo back women

"After disowning it, now Romney is embracing his Massachusetts healthcare law to win over female voters. That's not happening
Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan at a campaign stop in Manchester, New Hampshire
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney and VP nominee Paul Ryan at a campaign stop in Manchester, New Hampshire. Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters
The Romney camp has finally gotten it.
No, not about whether rape can ever be "legitimate". Or whether contraception is a fundamental right. No, what they have finally gotten is that they are likely to lose this election because of women.
Clear evidence of this is the volte-face the Romney camp has done in the past few days on "Romneycare", a topic that it had treated as thoroughly radioactive until now. And the Obama camp is banking on a case of irreconcilable differences between the Republicans and, come November, a majority of voting women to put them over the top.
In a sane Republican party, Romneycare, the healthcare overhaul Romney implemented as governor of Massachusetts and which Obamacare closely resembles, would be a major selling-point. It's overwhelmingly popular in Massachusetts, delivering to residents the highest percentage of insurance coverage in the country.
But sanity long since quit the Republican party. Republicans just plain hate Obamacare and they've pledged to wipe it out, root and branch. Romney, ever compliant towards the radicals in his party, ran away from his own signature governing accomplishment during the primary season as fast as he could.
Until now. In a Fox News interview on Sunday, Romney declared:
"With regards to women's healthcare, look, I'm the guy that was able to get healthcare for all the women and men in my state."
The host, Chris Wallace, parried, "So you're saying, look at Romneycare?" To which Romney replied, "Absolutely. I'm proud of what we did."
In belatedly embracing Romneycare, Romney is trying to make up lost ground on a policy that women are significantly more likely to support than men. By a wide margin, women are more likely to support health insurance requirements than men. Yet Romney, as always, hopes to have it both ways. He hopes that the public won't notice that, in order to satisfy his party, what he is really promising is not only the repeal of Obamacare, but also the destruction of Medicare, to be replaced by the Ryan voucher plan.
So, it's unlikely that a few insincere words delivered via a Fox News interview is going to mend Romney's broken relationship with women. And the fact is, it was never good to begin with.
Romney has consistently suffered from a significant gender gap, with Obama's lead among women clocking in at between 16 to 20 percentage points in April. Although that has since narrowed, a recent ABC/Washington Post poll gives Obama a 6 percentage point advantage nation-wide among women. Obama's advantage with women continues to more than offset Romney's advantage with men – enough, at this point, to deliver victory to Obama in November.
What the Romney camp is trying to come to terms with is that, in this election, caring and compassion are trumping perceptions of competence in managing the economy. In a recent CNN poll, 53% of likely voters stated that Obama is more in touch with the problems facing middle-class Americans, compared to only 39% who stated that Romney is more in touch. In contrast, Romney bested Obama by 48% to 44% on competence in managing the economy. Tellingly, though, Obama leads Romney 60% to 31% on the question of who is more in touch with the problems facing women today.
In reality, Romney's plan (that is, Paul Ryan's plan) for the economy would be an utter catastrophe, with savage cuts to government spending leading to a severely depressed economy, a skyrocketing deficit, and untold misery for the average American for years on end while the rich benefit. Despite Romney's unmerited reputation for competence in stewarding the economy, voters – women voters, to be exact – are signalling that Romney's vision of America is too extreme, too callous, too destructive.
Arguably, it might be the wrong comparison, but the conclusion is correct. I'll take it, flaws and all."


http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/29/opinion/how-the-republicans-built-it.html/?_r=1&hp
Editorial

How the Republicans Built It

It was a day late, but the Republicans’ parade of truth-twisting, distortions and plain falsehoods arrived on the podium of their national convention on Tuesday. Following in the footsteps of Mitt Romney’s campaign, rarely have so many convention speeches been based on such shaky foundations. Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey, in the keynote speech, angrily demanded that the American people learn the hard truths about the two parties, but like most of those at the microphone, he failed to supply any. He said his state needed his austere discipline of slashed budgets, canceled public projects and broken public unions, but did not mention that New Jersey now has a higher unemployment rate than when he took over, and never had the revenue boom he promised from tax cuts.
“We believe in telling our seniors the truth about our overburdened entitlements,” he said, but his party has consistently refused to come clean about its real plans to undo Medicare and Medicaid. “Mitt Romney will tell us the hard truths we need to hear to put us back on a path to growth,” he said, but Mr. Romney has consistently refused to tell the truth about his tax plan, his budget plan, and his health care plan.
It was appropriate that “We built it,” the needling slogan of the evening, was painted on the side of the convention hall. Speaker after speaker alluded to the phrase in an entire day based on the thinnest of reeds — a poorly phrased remark by the president, deliberately taken out of context. President Obama was making the obvious point that all businesses rely to some extent on the work and services of government. But Mr. Romney has twisted it to suggest that Mr. Obama believes all businesses are creatures of the government, and so the convention had to parrot the line.
“We need a president who will say to a small businesswoman: Congratulations, we applaud your success, you did make that happen, you did build that,” said Gov. Bob McDonnell of Virginia. “Big government didn’t build America; you built America!”
That was far from the only piece of nonsense on the menu, only the most frequently repeated one. Conventions are always full of cheap applause lines and over-the-top attacks, but it was startling to hear how many speakers in Tampa considered it acceptable to make points that had no basis in reality.
Gov. John Kasich of Ohio, for example, boasted of the booming economy in his state, never mentioning that he and Mr. Romney opposed the auto bailout that has played an outsized role in the state’s recovery. (Apparently Mr. Obama’s destructive economic policies do not apply everywhere.)
Andy Barr, a Congressional candidate in Kentucky, made the particularly egregious charge that the president was conducting “a war on coal,” ruthlessly attacking an industry and thousands of struggling miners.
He was apparently referring to the Environmental Protection Agency’s efforts to limit greenhouse gas emissions and prevent power-plant pollution from drifting through the East Coast states. The country desperately needs to reduce its reliance on coal, which is far more polluting than natural gas, but that goal gets harder to achieve every time someone like Mr. Barr makes it out to be an attack on a way of life.
Considering how Mr. Romney has conducted his campaign so far, most recently his blatantly false advertising accusing Mr. Obama of gutting the work requirement on welfare, it is probably not surprising that the convention he leads would follow a similar path.
Voters looking for a few nuggets of truth would not have found them in Tampa on Tuesday."

http://www.athensnews.gr/portal/1/57910


"by Dioni Vougioukli
29 Aug 2012

Tensions rose on Wednesday during a municipality employees' protest between MAT riot police and protesting garbage collectors

Tensions rose on Wednesday during a municipality employees' protest between MAT riot police and protesting garbage collectors
1. COALITION MEETING Political leaders broadly agree on an austerity package demanded by the country's lenders but have yet to decide on how to soften its impact on low-wage earners and pensioners, government officials and party leaders said on Wednesday. The austerity package will be ready next week to be presented to the troika, Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras said. Following the coalition leaders' meeting, Democratic Left leader Fotis Kouvelis told reporters that elaboration of the measures has not yet been completed, adding that efforts were being made to avoid across-the-board cuts, to which he said he was opposed, and to "protect the low and small incomes".
 
2. MUNICIPALITY STRIKE Local administration employees have called a two-day strike starting Wednesday, protesting for the municipalities' economic condition, cutbacks in salaries and lay-offs. The striking Attica municipal employees staged a demonstration and march to the interior ministry on Wednesday morning. Tensions rose during the protest between MAT riot police and protesting garbage collectors. Prime Minister Antonis Samaras was to meet on Wednesday afternoon with the mayors at their request. The final decisions on the further stance of the local administration employees will be taken on Thursday.
 
3. PIRATES ABOARD A Greek-operated oil tanker seized off Togo was tracked down on Wednesday off the coast of Nigeria under the control of pirates, the ship's operator and Togolese authorities said. The ship is operated by Golden Energy Management, which said in a statement that "the vessel is presently sailing off the coast of Nigeria under the control of pirates who have the intention to steal the cargo.” The crew are believed to be in good health and unharmed, the statement added. The Greek coastguard said there were 24 people on board, all of whom Russian nationals.
 
4. DEI TROUBLE Public Power Corporation (DEI) on Wednesday warned that a high level of unpaid debts to the utility – estimated at around 600-700 million euros - was creating a significant liquidity problem. The issue, along with a proposal to off-set public sector debt to DEI, were discussed during a meeting between Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras and DEI CEO Arthuros Zervos. On the same day the company’s alternate CEO Nikos Hatziargyriou had rendered his resignation from his post. Also on Wednesday, newspaper ToVima reported that DEI customers who cannot afford the property tax that is attached to their electricity bill will have to pay 50 euros in order for the tax to be removed from the bill.
 
5. HIDDEN CAMERA A 42-year-old high-school teacher who was arrested two years ago on child pornography charges had placed a hidden camera in a school classroom to secretly videotape pupils, police said on Wednesday. The recordings were discovered in a laboratory analysis of files found on the man's computer in January 2010, the cybercrime squad announced. Police said a total of 80 recordings were found, adding that the teacher had placed the hidden camera at a spot in the classroom so as to tape the genital area of the pupils undetected. In the statement announcing the discovery, the police gave no indication why it took so long to find the classroom recordings nor did they provide any information on the suspect's whereabouts or current employment status."
 

Greece will not receive more bailout cash.
There will be another election very soon.



http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/text/refresh/MIATCDAT4+shtml/291451.shtml


"000
WTNT44 KNHC 291451
TCDAT4

HURRICANE ISAAC DISCUSSION NUMBER  34
NWS NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER MIAMI FL       AL092012
1000 AM CDT WED AUG 29 2012

HURRICANE ISAAC IS INLAND OVER SOUTHEASTERN LOUISIANA NEAR HOUMA.
THE CYCLONE HAS MAINTAINED AN IMPRESSIVE RADAR SIGNATURE...WHICH
INCLUDES A RAGGED 40-NMI DIAMETER EYE. CURVED CONVECTIVE RAINBANDS
HAVE INCREASED IN THE EASTERN SEMICIRCLE...AND DOPPLER RADAR
VELOCITIES OF NEAR 80 KT OVER WATER SUPPORT KEEPING ISAAC AS A
MINIMAL HURRICANE FOR THIS ADVISORY. SIMILAR DOPPLER VELOCITIES
OVER LAND AND OVER LAKE PONTCHARTRAIN SUGGEST WIND GUSTS TO NEAR 80
KT COULD OCCUR INLAND OVER SOUTHEASTERN LOUISIANA INTO THIS
AFTERNOON. BY LATE THIS AFTERNOON OR EVENING...HOWEVER...ISAAC IS
FORECAST TO WEAKEN TO A TROPICAL STORM...AND BECOME A TROPICAL
DEPRESSION BY THURSDAY NIGHT.

THE INITIAL MOTION ESTIMATE IS 310/5. ISAAC IS EXPECTED TO MOVE
SLOWLY NORTHWESTWARD THROUGH A WEAKNESS IN THE SUBTROPICAL RIDGE
FOR THE NEXT 24 HOURS...AND THEN TURN NORTH-NORTHWESTWARD AND
NORTHWARD AROUND THE WESTERN PERIPHERY OF THE RIDGE BY 36 AND 48
HOURS...RESPECTIVELY. BY 72 HOURS...ISAAC IS FORECAST TO BECOME A
POST-TROPICAL REMNANT LOW PRESSURE SYSTEM THAT SHOULD MOVE
NORTHEASTWARD TO EAST-NORTHEASTWARD WHEN IT WILL BE CAUGHT UP IN
WEAK MID-LATITUDE WESTERLIES. THERE ARE CURRENTLY NO INDICATIONS IN
ANY OF THE MODEL GUIDANCE SUGGESTING THAT ISAAC WILL TAP INTO ANY
BAROCLINIC ENERGY SOURCES THAT COULD RESULT IN EXTRATROPICAL
STRENGTHENING OVER THE CENTRAL UNITED STATES. THE OFFICIAL TRACK
FORECAST IS SIMILAR TO THE PREVIOUS ADVISORY TRACK AND IS JUST EAST
OF THE MODEL CONSENSUS.

SINCE ISAAC IS FORECAST TO MOVE SLOWLY OVER THE NEXT 24-36 HOURS...
THERE WILL BE A PROLONGED THREAT OF FLOODING FROM HEAVY RAINS OVER
THE NORTHERN GULF COAST AREA AND THE SOUTH-CENTRAL UNITED STATES.

NATIONAL OCEAN SERVICE TIDE GAGES INDICATE THAT STORM SURGE HEIGHTS
OF 6 TO 8 FEET ARE STILL OCCURRING ALONG PORTIONS OF THE COAST OF
SOUTHEASTERN LOUISIANA AND MISSISSIPPI.  GIVEN THE LONG DURATION
OF ONSHORE FLOW IN THESE AREAS...WATER LEVELS ARE EXPECTED TO REMAIN
HIGH THROUGH TODAY.

A SPECIAL THANKS TO THE CREWS OF THE AIR FORCE RESERVE AND NOAA
HURRICANE HUNTERS WHO FLEW A TOTAL OF 34 HAZARDOUS MISSIONS INTO
ISAAC...WHICH RESULTED IN AN IMPRESSIVE TOTAL OF 95 CENTER FIXES.

FORECAST POSITIONS AND MAX WINDS

INIT  29/1500Z 29.6N  90.7W   65 KT  75 MPH...INLAND
 12H  30/0000Z 30.2N  91.4W   55 KT  65 MPH...INLAND
 24H  30/1200Z 31.2N  92.2W   45 KT  50 MPH...INLAND
 36H  31/0000Z 32.8N  93.1W   30 KT  35 MPH...INLAND
 48H  31/1200Z 34.6N  93.5W   25 KT  30 MPH...INLAND
 72H  01/1200Z 38.0N  92.5W   20 KT  25 MPH...POST-TROP/REMNT LOW
 96H  02/1200Z 40.0N  89.0W   15 KT  15 MPH...POST-TROP/REMNT LOW
120H  03/1200Z 41.0N  85.0W   15 KT  15 MPH...POST-TROP/REMNT LOW

$$
FORECASTER STEWART"

The local emergency services could handle this.  Whether they will is another question.

Greek coalition meets to finalise €11.5bn austerity measures

Greece's coalition partners are meeting to finalise €11.5bn in savings needed to unlock bankruptcy-saving loans from the EU and the International Monetary Fund.
29 Aug 2012
| 3 Comments

Record deposit flight from Spanish banks

Spain has suffered the worst haemorrhaging of bank deposits since the launch of the euro, losing funds equal to 7pc of its GDP in a single month during July.
28 Aug 2012
| 204 Comments


I will post again late tonight.





































.