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Paul Krugman Awarded Nobel Prize For Economics

zogger writes in his journal, "The guy who put together the concept of geographical location combined with cheap transportation leading to 'like trades with like' and the rise of superindustrial trading blocs has won the Nobel economics science prize. He's a bigtime critic of a lot of this administration's policies, and is unabashedly an FDR-economy styled fella. Here is his blog at the NYTimes." Reader yoyoq adds that Krugman's career choice was inspired by reading Asimov's Foundation series at a young age.

425 comments

  1. Seems like a very cool guy by religious+freak · · Score: 2, Interesting

    He was on the newshour with Jim Lehrer last night and spoke intelligently and seemed very down to earth. I had a real respect for him when he mentioned he was inspired by Asimov.

    http://www.pbs.org/newshour/video/module.html?mod=0&pkg=13102008&seg=5

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    1. Re:Seems like a very cool guy by wrecked · · Score: 5, Informative

      I had a real respect for him when he mentioned he was inspired by Asimov.

      For more geek cred: while at Princeton in 1978, Krugman wrote a tongue-in-cheek paper titled The Theory of Interstellar Trade (PDF) (see Slashdot article on it).

    2. Re:Seems like a very cool guy by Lumpmoose · · Score: 5, Funny

      For even more geek cred: he made an 'All your base' reference on Olbermann last month: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pVsYZo86S-k (0:48)

    3. Re:Seems like a very cool guy by Snaller · · Score: 1

      Heh, yes Hari Seldon and Psycho history - I too remember the foundation well. Hari calculated the fall of the empire, years before it became apparent to the ordinary guy - Krugman has become a bit of Hari Seldon himself.

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    4. Re:Seems like a very cool guy by Petrushka · · Score: 1

      Thank you for that, I had read it a long time ago but had forgotten it. It's a real gem. I find it pleasing indeed, and it demonstrates Asimov's influence, that the two example planets he chooses to discuss are Earth and Trantor.

    5. Re:Seems like a very cool guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was cool. It's too bad he turned into a partisan hack.

    6. Re:Seems like a very cool guy by VShael · · Score: 3, Funny

      Won't be long now before the Chinese will be telling the US "All your business belong to us"

  2. Huff post concerned primarily with douchbaggery by Gat0r30y · · Score: 0, Troll
    The Huffington Post seems most concerned with Krugman's potential to be an ass about it:

    said one of Mr. Krugman's Princeton associates, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "But now he's walking around like he's Jay-Z or something."

    So... when is Hova gonna get the Nobel?

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    1. Re:Huff post concerned primarily with douchbaggery by StevenMaurer · · Score: 3, Informative

      The author of the article was joking.

      Andy Borowitz is a comedian and writer whose work appears in The New Yorker and The New York Times, and at his award-winning humor site, BorowitzReport.com.

    2. Re:Huff post concerned primarily with douchbaggery by Gat0r30y · · Score: 1

      Indeed he was - though I have always subscribed to the philosophy that something isn't funny if you have to point out that its a joke (I just thought the Jay-Z comment was too funny not to share).

      --
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    3. Re:Huff post concerned primarily with douchbaggery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you haven't really followed him, but you know his work has "a hint of douchebaggery". You, sir, are an idiot, of the kind that does not recognize he is an idiot.

    4. Re:Huff post concerned primarily with douchbaggery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You admit you haven't read up on him but conclude he's a "douchebag" anyway, and to knock this left-leaning economist you link to an article from a right-wing publication that declares without evidence that if somebody wins an honor who just so happens to be critical of the Bush administration, the honor is due to politics. You sure it isn't instead that reality's well-known liberal bias is grabbing the Republicans by the ear and taking them out to the woodshed for a much deserved whipping?

    5. Re:Huff post concerned primarily with douchbaggery by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I don't think you read the article. It did highlight a few of the nonsensical remarks he's made over the past decade, and those were what I was referring to. No, I haven't followed him, but that doesn't mean I haven't read a few of his remarks. Also, I'm not sure where you got the idea that I concluded that "he's a douchebag." I believe the words I used were "hint of douchebaggery," which could be interpreted as "indication," not "definite proof." Lastly, you can say what you want about some alleged bias that reality has towards "liberals", but given the virulent nature of Krugman's recent political opinions, it's very hard to ignore the political aspect of his being chosen.

    6. Re:Huff post concerned primarily with douchbaggery by retchdog · · Score: 3, Funny

      retchdog's corollary to Gat0r30y's law: Nothing is funny on slashdot.

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    7. Re:Huff post concerned primarily with douchbaggery by doom · · Score: 1

      Well, I just read the article, and what I see is a couple of lines devoid of context that are being used to support a sweeping statement, and there you have the conservative-hit-piece MO in a nutshell.

      Dismiss the remark "if the rich get more, that leaves less for everyone else" as over-simplified, if you like, but try reading the entire article and tell me that Krugman isn't talking about a real problem: For richer

      You might consider this point (which addresses your implicit "but the pie gets bigger!" argument): "We pride ourselves, with considerable justification, on our record of economic growth. But over the last few decades it's remarkable how little of that growth has trickled down to ordinary families." Or how about this point: "The reason conservatives engage in bouts of Sweden-bashing is that they want to convince us that there is no tradeoff between economic efficiency and equity -- that if you try to take from the rich and give to the poor, you actually make everyone worse off. But the comparison between the U.S. and other advanced countries doesn't support this conclusion at all."

      But on the other hand, I have no doubt that you're correct that the award is "politically motivated", at least in part: it's much like the Dixie Chicks getting a Grammie... there are so many people so disgusted with the Bush regime at this point that the awards committees can't resist tweaking some Republican noses.

      (And if anyone cares, this is my take on Krugman: KRUGMAN_FUNNIES.)

    8. Re:Huff post concerned primarily with douchbaggery by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      But only if someone comes along and explains why this is so...

      (Think about it... think about it...)

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    9. Re:Huff post concerned primarily with douchbaggery by ChadAmberg · · Score: 2, Funny

      Waitjustaminute.... The Huffington Post is right wing? Who are you, Stalin?

    10. Re:Huff post concerned primarily with douchbaggery by retchdog · · Score: 1

      Shhh... my +4 Funny is dependent on the invalidity of my corollary. I am savoring this.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    11. Re:Huff post concerned primarily with douchbaggery by gordo3000 · · Score: 1

      of course, the article completely ignores that he has won several others economics awards including the Clark Medal and states that he was a very well respected economist (and continues to be) during the time he did the work he got the medal for (the same work he got the clark medal for).

      of course, it also leaves out any example of other economists who are "far more deserving".

      I don't agree with most of his political views but he has done some great work in economics and has long been considered a possible Nobel candidate. Given his past accomplishments in the field, it's easy to tag this article as conservative whining and complaining when they try to diminish the past accomplishments of someone simply because they disagree (the Nobel prize is almost never given for recent work, it's always work done 10, 20, or even 50 years before).

      The choice of Al Gore was... surprising to say the least... as I don't agree he has done anything the peace medal has historically gone towards but Jimmy Carter has done a great deal of work and definitely fell in the long term category of candidates for the prize.

  3. Deserved by RJBeery · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not saying that Paul Krugman does not deserve a Nobel Prize, but I would like to point out that the judging and awarding process of said prize is subject to the political agenda of those involved, just like the wording of this submission.

    1. Re:Deserved by SirLanse · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      He needs to read the forgotten man
      http://www.amazon.com/Forgotten-Man-History-Great-Depression/dp/0066211700/ref=tag_tdp_sv_edpp_pop_t
      It details how FDR made a minor recession into the Great Depression.
      Socialism has FAILED everywhere it has been tried.
      Capitalism is not perfect, but then again humans are not perfect.
      Stop giving MY MONEY to other people!
      Taking less money is not the same as giving money.
      Tax breaks are not welfare.

    2. Re:Deserved by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      This really requires mentioning that the prize in Economics is not one of the Nobel Prizes, though there is limited political influence on the selection. The more-often-criticized selection, the Peace Prize, has much heavier political influence, but is decided by a different committee and hosted by a different country.

      The scientific Nobel Prizes are quite free of political agenda.

    3. Re:Deserved by SerpentMage · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Interesting...

      Did you maybe happen to look at what he won his prize on?

      It actually is a very interesting theory and idea...

      Oh but wait he is a LIBERAL... and thus he can't have good ideas...

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    4. Re:Deserved by yali · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Especially interesting is that the work Krugman won his prize for is about global free trade. Like most economists who've seriously studied the issue, Krugman has concluded that free trade is unabashedly a good thing.

      But in the current U.S. political climate, free trade is mostly being touted by conservatives and reviled by liberals. So if you're a conservative and you want to claim liberal bias, you have to account for the fact that Krugman got the prize for work you probably agree with. And if you're a protectionist liberal who wants to boast, you're similarly stuck.

      And if you're just generally tired of ideologues crowing about victory or whining about bias when neither is deserved, you can enjoy the whole spectacle of people getting tongue tied when someone wins the Nobel prize on (gasp) the strength of his ideas.

    5. Re:Deserved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correct. Liberals can't have good ideas whereas conservatives just can't have ideas.

    6. Re:Deserved by MushMouth · · Score: 1

      Except Krugman was given the award for his papers explaining international trade, and had nothing to do with Krugman, as the open liberal oped columnist (BTW economics is not an official Nobel Prize, its the The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobell )

    7. Re:Deserved by XDirtypunkX · · Score: 1, Informative

      If it details how FDR made a minor recession into the Great Depression, it should be dismissed outright.

      GNP fell 31% between 1929 and 1932. Roosevelt was inaugurated in 1933. In 1934, 1935, 1936 and 1937 GNP rose by 7.7%, 8.1%, 14.1% and 5%. In 1938 there was a slight recession and then in 1939 GNP went up by 7.9%.

      Note that Calvin Coolidge was extremely Laissez-Faire and he was the man behind the wheel most of the time in the events leading up to the depression, followed by Hoover who was only slightly less Laissez-Faire... and GNP fell every year under his term.

      In short, you fail at history!

    8. Re:Deserved by extintor · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying that Paul Krugman does not deserve a Nobel Prize, but I would like to point out that the judging and awarding process of said prize is subject to the political agenda of those involved, just like the wording of this submission.

      I'm not sure what the National Swedish Bank have for hidden agenda... And oh, it's not a Nobel prize :)

  4. Hari Seldon says... by simaolation · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...shit! Trantor is only worth as much as Compton now!

  5. The other side..... by jmorris42 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Of course others differ in their opinion of Krugman....

    Krugman's Posthumous Nobel

    And doesn't it make perfect sense that this assclown puts such stock in Asimov's Foundation books? A fictional story that makes zero sense unless one postulates a totally hypothetical science that allows sociologists to acually make valid predictions about human behaviour. That was what the books were about, an exploration of the consequences that would follow from such a discovery, i.e. it was typical of most hard SciFi then and now in that it postulates some new thing and explores the consequences.

    Too bad a large portion of the left believes that it possesses the ability to do the sort of micro control today that would in reality only be possible after Hari Seldon created the tools.

    --
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    1. Re:The other side..... by the_skywise · · Score: 1

      Are you insinuating that Krugman's The Mule?

    2. Re:The other side..... by jcr · · Score: 1

      a totally hypothetical science that allows sociologists to acually make valid predictions about human behaviour.

      That was always a bit of a disturbing aspect for me of Asimov's work. The foundation series, and the robot series as well, both have this nasty premise that people should be manipulated by the characters that Asimov considers superior.

      -jcr

      --
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    3. Re:The other side..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Huh. I wonder if you understand the difference between "inspired to go into the field" and "puts stock in". Just kidding, I already know the answer.

      I mean seriously, what if he said he was inspired to go into aerospace engineering by the same books? Would you complain that he puts too much stock in books that require hypothetical FTL drives to be invented, and that his ambitions to eventually people a colony on mars requires science we don't have yet?

    4. Re:The other side..... by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      assclown? English has tens of thousands of potential insults-- and you come up with "assclown"?

    5. Re:The other side..... by ThreeE · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree with you that that sort of micro control is BS, but you are the ass clown if you are condemning a Nobel Prize winner based only on the fact that he read a book once. He never said he put any stock in "Psychohistory."

    6. Re:The other side..... by jmorris42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > The foundation series, and the robot series as well, both have this nasty premise
      > that people should be manipulated by the characters that Asimov considers superior.

      Asimov was a socialist. Of course this was from a time when all right thinking people believed socialism was the future, but he never appears to have totally freed his mind from many of the basic assumptions that underlie the system of ideas we lump under the word. In his case the notions behind 'scientific socialism' seems to have been deeply engrained into him. The idea that scientists and assorted elite intellectuals were the rightful ruling class; that under their enlightened rule the lot of the masses would be improved was pervasive during his formative years and carried over into much of his work. It doesn't take much imagination to see how the idea of the new soviet man morphed into the all knowing benevolent rule of the robots in his later works. It became obvious to all thinking creatures that no human could know enough, be just enough, etc. to actually be entrusted with the sort of absolute power fascism/socialism/communism implied, thus his later works substituited robots.

      Notice how his later books reveal the robots to have absolutely taken over all important aspects of human society, but that we are told that this isn't a totalitarian distopia, nay the future projected in the book is virtually a utopia. We are carefully lead to believe we are still in control because we have a need to believe we are free people who are in control of our destiny, but that it is a carefully maintained fiction,

      More importantly, a careful reader can see that the whole system is already blowing itself to hell. The robots have already discarded the laws of robotics, substituiting for them a notion that they should generally follow the laws in terms of protecting humans as a group if not as individuals, but hey! ya gotta break a few eggs to mame an omelette. They allow humans to die, both by acts of omission and commission in the name of their new greater mission to serve humanity by ruling them. Where have we heard that crap before?

      --
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    7. Re:The other side..... by oldhack · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Krugman explained there is more to trade than simple comparative advantage - Japan and Germany don't make and sell cars the world over because engines grow on tree in their soil. That's the work cited for prize.

      Who's the assclown? You, citing intellectually decaying National Review (just hounded out a Buckley, didn't it, any sane one left there?), or Krugman for liking science fiction.

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    8. Re:The other side..... by philspear · · Score: 4, Informative

      Of course others differ in their opinion of Krugman....

      I have to point out that the "other" side does not have a nobel prize or a college diploma, and appears on Fox news and National review.

      (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Luskin)

    9. Re:The other side..... by Nethead · · Score: 1

      Damn insightful. And I just used up all my mods points a few minutes ago.

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    10. Re:The other side..... by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > You, citing intellectually decaying National Review (just hounded out a Buckley, didn't it,

      Because on the Right we don't go much for pedigree. Bill Buckley was an intellectual giant but it is painfully obvious he failed to impart the importance of intellectual rigor to his son. Go read his endorsement of Obama if you don't believe me, there ain't a shred of rational argument in it. All emotion and feelings, i.e. left. We think, you guys feel. It's why NR is such a hotbed of reasoned but passionate debate over ideas and the huffington post is a bunch of vacuous twits pretending to be intellectuals. Which is why Christopher Buckley had to go be with his own kind. Perhaps age will bring him wisdom.

      > or Krugman for liking science fiction.

      No. I was criticizing his choice of science fiction. See the difference? Scoialists see the Foundation series very differently than people like me. I found them disturbing, socialists tend to see a positive vision of the future in them.

      --
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    11. Re:The other side..... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      What books are you exactly referring to? I've read pretty much all of them, and none of them qualify as an Utopia ruled by robots. The part where the robots have discarded the laws of robotics is indeed true - but that was there as a point to demonstrate that the laws were not perfect, and could not prevent the kind of stuff that they were designed to prevent.

      Your comment makes absolutely no sense.

      --
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    12. Re:The other side..... by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      Of course others differ in their opinion of Krugman....

      I have to point out that the "other" side does not have a nobel prize or a college diploma, and appears on Fox news and National review.

      (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Luskin)

      Milton Friedman was often at odds with Krugman, and he did have a nobel.

      --
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    13. Re:The other side..... by oldhack · · Score: 1

      You are such an Einstein that you can't bring up a single legit criticism of Krugman's trade theory, for which the prize was awarded, while calling him an assclown?

      Your primitive brain reveals itself by your allusions to "you left" vs. "we" ("right" I'm guessing), "socialist" vs. (presumably) "capitalist". Have fun in your linear universe. Hotbed of something alright.

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    14. Re:The other side..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I never looked at it that way.

      One of the points he goes over and over again (Asimov and the character Hari Seldon) is the way that the imaginary sociological science (psychohistory) only works in a statistical sense, not for predicting individual actions -- kind of like the ideal gas law doesn't predict the motion of individual molecules. In that sense, if someone does have the key to understanding the process of human history on a grand scale, it would give them a huge advantage when it comes to manipulating things, albeit over a long period of time and en masse. I never thought of it as "should be manipulated" so much as "IF there really was a way to predict like that, it would mean humanity was open to much more manipulation than expected, and here's the sci-fi result." Is that disturbing? Maybe, but if there isn't such a means of predicting mass human behavior then the disturbing aspects are as hypothetical as psychohistory is. Notwithstanding this "grand scale" of potential control/manipulation is the fact that, in the stories, individual people and their individual actions DO make an enormous difference many times.

      Heck, I find Santa Claus disturbing in some ways, spying on us all the time and assessing whether we are naughty or nice, but he's hypothetical. If someone could have that kind of power or wrote a story about what it would be like if they did I wouldn't necessarily think that they were saying people should do things that way.

      So robots start controlling humanity in accordance with their thinking about the Three Laws? Would the Zeroth Law be an inevitable outcome of the application of the others? If psychohistory were invented, would it yield a better outcome or not? Could humans ever evolve into odd, augmented beings like the Solarans? Which is more important to human history: individual actions at key moments or the broad ebb and flow of history? Would all that be good or bad? What are the implications?

      It's fiction. An interesting "what if?" story. There's nothing saying it "should" be that way. If Asimov was putting any message in there (i.e. beyond merely being entertaining), I suspect it is simply that we should think about the implications of where we are going as broader humanity and how we each fit into it.

    15. Re:The other side..... by philspear · · Score: 1

      Yes, but did he have a college diploma??? No? Didn't think so.

      Sorry, you're right, I should have been more specific: the guy cited bashing Krugman apperantly is something of an anti-krugman fanatic, is a college dropout, has won no awards, and is a worthless pundit. That's not to say everyone who disagrees with Krugman is that way, and also not to imply that not having a college degree makes you dumb, I just thought it was helpful in highlighting the ridiculousness of someone who appears to be the Anne Coulter of economics.

    16. Re:The other side..... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 5, Insightful

      More importantly, a careful reader can see that the whole system is already blowing itself to hell. The robots have already discarded the laws of robotics, substituiting for them a notion that they should generally follow the laws in terms of protecting humans as a group if not as individuals, but hey! ya gotta break a few eggs to mame an omelette. They allow humans to die, both by acts of omission and commission in the name of their new greater mission to serve humanity by ruling them. Where have we heard that crap before?

      It doesn't take careful reading at all to see the system is blowing itself to hell. The failure of the 3 Laws begins in the second short story of I, Robot, and by the end of the same book the robots control everything and are already sacrificing individuals for the "good of the whole". The entire point of the book is that he hypothesizes these perfect laws that you can somehow program a robot to never violate, and then proceeds to show all the ways these "perfect" laws fail and yield undesirable results.

      So given that he goes out of his way to show you how the system fails in rather deliberate and obvious ways, I'm not sure how you conclude that his point was that totalitarian socialism works as long as you have perfect beings in control. Is it that there are characters who argue in favor of the system, without being overtly evil like O'Brien of 1984? That's not Asimov's style.

      I suppose you would also say the point of Foundation is that once you have invented psychohistory, you can control the future perfectly and the masses will simply do what you want with no need for individualism, even though at every point in time it took daring and creative individuals a great deal of effort to actually overcome the obstacles?

      --

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    17. Re:The other side..... by unlametheweak · · Score: 1

      The idea that scientists and assorted elite intellectuals were the rightful ruling class

      Much can be said today about entrepreneurs and the business elite. People worship what is fashionable. Arnold Schwarzenegger opined on this when he first ran for governor, noting his business success.

    18. Re:The other side..... by bledri · · Score: 2, Informative

      All emotion and feelings, i.e. left. We think, you guys feel.

      Oh please, there is plenty of stupidity to go around. There are people on the Right who think Obama is an Arab, Muslim, and/or terrorist and scream "kill him!" at rallies. There are people on the Right that think the earth is 6,000 years old. There are people on the Right that want to force teaching "intelligent design" and want to outlaw teaching evolution. And there are people on the Right that think that a total lack of regulation is a good thing. There are people on the Right that put all of their faith in the "invisible hand."

      "We think", no. "You believe," there's a difference.

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    19. Re:The other side..... by againjj · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Well, remember that his books also state that the ruling class is not the right way to go. The robot series ends with Robots and Empire, which states that humanity living without robots is healthier (this is where the Zeroth law comes in, which you obliquely refer to in your last paragraph). The Foundation series ends with Foundation's Edge and Foundation and Earth where the true solution is Galaxia, without the overlords of the First or Second Foundations (a "living death", in the words of Gaia). There is also reference to The End of Eternity, where the overlords of Eternity are brought to an end, since they do more harm than good, preventing humanity from reaching its full potential.

      In sum, I would say you overgeneralized.

    20. Re:The other side..... by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > ..the guy cited bashing Krugman apperantly is something of an anti-krugman fanatic,
      > is a college dropout, has won no awards, and is a worthless pundit.

      Normally I recommend against trusting Wikipedia but since the origional guy cited it I wonder if he can read since when I read it it tells me Luskin could probably BUY the NYT if he really wanted to and just fire Krugman.... except of course you can't actually buy it because of the family trust and it's preferred stock. Somehow I trust somebody talking about economics who has actually DONE things more than a crazy old marxist ranting tired old BSD drivel in a dying (Netcraft confirms it!) newspaper.

      Real economists seem to agree Krugman did worthwhile work long ago, but his mind has long since withered away. No sane person believes the Nobel Committee made the award based on his previous economic work vs his contemporary political ravings. This is the same bunch of useful idiots who gave a Nobel to Al Gore after all.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    21. Re:The other side..... by AdamHaun · · Score: 1

      We think, you guys feel.

      You know that's exactly what people on the left say about you, right? That you guys are too busy with jingoistic cheerleading and hating immigrants/liberals/terrorists to bother thinking about anything. The NR hosts a blog called "Liberal Fascism" whose header image is a smiley face with a Hitler mustache. One of the front page articles is called "Barack Obama is hazardous to a culture of life -- lives depend on your vote!". Yeah, no appeals to emotion there.

      News flash: *everyone* thinks their own ideas are well-thought-out and their opponents' ideas are fluff. They're half-right -- almost everyone's ideas about almost everything are fluff. It takes depressing amounts of evidence and analysis to be sure of even the simplest and most concrete of things. When it comes to softer stuff like macroeconomics it's hard to get any evidence that isn't tarred with interpretations and post-hoc rationalizations. There's certainly no position solid enough to be worth calling names over.

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    22. Re:The other side..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I have 150 slashdot freaks!"

      And it's no wonder if that nonsense is any indication of the way your mind works.

    23. Re:The other side..... by philspear · · Score: 1

      Normally I recommend against trusting Wikipedia...

      You don't trust wiki or the articles it cites but you DO trust a guy who has devoted his life to taking down a nobel-laureate economist because he doesn't like what he's saying? Why is it most conservatives are so skeptical about anything that doesn't agree with their worldview, but are so gullible when it does?

      Somehow I trust somebody talking about economics who has actually DONE things more than a crazy old marxist ranting tired old BSD drivel in a dying (Netcraft confirms it!) newspaper

      You're right, the current economic crisis clearly proves that bankers, presidents with MBAs, and other people who have actually done "things" know economics much better than nobel laureates.

      Also, "marxist" as an insult? Really? Get with the times, the cold war is over.

      This is the same bunch of useful idiots who gave a Nobel to Al Gore after all.

      See, now I was about to say "These are the same forward thinking people who awarded Al Gore a prize for his important work raising awareness of the dangers of global warming." Just kidding, but surely you don't think that's at all convincing to those people who don't already hate Krugman and the Nobel comittee for awarding him.

    24. Re:The other side..... by pugugly · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This seems to be a careful attempt to read his books without studying both sides of the issues he presents.

      Asimov posits both positive and negative issues resulting from the robot based society he has created - and you obviously went to a great deal of effort to ignore half his writing if you only saw him speaking of some wonderful liberal society rising from it.

      Anyone that reads it otherwise, has a fairly obvious axe to grind.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    25. Re:The other side..... by pugugly · · Score: 1

      Krugman's site at Princeton has a rather interesting semi-bio titled How I work that gives a pretty good breakdown of his use of models and simplifications, most of which I think can be boiled down to "Simplified Models are great, but don't confuse the map for the terrain".

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    26. Re:The other side..... by jbeach · · Score: 1
      I've always thought of the Foundation series, that Asimov painted himself into a corner. He started out with the premise that an ideal human society would be run from on top by the "smart people", who were the only people who could be unbiased and with the best of intentions.

      Then, as he got further towards the end of that first arc, around "Second Foundation" I think he started to see a bit more clearly into the inner politics and power-lust of all humans, smart or not. This shows in some of the internal politics shown by the inside of the Second Foundation.

      So I think he merged the robots into this universe, as the only way to have a group of rulers who really could be trusted to serve humans selflessly.

      This was a bit of a cop-out, for me. I think a cooler ending would be to have ended the arc with Hari Seldon having seen the possibility of his own Second Foundation becoming a well-intentioned tyranny - and set things up in a way that they couldn't see their own demise, as well, as everyone attained the skills and knowledge stemming from psychohistory.

      But, I didn't write it. :) And that's overall a nitpick on my part - they're still great stories with a lot of great ideas in them.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    27. Re:The other side..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to further elaborate the point (it seems people here talk about the books without having actually read them), in the second Foundation book, Asimov examines the limitations of psychohistory - the Mule, an individual, disrupts Seldon's plans and it takes other individuals to try and put the future back on the right path.

    28. Re:The other side..... by jbeach · · Score: 1

      Buckley was a great writer, but I don't see him as a great intellectual. Granted, I'm not a conservative. But from what I've read of his work, I haven't read a lot of logical points. It's occurred to me more as dressing up some points that I consider rather irrational - his support of segregation and the Viet Nam war, for instance - in beautiful phrases that *sound* reasonable, as long as the underlying assumptions aren't looked at clearly.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    29. Re:The other side..... by againjj · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A good example is the end of I, Robot, where the machines control the economy (and therefore all of society (echoes of the US gov?)) for the good of humanity. Another example is the Foundation series, where the Second Foundation is helping guide events so that the First Foundation will eventually grow to be a society where the populace will accept the Second Foundation as leaders.

    30. Re:The other side..... by jbeach · · Score: 1
      Somehow I trust somebody talking about economics who has actually DONE things more than a crazy old marxist ranting tired old BSD drivel in a dying (Netcraft confirms it!) newspaper.

      Since all those millionaires running our economy have done so well for us recently...

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    31. Re:The other side..... by lenski · · Score: 1

      "Reading... It's fundamental!" -- Try it sometime, you might like it. Or perhaps you are simply attracted as a moth to the light of a burning strawman.

      Nobody with a triple digit IQ thinks now, or ever did, think that psychohistory Actually Works. The point to the Foundation trilogy++ and a huge fraction of SF is not "psychohistory" or any of the other magical impossible inventions of the literature but the idea of applying one's life faithfully to the proposition that humanity is worth working for.

      Whether

      a large portion of the left believes that it possesses the ability to do the sort of micro control today

      is a valid proposition whose debate must be left for another day. Personally, I don't see it. In general The Left tend to be castigated for believing that societies can benefit broadly by providing a helping hand to their less fortunate members.

    32. Re:The other side..... by T3Tech · · Score: 1

      Krugman explained there is more to trade than simple comparative advantage - Japan and Germany don't make and sell cars the world over because engines grow on tree in their soil. That's the work cited for prize.

      Well damn, if I knew I could get a Nobel prize for simply pointing out rather obvious facts that most people of at least average intelligence are already aware of...

      --
      Of course I didn't RTFA... why would I do that? You really are new here aren't you? Don't let my UID fool you.
    33. Re:The other side..... by jmorris42 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      > You don't trust wiki or the articles it cites but you DO trust a guy who has devoted his life...

      Nope, Wikipedia is broken by design. But it probably has enough right in this case to say Luskin proabably has more of a life than just his running feud with Krugman.

      > You're right, the current economic crisis clearly proves that bankers, presidents with MBAs, and
      > other people who have actually done "things" know economics much better than nobel laureates.

      Yup. The current crisis is a result of marxism, not a failure of capitalism. The "President with an MBA" warned of the danger Freddie and Fannie posed to our economy repeatedly and loudly. Hell, even the 'ol Arkansas Horndog tried to reign em in. The normally Democrat loving McCainiac signed onto an effort to stop the ACORN inspired madness going on. Freddie and Fannie are government creatures having nothing at all to do with a free market economy. And since this bailout didn't disolve Freddie and Fannie we will be repeating this crisis in a decade.

      > Also, "marxist" as an insult? Really? Get with the times, the cold war is over.

      No it isn't over. Reagan defeated the Soviet Union but he didn't get a chance to finish the War. The War isn't over until we face up to and defeat the 5th column still working it's way through American Society spreading rot and ruin behind it. ACORN, most of academia, most of the higher echlons of the Democrat Party most certainly including (just listing the ones most responsible for this crisis as examples) but not limited to: Barack Obama, Charlie Rangel[sp], Barney Frank, Chris Dodd. All these people knew they were creating a disaster and didn't care.

      Try this if you really want to be scared:

      Barack Obama and the Strategy of Manufactured Crisis

      > "These are the same forward thinking people who awarded Al Gore a prize for his
      > important work raising awareness of the dangers of global warming."

      He made a documentary. And a bad one full of factual errors at that. For that he gets a Nobel Peace Prize? President Reagan defeated the Soviet Union with but a word, freeing millions from slavery and tyranny without a single shot fired. Al Gore => Ronald Reagan? On Peace? We obviously aren't on the same planet.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    34. Re:The other side..... by philspear · · Score: 1

      Yup. The current crisis is a result of marxism, not a failure of capitalism.

      I don't know much about economics, so maybe this is my ignorance coming through, but I'm doubtfull that Fannie Mae is an example of marxism. Even if it is, it's my understanding that it was private banks which gleefully picked up the home loans, for some reason assuming it was a good investment. Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the lesson here, if anything, that private enterprise and government enterprises don't always interface well? It seems unjustified to me to say it was the government half of the equation that was the entire problem, not at all greed and carelessness on the other side.

      I also don't know much about the previous depression, but I was under the (quite possibly mistaken) impression it was because of a lack of government controls. That said, I don't remember how or if that was explained. ... Feeling a little self conscious about my ignorance here, so I have to say the following: I know a lot more about my field of expertise (cell biology) than economics.

      The War isn't over until we face up to and defeat the 5th column still working it's way through American Society spreading rot and ruin behind it.

      I'm really going to need you to explain some of that. I know you say the current economic mess is clearly a result of communism, any other examples? I work in acadamia, biology specifically. Am I or my colleagues communist and how are we destroying american society?

      Anyway, for most of us, "marxist" is not an insult, anymore than calling someone a "yankee" is.

    35. Re:The other side..... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 3, Informative

      But the question is - is that portrayed as good? The short answer is that in both, it isn't. Ultimately, it all falls apart, with the message that humanity has to stand on its own.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    36. Re:The other side..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      As you pointed out, the robots stories started with the Three Laws and then explored limits and problems related to them. You didn't spell it out, but there is a parallel in the Foundation trilogy, where one of the problems with predicting the future via psychohistory was that eventually random factors would screw the predictions up... in particular, a mutant human ("the Mule") developed nontrivial psychic powers and just shot the whole plan to Hell. I'll always remember the scene where the reporters visited the vault where the recordings of Hari Seldon played, and his latest recording was just wrong.

    37. Re:The other side..... by oldhack · · Score: 1

      Hah, I don't think you're all that far off in social sciences. Key seems to be wrapping it in an accepted formalism.

      Good luck - there are plenty obvious "facts" and it's a nice chunk of cash.

      --
      Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    38. Re:The other side..... by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Since all those millionaires running our economy have done so well for us recently...

      If you're talking about the US, it's been a long time since mere millionares were running the country. To the people really in charge, a millionaire would be classified among the poor people. To actually be rich and powerful in the US now, you have to count your dollars in units of a billion.

      (OTOH, there is a theory that the people really running the country are the millions of unknown bureaucrats in both the government and corporate worlds, who routinely make hash of whatever decrees come down from on high. Those people are rarely if ever millionaries, except maybe for the few that have good rackets going on the side. ;-)

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    39. Re:The other side..... by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > but I'm doubtfull that Fannie Mae is an example of marxism.

      But it is. Most people knew nothing about Freddie and Fannie until a few weeks ago. They are old New Deal relics that won't die. They were created to help the 'poor' get a home loan. Right before they blew up they were involved with almost half of home loans. Now either that is a hell of a mission creep or half of America is in poverty. What they were doing is buying up paper from banks and packaging them as 'mortgage backed securities' and reselling them. The magic they were performing was due to their being government enterprises, thus the securities were government backed and nobody bothered to look at the underlying assets since Uncle Sugar was supposed to cover the bet.

      I won't repeat all of what others have said better in other places but basically Freddie and Fannie distorted the entire market with their antics. Because they accounted for so much of the market their rules came to dominate even transactions that didn't eventually get sold to them. And increasingly Freddie, Fannie and the Democrats in Congress[1] were pushing the notion to give anybody who wanted one a home loan, after all Freddie and Fannie would buy the loan from ya, sprinkle some taxpayer insurance on it and resell it as a Mortgage Backed Security and everybody wins. Right up until everybody lost when Freddie and Fannie went under and people quickly realized even Uncle Sugar couldn't possibly cover all the bets.

      > Even if it is, it's my understanding that it was private banks which gleefully picked up
      > the home loans, for some reason assuming it was a good investment. Correct me if I'm wrong,
      > but isn't the lesson here, if anything, that private enterprise and government enterprises
      > don't always interface well?

      Remember the part about the securities being government backed? They were supposed to be as safe an investment as treasury bills so of course everybody was happy to buy them. But I couldn't say it better when you note government enterprises and private enterprise don't work well. They don't and that is what conservatives have been saying since the New Deal. The solution here is obvious but politically impossible; wind down Freddie and Fannie. Yes this will mean people who used to get NINJA loans will remain renters, this is life. If we leave em around this situation will recur in 10-20 years as Democrats decide votors have forgotten this time.

      > It seems unjustified to me to say it was the government half of the equation that was the
      > entire problem, not at all greed and carelessness on the other side.

      Granted that individuals should have either known or consulted someone with a clue before signing a balloon mortgage, bankers should have had sense enough to know this scam would eventually burst and raised holy hell... assuming any MSM outlet would give them airtime even if they bought it.... But the root cause was Freddie and Fannie encouraging banks to give loans to anyone regardless of creditworthiness and to then sell them the paper.

      > I also don't know much about the previous depression, but I was under the (quite possibly mistaken)
      > impression it was because of a lack of government controls.

      Yes there was some pretty obvious problems in regulation. A Free Market does need regulation to ensure transparency and protect investors against fraud. Even Libertarians are generally in favor of the Government maintaining the Rule of Law. But it was FDR's New Deal experimentation that made the Depression Great. Go look at the historical record. The Depression threw the whole world into a major slump but while everyone else recovered it took a World War to finally snap the US out of it.

      > Anyway, for most of us, "marxist" is not an insult

      Because you live in academia where the reality of marxism is carefully suppressed. Marx's ideas have lead to prison states and mass graves each and every time they have been allowed to be fully implemented. Zero ex

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    40. Re:The other side..... by ClassMyAss · · Score: 1

      Because on the Right we don't go much for pedigree.

      Seriously. Why can't these pot smoking unemployed hippie liberals seethink, and we just don't care who your father was, where you went to school, or what sort of connections you have?

      I mean, what's the last time you can think of when an underqualified person was elevated in the Republican party just because of who he was as opposed to what he could do?

      Bill Buckley was an intellectual giant but it is painfully obvious he failed to impart the importance of intellectual rigor to his son.

      Hmm, that reminds me of something, or someone...I just...can't put my finger on it. Oh well!

      As an aside, I'm getting real tired of all this content-free name calling when it comes to politics on Slashdot ("We think, you guys feel"? Come now, if you really believe that, you're seriously underestimating your opponents, just as they would be doing if they said the same about you). That someone is a liberal doesn't make them stupid, and that someone is conservative doesn't make them cold or unfeeling. It just means that they have a slightly different set of priorities that you happen to disagree with (or re: the economy, a different set of equally [un]justifiable economic beliefs about what is best for our country's financial well-being and growth - yes, that DOES mean that I'm making the claim that lowering taxes on the rich is not necessarily a panacea for a slowing economy, and that raising them does not unconditionally help those that make less have more money in their pockets in the long term - there is a balance necessary in most economic issues, and the problem with our parties is that each side is trying to push the other one into the ground by screaming about how RIGHT they are rather than trying to achieve this balance).

      Which is not to say that some individuals don't deserve what they get when they behave like children (Michael Moore, Ann Coulter, et al). But don't make the crucial mistake of equating these loonies with the rest of the mostly reasonable people in the parties they unfortunately pretend to represent. From anywhere remotely near the middle, it makes you all look like ass-wieners.

    41. Re:The other side..... by Wildclaw · · Score: 1

      The magic they were performing was due to their being government enterprises, thus the securities were government backed

      Except of course that the securities were in no way goverment backed. Anyone who says so have either never seen one, or don't possess the reading level of a 12 year old.

      I quote the title page of a Fannie Mae certificate (except that the certificate has this in capitalized letters in a big font): "The certificates and payment of principal and interest on the certificates are not guaranteed by the United States, and do not constitute a debt or obligation of the United States or any of its agencies or instrumentalities other than Fannie Mae"

    42. Re:The other side..... by ThreeE · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are right and you are wrong. There was no _explicit_ guarantee, but everyone assumed an _implicit_ guarantee. This created a huge moral hazard -- Fannie and Freddie allowed riskier and riskier mortgages. And, in the end, the implicit guarantee became explicit -- just like everyone knew it would.

      There was never any chance that the government would let Fannie or Freddie fail -- thus, they have always been 100% government backed.

    43. Re:The other side..... by jcr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The idea that scientists and assorted elite intellectuals were the rightful ruling class

      That idea goes back at least to Plato. It was wrong then, and it's still wrong today. There is no "rightful" ruling class. We are entitled to our liberty, and anyone who seeks to infringe upon it carries the burden of justifying that use of force.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    44. Re:The other side..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      and there was bliss' adopted spacer child - an alien, fully mature and in a position to destroy galaxia. the foundation series did not end fully. we have no idea what the ending is.

    45. Re:The other side..... by jbeach · · Score: 1

      True enough. To this current group, millionaires are barely middle class. :) And thank God all those bureaucrats aren't working together. It's hard to imagine a world more terrifying than one big DMV.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    46. Re:The other side..... by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > Except of course that the securities were in no way goverment backed.

      Even though I hate the socialists who did this I have to admire the scam on it's artistic merits.

      Had the securities actually been government backed the calls for oversight would have been too loud to keep quiet and the scheme would have failed. But without the implicit promise of a bailout implied by Freddie and Fannie being Government Sponsored Enterprises nobody would have bought their paper without a lot higher risk premium and again, ACORN's scheme would have failed. So everybody could believe what the wanted when they needed to. And in the end it is going to be bailed out by the taxpayers regardless who wins the election. McCain has already promised to tax those of us who bought wisely to bail out the people with NINJA loans and while Obama is saying he won't everybody knows he will since it is at its heart a redistribution of wealth scheme.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    47. Re:The other side..... by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      In general The Left tend to be castigated for believing that societies can benefit broadly by providing a helping hand to their less fortunate members.

      No, the left is castigated for believing that charity is best done by compulsion. Implying that conservatives are less inclined to help the unfortunate is manifestly false, but it's a quite common view so I'll assume you held it sincerely.
      http://www.amazon.com/Who-Really-Cares-Compassionate-Conservatism/dp/B000WCTRPA/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1224047886&sr=8-1
      "We all know we should give to charity, but who really does? Approximately three-quarters of Americans give their time and money to various charities, churches, and causes; the other quarter of the population does not. Why has America split into two nations: givers and non-givers? Arthur Brooks, a top scholar of economics and public policy, has spent years researching this trend, and even he was surprised by what he found. In Who Really Cares, he demonstrates conclusively that conservatives really are compassionate-far more compassionate than their liberal foes. Strong families, church attendance, earned income (as opposed to state-subsidized income), and the belief that individuals, not government, offer the best solution to social ills-all of these factors determine how likely one is to give."

    48. Re:The other side..... by philspear · · Score: 1

      Yes, the devious socialist scam to redistribute wealth, which is why the bailout is going to our poorest citizens! Mwhahah- uh...

      Wait a minute guys, I think I may have spotted a problem with our plan...

    49. Re:The other side..... by XDirtypunkX · · Score: 1

      Another Great Depression revisionist! How wonderful to see the kind of demagoguery that conflates government intervention in a time of crisis with Marxism. Would you call William Pitt the younger a Marxist?

      The great depression was preceded by a laissez-faire Coolidge and came to fruition and worsened by a slightly less laissez-faire Hoover. GNP grew (unemployment fell) in the majority of years FDR was in power before the war at levels unheard of in recent times in the USA. He managed to grow the economy in those times during the dustbowl and other calamities.

      So kindly take your pseudo-intellectual claptrap back to the revisionist hole it came from.

    50. Re:The other side..... by marnues · · Score: 1

      Ronald Reagan did what? I was pretty sure it was the failed policies of the Soviet Union coupled with emerging Capitalist powerhouses in the constituent Soviets that toppled the Empire...

    51. Re:The other side..... by philspear · · Score: 1

      I have to say you seem to know quite a bit about economics. I'm not convinced by the interpretations, and I think you're too quick to take this as proof that government programs to increase home ownership is an inherently flawed approach, but you are at least a lot more knowledgeable than most, including me, on this issue.

      The marxism is another story though...

      ...you live in academia where the reality of marxism is carefully suppressed. Marx's ideas have lead to prison states and mass graves each and every time they have been allowed to be fully implemented. Zero exceptions.

      We don't really talk about international economics in biology, except around the water cooler when they affect us personally. The undergrads may be talking about Marx, and it might be an issue in some departments like economics or political science. I don't know, but I can tell you it's absolutely not all of academia. Don't paint us all with the same red brush, we're too busy trying to cure cancer.

    52. Re:The other side..... by DerekSTheRed · · Score: 1

      By Plato, I assume you mean Plato's Republic where Socrates declares that the philosopher should rule in enlightened despotism. I am a big fan of the Foundation series. It just seems so American to me. The Foundation had this manifest destiny that carried it in its early days is reminiscent of the early U.S. In Contrast, the last book he wrote was a prequel, Forward the Foundation, that details the fall of the Trantorian galactic empire. This to me is very representative of the U.S. as it is now. My favorite scene is Seldon complaining about something breaking down and how in his day everyone would be outraged, yet now everyone just ignores the problem. Reminds me of Katrina or the Minneapolis bridge collapsing in America recently. The unwillingness to pay taxes to a corrupt government is also similar.

    53. Re:The other side..... by g8oz · · Score: 1

      It does make sense that conservative assclowns dismiss any thinker that doesn't rigidly follow their doctrines.

    54. Re:The other side..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other point of Foundation was that Psychohistory did not work beyond the 100 or so years of Seldon's predictions. There were outside forces shaping history to match Seldon's predictions.

      No matter how reasoned a theory, the future will not necessarily match it's predictions, and the further out from present you go, the less likely it is.

    55. Re:The other side..... by jc42 · · Score: 1

      And thank God all those bureaucrats aren't working together. It's hard to imagine a world more terrifying than one big DMV.

      Actually, I've seen an interesting theory to the effect that the best world would make all the military organizations into the best (i.e., the worst) bureaucracies possible. That way, when the politicial leaders tried to start a war, the militaries on both sides would take so long to do all the paperwork to get it going that the politicians would have all died of old age and the pretexts for the war would have been forgotten by all but historians.

      We don't seem to be able to end war by any other approach; maybe we should give that one a try.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    56. Re:The other side..... by jbeach · · Score: 1

      Ha! Passive-aggressive pacification of aggression. :)

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
  6. Would this be the same FDR-economy... by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1, Interesting

    that prolonged the Great Depression by 7 years or so?

    http://newsroom.ucla.edu/portal/ucla/FDR-s-Policies-Prolonged-Depression-5409.aspx?RelNum=5409

    Brilliant stuff...

    1. Re:Would this be the same FDR-economy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Any economist can look at any data and come to any conclusion.

      2 UCLA economists' opinion is not a consensus though it's certainly not "proven" that what FDR did helped either.

    2. Re:Would this be the same FDR-economy... by Gat0r30y · · Score: 1

      Because Cooladge and Hoover were oh so brilliant? - just saying there is plenty of blame to go around.

      --
      Prediction: The real iPhone killer is going to be sex robots from Japan. Think about it.
    3. Re:Would this be the same FDR-economy... by Baba+Ram+Dass · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's funny because most historians paint the New Deal as having helped the Great Depression, when in fact no such consensus exists among economists.

      --
      Truckin like the Doo-Dah man...
    4. Re:Would this be the same FDR-economy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And economists know what they are talking about? Yeah right... The economic system is way too complicated without computer aid to get a handle on, if they were so easy why do economists keep making big ass mistakes? Like Krugman didn't want to believe many companies were cooking their books while he worked for enron and then enron went down and he had to eat crow.

    5. Re:Would this be the same FDR-economy... by justinlee37 · · Score: 1

      Oh, go dick yourself. No scientist knows the full and complete truth about what he studies. Why do you think we have confidence intervals in statistics?

    6. Re:Would this be the same FDR-economy... by XDirtypunkX · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's funny, but ideology seems to be particularly adept at re-writing history.

      For the nth time, Coolidge and Hoover were both laissez-faire capitalists (Coolidge more than Hoover) who precipitated the great depression. Under Hoover GNP fell by 31%. Under Roosevelt GNP rose and unemployment fell the majority of years before the war that he was in power, often in numbers unheard of in modern times.

      Now, I'm not saying the New Deal was responsible for this, but to say FDR prolonged the depression when the economy recovered under him (slowly) but failed to do so under Hoover is intellectually dishonest at best and deliberate ideologically driven revisionism at worst. One might also offer the opinion that the bubble of the roaring twenties, where stock prices and investments did not seem to be tied to reality, was not something to be repeated so soon after the disaster it caused.

      It took the massive motivation of the second world war which created a new set of real growth (as opposed to a roaring twenties bubble) to actually get things on par again. Oddly enough, most economic historians equate this with Keynes, saying that if FDR had been more willing to spend into deficit (and had adopted a more aggressively interventionist policy), the economy would've recovered even quicker... although, if you can show me a modern Western economy growing at better than 14.1% (as the US did in 1936 under FDR), I'll be surprised!

  7. Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by mcg1969 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    only serves to diminish the value of this award. IF he starts to link it to his political views, then he'll bring derision upon himself and the Nobel committee. But he doesn't need to, because in his prior life as an full-time economist he did work that was genuinely worthy of recognition. I've spoken with several conservative economists who admire that work, even as they wondered "what happened to him?"

    1. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by philspear · · Score: 1

      Is he the first economist who did groundbreaking work and then may have gone off the deep end, winning the nobel afterwards?

      James Watson, one of the several people who discovered DNA, likes to give lectures on how he likes big butts, and lost his job for some scandal over race and intelligence (neither are his area of expertise). Kary Mullis, who invented PCR, was apperantly always crazy, thought up the thing while high on acid, is dubious of the connection between HIV and AIDS.

      While their points are probably more reasoned than I'm making them sound here, at least we can agree that the equivalent would be Krugman saying that 9/11 was a conspiracy by Bush.

    2. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1
      "Brilliant economist, that Krugman. But being anti-Bush means he's a Flat Earth Black Helicopter nutjob."

      In addition to +5 insightful, that's pretty hilarious. In case you hadn't noticed, genius, being Anti-Bush is now the majority opinion in the USA (not to mention most of the world), and has been for some time.

    3. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by mcg1969 · · Score: 1

      Hmm. Nice distortion of my point, "genius".

    4. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1
      Oh piffle. What else are you trying to do with your opening remark but imply that Krugman's anti-Bush stance is somehow fringe and laughable? Here's your opening remark:

      Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment only serves to diminish the value of this award. IF he starts to link it to his political views, then he'll bring derision upon himself and the Nobel committee.

      On the contrary: His anti-Bush sentiment demonstrates that he's been paying attention.

    5. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by mcg1969 · · Score: 1

      Idiot: I'm doing no such thing. I made no implication that his anti-Bush stance is fringe or laughable.

      The point is that, rightly or wrongly, it is believed by many that the Nobel prize selections are unduly influenced by politics. But it is unwarranted in this case. The work for which his prize was awarded is genuinely worthy of recognition.

      Bringing up Krugman's political views and notoriety, as the original poster did, only serves to feed the temptation to believe he did not deserve the award. I don't care whether is sentiment is the majority view or not.

    6. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1

      You implied precisely that, "idiot". Words still have meaning.

    7. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by mcg1969 · · Score: 1

      Yes they do! You might consider relying on that meaning instead of what you think I implied. Other readers understood quite well what I was saying.

    8. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1

      Yes, and learning how to *employ* words in the interest of clarity *even more important*! Something about which you seem never to have been instructed! You're the same sort of hopeless idiot who thinks nobody attacked Friedman Nobel on the same basis.

    9. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by mcg1969 · · Score: 1

      You're getting more incoherent by the post. Why in the world would I think that? Both men are regularly pilloried by their political adversaries (Friedman posthumously, of course). Recall the recent protest over the founding of a Milton Friedman Institute, for instance.

      Krugman deserves his award, fair and square, and even economists who disagree with him politically recognize that. Your problem from the beginning is that you took my synthesized quote from those economists, exaggerated it for effect, and attributed it to me.

      Holy crap you're a dolt.

    10. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1
      I haven't exaggerated a bloody thing. Your quotes are your quotes, and they clearly imply that Krugman's political opinions discredit him, if not his work:

      Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment only serves to diminish the value of this award.

      In what universe? How does acknowledging Krugman's political opinions diminish the value of his award? How does pointing to Friedman's political opinions diminish the value of his award? If both men won their awards fair and square, based on peer judgement of the worth of each man's work as a useful finding or theoretical instrument, how would the value of an award recognizing the value of that work be diminished by pointing to the man's political opinions? If your point is that nothing outside the work itself has any effect on the value of that work, then the value of awards recognizing that work can neither be enhanced nor diminished by information about things like their political opinions. It would be incoherent to do so; like saying Robert Reich was a terrible Treasury official because he is physically almost a dwarf, or that Don Rumsfeld was a great Secretary of Defense because his jokes were funny and he stood at his desk all day.

      IF he starts to link it to his political views, then he'll bring derision upon himself and the Nobel committee.

      Krugman hasn't been stupid enough to claim he got the award for political reasons, and neither have I. It would be especially stupid to do so given that Friedman, whose political opinions couldn't be more different from Krugman's, has won the same award.

      As it happens, however, Krugman is on record (in "Conscience of a Liberal") that his political opinions are outgrowths of his understanding of economics. Friedman has said essentially the same thing in some work of his I've forgotten. Both men clearly think their work and their politics are connected. Why is it therefore out of bounds to accept them at their word and criticize or praise these men -- not their awards, or the work itself -- based on what they claim are the political implications of their work?

      But he doesn't need to, because in his prior life as an full-time economist he did work that was genuinely worthy of recognition.

      Another idiotic remark. Krugman hasn't stopped working. What, Krugman stopped being a "full-time" economist when he started teaching at Princeton? How about after he started writing for Slate? Was it the Times columns? What, precisely, constitutes a "full-time economist" in your world?

      I've spoken with several conservative economists who admire that work, even as they wondered "what happened to him?"

      Your statement here is argumentative to say the least. So the fact that conservative economists respect Krugman's research work in spite of Krugman's politics somehow legitimizes that work? That if he were releasing more of this work and doing fewer Times columns, he would be even more "worthy"? I thought you were arguing that politics has nothing to do with the worth of the work? Friedman's work is also admired by some liberal economists. The Friedmanites I've read couldn't care less. These idiots and their work don't constitute a canon, and they are arbiters of nothing. The additional "while wondering 'What happened to him?'" is particularly egregious. Why even bring that up, if you're not trying to argue that Krugman's political opinions are indeed somehow "fringe" and discredit him?

      You know, I don't think I've deliberately misread you. I appreciate that you think Krugman deserved his award, and I certainly agree. But you lard the pig with all this additional stuff about politics and I don't think that was accidental.

      If you want to dismiss me as an dolt, be my guest. The feeling is certainly mutual. Your original statement is illogical, incoherent, and if not obviously tendentious in the ways I've

    11. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by mcg1969 · · Score: 1

      Now you see, this is the discussion we should have been having from the beginning. I am glad that you have finally chosen to explain your disagreement fully instead of limit yourself to a silly retort. I think I'm in a better position to explain myself now that you've explained yourself beyond partisan puffery.

      I haven't exaggerated a bloody thing. Your quotes are your quotes, and they clearly imply that Krugman's political opinions discredit him, if not his work:

      Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment only serves to diminish the value of this award.

      In what universe? How does acknowledging Krugman's political opinions diminish the value of his award? How does pointing to Friedman's political opinions diminish the value of his award? If both men won their awards fair and square, based on peer judgement of the worth of each man's work as a useful finding or theoretical instrument, how would the value of an award recognizing the value of that work be diminished by pointing to the man's political opinions?

      Because its value is dependent upon the award's reputation, that's why. And lately that reputation has been tarnished because of the apparent alleged political motivations behind the awarding of other Nobel Prizes.

      I happen to be one of those people. I think the awarding Peace prize in particular to Al Gore and the IPCC and Mohamed ElBaradei and the IAEA damaged the reputation of the Peace Prize. The rhetorical contortions required to justify the 2007 award were particularly egregious. I think that more deserving candidates (my recent favorite being Muhammad Yunus in 2006 and Doctors Without Borders in 1999) are overshadowed, quite unfortunately, by these more questionable choices.

      Now yes, this is where you might say "that's just what a bunch of kooks say" or whatever. The problem is that the awardee's supporters often end up supporting those very allegations of politicization. When fans of Al Gore talk about his award as a thumb in the eye of the Bush administration, they legitimize the suspicions of the so-called kooks. A similar phenomenon happened when the Oscar was awarded to Michael Moore for Fahrenheit 9/11: the glee from the left and Michael Moore himself served to validate accusations that the award wasn't given on merit.

      If your point is that nothing outside the work itself has any effect on the value of that work, then the value of awards recognizing that work can neither be enhanced nor diminished by information about things like their political opinions.

      Well as you can see that is not my belief. I believe that the reputation of the award matters when determining its value.

      IF he starts to link it to his political views, then he'll bring derision upon himself and the Nobel committee.

      Krugman hasn't been stupid enough to claim he got the award for political reasons, and neither have I. It would be especially stupid to do so given that Friedman, whose political opinions couldn't be more different from Krugman's, has won the same award.

      Agreed. My "if" above wasn't meant to imply that it was likely Krugman would do this, indeed I would expect him to defend himself against claims the award was politically motivated. But he is but one man (albeit a famous one) and he cannot control all the chatter.

      What I have been saying all along is that, out of respect for Krugman's work one should be careful about bringing up his politics as if that had something to do with it. In particular, focusing in particular on his criticism of the Bush administration is irrelevant to the point that he is a critic on far more than economic policy, and it is somewhat limited in the fact that he also criticized the Clinton administration as well (though obviously somewhat less.

      What, precisely, constitutes a "full-time econo

    12. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1
      Ah, thanks, now it's all clear! Your concern is solely for the perceived value -- the reputation -- of the institutions (the Nobel Committee, the MPAS Academy, the people who gave a Grammy to the Dixie Chicks, etc.) granting these forms of recognition to workers in various fields. And naturally, any time such an institution recognizes a known anti-Bush partisan for his or her work, those institutions risk impairment of their reputations because:

      A) After all, everyone knows there is a massive partisan conspiracy on the part of Bush critics to attack this wildly popular president every and any way they can. These people are fanatical and will stop at nothing to destroy him. (Al Gore, in particular, has never stopped talking for a second about how the 2000 election was stolen, which is why nobody takes him seriously on stuff like global warming. And of course, the IAEA...they were completely wrong about there being no WMD in Iraq, and just having them around is such an insult to Bush.)

      B) Some pack of well-intentioned, impartial conservatives might attribute the fact that the award was made at all to this well-known, massive, partisan anti-Bush conspiracy, acting behind the scenes at the institution to ensure that the award was made. And of course, there is no defence against such a suspicion of, as you put it, "apparent alleged political motivations behind the awarding" (nice string of modifiers there, BTW!).

      So your concern is that these institutions stop giving awards to known anti-Bush partisans. And if they should find that impossible, then they need to at least not acknowledge the fact that the awardee is an anti-Bush partisan. Those receiving the awards, and anyone who thinks they deserved the award, should these unmentionable topics too. Because it's, you know, embarrassing. Of course, it's not really you that's embarrassed. It's those institutions and those receiving the awards. They're embarrassed. If you're embarrassed at all, it's because you're embarrassed for them.

      So does that about sum it up? If so, I have one last question: Does the phrase "concern troll" mean anything to you?

    13. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by mcg1969 · · Score: 1

      Not until you linked to it, no. The idea that I would think that they should "stop giving awards to known anti-Bush partisans" is preposterous.

      I genuinely believe Krugman deserves his award. I believe the work for which he earned it is great stuff, and so did those aformentioned economists with whom I once had the pleasure of meeting. And I believe that the way the OP phrases his post unnecessarily links that work with his political punditry.

      That's what I believe, that's what I meant, and that's what I said. You clearly doubt my sincerity; that is your problem, not mine. But since I can't fight that, you win.

    14. Re:Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1
      Ah, such hurt feelings. There, there. You got to call me "dolt" and "idiot" and I just called you "genius". Doesn't that feel better?

      Actually, genius, no, I don't win. Apparently I have to continue sharing my nation with lots of people -- alleged academics, even -- who are either liars or so powerfully biased they're willing to toss logic out the window to serve a partisan end. That's pretty much a loss all around.

      Of course, I should expect that. In America, even supposed "conservative intellectuals" George Will get paid to utter biased crap like this: George Will Explains the Colin Powell Endorsement. But hey, I'm partisan! Don't believe anything I say.

  8. Agenda: It's everywhere! by orthancstone · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Honestly, as long as you voice an opinion in some editorial form that serves more than a handful of national papers, you are inevitably tied to an agenda by someone else even if you don't claim one (that's not to say Krugman hides his agenda).

    My point, of course, is that whining about agenda is a symptom of feeling the need crying bias about other people's ideas/opinions. Apparently we, intelligent beings, have come so far that we'd rather just bitch about bias than have a worthwhile discourse.

    In summary, stop crying about political agenda; the longer we waste on it, the faster we continue to ignore the real problems that need serious critical thinking.

    1. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by RJBeery · · Score: 3, Insightful

      When the TRUE agenda differs from the STATED agenda, I have a problem. Conservative talk radio, Planned Parenthood, the NRA, and the DailyKos have their agendas but it doesn't bother me because they seem consistent. What bothers me is when proclaimed non-political entities seem to have significant political bias driving their actions.

    2. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When does stating the truth become whining? People may not be able to see the bias because of their own personal bias. It has to be pointed out to them. Your post adds nothing to worthwhile discourse.

    3. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by moderatorrater · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Says the obvious democrat. But seriously, I think you're wrong.

      My point, of course, is that whining about agenda is a symptom of feeling the need crying bias about other people's ideas/opinions

      Right, just like Einstein's theory of relativity is a symptom of his hatred of Newton. The other option is that the nobel committee has a clear bias towards what Americans view as the left, and people who point that out are doing so in an attempt to find the truth. Or, in other words, you're showing your own bias by your attack. If he's wrong, point it out, but the fact that he's crying "bias" just implies that he's of the opinion that they're biased, not that he feels insecure.

    4. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      The NRA? Planned Parenthood? Conservative Talk radio?

      Jesus man - Consistent?

      I want whatever you are smoking... seriously...

    5. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by SerpentMage · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Conservative talk radio is consistent? Actually let's put this in context. [fill in the blank] talk radio is consistent?

      One thing that people have to remember is that conservatives more likely than not are not going to win awards. And that liberals will...

      Think hard about this. What is a conservative? Somebody who believes in their ideals and fundamentals. Thus they are not thinking about the future, but the past.

      On the other hand a liberal challenges the notion of today and looks at what could be.

      A conservative today is yesterday's liberal.

      Go back in history and look at conservative stances, and liberal stances.

      Women rights: Conservative of 2000 would say hey yes why not. Liberal of 1800 would say "hey yes why not." Conservative of 1800 would say, "blasphemy"

      So you see, a conservative will always be two or three, or four steps behind the real action...

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    6. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by jbeach · · Score: 1
      Thank you.

      I'd also like to point out that there's an important distinction between bias in the interpretation of facts, and bias in distorting or omitting the facts themselves.

      DailyKos , Keith Olbermann, et al. interpret the facts differently than conservatives - but they still are based very heavily in the facts. Rush Limbaugh, Ann Coulter, Sean Hannity et al. will eliminate any inconvenient facts out of discussion, and shamelessly replace them with factoids pulled freshly from their rears.

      This way of dealing with information has caused some short-term gains for conservatism as a movement, but has required constantly raising the stakes and distracting from accountability to keep it going. I think this strategy's now finally starting to it's long-term weakness: after the last 8 years, people just aren't believing them anymore.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    7. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by bendodge · · Score: 4, Informative

      A true economic conservative is someone who believes in traditional economic liberalism. (Liberalism used to mean 'freedomism'.)

      --
      The government can't save you.
    8. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Admiral+Ag · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "The other option is that the nobel committee has a clear bias towards what Americans view as the left,"

      No.

      The Nobel Prizes are Scandinavian institutions. To Scandinavians, what Americans think is "left" looks like extreme far right wing kookery, and what Americans think is "right" is simply beyond the pale.

      Americans have no business talking about the left and the right in terms of their own politics which is extremely right wing, extremely religious and extremely authoritarian compared to the rest of the world's democracies. You guys need to realize that it's you that are out of step and it is your politics that is weird and kooky.

      How's that then. You've made the Canadians look normal!! Hang your heads in shame.

      --
      "by that I mean people who don't sit on slashdot all day wondering why everyone else isn't building robots" DECS
    9. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 4, Informative

      Thank you. I am moderately conservative, in the old Goldwater sense. I, and many like me, want nothing to do with that hatemongering lying bastards that have taken over the label of 'conservative'. 'Conservative' used to mean wanting incremental, cautious change, keeping what works, and being cautious about expanding the mission of government.

      The label conservative, these days, means 'radical religious nationalist'. It has nothing to do with the traditional ethos of small government and individual freedoms.

      Changing the subject slightly, I will note that I agree with Krugman more often than I disagree, and I think that a lot of careful economic analysis shows that more governmental intervention may be in the best interests of most of society. I would like to see us cautiously move in this direction.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    10. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by AoT · · Score: 1

      Generally speaking the Nobel Peace Prize is given to more left than to the right, as is the case with the literature, but really right wingers can't, or don't, write decent literature. The science prizes are hardly political in terms of government. The Prize in Economics is generally given to more free-market type economists than people who lean left. It's actually a different prize than the real Nobel Prizes, about 70 years younger than the real ones.

    11. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by adavies42 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      To Americans, most of the rest of the world was conquered by the commies long ago. Who are you to define the spectrum of acceptable politics so narrowly?

      --
      Media that can be recorded and distributed can be recorded and distributed.
      -kfg
    12. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by j0nb0y · · Score: 1

      That's hyperbole, of course.

      Using the same logic, you would have to say that liberals don't care about the past, and thus are incapable of learning from history.

      --
      If you had super powers, would you use them for good, or for awesome?
    13. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by alvinrod · · Score: 3, Informative

      If you look here and here you will notice that most European countries are not much more economically left than the US Democrat party. The Scandinavian countries are much less authoritarian than either major US party, but on the economical scale, they're not terribly far off for the most part. For some countries the Republican party doesn't appear to be too much further to the right either.

      I think that the one major difference is the universal (or social if you prefer) healthcare that exists in most European countries. Beyond that, I don't think that there are any major differences that I can think of off the top of my head, but I'm sure some European slashdot readers could provide a few more examples.

      For the most part, things probably aren't that different. I think that the whole thing is just some meme started by Europeans to mock Americans (as though there weren't already enough reasons.) some more. There's certainly a larger difference on the social scale, but that really doesn't have much to do with economically left or right. You could be a completely socialist country or a completely free market country and still legalize prostitution, marijuana, abortions, etc.

    14. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by ClassMyAss · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The other option is that the nobel committee has a clear bias towards what Americans view as the left, and people who point that out are doing so in an attempt to find the truth.

      The truth is, for better or worse, most people that remain in academia (and generally speaking, most people with high levels of education) tend to lean left. Blame academic bias, truth, or tradition as you choose, it doesn't matter; it's probably a bit of all three, honestly. Regardless, since a) academics usually win Nobels, and b) most academics lean left, the fact that those that win Nobels lean left is not a matter of bias on the part of the judges, it's just what happens when your pick winners from a pre-skewed population.

      In other words, move along, folks, there's nothing to see here.

    15. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by wellingj · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First congresswoman: Jannette Rankin from Montana in 1916 before national women's suffrage. She did not vote for the Declaration of WW1 and WW2. She stood on her Ideals and Fundamentals.

      Marting Luther King, Jr. also Republican, died for his Ideals and Fundamentals.

      Ron Paul doesn't seem to be steps behind the real action on the economic bust and the problems that interventionist policy causes. He stood up and told the truth to the Republican party about terrorism and the economy. He stood on his Ideals and Fundamentals when he voted against second Iraq war, against FISA, and against the recent string of bailouts. His Ideals and Fundamentals come from the Constitution.

      There is a time and a place to look for new things, but Morality and Justice don't mean jack if you don't have Ideals or Fundamentals. I suggest the book "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" for further study of Ideals and Fundamentals and how they make your life better.

    16. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by wellingj · · Score: 1

      Uggg.. Martin not Marting. Seriously, when I start typing fast my predictive fingers go crazy with muscle memory.

    17. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by wellingj · · Score: 1

      Did you hear our "Conservative" President today? His New Deal is anything but cautious.

    18. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by gad_zuki! · · Score: 4, Informative

      Granted to the US is to the right of europe, buts funny you mention this because there really isnt a nobel peace prize in economics. This award established in 1968 by a bank with a lot of political pull. Its not a Nobel award. It just lifts the name. The name of this award is: The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.

      So in other words you're criticizing the US by holding up a questionable award which only exists because of authoritarian political clout by a financial institution in 1960s Sweden? Pot meet Kettle.

    19. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

      My point exactly. I didn't vote for him. I voted for his dad, twice. I didn't mind Clinton too much. I hope GW kills any chance for the current crop of so called conservatives for the next 20 years.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    20. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Americans have no business talking about the left and the right in terms of their own politics which is extremely right wing, extremely religious and extremely authoritarian compared to the rest of the world's democracies.

      To give you an idea of just how true this is, realize that Obama is the "left" candidate in the US. He belonged, for 20 years, to a church that belongs to the "UCC" or "United Church of Christ."

      Believe it or not, you may have heard about this church before. It's better known as "the Puritans" - it's the current version of the church the Puritan pilgrims brought with them to Massachusetts Bay.

      And that's the candidate who leans left in the US...

    21. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      I believe in economic liberalism, but I don't believe most on the right practice that. They preach it, they preach it all day long, hell I'd say they've redefined it.

      A truly free economy would have vehicles with alternative fuel sources by now. The US doesn't have that, because our economy is constrained. I think it's constrained by television. Specifically, commercials which lead to consumerism. Instead of thinking about the car that's best for the environment or the car that gets the best gas mileage, they (us/we/the world) think(s) about the cool song or hot babe in the comercial. Consumerism is the belief that people will eat (consume) whatever you feed to them and it's true if you include trillions of hours of information on the airwaves.

      I think maybe both (*political*) liberals and (*academic*) economists tend not to like consumerism.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    22. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Workaphobia · · Score: 1

      How's that then. You've made the Canadians look normal!! Hang your heads in shame.

      That's my new favorite put-down for this country (US), thank you.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    23. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      that is using the term "consumerism" politically, rather than economically.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    24. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by wellingj · · Score: 1

      So were there any Republican candidates that you liked?

    25. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

      Well, I liked McCain in 2000, but not recently, for all the obvious reasons. There haven't been many candidates I have cared for in a while, though I confess that Obama sounded sensible for a while, before he started having to promise everything to everybody. I'll vote for Obama.

      I'm tired of politicians trying to sound like they are the same as the guy sitting next to me at a bar. When my pipe leaks, I want a plumber, not a drinking buddy. I don't care if the plumber has kooky friends or sleeps with his apprentice, I care if he knows how to fix leaks. It's the same with my government. I want someone who knows how nations work, who understands history, and who is both educated and experienced and knows how to use other people with education and experience. I want him to be different from and better than me in these areas, and I don't care if he smoked pot in college (or last week) or if some people he has been connected with have unrelated flaws.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    26. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by wellingj · · Score: 1

      I liked Bush of 2000 enough, but not 2001. It's been an exponential hate relationship ever since.
      I'm tired of politicians saying they know what's best for me. Don't get me wrong, I like smart people, but truly smart people acknowledge the power of freethinking and the liberty to follow your own ideas. I tend to see most politicians saying "Don't worry we know what's best, and you should just go along with it despite what the Constitution has to say about it."

    27. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Knuckles · · Score: 1

      I gotta tell you, being conquered by the commies makes pretty nice living.

      --
      "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
    28. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Knuckles · · Score: 1

      Things are very different.

      --
      "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
    29. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Knuckles · · Score: 1

      Generally speaking the Nobel Peace Prize is given to more left than to the right

      What?

      --
      "When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
    30. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What bothers me is when proclaimed non-political entities seem to have significant political bias driving their actions.

      I would stick Lou Dobbs in that category. I really wish CNN would fire him, or push him off to CNN2. I don't mind listening to CNN when I get off work on Sirius, but you get that pompous self-righteous twit who claims he is an independent yet, while he insults everybody for forms sake, his policies clearly predominately support the right wing.

      Take recently, his going crazy over ACORN turning in some faked ballot applications. One saying goes, "Never ascribe to malice what can be more easily explained by incompetence." Instead of taking a rational approach, he parrots the talking point that Obama is paying them to try to steal the election, which is absurd even on face value since that would imply you had all these people that were planning on showing up on multiple polling places pretending to be a bunch of different people. Such a large conspiracy just wouldn't work, since someone would find out. (Now, having hackable voting machines is a far more likely way to change an election, or, like has been done and is apparently being done, purging people from voting rolls inappropriately.)

      At any rate, the true story appears to be that yes, in the primary, Obama paid them to register voters. Now in the general election, Acorn, without further funding from his campaign was still registering people and in doing so paid a lot of other people, some of which included people who, in order to meet their quotas and thus get paid made up a bunch of crap. So in the end Acorn didn't get its money's worth of work, and thanks to their poor hiring practices even hurt their own cause. Of course part of this might be linked to the apparent rule of having to turn in all applications filled out. Either way, while it is clear ACORN needs to focus more on hiring quality people, as opposed to quantity, it is also clear that Dobbs' and others ranting about stealing the election is utter nonsense. Personally, I say, investigate it just to be safe, and then make ACORN pay penalties for all the fake applications, with perhaps lesser penalties for those who they turn in flagged.

      In conclusion, while this post is a bit off the main topic, I fully agree with the parent post in how irritating it is to listen to obvious political bias in those that pretend to be neutral. In this case it does tend to prove the rule, that when someone shouts loudly how they have a certain quality, it is time to question that quality even more.

    31. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Yokaze · · Score: 1

      > I think that the one major difference is the universal (or social if you prefer) healthcare that exists in most European countries.

      Not only universal healthcare, also social welfare and a government funded school and university system, and a public funded television.
      More Co-determination-rights for employees, stricter employment laws (working hours, lay-off, equal employment). Privacy and data protection laws come also to mind.

      --
      "Between strong and weak, between rich and poor [...], it is freedom which oppresses and the law which sets free"
    32. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Colin+Smith · · Score: 2, Insightful

      or a completely free market country and still legalize prostitution, marijuana, abortions, etc.

      "still"?

      There is a fundamental contradiction between being a fiscal and social conservative. One requires a belief that government should be small and weak with reducing regulations and laws. The other requires that the government be large and strong with increasing regulation and laws. The American definition of Liberal is equally contradictory; greater freedom through greater regulation...

      These contradictions exist because the political system is one dimensional; left and right, and the political system is one dimensional because the electoral system punishes any candidates which do not conform to those stereotypes.
       

      --
      Deleted
    33. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      Out of interest, are you against gay-marriage, against abortions, and stuff like that?

    34. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by knutkracker · · Score: 1

      The label conservative, these days, means 'radical religious nationalist'. It has nothing to do with the traditional ethos of small government and individual freedoms

      I thought that conservative (as in right wing) meant, strictly controlled personal freedoms and small government as in relaxed economic freedoms. e.g. left wing liberal: legalise pot & same sex marriage, state taxes corporations and distributes wealth to poor via social security; conservative right wing: drug control, abortion control, sexual 'normalness' only, minimal taxation of the rich, poor fend for themselves.

    35. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by mwlewis · · Score: 1

      Conservative talk radio is consistent? Actually let's put this in context. [fill in the blank] talk radio is consistent?

      Nice reading comprehension there. He said that their true and stated agenda is consistent. Since you failed to understand the first time, what he meant was that (whether or not you agree with them) they weren't pretending to be something other than what they are.

      --
      JOIN US FOR PONG!
    36. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by witherstaff · · Score: 1

      You're right about the current meaning of the label conservative. Too bad people lump politicians under Liberal and Conservative but the popular beliefs of them can co-exist under the title Libertarian. The libertarian ideal can be tied together with the foundations of the conservative movement in a way that makes the religious right pandering politicians sputter.

      Libertarians want the hallmarks of the Goldwater republicans - smaller government, reduced oversight, and usually a strong military for defense. They also love the personal freedoms from the Bill of Rights, are usually fine with you smoking pot in your own home and doing most anything you want that doesn't harm others on your own land.

      This is why Ron Paul had such a diverse range of supporters - he is a libertarian at heart and also a conservative.

    37. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      The Sarah Palin birth control method, the NRA, talk-yell Radio, the Sarah Palin pre-signed resignation letters, their positions on stem cell research, and the death penalty, are all about expanding authority and increasing punishment. In that light, these self-proclaimed conservatives are very consistent.

      That being said, these days they've been running around like chickens with their heads cut off, flip-flopping on issues, compromising on their very own principles, giving away the farm, increasing the size of government to massive proportions, saying instead of doing the "straight talk", mostly to pander for any vote they might get.

    38. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by MickLinux · · Score: 1

      So I guess it did bother you when Rush Limbough started excusing the Republicans for everything he had been lambasting the Democrats for? And Paulson probably bothers you a lot?

      On the other hand, it shouldn't bother you when non-political churches (that is, the church is not politically oriented) takes a political stance, for the reason that church is about religion, which is supposed to reshape every part of a person's life: privte, professional, political, and more.

      --
      Correct Horse Battery Staple: 72 bits of entropy. Enter "Correct H" into google. When it generates the phrase, that's
    39. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Talderas · · Score: 1

      Right, because we're solving the world's problems here on /.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    40. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      "So you see, a conservative will always be two or three, or four steps behind the real action..." ...and the other side of the coin - a Liberal is often two, three, or four steps past the edge of the cliff.

      Which would you rather be? Short of the edge or past it?

      --
      -Styopa
    41. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      Wasn't it Goldwater that started the whole "hatemongering lying bastard" style of campaigning? I thought his campaign was practically defined by race-baiting, FUD, etc.

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
    42. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by catmistake · · Score: 1

      My observation, knowing many former liberals, many lifelong liberals and a few former conservatives, is that as an individual's personal wealth increases (and thus they have more to lose) they begin to care more about themselves and their material wealth and less about everyone else. In general, money changes peoples' political landscape. If you're poor, you care about civil rights and society's responsibility to human decency. If you're rich, you care about your money and your comfort, and little else. Of course, there are exceptions... but generally speaking, I think this applies to better than most of each group. Also, IMHO, middle-class liberals are the mean, middle-class conservatives are merely stubborn, rich liberals are saints, and poor conservatives are idiots and/or bigots.

    43. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by indifferent+children · · Score: 1
      The American definition of Liberal is equally contradictory; greater freedom through greater regulation...

      That is not necessarily contradictory. Greater freedom in non-commercial activity, with greater regulation of commercial activity. Complete, inalienable right for adults to engage in consensual sex, does not mean that the activity can be conducted for cash.

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    44. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      Complete, inalienable right for adults to engage in consensual sex, does not mean that the activity can be conducted for cash.

      LOL.

       

      --
      Deleted
    45. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by jonaskoelker · · Score: 1

      Think hard about this. What is a conservative? Somebody who believes in their ideals and fundamentals. Thus they are not thinking about the future, but the past.

      On the other hand a liberal challenges the notion of today and looks at what could be.

      Wouldn't that be a progressive?

      I think calling the left wingers Liberal is a phenomenon unique to the USA. In my country (Denmark), the liberals and conservatives are right-wing parties with adjacent seats; they often form a government together. Among the left wing parties are the Social Democrats and the Socialist People's Party.

      Of course, politics is not one-dimensional. A dichotomy I've seen more than once is that between personal and economic freedom (c.f. http://www.theadvocates.org/quizp/index.html). And of course, those can be broken into dimensions of their own: abortion, same-sex marriage; tax-paid aqueducts/irrigation/roads/law+order; also, some of the personal freedoms have an economic impact (there's a lot of money rules surrounding married couples vs. singles).

    46. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by DustoneGT · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Or it might be because the government policies favor large corporations, believing that it will somehow benefit the lowly slave workers.

      This would include the practice of requiring large employers to provide healthcare. This benefits the corrupt insurance industry massively.

    47. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Political compass is bullshit. Specifically, it's thinly concealed U.S. Libertarian (i.e. mired in the same skewed political range as the rest of U.S. politics, only kookier) bullshit posing as an objective measure.

      Last time I took the test, it labeled me as an anarcho-capitalist, which is so fucking ridiculous I wouldn't trust their ratings of European countries farther than I could throw the corpse of Ayn Rand.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    48. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by bendodge · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up!
      Consumerism isn't ruining us. State intervention is.

      --
      The government can't save you.
    49. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

      Nope. Gay marriage is a personal privacy issue. Screw who you want to. Abortion is a personal privacy issue, and a societal choice about the worth of one individual over another. It you accept that society can allow capital punishment, and sending people to war to get killed, then it's inconsistent to say that we can't allow killing of fetuses, which I acknowledge are people, too. But it's a choice of maximizing potential for a realized person against that of an unrealized person.

      Finally, I don't believe in making laws out of religious teachings, which means that most of the current crop of conservatives' exhortations don't work for me. If the Bible is valid, then so is the Koran, the Torah, and the teachings of Buddha. These are inconsitent, so you can't use any of them, and you have to think from first principles, which our current crop don't like to do. Think, that is.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    50. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but the libertarians are generally nutcases when it comes to economics. The free market causes a lot of societal pain if left untended.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    51. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by riondluz · · Score: 0

      I guess that's why they're called conservatives:)
      But the real question is whether they are a product of their upbringing.
      (1st response: say NO! you can always change you mind; though you
      probably wont)

      Conservatives are the spear of business, which seeks stability.
        It may be bundled in with tradition and history, high-minded
      ideals; but is nonetheless focused on preservation of status-quo.

      Liberals, progressives, et.al. I find to be less change-averse.
      They are willing to believe that today's ideals are tommorrows'
      pragmatic solutions. It gives their minds an elasticity that
      conservative will never have because they are better equipped in
      dealing w/the chaos that ensues.

      --
      resist propaganda
    52. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by wclacy · · Score: 1

      Liberals will always be the ones that screw up everything in the end because they are out of touch with reality, and History.

      Bill Clinton ran the economy into the ground. It started 300 days before he left office. His policies are to blame:

      Nafta and Gatt sent jobs out of the country.

      CRA required banks to make bad loans

      Enviromental policies against Drilling for Oil and Bulding Refineries

      Now the Republicans are trying to be liberals and don't have the Guts to tell the American People that it is not Governments responsibility to provide Health Care, Welfare, etc.

      The Economy had recovered under Bush, but how long can an economy stand without manufacturing jobs, and with laws requiring banks to make bad loans? Bush has only had clear control of the Senate for 2 years of his administration (during and right after 911). Bush tried to fix the CRA but was shot down by Democrats.

      Bush also has not been much of a conservative when it comes to Federal Education spending, Medicare, etc.

      Paul Krugman was an econimic consultant for Enron.(Nice job there) He also helped talk the Clinton Administration into "Free Trade." Maybe Krugman doesn't like the Bush Administration because they didn't listen to him like the Clinton administration did.

    53. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      I'd like to point out a possible explanation for why academia is skewed left (considering only the US population) (tenuous though the argument may be):
      1) people who are conservatives want to keep their money; thus,
      2) they prioritize money; thus,
      3) they desire more money; thus,
      4) they desire high-paying jobs.
      5) Academia pays less than the private sector. Thus,
      6) Conservatives tend to go into the private sector. Thus,
      7) Liberals are left to fill in the ranks of academia.

    54. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by dwye · · Score: 1

      > I think calling the left wingers Liberal is a phenomenon unique to the USA.

      No, we call them "liberal" - note the lack of capitalization.

      > In my country (Denmark), the liberals and conservatives are right-wing parties with adjacent seats

      No, I expect that the Liberals and Conservatives (assuming translation into English) are the parties that you mention - note the presence of capitalization.

      Names and reality are oft askew in politics. How much democracy was there in the Democratic Republic of Kampuchea, or even of Germany? How much socialism in the National Socialist Party?

      > Of course, politics is not one-dimensional.

      Sci-Fi writer Jerry Pournelle got a PhD with a thesis dividing it into a Statist-Individualist axis and a Rationalist-Irrationalist axis at right angles. Fascists were Statist/Irrationalist whereas the Soviets were Statist/Rationalists, because Communism had a claim of rationality to Marx's theories whereas Fascists appealed to the Spirit of The People or some such nebulous source. Ayn Rand was an Individualist/Rationalist whereas Anarchists were Individualist/Irrationalists, because she had a set of theories to justify her stands while they just went on emotional appeals. Note that "Rationalist" theories do not have to be correct, rational, or even supportable, merely claim to be, and seem to be on a cursory glance (and if you accept their theses about the superiority of the "real" Proletariat [vs the Lumpen-Proletariat, or the Bourgeoisie, or whatever else], or that Ideas are real things, vs. merely having real consequences).

    55. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by ClassMyAss · · Score: 1

      I suspect you're pretty close on that one - I might go even further and say that conservatives and liberals have directly opposed views on the morality of pursuing large sums of money, conservatives generally feeling that it is healthy and virtuous (since you're "contributing to the economy"), liberals taking the view that it's greedy or exploitative ("profiting off the labors of others").

    56. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by jbeach · · Score: 1
      You sound like exactly the kind of conservative I can get along with. Then it becomes more of a policy discussion about what works, and what doesn't. And if an idea I initially disagree with happens to work better than I thought it would one, I'll be quite happy to be proven wrong.

      I really hope, and I think it might actually be possible, that this election we will finally move beyond a lot of the distracting symbols we've had shouted at us, and really get into the substance of making things work, and hiring people who do the right work for us.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    57. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by jbeach · · Score: 1

      I agree; there seems to be a similar lack of awareness about issues of economic class.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    58. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by AndersOSU · · Score: 1

      Somebody's been listening to too much Hanity.

      Bill Clinton ran the economy into the ground. It started 300 days before he left office. His policies are to blame:
      annualized GDP per capita change by president:

      Eisenhower (R) +1.11%
      JFK (D) +3.48%
      Nixon (R) +1.70%
      Carter (D) +2.14%
      Regan (R) +2.45%
      G. H. W. Bush (R) +0.93%
      Clinton (D) +2.49% (+2.4% from 1999-2000)
      G. W. Bush (R) +1.39 as of 2006 (and dropping)

      Nafta and Gatt sent jobs out of the country.
      George H.W. Bush, Clinton, and George W Bush all support NAFTA, you're going to have a hard time pinning that on liberals. Globilization and free trade are typical of modern conservative economists (which isn't to say that they're always bad ideas)

      CRA required banks to make bad loans
      The CRA only applies to banks and thrifts whose deposits are insured by the FDIC. Mortgage companies like Countrywide Financial and fly-by-night cheapmortgage.com-type operations aren't CRA banks. Half of the subprime mortgages were made by companies that weren't covered by the CRA, and another 30 percent were written by organizations only loosely affiliated with CRA banks.

      Enviromental policies against Drilling for Oil and Bulding Refineries
      There's been a conservative in the whitehouse (an oil man no less) for 8 years, and a republican congress for most of that time. So don't blame lack of an energy policy on liberals. No matter who you listen to the price of oil is going to continue going up as china and india come on line. The real solution is alternative energy and conservation. Carter had an energy policy, Reagan ripped the solar panels off the white house roof.

      Now the Republicans are trying to be liberals and don't have the Guts to tell the American People that it is not Governments responsibility to provide Health Care, Welfare, etc.
      Obviously this rescue package is hardly conservative economics, and from a strictly economic standpoint, you're right, it's not the governments job to provide healthcare and welfare. However, here in reality, if the government doesn't administer it, no one will. Human dignity demands that we don't let our poor die in the streets from treatable ailments.

      The Economy had recovered under Bush, but how long can an economy stand without manufacturing jobs, and with laws requiring banks to make bad loans? Bush has only had clear control of the Senate for 2 years of his administration (during and right after 911). Bush tried to fix the CRA but was shot down by Democrats.
      Bwahaha. The GOP controlled the both houses for half of 2001 and from 2003-2007. The GOP controlled the house for all of W's term until 2007.

      Bush also has not been much of a conservative when it comes to Federal Education spending, Medicare, etc.
      Not gonna argue there, but I'd also add he's wasted a ton of money in Iraq.

      Paul Krugman was an econimic consultant for Enron.(Nice job there) He also helped talk the Clinton Administration into "Free Trade." Maybe Krugman doesn't like the Bush Administration because they didn't listen to him like the Clinton administration did.
      McCain via Phil Gramm and Bush both also have ties to enron. Maybe if the Bush administration had listened to Krugman warn of the housing bust we wouldn't be in the mess we are now.

    59. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by wclacy · · Score: 1

      Wow, you would put up Carter as an example of Energy Policy? That is a joke right?

      As for overall economic performance, Clinton did a great job of building the economy, He led the really stable .com boom and bust, He also spear headed the growth of great companies like Enron.

      The GOP has only had clear control of the Senate for 2 years of the Bush Presidency. That was during the years right around 911, and there were other priorities at the time. You need control of both the Senate and House to be able to get legislation through. CRA reforms were also blocked by Democrats in Congress.

      The cost of the Iraq War sits at 800 billion, which is less than the 800+ billion in new spending proposed by Obama. Iraq war spending will eventually go away, but the spending proposed by Obama will only grow because they are social programs that will be as hard to cut as Medicaid or Social Security.

    60. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by AndersOSU · · Score: 1

      The google is your friend.

      Here's one from 1978. It's critical of Carter. It says he want's to do crazy things like shift away from oil to coal and nuclear.

      Here's another. He foresaw the problem oil would become. He supported conservation and alternative energy. A frequent criticism of Carter is that he asked Americans to conserve - I'm still not sure I get that. He wanted to develop syngas. If anything he was ahead of his time, when oil prices went down again after the '79 energy crisis Carter's successor figured we wouldn't have to do anything, and that the status quo was just dandy.

      Even with the dot-com bust (which incidentally pales in comparison to the housing bust) Clinton grew the economy more than anyone since JFK.

      I like how you complain that Bush couldn't push an agenda because the GOP only had control of congress for 2 years (it's 4 and a half - i even gave you dates 1/20/01-6/6/01 and 2003-2007 - and it wasn't around 9/11) you blame Clinton's agenda for Bush's collapse, when the dems only actually controlled congress for two years ('93-'94). Blame Phil Gramm for Enron.

      The CRA wasn't the problem. As I said 80% of subprime loans were issued by companies not bound by CRA regulations.

      The real cost of the Iraq war is well into the trillions, and I'd rather spend that money on health care than nation building.

    61. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by alvinrod · · Score: 1

      I don't think that it's as different as you think.

      We don't have full-blown universal healthcare, but we do have Medicaid which helps provide some assistance for low-income families. Public schools are funded through tax dollars. A lot of it comes from local property taxes but there still is some federal and state money. A lot of universities in the US also receive federal or state tax dollars. Students are also able to receive subsidized government loans which accumulate no interest at all while you're in school and generally have a low interest rate. PBS is a television station that receives partial public funding and also generates a lot of its other income from viewer contributions. Individual states have varying employment laws, but I'm not sure to what degree and individual state matches European standards or laws.

      Iowa, for example, may not be much like a European country, but California, on the other hand, may be very similar. Personally, I believe that if the federal government were less powerful, individual states would have more freeway in implementing more social programs within their own state. I'm not entirely sure why the state of Massachusetts doesn't just implement their own state-wide universal healthcare. If it works as well as everyone in favor of it says is does, then other states will eventually adopt it as well.

    62. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Yokaze · · Score: 1

      It is a matter of scale and acceptance.

      With the very same fervour U.S. citizens seem to be fighting against governmental influence, you will see European fight for social insurance and laws limiting working hours.

      PBS? How many people watch it in contrast to the BBC, RAI, ARD/ZDF, France Televisions?

      Yes, California is relatively similar to Europe. But AFAIK, California is quite an oddball in the US anyway.

      > [...], individual states would have more freeway in implementing more social programs within their own state [...]

      How can they have more freeway than given by the 10th amendment?

      The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.

      > If it works as well as everyone in favor of it says is does, then other states will eventually adopt it as well.

      The problem is, social systems do not work for everyone in favour. They work in favour for those in need. When a state adopts universal healthcare, it will simultaneously become more attractive for the less fortunate and unattractive for companies and the wealthy.
      What stops a company or someone with $250k+ income relocating from Massachusetts to New Hampshire?

      --
      "Between strong and weak, between rich and poor [...], it is freedom which oppresses and the law which sets free"
  9. Re:How wonderful (eye roll) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'American' isn't a 'race', and 'pride' comes before a 'fall'.

  10. Flat earth... by lelitsch · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...with the only speed bump being the Slashdot editing process. Seriously, this was in every newspaper PRINT edition before it showed up on Slashdot.

    1. Re:Flat earth... by 77Punker · · Score: 4, Funny

      Nobody comes here to stay current with the news; we come here for discussion that's better than most other places.

    2. Re:Flat earth... by MrHanky · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      No, discussion is not better here than most other places. Sure, there are often a few informed people around, but far from always. Most science debates show that the average slashdotter doesn't have the slightest idea about what science is, for example. Most technology discussions show that there are loads of fanboys with mod points, and loads of people with nothing to say who know these fanboys have mod points, and go out to say whatever gives them their +5.

      I come here mostly to flame.

    3. Re:Flat earth... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I come here mostly to flame.

      Indeed.

    4. Re:Flat earth... by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

      Try having a discussion on science in the forums of your local paper. Slashdot is indeed a much better forum than most. That doesn't mean there aren't tons of morons, just far fewer than the typical forum.

      --
      I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
    5. Re:Flat earth... by LakeSolon · · Score: 1

      No, discussion is not better here than most other places. Sure, there are often a few informed people around, but far from always. Most science debates show that the average slashdotter doesn't have the slightest idea about what science is, for example. [...]

      I don't care what the average slashdotter thinks as I don't read their posts.

      Slashdot's strength is its, albeit flawed, moderation system.

    6. Re:Flat earth... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I come here mostly to flame.

      Well, that's just because you're a shit-eating vagina-monkey. Suck my ass-cne, fuckhole.

    7. Re:Flat earth... by DrEasy · · Score: 1

      Why is this modded funny? Have we become that cynical? Or did the mod miss the second half of the sentence?

      --
      "In our tactical decisions, we are operating contrary to our strategic interest."
    8. Re:Flat earth... by MrHanky · · Score: 1

      That's simply untrue. The moderation system is one of the main reasons for the fanboyism. In science discussions, it's the reason why you have 200 posters trying to be the first to remind everyone that correlation is not causation, and the first dozen or so are always at +5, even when it's blatantly off topic. Oh, and those are the very average slashdotters. They provide clichés they don't understand, and they are +5, insightful.

  11. We really should have listened to him 3 years ago by StevenMaurer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Safe as Houses

    A snippet (only 3 paragraphs to fall within fair use):

    I used to live next door to a Russian emigre. One day he asked me to explain something that puzzled him about his new country. "This place seems very rich," he said, "but I never see anyone making anything. How does the country earn its money?"

    ...

    In other words, a fuller answer to my former neighbor would be that these days, Americans make a living selling each other houses, paid for with money borrowed from the Chinese. Somehow, that doesn't seem like a sustainable lifestyle.

    How solid, then, is America's economic recovery? The British have a phrase that applies: "safe as houses." Our economy is as safe as houses. Unfortunately, given current prices and our dependence on foreign lenders, houses aren't safe at all.

    Whine all you want about the Nobel Committee having a political agenda. Right is right. And Krugman was right.

  12. It's not a Nobel Prize by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's "The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel."

    --
    Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
    1. Re:It's not a Nobel Prize by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obligatory Dilbert quote:

      "Economics is not a science and never will be!"

  13. Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Even now unabashed Hayek/Friedman fanboi come out of the woodwork to passive aggressively promote the often failed free market scam.

    Get a real economic clue, PLEASE, the planet can not afford more of the lies, fraud, and outright theft of failed ideologues. The Reagan clan has spawned devastating economic failure, again. How many more times must the ripoffs occur before y'all wake up? S&L, Enron, W/Cheney. Even Libertarians are FINALLY growing up and catching a ride on the Keynes cluetrain.

    1. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by jcr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Get a real economic clue, PLEASE,

      That's advice that you would do well to take. We had bubbles and depressions before FDR, but the government had very little power to interfere in the recovery process, and they were typically over in two years or less.

      FDR, and the Keynsian idiots around him, believed that falling prices were the problem, and did everything they could think of, legal or not, to try to prop up prices, including such asinine measures as plowing crops under and slaughtering livestock just to waste them. It's no coincidence that a man who thought he was entitled to command every aspect of our economy is also the man who imprisoned Americans without trial or charges for nothing more than having Japanese ancestry.

      FDR was a tyrant.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    2. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by Flavio · · Score: 1

      Even now unabashed Hayek/Friedman fanboi come out of the woodwork to passive aggressively promote the often failed free market scam.

      Hayek was from the Austrian school of economics. Friedman was from the Chicago school. Like every other Chicago school economist, Friedman defended government intervention through a central bank. Hayek won the Nobel Prize for showing how central banking and the government manipulation of interest rates caused and aggravated recessions.

      The fact that you've associated Hayek and Friedman as if they stood for the same concepts shows that you don't know what you're talking about.

    3. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The reason why I don't like Keynesian economics are two facts:

      1) It caused the Great Depression to last longer than it should have, especially with the confiscatory level of income taxes after FDR came into power in 1933, which did a lot to discourage economic expansion.

      2) Britain tried Keynesian economics after World War II, and while it had early success in the end it nearly drove the British economy into ground. It took former PM Margaret Thatcher's privatization of many British companies for the British economy to finally grow again during the 1980's.

    4. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by DerWulf · · Score: 1

      Interesting how "Hayek Fanbois" predicted every major recession in the last hundred years and how they have a very consitent framework for explaining exactly the causes. This is a SHITLOAD more than any other econ theory can provide. Hell, even Krugman thought the techbubble would never crunch ... As for DEM v REP I don't think you'll find much love for either in the austrian school. In fact, Hayek even wrote an essay entitled "Why I'm not a conservative". But here is some food for thought: Do you really think that the current economic situation is wholely and completely caused by policies enacted during the last 8 years? 16? 32? Do you really believe that the economy works in year cycles that are multiples of four? Maybe it has more to do with this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Components_of_the_United_States_money_supply2.svg

      --

      ___
      No power in the 'verse can stop me
    5. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by jcr · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The essence of Keynsianism is conceit. Keynes believed that he was such a genius that he could override the forces of supply and demand just by getting the government to do his bidding.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    6. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by StevenMaurer · · Score: 5, Interesting

      We had bubbles and depressions before FDR, but the government had very little power to interfere in the recovery process, and they were typically over in two years or less.

      Your assertions don't square against known history. The panic of 1857 was interrupted only by the civil war. The panic of 1873 lasted five years. The panic of 1893 lasted nearly four.

      And in all of them, the American governments of the day did indeed try to take various measures to stop them, although they weren't always very effective.

      And these panics were far more serious. For people who lost their life savings in a supposedly guaranteed savings account, they could be literally deadly, given that retirees did not have Social Security to fall back on. If you didn't have an extended family who could provide food, you could (and would) starve to death.

      Insofar as your attack on FDR and farm price supports, you are clearly not aware that some goods and services (most notably rail transportation) did not substantially fall during that period. The result: it cost more to transport goods to market than you could get by selling them. So your idea that there would be food for all, if only bad old FDR hadn't stopped the market from working, is, to put it mildly, completely unsupported by fact.

      I would go on, but given the tenor of your original post, I'm pretty sure any additional logic or fast would be wasted on you. There's a rule about arguing on the internet, and believe me, I'm not retarded.

    7. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Interesting

      We had bubbles and depressions before FDR, but the government had very little power to interfere in the recovery process, and they were typically over in two years or less.

      The "Long Depression" was from 1873 to 1896, starting with the collapse of the Vienna Stock Exchange in Europe, and the debts from the Civil War plus the Credit Mobilier scandal in the U.S., and possibly rooted in socioeconomic and political changes wrought by the "Second" Industrial revolution. It demonstrates that there exists a deeper, more fundamental sort of downturn than the sort of readjustment that lasts for a year or two.

      If we date the "Great Depression" from October 1929, then by the time FDR started his first term in March of 1933 , we already had a depression that had gone on for almost three and a half years, which would suggest that it was more than a simple business cycle re-adjustment. You can't blame FDR for that.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    8. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by pugugly · · Score: 1

      With apologies - you quite obviously don't really know anything about the history of recessions - look at the old recessions in U.S. History - they last *much* longer than what we call a recession today.

      I could come up with a dozen arguments about why, ranging from crediting Keynes (I do) to increased speed of communication, mobility in the workforce, a stronger middle class, greater productivity, and I could come up with a dozen other things given time, but the historical fact is that depressions and recessions were longer and deeper prior to Keynes than they have been since.

      Saying otherwise is simple historical ignorance.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    9. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by jcr · · Score: 1

      You can't blame FDR for that.

      I don't blame him for the onset, I blame him for its continuation.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    10. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by Mr.+Beatdown · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hey he did much worse than imprisoning people for who their ancestors were, he also imprisoned people below the poverty line for growing their own food. Forced starvation: socialism style. When doing work on your own to feed yourself and your family is a crime, your country is run by totalitarian fascists.

      --
      My fellow Americans, let's restore the death penalty for child rapists. Let's do it . . . for the children.
    11. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by jcr · · Score: 1

      depressions and recessions were longer and deeper prior to Keynes than they have been since.

      Except for the biggest one so far. FDR followed Keynes' advice, and we had a depression for a couple of decades.

      Saying otherwise is simple historical ignorance.

      And what would you call ignoring the single largest counter-example to your argument?

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    12. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by jbeach · · Score: 1

      Britain lost their empires after World War II. I think that maybe also have had a slight effect....

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    13. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by pugugly · · Score: 1

      Just because I hate making blanket assertions:
      From coverage of a Ben Bernanke talk last year.
      Original stats from NBER

      Recessions of the 20th Century
      Date Range & Duration (In months)
      Sept. 1902-Aug. 1904 23
      May 1907-June 1908 13
      Jan. 1910-Jan. 1912 24
      Jan. 1913-Dec. 1914 23
      Aug. 1918-March 1919 7
      Jan. 1920-July 1921 18
      May 1923-July 1924 14
      Oct. 1926-Nov. 1927 13
      Aug. 1929-March 1933 43
      May 1937-June 1938 13
      Feb. 1945-Oct. 1945 8
      Nov. 1948-Oct. 1949 11
      July 1953-May 1954 10
      Aug. 1957-April 1958 8
      April 1960-Feb. 1961 10
      Dec. 1969-Nov. 1970 11
      Nov. 1973-March 1975 16
      Jan. 1980-July 1980 6
      July 1981-Nov. 1982 16
      July 1990-March 1991 8
      March 2001-Nov. 2001 8

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    14. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by pugugly · · Score: 1

      So, from 1900 to 1929, there were eight recessions, only one under 12 months. From 1933 to 2001, there were 12 recessions, only three of which were *over* 12 months.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    15. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by jcr · · Score: 1

      There's at least one major error in your data above. The great depression began in the Hoover administration and continued until 1946.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    16. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by pugugly · · Score: 1

      The recession is not, strictly speaking, actually the same as the Great Depression - although I'm not familiar with any definition of the Great Depression that extends it to 1946 either; typically 1939 is given as the end of the Depression.

      I believe NEBR uses the "Two Quarters of Contraction" definition of a recession - so up and down periods and temporary upturns in the larger depression would mark smaller recessions within it.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    17. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't blame him for the onset, I blame him for its continuation.

      Point is, you can't do that based on the assertion that other depressions were "typically over in two years or less". At 23 years, the Long Depression is a counterexample to this assertion - and the wik also notes the Depression of 1807 (7 years), the Panics of 1819 (5 years), 1837 (6 years), 1857 (3 years), 1873 (6 years), and 1893 (3 years), and the Post WWI recession (3 years). In fact, it lists only one recession/depression of less than two years prior to 1930, the Panic of 1907. So I don't know where you're getting your assertion from.

      If the Great Depression was a phenomenon of the same order as the Long Depression, it could have lasted for over two decades without intervention.

      Looking at this graph of employment, it sure looks like the New Deal was having a positive impact, and had just about pulled employment back to pre-Depression levels when there came the sudden drop of the Recession of 1937.

      That recession was caused by a premature start in ramping down New Deal programs. So if you want to argue that FDR prolonged the depression by weakening the New Deal, there might be an argument there, but I get the impression that's not the gist of the argument you'd like to make.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    18. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by jcr · · Score: 1

      I'm not familiar with any definition of the Great Depression that extends it to 1946

      War production isn't wealth, even if some economists include it in the GNP.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    19. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by jcr · · Score: 1

      The problem with your graph of employment, is that it includes people with unproductive jobs paid for with tax money. The Soviet Union nominally had close to full employment, yet it was an economic basket case.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    20. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by jcr · · Score: 1

      he also imprisoned people below the poverty line for growing their own food.

      Yeah, and he also threw people in jail for performing services for less than the price that the NRA insisted they should charge. The NRA established minimum prices on all kinds of things. I've been reading a collection of articles from the Saturday Evening Post from that period, and the man was far worse than I'd ever realized.

      I've also been reading up n the history of the minimum wage laws, which had the immediate effect of putting about half a million black men out of work when they were enacted.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    21. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 3, Informative

      The problem with your graph of employment, is that it includes people with unproductive jobs paid for with tax money.

      Assuming you're refering to the WPA, read the page. It states, "Note that these figures do not include farm or WPA employment."

      Of course, it's also a debatable proposition whether building national infrastructure is "unproductive".

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    22. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FDR followed Keynes' advice

      Keynes visited the White House in 1934 to urge President Roosevelt to increase deficit spending. Roosevelt afterwards complained to Labor Secretary Frances Perkins that "he left a whole rigmarole of figures --- he must be a mathematician rather than a political economist."

      (Wikipedia, but unfortunately uncited)

    23. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by zymano · · Score: 1

      LOL. 'Anonymous coward cocksucker'

    24. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by Mr.+Beatdown · · Score: 1

      Great book for the period is Amity Shlaes' The Forgotten Man. Make me really scared when I hear people call for a new "New Deal"

      --
      My fellow Americans, let's restore the death penalty for child rapists. Let's do it . . . for the children.
    25. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      promote the often failed free market scam.

      Wouldn't a free market have to be tried before it can fail? When you have the currency of exchange established by government decree (fiat currency as used by every country on earth today) and government sanctioned fraud/counterfeiting (fractional reserve lending, where the banks lend money that doesn't exist, and that loan money is legally redeemable for the fiat currency) how can it be said that we have a free market?

      We have a command economy, it's that simple. Our money supply is not determined by production levels, supply and demand but by the edict of government and central banks. They openly control the money supply in order to direct the market, any free market principles in operation are allowed only so far as they conform to the approval of those organisations. If we had a system where you could do whatever you want until I don't like it, and I control necessities of your life to make you do my will, we don't call that freedom. I don't know why people think we have any real implementation of a free market when that is precisely the situation we have with the economy.

    26. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by XDirtypunkX · · Score: 1

      1934, 1935, 1936, 1937 and 1939 were all years of GNP growth where unemployment fell under FDR. I would call that a "recovery". Of course, it might just be that the disaster precipitated by laissez-faire policies before those years was so monumental that all that growth still wasn't enough to quite get the economy out of the hole dug for it by Coolidge and Hoover.

    27. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by XDirtypunkX · · Score: 1

      FDR didn't follow Keynes advice. It was notorious that they had a falling out because FDR refused to spend into deficit.

      Many historians link the 2nd World War and the deficit spending it caused as the real triumph of Keynes's ideas in turning the USA into the economic powerhouse of post war period. It also should be noted that economies which spent in deficit such as Sweden (which followed a full Keynesian policy) and Germany (which was gearing up for war) recovered much more quickly from the depression.

    28. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by pugugly · · Score: 1

      Much as I like the idea of decoupling money paid to the DoD from being counted as any benefit to the U.S., the money paid to soldiers and factory workers building planes spends just as well as the money paid to a museum curator.

      The general economy improved after 1939 by all objectively measurable standards.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    29. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by jcr · · Score: 1

      disaster precipitated by laissez-faire policies before those years

      Guess again. The Federal Reserve was created in 1913, and it provided the inflation that made the stock bubble of the 1920s possible.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  14. Re:inspiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    I found not only the smell but the shit itself. He'd forgotten to flush.

    Barack Obama is leading the way in saving the environment by not flushing. John McCain requires 3 or 4 flushes. Because he's full of shit.

  15. Economics by oldhack · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Economics, a fine scholarly field, is not a science, as much as some economists would like to pretend with their crude algebra and stats.

    --
    Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    1. Re:Economics by cailith1970 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Agreed. The stock market is a direct indicator of the current balance between fear and greed. And since both of these are human emotions, they are very difficult to predict with any accuracy.

      However, if you use technical charting, some statistical markers such as price point values can provide support and resistance to the price going through them. But again, it's people that push the price up or down through these. Is there enough fear to push it down through support, or enough greed to push it up through resistance? You can only take an educated guess. It's not deterministic.

      --
      I intend to live forever, or die trying. - Groucho Marx
    2. Re:Economics by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 1

      That's ridiculous. It may not be well developed, but they use scientific principles and methodology. It IS a science. Buy a clue.

    3. Re:Economics by KamenK · · Score: 1

      I suggest that you buy a clue. Economics is a "social science" - meaning that it deals with social phenomena and all the math and methodology they use is a smoke screen. It will become science when people become robots (read - predictable and rational).

    4. Re:Economics by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 1

      Do you know what science means? It's a process that's extremely well defined. And yes, economists use those tools. They don't use them well enough yet, and it's a baby science, but the scientific method is used.

      Don't deny reality - it'll only bite you on the ass.

  16. There is no Nobel Prize in economics by riker1384 · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences is a prize given by the Bank of Sweden, not by the Nobel Foundation. It is not one of the prizes established by Alfred Nobel. It's named after him and inspired by Nobel Prizes, but it's not a Nobel Prize.

    1. Re:There is no Nobel Prize in economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LA LA LA I can't hear you!

                    Sincerely,

                    Paul Krugman

    2. Re:There is no Nobel Prize in economics by timster · · Score: 1

      The prize was established by the Bank of Sweden but it's important to note that the winner is determined by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, just like all the others except for the Peace Prize.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    3. Re:There is no Nobel Prize in economics by Marcika · · Score: 5, Informative
      It is endowed by the Bank of Sweden, but it is awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, same as the science Nobel prizes.

      Besides, it is on the Nobel website, equivalent to all the other prizes. If it's good enough for them...

      So you might be technically right, but only in the pedant's sense.

    4. Re:There is no Nobel Prize in economics by Trojan35 · · Score: 1

      I have 5 moderator points, and no way to moderate the summary.

    5. Re:There is no Nobel Prize in economics by Bartab · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's not actually "good enough for them"

      http://nobelprize.org/nomination/economics/nominators.html

      The Prize in Economics is not a Nobel Prize.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    6. Re:There is no Nobel Prize in economics by wonderboss · · Score: 1

      Quote from Nobel's will "The said interest shall be divided into five equal parts, which shall be apportioned as follows: one part to the person who shall have made the most important discovery or invention within the field of physics; one part to the person who shall have made the most important chemical discovery or improvement; one part to the person who shall have made the most important discovery within the domain of physiology or medicine; one part to the person who shall have produced in the field of literature the most outstanding work in an ideal direction; and one part to the person who shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses." http://nobelprize.org/alfred_nobel/will/short_testamente.html

      --
      more cowbell
  17. One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by plasmacutter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yet another nobel winner for a mixed economy which offers the general public a hedge against the risks taken for, say, entrepreneurial endeavors, trade policies which encourage the retention of jobs and the continuation of a healthy middle class, and regulations which will insure at least a basic check on corporate malfeasance and market consolidation.

    How many more politicians and faux-news talking heads will continue to push the pseudo-scientific religion that is reaganomics?

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    1. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by MagikSlinger · · Score: 5, Informative

      How many more politicians and faux-news talking heads will continue to push the pseudo-scientific religion that is reaganomics?

      Humans are capable of believing untrue things for a very long time, even after reality begins to seriously challenge those beliefs. The Left has long-cherished beliefs (Example: Unions are good for workers, My Counter-Example: The number of Unions up until the 60s that prohibited blacks from working at a union shop). The Right has its long-cherished beliefs.

      There are a lot of possible explanations why people are like that, but the more important thing is to engage those people by asking questions about the basis of their belief and learning yourself. If someone says something, and you don't know if it's true or not, take some effort to find out if it is. Most of the time, you can Google the issue and find a lot of people have done the hard work for you. You just have to verify if their logic is sound and inferences are valid.

      Krugman, via his blog and columns, does try his best to do this. In fact, he often posts links to early versions of his papers and mathematics on his NY Times blog and lets his readers pick it apart. He and Tyler Cowan (a libertarian leaning economist) have very civil debates via their blogs.

      Most *-wing sites simply tune out contrary voices with more chanting and weak arguments that bolster that community's feelings on right and wrong. In short: people judge arguments by its truthiness, not its validity.

      And for the record, we cannot judge if Reagnomics worked because Reagonomics is:

      1. reduce the growth of government spending,
      2. reduce marginal tax rates on income from labor and capital,
      3. reduce government regulation of the economy,
      4. control the money supply to reduce inflation.

      To be honest, I don't believe he achieved those four goals during his presidency, so I'm not sure one can say Reagonomics worked or not:

      1. Government spending as a percentage of GDP
      2. Tax receipts as percentage of GDP
      3. Quantifying regulation: Notice the Clinton years come out looking pretty good too (i.e., congress is as much to blame/credit as the President)
      4. Inflation from 1913 to present
      --
      The bitter lessons of a veteran coder: http://bitterprogrammer.blogspot.com
    2. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by marco.antonio.costa · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Like the regulations that prevented the current bubble? Or the dot-com bubble before that? Sure, sure, give us more of those enlightened commandments. ;-)

      It's naive of you not to consider government regulations as part of corporations' 'malfeasance' plans. The tax exemption for companies manufacturing child toy arrows on the latest bailout bill, is a small example. While I do not agree with his views on monetary policy, Milton Friedman was right on the money when he said: "When you have big government, big business takes it over.".

      The 'hedge' you speak of is currently being stuck up the taxpayer's behind. It's something that came out of a head not unlike this Nobel 'mixed economy' laureate. All for the general public's welfare, of course.

      In a free market if you fail you bear the consequences, in Communist US there is the Fed. :-)

      --
      Send your spendthrift head of state this
    3. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I do not agree with his views on monetary policy, Milton Friedman was right on the money when he said: "When you have big government, big business takes it over.".

      The 'hedge' you speak of is currently being stuck up the taxpayer's behind. It's something that came out of a head not unlike this Nobel 'mixed economy' laureate. All for the general public's welfare, of course.

      In a free market if you fail you bear the consequences, in Communist US there is the Fed. :-)

      Seems like we've got the worst of both worlds. The people largely responsible for the current insanity made off with the profits for years and the taxpayers are stuck paying for the eventual crash, or else.

      So I'm fine with the free market thing as long as the government isn't going to help or hinder anyone. What I'm not fine with is the selective regulation and deregulation that just leaves legal loopholes for theft and fraud on a massive scale.

    4. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by Moridineas · · Score: 1

      Interesting--an economist that you seem to like gets awarded a prize and automatically anyone that disagrees with him is spouting a "pseudo-scientific religion."

      Krugman supports free trade. Krugman is against protectionism. Krugman is a big supporter of globalization. Krugman defends factory sweatshops. Krugman blames Europe's high levels of unemployment on overbearing government regulations.

      As a right winger, if that's the world's premier leftist economist (as I've seen people call him), I've got to feel pretty good about the growing consensus between left and right on issues like free trade and globalization.

      I would think ALL economic theories would be pseudo-scientific to some degree. Maybe the previous winners of the prize who disagreed with Krugman on some things means something to you? no?

    5. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by glwtta · · Score: 2, Insightful

      (Example: Unions are good for workers, My Counter-Example: The number of Unions up until the 60s that prohibited blacks from working at a union shop)

      That's a counterexample for "Unions are perfect", not for "Unions are good". I don't have any strong opinions on unions, one way or another, but I just hate to see a bogus argument go unchallenged.

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
    6. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by jbeach · · Score: 1
      I agree very much with your post, I just want to post a qualification on one point: The Clinton years.

      Clinton ran contrary to the Voodoo-economics-in-practice of cutting taxes on the rich; instead he cut taxes on the poor and middle class and increased programs to help the poor and middle class.

      Then as the boom years kicked in and tax revenues increased, the GOP fought him tooth and nail to cut taxes rather than continue to reduce the deficit.

      So, since Clinton pursued a tax policy that was the opposite of typical GOP practice, and he then went all the way to shutting down the government rather than going along with their plan, it seems to me that Clinton deserves considerably more than half of the credit for reducing the deficit.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    7. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by MagikSlinger · · Score: 3

      (Example: Unions are good for workers, My Counter-Example: The number of Unions up until the 60s that prohibited blacks from working at a union shop)

      That's a counterexample for "Unions are perfect", not for "Unions are good". I don't have any strong opinions on unions, one way or another, but I just hate to see a bogus argument go unchallenged.

      Touche! Excellent point, and good call on my straw man argument. :-)

      --
      The bitter lessons of a veteran coder: http://bitterprogrammer.blogspot.com
    8. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by dachshund · · Score: 1

      And for the record, we cannot judge if Reagnomics worked because Reagonomics is...

      With due respect, Reaganomics is whatever Reagan actually accomplished. If he found it politically expedient to reduce taxes without reducing spending to match, then that's Reaganomics. In my view, it's not a particularly successful policy.

    9. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

      While Reagan was in office, but against his strenuous complaints, Paul Volcker did succeed in controlling the growth of the money supply, which reigned in inflation and probably stimulated the stock market. Reagan took credit for it, but the truth is he fought Volcker and the Fed every inch of the way. Ironically, Carter appointed Volcker, who basically cured the inflation that was plaguing the country.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    10. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And for the record, we cannot judge if Reagnomics worked because Reagonomics is:

      reduce the growth of government spending,
      reduce marginal tax rates on income from labor and capital,
      reduce government regulation of the economy,
      control the money supply to reduce inflation.

      Isn't this argument a bit like claiming we cannot judge Communism because it was never implemented per Karl Marx vision?

      The reason why those items were not implemented was because Reagan and his predecessors failed to take into account the reality of public sentiment. If you are going to cut government spending, you need to be able to articulate an argument for it and you need to be prepared to go to bat for it and lose an election if the public disagrees. Republicans have never done that.

      The last time in recent memory they did make a big stink about spending(besides John McCain whining about earmarks) was in the mid-1990s and their big wasteful areas... Sesame Street and the National Endowment for the Arts. Both of which amount to bumpkiss in the grand scheme of the budget.

      Consider this... We currently have around $10 trillion in debt. Servicing that debt costs around $400-500 billion a year in interest payments. $400-500 billion a year is just about the amount of our annual deficit(although this year it'll be substantially higher due to item #3 of Reaganomics). Had we balanced the budget back in 1982 instead of using the whole thing as a giant slush fund for the "more important" people, we wouldn't be in the straights we are today. Every year we add to the debt makes the problem exponentionally worse.

      For you see that $400 billion being spent on interest... That is the tax payers money. I am paying it out of my paycheck.

      And unlike spending money on roads, bridges, police, military or even food stamps and welfare. I RECEIVE NO BENEFIT. None, zipppo, nada... zilch. It's wasted. Just might as well flush it down the toilet.

    11. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by khallow · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should get out of the 80's more. "Reaganomics" hasn't been around for a long time. Also, if we're going to treat a Nobel prize as an endorsement of the beliefs of the person in question, then we need to consider who is granting this recognition. As it turns out, it is the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. I imagine that group is heavily dependent as a whole on government funding. That inserts all kinds of biases into their judgement.

    12. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by MagikSlinger · · Score: 1

      Isn't this argument a bit like claiming we cannot judge Communism because it was never implemented per Karl Marx vision?

      No, because that is the very definition of Reganomics, and the very goals Republican administrations have claimed to aspire to. What Regan actually did is something else, which can be debated endlessly. And let's face it, Communism was never implemented Karl Marx style, but that's why we make the distinction of Soviet Communism (which bore a striking resemblance to fascism to me), Chinese Communism (which seemed to be an effectively modernized Chinese imperialism -- i.e., emperor based) and Cuban Communism, which seems more like Socialism as the days go on and they begin to play at the edges.

      The point is that Reganomics is defined (simply) as Less Government = More Prosperity = More Equality. Since Regan was never able to implement the Less Government thing, how can he have proved Less Government = More Prosperity = More Equality? He did some minor things, but we still have the Farm Bill, the Sugar price controls and countless other ways the American government manages the marketplace.

      Your other comment about not balancing the budget is square on the money, though. So many things that happened in the 80s could have been avoided: The Japanese trade deficit, high interest rates and inflation above 4%. This is why I think Americans should be presented the stark reality: if you are unwilling to cut spending, you need more taxes. Chose.

      --
      The bitter lessons of a veteran coder: http://bitterprogrammer.blogspot.com
    13. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's also important to note that unions in the US were more or less declawed by Taft and FDR. They were transformed from "dangerous" (to those in power, anyway) radical organizations that delivered political power directly to the hands of working-class people, into stifling bureacracies run by "safe" career men who had more in common with the bosses than the guys on the bottom tier.

        In this way, unions were domesticated and became just another faction on the business scene.

    14. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by bahbar · · Score: 1

      Inflation has to be shown on a log scale... This linear scale is just bogus.

    15. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by pablodiazgutierrez · · Score: 1

      Wow, it's the first time I read someone in /. agree that he was wrong arguing something, anything. Bravo! Honestly.

    16. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

      To be honest, I don't believe he achieved those four goals during his presidency, so I'm not sure one can say Reagonomics worked or not.

      This is roughly the same thing die-hard communists say these days about communisim. It's the tinkerbell theory: It only failed because you didn't believe hard enough!

    17. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by lawpoop · · Score: 1

      Damn, I wish there was some kind of prize or trophy that slashdot offered for a poster who has the decency to accept when a poster calls them out.

      You, sir, are a member of a very select group :)

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    18. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      People seem to misunderstand that regulations were put in place for good reasons.

      Some of which include:
      The abuse of labor to the point of neo-feudalism
      The rise of massive cartels and trusts in the early 20th century.
      The recklessness and malfeasance which led to the 1929 collapse.

      Deregulation is a pretty aweful idea all around.
      The system of regs which were in place before his presidency were carefully erected over a long period of time, and represented a much better balance of centralized, liability free corporate power and consumer and labor rights.

      The removal of media ownership regulations resulted in clear channel, fox, and the other big houses which have long since pitched investigative reporting in favor of catering to governmental political whims by assisting their slight of hand.

      The removal of tariffs allowed multinational conglomerates to turn the competition game on its head, and force governments to compete for them by selling out their constituencies.

      While there are a few bad examples, most regulations are there for a damn good reason. And, of course, Reagan, like every other "anti-regulation" administration since, has cherry picked the regulations most useful to the protection of the public trust for the chopping block (FCC media ownership, trade barriers against nations with no human rights standards, organized labor support, bankruptcy protections), while turning around and strengthening things like limited liability and copyright.

      We now have so many examples from recent history of the calamitous consequences for the public at large, the middle class, and political discourse that it's utterly ludicrous to consider deregulation beneficial. At this point, however, the issues is moot.

      The media moguls the reaganites fed in the 90's are the only ones left, and they don't give one damn about honest political discourse or an informed public. In fact, they want quite the contrary, because they routinely play golf with the political bed fellows who gave them their media empires.

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    19. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      Like the regulations that prevented the current bubble? Or the dot-com bubble before that? Sure, sure, give us more of those enlightened commandments. ;-)

      Exactly my point. You do know there were regulations, rolled back by republicans, which prevented investment and banking firms from investing in certain sectors at the same time, among other things.

      The ABSENCE of those regulations led to the credit crunch.

      As for the dot-com bubble, that's just a case of people rushing to a new, unexplored market. Some win, many lose, but people who recklessly invest in it should not expect the returns they do.

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    20. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      Less Government = More Prosperity = More Equality.

      late 19th and early 20th century US.

      It had much less government.
      Most people lived in shacks and had no indoor plumbing.

      The wealthy lived in opulent estates, not unlike biltmore.

      Any attempt by workers to get uppity with leave for illness or enough free time to eat and sleep regularly were met with responses ranging from immediate termination to machine gun fire.

      Most medications and processed foods carried with them very real risks of mortality for those who consumed them, and a very large portion of them contained far from what the packaging indicated.

      Since Regan was never able to implement the Less Government thing, how can he have proved Less Government = More Prosperity = More Equality?

      simple. he made the government bigger only in military spending, syphoned money away from domestic programs to do so, and got the government regulators' nose out of the business of fine, upstanding business executives.

      It certainly created more equality. Anyone not within the upper 2% was equally miserable.

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  18. Interstellar trade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Let us not forget his contributions to the field of interstellar trade:

    http://www.princeton.edu/~pkrugman/interstellar.pdf

    1. Re:Interstellar trade by able1234au · · Score: 1

      Now THAT's thinking ahead. Note the use of Trantor in the paper clearly showing his inspiration.

  19. Consider the source. by jcr · · Score: 0

    This award comes from a committee of bankers. It's not at all surprising that they decide to give it to someone who's all for bailing out banks that have been run into the ground by incompetent risk management.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    1. Re:Consider the source. by EdwinFreed · · Score: 2, Informative

      You might want to read a little more of Krugman's positions if you believe that. He was adamantly opposed to the original Paulson bailout plan, which was a banker's wet dream. He was much more in favor of the Dodd plan and eventually came down in favor of the final plan that passed here, but he was far from enthusiastic about it. "Better than nothing, but just barely" sums up his take, I think.

      The British plan, OTOH, is one he supports much more wholeheartedly. But the banking community is far from haapy with that plan.

    2. Re:Consider the source. by jmauro · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Economics prize is actually selected by a committee of members of the The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. The prize was established by the Sveriges Riksbank, but it is not awarded by it.

    3. Re:Consider the source. by jcr · · Score: 1

      The bottom line is that he favored the bailout. Picking one unconstitutional scheme over another is nothing but splitting hairs.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    4. Re:Consider the source. by jcr · · Score: 1

      That being the case, the state of education in Sweden must be rather worse than I had assumed.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    5. Re:Consider the source. by pugugly · · Score: 1

      If your economy is hanging on by a hair, it's pretty damn important which hairs you split.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
  20. There is NO Nobel Prize for Economics! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is NO Nobel Prize for Economics!
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Memorial_Prize_in_Economic_Sciences

    1. Re:There is NO Nobel Prize for Economics! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  21. For those of you interested in learning more by kipin · · Score: 2, Informative

    Here is a good synopsis and collection of his recent work compiled by an Economics professor at George Mason University.

    Marginal Revolution: Paul Krugman wins the Nobel Prize

    --
    If I can not smoke in heaven, then I shall not go. -- Mark Twain
  22. Hayek and Friedman got one too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Does that mean the Nobel people endorse all their political viewpoints? Even though I might agree they were more deserving.

    Krugman, is getting a nod for specific contributions to economic theory, not full approval of a progressive worldview. And in many specific areas of global free trade, Krugman is closer to Friedman than the duds who will be inheriting the current mess. (And likely to make it worse, I might add)

    But Krugman's worthiness in economic theory should not be diminished just because he is a stinking liberal from a stinking party whose 8 years of invertebrate opposition to the dumbest president ever is getting rewarded with a mandate to control all branches of government. And the rise not of Clintonian Blue Dogs, but the reddest of greens. Yuk and woe unto the currency.

    1. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by Shatrat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Does that mean the Nobel people endorse all their political viewpoints?

      Since Al Gore and Yasir Arafat, it seems like political viewpoint is the most important thing for consideration for a Nobel prize.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    2. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by blueg3 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Good job confusing the Nobel Peace Prize, the Prize in Economics, and the scientific Nobel Prizes, which are selected by different groups and with different criteria.

    3. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by Shatrat · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that they are not all under the control of the Nobel Foundation, or that the actions of one committee should not reflect at all on the rest of the foundation?

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    4. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by Rhinobird · · Score: 5, Informative

      There is no Nobel prize in Economics. It's an associated prize, "The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel", was instituted by Sweden's central bank in 1968

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sveriges_Riksbank_Prize_in_Economic_Sciences_in_Memory_of_Alfred_Nobel

      --
      If Mr. Edison had thought smarter he wouldn't sweat as much. --Nikola Tesla
    5. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Well the Economics prize certainly isn't under the control of the Nobel Foundation, no.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    6. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by Shatrat · · Score: 1

      Well, I wasn't aware of the separation of the Peace and Economics prizes from the other original prizes awarded in Stockholm.
      Still, even knowing that, I have a hard time taking anything labeled Nobel seriously as long as the Peace prize is being handed out for political reasons instead of merit.
      The fact that Al Gore got the prize for a documentary that convinced no one of anything they didn't already believe instead of someone who risked their life for no other reason than that it was the right thing to do.
      Irena Sendler for example.
      And shit, I think I've done more for the cause of peace than Yasir Arafat.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    7. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are correct that Alfred Nobel did not specify economics in his will, and it was added later.

      However, the Nobel Foundation has adopted it, which is why you will find Krugman on their page under "2008 Nobel Prizes":

      http://nobelprize.org/

      So you can choose to believe that there is no Nobel prize in economics and you can waste bits here trying to convince others, but that doesn't make it true.

    8. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      The Economics prize isn't under the control of the Nobel foundation, it just shares the name. The Peace and scientific prizes share some connection, yes, but they're clearly have different intents and standards. I don't think the politics of the Peace prize at all reflect on the scientific prizes, as the decisions are made by different groups with different criteria.

    9. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by truesaer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The Peace Prize is usually awarded for a recent achievement, or for a lifetime of achievement that is sort of continuing to the present day. If you look at the winners you'll see that they almost always fall into one of these two camps.

      As for Arafat, as usual this complaint is provided with no context. I'm not sure how many of the people that raise this issue even know the context, I suspect they just have heard it mentioned and have no idea what the circumstances were. Arafat was awarded the prize jointly with Shimon Peres and Yitzak Rabin after the Oslo Accords were made. It was awarded for a specific and very recent achievement, and while the peace process has not exactly been successful most of the elements in those agreements are still being worked towards. This is the same reason Henry Kissinger won the award, for negotiating peace with Vietnam.

      So while you might argue that only really nice people should get the award, the reality is that people that can significantly affect peace in the world are often gigantic assholes. If you refused to recognize them then then you'd be unable to recognize major achievements in peace. Either way has some merit, I don't see anything particularly unreasonable about the path the Peace Prize has taken.

    10. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by Shatrat · · Score: 1

      If you refused to recognize them then then you'd be unable to recognize major achievements in peace.

      So why does the Nobel Prize have to be awarded for every major achievement in peace anyway?
      If nobody involved genuinely deservs recognition, someone in the world definitely does.
      Awarding a Peace Prize to someone who only only stopped fighting because they were running out of young bodies to strap assault rifles to cheapens the award. How about that for a context of objection to Arafat having a "Peace Prize"?
      It could have meant something, but instead it's a reward for people who do things that are politically popular in northern Europe.

      Putting it another way.
      If the Peace Prize is awarded in order to make a statement about the cause a person is involved in, then the message is that the Prize isn't awarded to good people, but is only an endorsement of popular causes.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    11. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget Kissinger. Mr. 'Let's see what carpet bombing looks like' got the peace prize, too.

    12. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by unlametheweak · · Score: 1

      Still, even knowing that, I have a hard time taking anything labeled Nobel seriously as long as the Peace prize is being handed out for political reasons instead of merit.

      "Peace" is inherently a political process. "Merit" is essentially an opinion.

    13. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by unlametheweak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Your Flame definitely shows the integrity (or lack thereof) of your arguments. I note that you condemn Yasir Arafat and not Shimon Peres or Yitzak Rabin.

    14. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by Shatrat · · Score: 1

      I'm condemning all politically motivated awards, but I only had time to mention one and I did it in alphabetical order.
      Your flame shows your reading comprehension (or lack thereof).

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    15. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by Shatrat · · Score: 1

      I see what you are saying, but there is nothing wrong with a justified opinion.
      I believe that dedication to Peace and love of ones fellow man shows merit and should be rewarded over those who lay down their guns out of convenience or necessity.

      The difference between them seems very clear to me.
      Can you really compare Al Gore, Arafat, and Henry Kissinger to Nelson Mandela, Ghandi (never got the prize but should have), and Dr. Martin Luther King?

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    16. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by unlametheweak · · Score: 1

      Hindsight is 20 20, and all of those people you mention are comparably different people motivated by different circumstances. Rewarding any type of Peace prize seems somewhat dubious to me.

      Nelson Mandela has certainly contributed very little to peace in either his own country or the continent of Africa. How much influence he himself had in ending Apartheid is also questionable. What is certain is that he has been symbolized and made into a legend by world leaders.

      If Nelson Mandela were not imprisoned he could have very well turned out to be another Yassir Arafat:

      In 1961, Mandela became the leader of the ANC's armed wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe (translated as Spear of the Nation, also abbreviated as MK), which he co-founded. He coordinated a sabotage campaign against military and government targets, and made plans for a possible guerrilla war if sabotage failed to end apartheid. Mandela also raised funds for MK abroad, and arranged for paramilitary training, visiting various African governments.

      - Ref http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nelson_Mandela [wikipedia.org]

      Also of note:

      Unlike the other Nobel Prizes, which recognize completed scientific or literary accomplishment, the Nobel Peace Prize may be awarded to persons or organizations that are in the process of resolving a conflict or creating peace.

      - Ref http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Peace_Prize#Appointment_process

      Just a casual glance shows some interesting nominations for the Noble Peace prize including Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin and Benito Mussolini.

      Your said:

      I believe that dedication to Peace and love of ones fellow man shows merit and should be rewarded over those who lay down their guns out of convenience or necessity.

      Yes, but nobody seems interested in nominating me. Such people generally tend to show up on no-fly lists.

    17. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by kisak · · Score: 1

      The Nobel Peace Prize by necessity will have to have a political tone. It is hard to envision peace anywhere without some sort of political settlement and agreement. Therefore, with a peace prize, you will have to give the award to politicians who have done more to create peace, or find "neutral" parties who try to reduce the damage of war/conflicts (Red Cross has got the prize four times in different settings).

      It can seem strange today, but two such controversial politicians in its day were Gandhi and King jr. Gandhi never got the prize because of the oposition by GB (often considered the greatest mistake by the Nobel committee, greater than giving the price to Kissinger). MLK jr was at the time considered an extremely risky Nobel laureate since the civil rights issue was so explosive in the US at the time.

      Yasir Arafat together with the Israeli got the prize since he sat down and actually tried to find political agreements to the never ending Palistinian problem. The prize was of course controversial, since Arafat was a terrorist/freedom fighter before he turned himself into a politician (the Israeli counter-parts where generals turned politicians). This prize was also controversial, since it was given before peace was actually reached (in this case in the Oslo process), and of course Arafat never achieved a final agreement. It is an example of the prize being used to encourage negotiations and to try to make the two parties negotiation a peaceful agreement stronger than the war-mongers, which some argue should be outside of the scope of the peace prize (i.e., no prize before final peace).

      The peace price to Al Gore is an other example of the Nobel Peace Prize trying to expand on its scope (which is of course always controversial). Here the prize is given for pre-emptive work, trying to stop (in this case Global Warming) a cause for further war and troubles. The controversy here I guess is not because people in general have a hard time understanding that major change in the climate can cause war for resources, but because some people still think we should wait 50 years to see if human beings have any effect on the climate.

      The Nobel Economy Price might be seen as political since economical philosophy is linked to other political views, but it is hard to argue that Friedman is not a brilliant economist even though he is also a liberal.

      --

      --- guns don't kill people, people with guns kill people ---

    18. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So don't confuse the gravitas associated with the other Nobel Prizes, and "The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel"

      http://www.opendemocracy.net/article/nobel_by_association_beautiful_mind_non_existent_prize

    19. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by catxk · · Score: 1

      It could have meant something, but instead it's a reward for people who do things that are politically popular in northern Europe.

      I'm from northern Europe and I can say for a fact that things that are politically popular here generally are for the benefit of mankind.

      --
      Don't be crazy anymore!
  23. look, slashdot by circletimessquare · · Score: 2

    i know that there is some friction between the hard sciences and the soft sciences. and that physics, chemistry, and math types tend to look down in disdain on the economics, sociology, and psychology types

    but there really is no need to blatantly use the "sci-fi" label for an economics story. really slashdot, come on now

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:look, slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but there really is no need to blatantly use the "sci-fi" label for an economics story. really slashdot, come on now

      The guy thinks he's Hari Seldon! (Of course, so does every other economist who spends their days "experimenting" on these so-called "rational actors" with the idea that they can determine the outcome of their behavior on anything beyond the scale of an individual transaction)

  24. Silencing the Developed World's wants with Markets by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    As a result, small-scale production for a local market is replaced by large-scale production for the world market, where firms with similar products compete with one another.

    That can explain why the wants of developed world have been largely become a special case of the developing world. That is quite a problem.

    Now can there be someone who figures out how to allow the developed world to have their wants heard(quality without exorbitant price) and not as a special case of a developing one(such as just making it slightly better and/or shinier junk)?

    Make it possible to not have things boil down to junk cheap or exorbitantly expensive(if at all).

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  25. economics is a soft science by circletimessquare · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the issues involved are to some degree subjective. its not like physics where you can make a hard true or a hard false out of an issue

    therefore, it is absolutely impossible to talk about economics without some sort of bias. of course there is blatant purposeful bias, and then there is an honest attempt at intellectual honesty, in spite of the bit of bias we all have

    everyone serious realizes this. then there is sort of paranoid partisan type that sees agendas and bias everywhere they look. this kind of hysterical approach to the subject matter only cheapens you, so you need to lose your hypersensitivity to the issue of bias, you only make yourself look foolish

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:economics is a soft science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the issues involved are to some degree subjective...

      I would tend to disagree, some of the issues are subjective while a lot of issues have pretty good and very technical mathematical models to back up a lot of conclusions. Here is a recent paragraph from an article dealing with the bailout that describes the suits vs geeks relationship:

      "Harvard finance professor Robert Merton, a Nobel laureate, notes that one of the problems at large financial institutions is the gap between the executives and the financial engineers, or what I call the "suits" and the "geeks." The geeks possess knowledge that is highly specialized and extremely technical. Many suits have never even taken a course in the fundamentals of valuing complex financial instruments, even though the health of their firms depends crucially on that very issue.

      Today, the suits are saying that mortgage-backed securities are undervalued, and that if the government just holds them to maturity it will make a profit. But the geeks will tell you that we cannot be certain these securities are undervalued."

      I haven't studied Krugman's work, but I believe it is pretty technical in nature, and if he didn't quite deserve a Nobel based solely on his work, from what I've read it is still top notch. By the way this was written by someone who generally disagrees with a lot of Krugman's NY times columns.

      http://www.american.com/archive/2008/october-10-08/main-street-vs-wall-street

    2. Re:economics is a soft science by unlametheweak · · Score: 1

      the issues involved are to some degree subjective. its not like physics where you can make a hard true or a hard false out of an issue

      Yes you can make a "hard true or a hard false" with economic issues. Good economists, like good physicists, use Math, Science, and logic to draw conclusions. You are however probably referring to the practice where economists create models or abstractions of economic activity. Given a sample size of 100% of the world population and all the variables involved in economic activity then economics can be 100% accurate. If the practice of physics where 100% accurate then weather forecasting would also be 100% accurate (the butterfly effect be damned).

    3. Re:economics is a soft science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      its not like physics where you can make a hard true or a hard false out of an issue

      Where to begin? For starters, you're only half right about physics...

    4. Re:economics is a soft science by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

      Well, there are subjective inputs to the conclusions drawn. For example, you can conclude that there is a tendency for capital to accumulate, and that the marginal utility of the billionth dollar is lower than that of the first, those you can draw from math. Where it gets subjective is when you then conclude that it makes sense to tax rich people at a higher rate because of the declining marginal utility of money.

      Likewise, history shows that there is always a poor class that suffers. It's a subjective choice that we make how to deal with that information.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    5. Re:economics is a soft science by j0nb0y · · Score: 1

      use Math, Science, and logic to draw conclusions.

      And data. Don't forget data.

      --
      If you had super powers, would you use them for good, or for awesome?
    6. Re:economics is a soft science by unlametheweak · · Score: 1

      Where it gets subjective is when you then conclude that it makes sense to tax rich people at a higher rate because of the declining marginal utility of money.

      That is politics and not economics. Going on my original analogy a physicist may conclude that the dykes surrounding New Orleans are likely to fail within the next 100 years given a strong enough hurricane but if a physicist said that people should spend money on re-enforcing the dykes instead of lowering property taxes then that would be a political decision. Economic and political conclusions are distinct. There is nothing subjective about science, whether it be in the social sciences or the physical sciences.

    7. Re:economics is a soft science by ClassMyAss · · Score: 1

      I would tend to disagree, some of the issues are subjective while a lot of issues have pretty good and very technical mathematical models to back up a lot of conclusions.

      As someone that's dealt with a lot of these models (mainly in the area of risk analysis and options valuation), I can tell you that quite frankly, they suck. It's quite easy to come up with a model that can fit most economic processes perfectly, but there are always variables that you can't directly measure that factor crucially into your equations. For instance, even if Black-Scholes was a decent model of options pricing (which it's not, as last week's market showed quite clearly - the classical model would have assumed the probability of seven or eight big down days in a row to be so close to zero that you don't even need to consider it), you still need to essentially guess the volatility of the market to use it. And that's about the simplest model you can imagine when it comes to valuation; most have several, if not dozens, of unobservable "constants" (which, even worse, are usually not constant over time, asset, or price) that must be guessed at.

      Which turns applied mathematical finance into something of an art. Buffett didn't make his money because he blindly bought and held, or even because he had a "better" model that he used to value stocks; it was just that he really was that damn good at guessing the variables in the equation that he did use (which is also the reason most people have very little to learn from him or his methods, since almost nobody is at good at that "artistic" bit as he is). Macroeconomics gets even worse than financial valuation, since half the time the quantity you're trying to model and predict isn't even directly observable.

      Having said that, I absolutely agree that it's a real mess waiting to happen when the suits in charge have no idea how the hell valuations are arrived at when they watch them pop up on their pre-fab Excel spreadsheets. They rely on the nerds to get everything right, and simply get mad at them when the risky trades they make based on those models go wrong (even if the risk profiles showed that it was likely to happen). And they get even madder if the geeks tell them that the methods they are using have limits (like, as you noted, when you have to try to value something based on dozens of unobservable variables that doesn't even trade on a free and liquid market).

    8. Re:economics is a soft science by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      ... that it makes sense to tax rich people at a higher rate...

      That is politics and not economics.

      Oh, but it effects economics. It effects what states and countries rich people and corporate headquarters reside in. Why do you think businesses are leaving California in droves? (so I've heard - and yes, I personally know more than one small business owner who has left the state in the last few years.)

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    9. Re:economics is a soft science by unlametheweak · · Score: 1

      Oh, but it effects economics.

      EVERYTHING effects economics. Yes businesses aren't just leaving California, they are leaving America because of economic conditions. If California was more like India then there would be an influx of rich corporations wanting to do business there. Companies like Google setup shop in tax havens like Ireland to avoid taxes; this is no secret. The fact that companies decide to move may be based both on economic and political reasons, however I will emphasize that making a decision is not science in and of itself. Decision making is decision making. I choose not to do business with some companies and countries because of political reasons.

    10. Re:economics is a soft science by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Yes businesses aren't just leaving California, they are leaving America because of economic conditions.

      Large businesses have long left the US for tax reasons. You seem to suggest that this is accelerating like it has in CA? (that would be interesting indeed)

      This is one reason why I am in favor of making it a treasonous offense to accept campaign donations from foreign entities. I cannot relocate my personal headquarters and still enjoy the benefits of the US. They should either pay their share of taxes*, or be treated as a foreign entity with foreign intents.

      I don't know about you, but I also don't want random foreign groups donating to politicians campaigns. I want my politicians beholden to the people of this country, and inevitably failing that, to American special interests (unfortunate, but better than foreign interests).

      (*arguably, these should be smaller and with fewer loopholes, but it is still no excuse. This is a loophole and should be closed.)

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    11. Re:economics is a soft science by unlametheweak · · Score: 1

      Large businesses have long left the US for tax reasons. You seem to suggest that this is accelerating like it has in CA? (that would be interesting indeed)

      No. I am merely suggesting that (at least some) businesses will go where they perceive it is more profitable for them, whether it be to places with lax regulations on child labour, pollution, etc.... and yes for tax benefits as well. Some states, regions, countries even give companies money to relocate or setup a new factory (the auto industry is a typical example).

      I don't know about you, but I also don't want random foreign groups donating to politicians campaigns. I want my politicians beholden to the people of this country, and inevitably failing that, to American special interests (unfortunate, but better than foreign interests).

      That reminds me; the US is one of the worst offenders in regards to giving foreign (generally third world) countries money to influence their political and social structure. More recently I'm thinking of the Bush administration giving African countries (actually they are giving the money to the dictators of those countries) financial assistance only if they abide by abstinence only campaigns, which like in the US, is having opposite effects. At least one country banned the importation of condoms which has led to an increase in AIDS.

      On another interesting side note I remember the US gave the then fledgling Russian democracy (I think it was) a 5 billion dollar donation to help in the transition to democracy. When they attempted to audit the money nobody in the Russian government could tell them what happened to it. Shortly there after the rise of the billionaire oligarchs occurred.

      As you alluded, politics certainly is intertwined with economics (but getting back to my original point, I will emphasize that they are still distinct from each other). I cannot conceive of simple solutions to the problems you raise; politics is a nasty business filled with hypocrisy after all. I do at least have sympathy for your arguments.

    12. Re:economics is a soft science by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      That reminds me; the US is one of the worst offenders in regards to giving foreign (generally third world) countries money to influence their political and social structure.

      I wouldn't disagree with this so much if (1) our own government could get it's act together and (2) it actually worked (disappointing success rate; low return on investment, so to speak; stop sending my money overseas to other greedy power hungry tyrants).

      More recently I'm thinking of the Bush administration giving African countries... financial assistance only if they abide by abstinence only campaigns,

      Abstinence is the solution.

      which like in the US, is having opposite effects.

      Only according to some theories and biased studies. The problem is not with teaching abstinence, but with what our society is willing to tolerate. We try to teach abstinence, but our media and advertisers are screaming sex at the top of their proverbial lungs. It's a topic that has become impossible to ignore. There is little wonder why abstinence education has been given a poor track record. There are other problems with abstinence education, but this is the fundamental problem. I don't care if you take your vitamins daily, if someone is constantly blowing second hand smoke in your face, you're not going to be at peak health.

      At least one country banned the importation of condoms which has led to an increase in AIDS.

      Now that's just stupid. I agree that this is not a desirable outcome. If condom manufacturers are going to have trouble, let it be from low demand due to actual abstinence. As a side note, It's the promiscuity that's the problem, not the condoms themselves.

      (actually they are giving the money to the dictators of those countries)

      I know. It's disgusting.

      On another interesting side note I remember the US gave the then fledgling Russian democracy (I think it was) a 5 billion dollar donation to help in the transition to democracy. When they attempted to audit the money nobody in the Russian government could tell them what happened to it. Shortly there after the rise of the billionaire oligarchs occurred.

      Interesting. I hadn't heard that one yet. It doesn't surprise me too much, but I'll need to find another source to verify this

      As you alluded, politics certainly is intertwined with economics (but getting back to my original point, I will emphasize that they are still distinct from each other).

      Economics is a study of how people treat money. Government and economics are indeed intertwined. I think all we are really disagreeing on is how fuzzy the line is between them.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    13. Re:economics is a soft science by unlametheweak · · Score: 1

      More recently I'm thinking of the Bush administration giving African countries... financial assistance only if they abide by abstinence only campaigns,

      Abstinence is the solution.

      and,

      which like in the US, is having opposite effects.

      Only according to some theories and biased studies...

      Speaking of biases, you seem to have been brainwashed by the religious right. I will not reply to any of your other posts on this topic because it is clear that you are not interested in reality. Your religious beliefs (and yes you are lying to me if you claim that you are not religious. There is statistical significance to what you are saying) remind me of the same type of logic and rationality used by the witchdoctors of Tanzania who tell people to kill albino's and use their body parts in magic potions. Your beliefs are just as irrational and dangerous.

      At any rate, to leave on a more positive note, I think we do tend to agree on most things. At this point I'm questioning if I am being too aggressive with my argument but I will let it stand. There is a point to be made, and at the risk of sounding rude I think my statements are sincere and accurate enough to post. Do some further research if you wish, and have an open mind when critically evaluating conclusions that don't match your ideology. Teaching ideology didn't work for the communists and it didn't/isn't working for prohibitionists.

      Best regards,

      UTW

  26. Not a Nobel Prize! by I'll+Provide+The+War · · Score: 0, Redundant

    It should be noted that this prize is NOT awarded by the Nobel Foundation.

    The actual title of this award is The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel and it is awarded by a bank.

    http://nobelprize.org/nomination/economics/nominators.html

    "The Prize in Economics is not a Nobel Prize."

    1. Re:Not a Nobel Prize! by curious.corn · · Score: 1

      Neither is the Fields Medal...

      --
      Mi domando chi à il mandante di tutte le cazzate che faccio - Altan
  27. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He sounds like Ron Paul there, though I'm sure that the two would draw opposite conclusions as to the New Deal.

  28. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by blueg3 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    People can agree on one thing while disagreeing on another.

    Details at 11.

  29. Re:inspiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just wait jackass. In 6 months, President Obama will have your fucking ass deported to gitmo.

  30. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

    Hindsight is always 20/20 (I'm talking about the Nobel Price committee)

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  31. Waah, my world view is under liberal assault by Bemopolis · · Score: 2, Funny

    Reading the conservative slams on Krugman's Nobel is like reading the Timecube posts on every Slashdot physics story.

    Except that the grammar is distinctly better on the Timecube comments.

    --
    "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
  32. Re:We get it kdawson - you don't like Bush by jmauro · · Score: 1

    Really? They announced last years prize on Slashdot.

  33. Not just anti-Bush by DesScorp · · Score: 2, Informative

    The guy isn't only anti-Bush, he's an arrogant douchenozzle to anyone that disagrees with him on anything. In Krugman's world, if you don't agree with him... be it economics, politics, whatever... you're not just wrong, you're an idiot. He's a very, very bright man, but he also holds too high an opinion of himself in every regard. He also takes the status of his field far too seriously, often indicating that economics is the most important field of study in the world. Medical doctors, physicists, and engineers would probably beg to differ.

    All that said, even though he hasn't done any real research in decades, even his enemies admit that he deserves the prize for his groundbreaking work in the late 70's. When standard Keynesian economists were saying that Stagflation couldn't possibly really exist, Krugman was one of a handful of guys that said "Yes it can, and here's how". He's a pioneer in many theories that are the bedrock of free trade work. You wouldn't know it from his rambling against Bush and Co. today, but he was on the outs with the Clinton crowd because he was too free-trade for them.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:Not just anti-Bush by FooGoo · · Score: 1

      poor guy doesn't even rate the whole bag...just the nozzle. Is that better or worse? I kinda think it's better.

      --
      People who bite the hand that feeds them usually lick the boot that kicks them
    2. Re:Not just anti-Bush by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Funny

      In Krugman's world, if you don't agree with him... be it economics, politics, whatever... you're not just wrong, you're an idiot.

      Sounds like he'd fit in perfectly on Slashdot!

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    3. Re:Not just anti-Bush by jbeach · · Score: 4, Funny
      And not only has he been rude to those he's disagreed with - Krugman's actually had the horrible to tend to be right! And about one issue after another, too!

      I mean, if only he'd had the common decency to NOT predict the housing bubble, and the complete havoc it could wreak on our economy. Then everyone who told him he was totally wrong wouldn't be nursing their hurt feelings.

      The sheer nerve of that guy!

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    4. Re:Not just anti-Bush by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so...

    5. Re:Not just anti-Bush by rhomp2002 · · Score: 1

      Strange but great minds can thnk alike. Bush said the same thing starting in 2001 and spent 8 years trying to get the Congress and the Senate to agree with him while Barney Frank, Chris Dodd and Barry Obama argued against him. For 4 of those years John McCain has been agreeing with him as well. Now we find out from the Swedes that Bush was right. Think he will get any credit for it?

    6. Re:Not just anti-Bush by jbeach · · Score: 1
      Got sources for Bush saying that, in 2001? And I"m not clear on exactly what you mean that "We find out from the Swedes that BUsh was right".

      I just did a quick google search, and I'm not finding anything that Bush said in 2001 that's anything similar to what Krugman said. Specifically, about the danger that inflated housing prices would pose to the world economy.

      Since in 2001 the economy was still recovering from the Internet bust, and people had yet to start heavily investing in housing as a 'safer' place to put their money (housing prices are *always* going to go up, aren't they?) - I'd be pretty surprised to see this sort of prescience from Bush.

      Also, not finding any sources for Bush trying to stop the subprime mortgage crisis at any time before everyone else started talking about it, around 2007; nor am I finding any sources that McCain was agreeing with Bush before 2007 re: the subprime mortgage crisis, and how it was threatening to meltdown our economy.

      Also, Barack Obama predicted the subprime crisis and tried to get Paulson to act on it, in 2007.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    7. Re:Not just anti-Bush by rhomp2002 · · Score: 1

      I'll dig them up and get back to you. This was brunted about when the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac problems first came out and the Bush initiatives was mentioned with sources. If I remember right there were references to over 35 times the president has tried to get Congress to do something about the Fannie Mae situation but Barney Frank and company kept talking up how they were strong and there was no problem. Guess who was right! no matter how much the LLL dems try to play it down.

    8. Re:Not just anti-Bush by jbeach · · Score: 1
      OK. If we're talking about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac then, they really are only one small part of our current mess. The other problems that really made this a disaster are:

      - all the other banks besides F. Mae and Mac, who were riding the subprime bandwagon - Mae and Mac were only 25% of those mortgages

      - worst of of all: the repealing of Glass-Steagal.

      With Glass-Steagal in place, this would have been rough but 'only' as bad as the Silverado S&L collapse of the late 1980's; the subprime mortgage collapse would have been firewalled off from investment banking. Instead the dominoes are crossing financial sectors and even continents to fall...

      I think maybe this is less mentioned than it should be, because BOTH parties led to the repealing of Glass-Steagal, in 1999. Bill Clinton and the GOP-led house and Senate, working together in a rare act of fully bipartisan stupidity...

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    9. Re:Not just anti-Bush by rhomp2002 · · Score: 1

      Check out this website which has links to the White House reporting of Bush's talking about the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac problems. The website is conservative but the link is to the official White House website. http://gatewaypundit.blogspot.com/2008/09/bush-called-for-reform-of-fannie-mae.html As to the Glass-Steagal repeal, you might have a point there but again the major problem was the CRA loans and the push to force the banks to loan money to people who clearly could not repay the loan or else face problems with the law. That was strictly the Democratic congress of 1994 under Clinton that passed that and the major people pushing for it were Barney Frank, Chris Dodd. You have to also remember that at the time Barney Frank was involved in a relationship with one of the heads of Fannie Mae who would get the major benefit of this act. You also have to look at the revision of the accounting during the last phase of the Clinton administration which resulted in Raines, Johnson, Gorelick and Murray getting huge payoffs based on the same false accounting practices as Enron used - and at about the same time. You also might check into who was pushing Enron globally to get them more business, even to the extent of sending his Commerce Department personnel along with the Enron salesmen to our allies to push for business - hint: it was not Bush - Bush is the one who prosecuted Enron. There is some blame to spread all around but the media has done a lousy job of reporting the president's initiatives in this matter and also done a lousy job of reporting what was really going on. In fact, the media has done a good job of only one thing - reporting the Democratic party bullet points in this matter. It is not the invisible hand of the free market that punches workers. It is the invisible hand of the liberals trying to micromanage the free market that results in the workers getting punched in the nuts.

    10. Re:Not just anti-Bush by rhomp2002 · · Score: 1

      Here's another one: Here's some more pathetic blame shifting: In 1992, the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston published a report citing racial discrimination in the mortgage lending industry. As a result, Clinton administration Secretary of Housing & Urban Development (HUD) Henry Cisneros and later Andrew Cuomo increased the percentage of sub-prime mortgages that could be held in the Fannie/Freddie portfolios. The Clinton administration also revamped the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), a 1977 law designed to motivate banks to âoeinvestâ (aka lend) more in the minority communities. Clintonâ(TM)s bank examiners now scored banks on how much âoeinvestingâ they were doing. The failure to achieve an adequate CRA score would mean trouble for any bank in the highly regulated industry. The Clinton administration encouraged âoecommunity groupsâ to get involved. Consequently, groups like ACORN or the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America (NACA) were given the opportunity to essentially run extortion rackets against banks. In 1999 President Clinton named Franklin Raines CEO of Fannie Mae. Mr. Raines and his friends in Fannie Mae were âoeincentivizedâ with bonus packages tied to Fannieâ(TM)s earnings. The more loans they made, the more money they got as individuals. The more of these risky loans Fannie Mae made to people who couldn't pay them back, the more the government (i.e. the taxpayers, i.e. you and me) were on the hook, because Fannie Maie is a government sponsored entity (GSE) and as such it benefitted from the implied backing of the US Treasury. But it's all Bush's fault. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2087284/posts 3:36 PM

    11. Re:Not just anti-Bush by jbeach · · Score: 1
      Well, as stated previously:

      1. Fannie Mae was only 25% of the subprime implosion.

      2. The CRA was only part of Fannie Mae's particular subprime implosion.

      3. The overall subprime implosion only affected the rest of the market because of Glass-Steagal.

      4. Bush was asked by several, including Obama, to address ALL of the coming subprime implosion - not just Fannie Mae's part in it. Bush did nothing.

      5. The rest of the market was so weak because our country is so in the red. We're borrowing from China to pay our bills, and the world has lost confidence in our dollar AND our banks.

      Fannie Mae was indeed a disaster. And it would be easy to blame everything on that. But it was only a part of the larger problem, and only one of the many institutions that have been coming down.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    12. Re:Not just anti-Bush by jbeach · · Score: 1
      As to the Glass-Steagal repeal, you might have a point there but again the major problem was the CRA loans and the push to force the banks to loan money to people who clearly could not repay the loan or else face problems with the law.

      No; not only was the CRA only a part of Fannie Mae, and Fannie Mae not only a part of the overall subprime implosion - but with Glass-steagal still in place, only the housing market and mortgage banks would have been affected.

      Just like a firewall, in which one computer goes down but the rest of the network stays secure and can distribute the increased load.

      That was strictly the Democratic congress of 1994 under Clinton

      So Clinton's laws were responsible for this going back to 1994 - but none of Bush's laws or policies for the past 8 years have anything to do with this? And while Bush and the GOP were in control of the House and Senate for 6 of those years, they couldn't do anything about it?

      As for Enron, sure. Clinton was business friendly. That doesn't make him responsible for Enron's false accounting - that didn't even come out until after Clinton left office. He's not a mind-reader.

      Here's what Bush did for Enron when he got in office: http://www.alternet.org/story/12155/ Shortly after taking office, President Bush waged a battle against the imposition of federal price controls in California that allowed Enron to price-gouge consumers by extending the energy crisis in California, costing the state billions of dollars. Enron reported increased revenues of almost $70 billion from the previous year.

      So Bush helped Enron nearly bankrupt California - funds California is still paying off, I might add.

      Bush also resisted attempts to crack down on Enron's utilization of its 847 offshore subsidiaries in countries with lax banking-regulation laws. The consumer-rights watchdog organization Public Citizen alleges that some of these offshore havens helped Enron defraud its stockholders.

      So thanks to Bush, Enron didn't even have to pay it's fair share in taxes.

      It is the invisible hand of the liberals trying to micromanage the free market that results in the workers getting punched in the nuts.

      No, that simply is not true. I'm not trying to be a dick, I'm just telling you: that outlook simply is not supported by historical fact. It is not in alignment with observed reality.

      Above are the specific examples that show the opposite - both conservative deregulation that's resulted in disaster (removal of Glass-Steagal, not implementing price controls on Enron) and Conservative government intervention that's hurt the working American (letting Enron gouge working families, and not even pay their fair share of taxes on it).

      See?

      Republicans and Democrats have both had a hand in creating this mess - and it wasn't because they interfered in the free market. Rules and regulations are required to make any group endeavor work smoothly, and the Free Market is the defining example of this rule, rather than any kind of an exception.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
  34. Re:The Slashdot Agenda by kdawson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    time to call the whaaaaaambulance!

  35. Krugman wasn't the only one by DesScorp · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "Whine all you want about the Nobel Committee having a political agenda. Right is right. And Krugman was right"

    You act like Krugman was the only one warning us about the housing bubble, when he was one of many, a lot of them being the very people he despises. It's not like Krugman was the first one to go "Hey, this thing is gonna burst".

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  36. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These stock indices go to 0.

  37. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by Jonnne · · Score: 0, Troll

    I would say that illustrates the problems with mr Krugman. A quick look at this Wikipedia article reveals that the industrial output of the US is about 2.2 times that of China, and output from services is roughly 10 times bigger: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_sector_composition

  38. no, the Austrians were right by qralston · · Score: 0, Troll

    Whine all you want about the Nobel Committee having a political agenda.

    As others have pointed out, Krugman did NOT win a Nobel prize; he won a different prize.

    Right is right. And Krugman was right.

    No, he wasn't. Krugman identified the symptom--a housing bubble--but not the cause.

    The Austrians were right. And no matter how much Krugman calls them poopy-heads, they're still right: Keynesian economics is one giant fraud.

    That's what's really at the core of the worldwide economic meltdown: the fraud is unravelling. And it's looking increasingly likely that world governments are going to nationalize their entire banking systems to prevent it, rather than doing the sane thing and returning to sound money.

    (If any of you have any doubts as to what type of standard of living nationalization leads to, take a good, hard at current and former communist countries--say, North Korea.)

    Our founding fathers are weeping in their graves, while Stalin is laughing in his.

    --
    Your bank is insolvent.
    Taking Money Back
    1. Re:no, the Austrians were right by jcr · · Score: 1

      Keynesian economics is one giant fraud.

      Like Keynes himself.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    2. Re:no, the Austrians were right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoever modded that is on crack.

    3. Re:no, the Austrians were right by doom · · Score: 1

      That's what's really at the core of the worldwide economic meltdown: the fraud is unravelling.

      Yes, that would explain why the standard-of-living of someone in Sweden has been so much better than the United States in recent years: For richer.

      Do you think you "objectivist" types could actually try dealing with reality once in awhile? Theory is nice, freedom is cool, but at some point you've got to come to grips with the real problems... e.g. there's always an asymmetry of power between the democratic citizen and the corporation interested in rigging the system, so the system is always going to be rigged, ergo we can't get an actual "free market", so the theory is pretty close to useless.

    4. Re:no, the Austrians were right by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Do you think you "objectivist" types could actually try dealing with reality once in awhile? Theory is nice, freedom is cool, but at some point you've got to come to grips with the real problems

      Real problems like the collapse of the fraudulent fiat money supply system perhaps?

      e.g. there's always an asymmetry of power between the democratic citizen and the corporation interested in rigging the system, so the system is always going to be rigged, ergo we can't get an actual "free market", so the theory is pretty close to useless.

      I agree that corporations as they exist preclude the possibility of a free market, but wouldn't therefore abandon the idea of a free market. Strip corporations of any rights as "persons" or citizens. The individuals who make up that corporation still have their rights, but not the corporate entity itself as separate from those people. So all the individuals in a corp have the right to petition the government for example, but the corporation itself does not.

      I'm not really an objectivist though I think they have some interesting ideas, but wouldn't a true objectivist see corporations as a form of collectivism?

    5. Re:no, the Austrians were right by doom · · Score: 1

      Here's the trouble: can you come up with some system -- some set of corporate rules or whatever -- that you can let loose in the wilds and expect it to self-regulate? My contention (and it's hardly controversial) is that the economic incentive to subvert this system of rules is far stronger than the economic incentive to block the subversion. Entity A (a corporation, a rich guy, whatever) sees an opportunity to get richer if they get a certain rule changed: they're going to make millions by ripping off each citizen for half-a-cent each. There may be thousands of such entities, with thousands of schemes like that, but even taken all together, each citizen loses only a total of around five bucks, and they've got other things to worry about.

      The only check on that kind of problem is a wise and informed leadership, and a committed, far-sighted electorate that cares about the health of the common weal many years hence.

      Now: what's the difference between that situation and a Social Democracy.

    6. Re:no, the Austrians were right by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Here's the trouble: can you come up with some system -- some set of corporate rules or whatever -- that you can let loose in the wilds and expect it to self-regulate? My contention (and it's hardly controversial) is that the economic incentive to subvert this system of rules is far stronger than the economic incentive to block the subversion.

      Hence Moridin's suggestion to stop using fiat currency and return to real money (presumably gold and silver). You have made an excellent summing up of why increasing regulation (even to the point of nationalisation) will not fix the problems inherent with fiat money, which absolutely precludes the possibility of a free market. The fact that some countries temporarily achieve a good standard of living while using this system is irrelevant.

      Allowing government and banking corporations to create money out of thin air is a recipe for disaster.

    7. Re:no, the Austrians were right by qralston · · Score: 1

      Do you think you "objectivist" types could actually try dealing with reality once in awhile? Theory is nice, freedom is cool, but at some point you've got to come to grips with the real problems...

      As rohan pointed out, I touched upon one very real problem, but I'll spell out the two biggest ones:

      Fiat currency. Fiat currency allows the government to counterfeit as much money as it wants. As the newly-created money works its way through the economy, those who get it first (the "imperial CEOs" Krugman laments) benefit at the expense of those who get it last (Main Street USA). This "inflation tax" is the most heinous of all taxes imposed by the government, because it is regressive: it robs from the poor and gives to the rich.

      Fractional reserve banking. When I place a $100 demand deposit into my local bank, and my bank then loans $1000 that it doesn't have to someone else based on the "reserves" of my $100, that's fraud.

      The only check on [the greedy corrupting the free market] is a wise and informed leadership, and a committed, far-sighted electorate that cares about the health of the common weal many years hence.

      Now: what's the difference between that situation and a Social Democracy.

      There's no difference, as neither can ever be realized.

      It's not that societies haven't tried, mind you. But what the proponents of social democracy fail to understand is that the "wise and informed" leaders have all the same foibles and predilections towards greed as do their counterparts in the free market.

      The free market isn't perfect. As you have noted, the greedy will try to rig the system. But in the free market, there's at least opportunity to combat the greedy. Once the greedy move into an all-reaching, all-empowered government, the dream of social democracy descends into the nightmare of dictatorship or oligarchy.

      If you haven't already done so, I strongly suggest you read the article I link to in my signature.

      --
      Your bank is insolvent.
      Taking Money Back
    8. Re:no, the Austrians were right by doom · · Score: 1

      So if we just create the right kind of system (no fiat money!) and stick to it, then we'll have no pesky problems with human corruption of our grand system ever again.

      This would appear to be circular. Any way you look at it, you're stuck with "eternal vigilance".

      (By the way, I think you exaggerate the role of fiat money in the present collapse, but they you would, being a gold bug.)

    9. Re:no, the Austrians were right by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      So if we just create the right kind of system (no fiat money!) and stick to it, then we'll have no pesky problems with human corruption of our grand system ever again.

      This would appear to be circular. Any way you look at it, you're stuck with "eternal vigilance".

      The "and stick to it" part is the eternal vilgilance, so it isn't circular. In any case, people will use gold as an exchange medium even without a government enforcing a system, that's why it's called real money. The thing about fiat currency is that it involves government decree in every transaction, so arguments that the free market has failed are always deceptive arguments in a fiat currency system. Even with gold backed currency though, if fractional reserve banking is allowed then you will still have the same problems. Lending money you don't have ought to be prosecuted as fraud. I don't have a problem with someone taking on the risk of financing a project based on another parties promise to pay, but when that promise is allowed to be circulated as currency as though it represented existing wealth rather than future production, then the currency system itself becomes vulnerable. If a significant % of people can't pay it collapses the money supply, which is what we see now.

      (By the way, I think you exaggerate the role of fiat money in the present collapse, but they you would, being a gold bug.)

      Without fractional reserve banking (which is fiat money, even if you have the appearance of having gold backed currency) the current financial crisis would be impossible. There would be no collapse of the money supply because the same amount of money would exist even if someone didn't pay a debt. The lender would be out of pocket but the money supply wouldn't be affected at all.

      Gold, silver, copper, hey make lead money for all I care. The important thing is that all legal tender be based on existing goods, not future production. Even gold doesn't solve the problem if you are creating currency backed by gold you hope do dig up one day. If you fail to dig it up, your money supply collapses, just as if you create currency backed by debt, the money supply collapses if that debt doesn't get paid.

  39. True of all "social sciences" by DesScorp · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Economics, a fine scholarly field, is not a science, as much as some economists would like to pretend with their crude algebra and stats.

    This is one of the things that makes Krugman in particular so insufferable about his profession. He places far too much importance on it in relation to it's actual value. Like all social sciences... sociology, psychology, political science... economics is not a hard science. It's a genuine field of study that uses some math and some science to reach conclusions, but also depends upon human behavior, which is not easily quantified, and cannot be quantified with any scientifc certainty or accuracy in many cases.

    This doesn't mean the fields are of no importance... they certainly are... but they're not pure science, and I have a hard time with calling some a political "scientist" or a social "scientist".

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:True of all "social sciences" by doom · · Score: 1

      This is one of the things that makes Krugman in particular so insufferable about his profession. He places far too much importance on it in relation to it's actual value. Like all social sciences... sociology, psychology, political science... economics is not a hard science.

      Question: do you know anything at all about Paul Krugman's research? Have you read anything at all of his popular writings?

      Here, let me help you out a little:

      And just for the hell of it, you might peek at the answer key, an article Krugman wrote about his own approach: How I Work

      Most young economists today enter the field from the technical end. Originally intending a career in hard science or engineering, they slip down the scale into the most rigorous of the social sciences. The advantages of entering economics from that direction are obvious: one arrives already well trained in mathematics, one finds the concept of formal modeling natural. It is not, however, where I come from. My first love was history; I studied little math, picking up what I needed as I went along.

      [...]

      I was, of course, only saying something that critics of conventional theory had been saying for decades. Yet my point was not part of the mainstream of international economics. Why? Because it had never been expressed in nice models. The new monopolistic competition models gave me a tool to open cleanly what had previously been regarded as a can of worms. More important, however, I suddenly realized the remarkable extent to which the methodology of economics creates blind spots. We just don't see what we can't formalize. And the biggest blind spot of all has involved increasing returns. So there, right at hand, was my mission: to look at things from a slightly different angle, and in so doing to reveal the obvious, things that had been right under our noses all the time.

    2. Re:True of all "social sciences" by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The issue with economics as a science is that it is very difficult to conduct experiments. The methodology and math is fine, and there are plenty of folks who work hard to be rigorous, but you fundamentally can't take one United States, and hold the money supply constant, and take another and allow the money supply to grow. As such, you are limited to after the fact analysis, often comparing situations that aren't strictly alike.

      Is this science? I don't know that we need to measure the angels on the head of that pin. Is it important, and susceptible to thoughtful study? I hope we all agree that it is.

      I studied econ in college, and am of the opinion that it is not possible to make educated political decisions without a solid understanding of macro and micro economics. Political history is rich with examples. Take the hyperinflation in various world economies, for example. Knowing what happened in Argentina, Mexico, pre-revolutionary France, and pre WWII Germany, I'll tell you this, now. The US is likely to undergo serious, double digit inflation for several years, in the next ten years, because printing money is the only way the US government can work its way out from under the debt and entitlement burdens we are taking on. Is it science that underlies this conclusion? Or is it just history, analysis, and a theory of the relationship between the money supply, interest rates and price levels? If I am right, does this become an experiment, and thus make econ science?

      I don't really care, but I'll tell you that I'm not investing in bonds or other dollar denominated investments.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    3. Re:True of all "social sciences" by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      "Is it science that underlies this conclusion? Or is it just history, analysis, and a theory of the relationship between the money supply, interest rates and price levels? If I am right, does this become an experiment, and thus make econ science?"

      Well, you seem to want to model the real world based on prior experiences (there must be a clippy joke hiden here, but I can't find it). Also, lots of the models make precise predictions, that could be proven false by comparing with the real wolrd; a few don't, but physics also have superstring theory and we didn't stop calling it science.

      I'd call it science. A not very powerfull one, but science nonetheless.

    4. Re:True of all "social sciences" by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

      No argument from me. That's essentially the point I was trying to make. It's possible to be scientific about economics, but it's hard because of the constraints.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
    5. Re:True of all "social sciences" by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      "but it's hard because of the constraints"

      If by constraints you mean politics, I entirely agree. But if you mean our inability to conduct some experiments and and know what people will do, I disagree. Those later constraints do only lead to weaker theories, not to an unscientific treatment.

    6. Re:True of all "social sciences" by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

      No, I mean constraints because you can't run a control. It's pretty hard to test both branches of a hypothesis, so you're left with after the fact analysis. Also, economists are rarely in a position to direct policy. They usually just get to write columns about it in the NYT and WSJ.

      --
      I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
  40. Economics science? by amdurak · · Score: 1

    Is it not pleonastic to say 'economics science'? The word 'economics' alone includes the meaning of it being science since the suffix '-ics' denotes arts, sciences, branches of study or profession. I could not resist!

  41. Ride on the Keynes cluetrain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess the keynesian cluetrain skips the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac stations because it would be required to go through reality junction (formerly known as conjunction junction).

  42. Do you even know what Krugman won the prize FOR? by DesScorp · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Where was your fanboy-ism for the Nobel when the Austrian School types were winning it?

    What's plainly idiotic about your post is that despite Krugman's other political views, the work in which he won his Nobel for advocated for free trade heavily. He was in part rejected for a job in the first Clinton Administration because he thought their early protectionist views were disastrous, and he lobbied for free trade policies in the 90's.

    I'm no fan of the man, and he does advocate some uncomfortably nanny-state views on some subjects, but in economics, the very theories that the man won his prize for laid some of the very foundation for "Reaganomics", as you like to put it.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  43. Pseudoscience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know, if there is really something as Economic Science, they'd have applied it to ... our Economy.

    If there are degrees of sciences, Economic Science ranks lower than Astrology.

    1. Re:Pseudoscience by justinlee37 · · Score: 1

      Who is "they?" And what economy is "our economy?"

      Not everybody has the same ideas about what constitutes the best economic system. That's like, fucking political science 101. There is no "they" that makes the rules across the board; world leaders and societies everywhere choose who to listen to. As in any other science, there are crackpots and there are people who know what they're talking about.

      Just because some people listen to the crackpots doesn't mean that there is no such thing as "economics."

      And stop thinking of gov't and academia worldwide as one homogeneous entity, "they." That is the grossest sort of oversimplification.

  44. Hey by justinlee37 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Fuck you, you ignorant hick.

    1. Re:Hey by grahamd0 · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry to break it to you, but he's right. Astrology is bogus.

    2. Re:Hey by justinlee37 · · Score: 1

      10/10, I lol'd

  45. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and hindsight is always 20/20.

  46. He Doesn't Like Globalization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But he seems to think that Globalization will fail. That's ridiculous -- you might as well be asking for the internet to disappear. People aren't going to give up globe-spanning communication, and thus they won't be giving up global economic opportunities.

    1. Re:He Doesn't Like Globalization by AoT · · Score: 1

      Globalization in this context means the continued lowering of trade barriers a la NAFTA, CAFTA, etc. That has pretty much failed at this point. The psuedo-libertarian idea of free trade, AKA the Washington Consensus, is dead in the water at this point and one can expect that movement in that direction will be reversed by the current economic woes.

      On another topic, it should be noted that the Nobel prize for economics is not the same as other Nobel prizes. It was instituted by the Swedish central bank about 70 years after the original prizes were instituted and is not considered a Nobel Prize by the actual Nobel organization. Generally the Prize in Economics, as the Nobel Foundation refers to it, has been awarded to rather more conservative economists. I have to wonder if the utter failure of deregulation and free trade in recent years is a reason for Krugman's winning this year.

    2. Re:He Doesn't Like Globalization by doom · · Score: 3, Informative

      But he seems to think that Globalization will fail.

      You need to read a little bit more of Krugman's stuff before you spout off about it.

      Hell, how about the wikipedia article: Paul Krugman: "He was critical of industrial policy (an approach Clinton later dropped under the influence of Robert Rubin and Lawrence Summers) and argued in favor of free trade. (He writes on p. xxvi of his book The Great Unraveling that 'I still have the angry letter Ralph Nader sent me when I criticized his attacks on globalization.')"

    3. Re:He Doesn't Like Globalization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      GP is dead wrong.

      Krugman is (or at least was) a very strong proponent of free trade. It's only in the past decade or so (since he became more of an op-ed writer) that he has shut up about it. It appears to many that he did so (shut up), only to avoid disagreements with the liberal intelligentsia, many of whom fawn over him, not knowing that he long espoused the economics of the right, and that he has never disavowed his positions on the subject.

      My. $.02

    4. Re:He Doesn't Like Globalization by doom · · Score: 1

      Krugman is (or at least was) a very strong proponent of free trade. It's only in the past decade or so (since he became more of an op-ed writer) that he has shut up about it. It appears to many that he did so (shut up), only to avoid disagreements with the liberal intelligentsia, many of whom fawn over him, not knowing that he long espoused the economics of the right, and that he has never disavowed his positions on the subject.

      It's an interesting theory. My theory is that since he's been forced into re-examining his beliefs (having been pushed hard left by the Bush administration) he's been avoiding looking too hard at globalization issues, because there's some cognitive dissonance awaiting him in there... (for example, could it be that the lefties have a point about "free trade" being a bad idea when the "comparative advantage" is in the realms of lax pollution regulations or labor laws?).

      Much as I like Paul Krugman, I think he shows symptoms (like much of the rest of humanity) of having an awfully hard time admitting that he might've called something wrong. Most recently, he'd convinced himself that we were all supposed to be excited about Hillary because her health plan was more comprehensive than Obama's (myself I care a bit about other things, too, like, you know, that was in Iraq... but that's just crazy talk, when the great Krugman has spoken).

  47. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right is right. And Krugman was right.

    Actually Krugman is left.

  48. As I pointed out elsewhere.... by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    ... Krugman was not the first or only person to warn of the housing bubble, and many of the people he loathes beat him to it.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:As I pointed out elsewhere.... by jbeach · · Score: 1
      OK, true.

      More to my point, is that he tends to be right in general. And from most of what I've seen, even when he's disagreed with people - I have yet to see him and his logical points actually proven wrong.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    2. Re:As I pointed out elsewhere.... by pugugly · · Score: 2

      Really? Preach it brother - Name Names of those conservative economists that were screaming about the problems, yet being ignored by the Bush Administration and the Republican Congress!

      Because I never heard anything from any of them - possibly they were too busy talking about how lowering taxes on the wealthy was going to generate an economic boom, the likes of which the world has never seen.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
    3. Re:As I pointed out elsewhere.... by Kumiorava · · Score: 1

      Including Obama and McCain who both foresaw the housing bubble right around the time Al Gore invented the Internet.

  49. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by evilviper · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Right is right. And Krugman was right.

    No. Everything you are crediting him with saying was WRONG.

    "This place seems very rich," he said, "but I never see anyone making anything. How does the country earn its money?"

    In fact the US is the #1 manufacturer in the world, more than twice as much as #2, and several times ahead of the likes of China.

    The notion that we are a nation that makes nothing but houses, is idiotic. Go anywhere in the world, and you'll see mostly US-made airplanes (Boeing), turbines (GE, Pratt&Whitney), heavy construction equipment (CAT, Mack, Peterbuilt, etc.), et al.

    Our economy is as safe as houses. Unfortunately, given current prices and our dependence on foreign lenders, houses aren't safe at all.

    Nothing here predicts the US bank and lending market collapse. Quite the opposite really. In fact foreign lenders got the short end of the stick this time around, so they were the un-safe ones. He's only right that prices were ridiculously high, but that's a bit like predicting the sky will be blue in the future...

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  50. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1

    You know, I haven't visited Slashdot in a couple of weeks, and it seems like the comment stupidity level here (not to mention in the moderation) is getting extremely high. Just a few more Bush Regime diehards, and Slashdot comments will achieve the "Catchment Basin for Subnormals" level observable at YouTube.

  51. Have you read Krugman? by tjstork · · Score: 1

    Liberal economics : Maxwell House and Folgers
    Conservative economics : Starbucks and 2000 different kinds of coffee you can buy in stores.

    Have you actually -read- Krugman?

    Krugman's a liberal but staunch free trader. He's into the free flow of goods and capital and in a way that would be even more deregulated than is today. All he is saying is that he wants to have this huge safety net so that he can open trade completely. In Krugman's world, the GM's go out of business, but the gov't steps in so people can be reassigned. IT's not too shabby except for that part that if your company can go out of business without consequence, then most people won't work. And, this whole "progressive" notion of fair trade in Krugman's eyes is really a sort of protectionism.

    The fact is, regardless of how many talking heads on the left wing speak otherwise, the free trade and free flow of capital which characterizes Reaganomics demonstrably elevated the standard of living of the entire world. At the end of 70 year of so-called progressive liberalism, circa, 1980, the west wasn't that much farther better off than the east, much of asia was starving, and even vast tracts of the USA hung barely above the poverty line. After thirty years of it, billions of people have been lifted out of poverty into the middle class, and nearly everyone has more stuff than ever before.

    In 1970 even food was hard to get, but now, the world is increasingly getting fat. In 1970, we were lucky to have a small house, and a car, and maybe a set of clothes for the year. Now, home ownership, even after this so-called crisis, is at all an time high, people have better cars, more cars, more bikes, more clothes, toys, and a whole new category of things called consumer electronics.

    Reaganomics was alway about putting the most things into people's lives, and it has succeeded so well, that, the only retort liberals have against it is to create an environmental great depression to save mother earth, or, to bemoan a gap between the top and bottom rungs of society. If you measure things directly, in absolute terms, people right now are richer than they have ever been.

    Seriously, people wishing the world was simpler like in the early 1970s have no clue just much those days sucked. It's a stalinist worshipping era of oppression that robbed the country of opportunity, relentlessly oppressed dissent, and if those jackasses try and do the same to this America today, I say we rise up and waste them!

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Have you read Krugman? by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      Krugman's a liberal but staunch free trader. He's into the free flow of goods and capital and in a way that would be even more deregulated than is today. All he is saying is that he wants to have this huge safety net so that he can open trade completely.

      he's not under the illusions reaganites are that free trade is somehow messianic on its own.

      Its true, in the extreme long run it won't matter. The increase in relative prosperity in other nations will give rise to the same labor movements which happened as the US economy geared up industrially.

      In the short to medium term though, it will result in tremendous economic pain to wealthier nations.

      In 1970 even food was hard to get, but now, the world is increasingly getting fat. In 1970, we were lucky to have a small house, and a car, and maybe a set of clothes for the year. Now, home ownership, even after this so-called crisis, is at all an time high, people have better cars, more cars, more bikes, more clothes, toys, and a whole new category of things called consumer electronics.

      What we also have is increasingly skilled jobs going overseas, wage freezes, people working 60-80 hours per week if they have families to support, and home prices skyrocketing to 400% of people's annual income.
      We live like we do on increasing debt, and that can't last forever.

      As far as the whole consumer electronics thing goes.. we got a whole new category of things called "household appliances" under FDR new deal policies from as they matured into the 40's and 50's.

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    2. Re:Have you read Krugman? by Moridineas · · Score: 1

      he's not under the illusions reaganites are that free trade is somehow messianic on its own.

      Does that mean anything or are you just being a zealot?

      In the short to medium term though, it will result in tremendous economic pain to wealthier nations.

      You think that's something that Krugman argues? Maybe you should read more of what he thinks about economic geography and clustering?

      What we also have is increasingly skilled jobs going overseas, wage freezes, people working 60-80 hours per week if they have families to support, and home prices skyrocketing to 400% of people's annual income.

      It's called a bubble. Look outside--it's bursting. See Japan, Tokyo. See Netherlands, Tulips. etc

  52. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by evilviper · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Topics here have certainly been getting much more politicized than I recall them ever being before, and diverging from factual and technical discussion more than they used to. It's not over the past few weeks, however, it's been long in coming. There were complaints about the process a couple years ago. Introducing the YRO section just made the editors feel better about doing it more and more, and seemingly sped-up the process...

    Technical discussions have become similarly undermined as well, as the demographics of /. have changed... With 90% of comments on technical stories being jokes, mindless anecdotes, and other clearly baseless nonsense that gets modded up.

    But in both cases, for every 100 morons, there is still one very well informed individual occasionally posting a comment, and shedding important new light and context on a subject... So, IMHO, it's still worth staying, even as a signal-to-noise slowly increases.

    I've seen repeated phases like this in the past as well. A few years ago, the trolls and flamers were winning, and discussions were even worse than they are now. It's just that now there seems little way to combat it, and it's rather condoned and encouraged by the editors, for the sake of more page views I assume. Hence the regular banalization of stories here.

    But as I said, despite the increasing quantities of smoke, I'd still say the

    Just a few more Bush Regime diehards

    That seems a strange comment to make. The hard core left-wing crowd that mindlessly bash everything from the right is just as bad, and, at least appear to be, far more numerous.

    There are good ideas and bad ideas on both sides. But picking the good from the bad requires the kind of intelligent discussion of policy issues we haven't seen here in some time. Of course if you're buying into the political party nonsense, it's easy to think that everyone on the other side of an issue are drooling morons, while your side is always right...

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  53. We can tell if it worked. IT did. by tjstork · · Score: 2, Interesting

    And for the record, we cannot judge if Reagnomics worked because Reagonomics is:

    The point of Reagonomics was to increase the amount of goods that people have and can choose to have. The idea was to stimulate production by encouraging investment. To some extent, Reaganomics is the Karl Marx critique of capitalism applied full tilt - overproduction, based on the observation that, if you produce a ton of stuff, competition emerges and prices fall.

    Investors can get really rich, but a lot take a beating, thus wealth tends to concentrate. But remember, the name of the game is to get the rich to overproduce. They do, because, they are greedy and want more, and so they invest, and boom. We get the jobs and the benefit of overproduction.

    So yeah, in Reaganomics, you get concentrations of wealth but you also get rich people losing everything. You get a very dynamic society where if you get lucky you can get rich very quick or get poor very quick, and, everyone gets tons of stuff.

    To map this out to specific policies, these things are the things Reagan does....

    --lower the cost of capital
    first off, allow private capital formation.. then, lower tax rates, lower capital gains in particular, lower interest rates.

    --allow it to move freely
    adopt free trade.

    For the most part, we've been on that plan since 1980s.

    This has completely worked, and I think its a good deal. We've had a lot of gyrations, dislocations, but as a whole, the world is much, much, richer than it was 40 years ago. Just take a look at what's going in China and India and Eastern Europe...or even Europe once they lowered the corp income tax. In the USA people have way more food and way more stuff than they have ever had before. The world is just richer, and despite a hugely expanded population, everyone has more stuff. That's a huge success.

    I think its worth it overall, but a lot of people in this election are fed up with constant social tension all the continuous upheavals cause. , and thus they are willing to sacrifice wealth and opportunity for some sort of stability. And, part of that too is because of an aging society and a more womanly male population. There's just less men willing to take risks and most young guys think like women these days.

    --
    This is my sig.
  54. Re:The Slashdot Agenda by kdawson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looking at all the comments in this thread, I haven't seen a single one responding to or any analysis of Krugman's research on international trade and economic geography that won him this prize.

    It's been nothing but a political flamewar this whole time, which is what kdawson, resident shit-stirrer loves.

    It wouldn't be so pathetic of kdawson if he was more honest about it. In short, this whole story is offtopic, and he should be banned. I win, you lose.

  55. citation needed by yali · · Score: 5, Informative

    Some supporting evidence making it hard to fit this prize into an ideological box...

    In his popular writing, including his NY Times column, Krugman is a pretty outspoken liberal on most issues. But within his academic expertise -- which is what he won the prize for -- he is very willing to depart from liberal orthodoxy if that's where logic and evidence lead him.

    1. Re:citation needed by jam-pearl · · Score: 1

      Here is an essay where Krugman takes a liberal reporter to task for misunderstanding and opposing globalization.

      Not sure if I'm missing something here. Sounds like an over-simplification. From the article:

      But wait--what entitles me to assume that consumer demand will rise enough to absorb all the additional production? One good answer is: Why not? If production were to double, and all that production were to be sold, then total income would double too; so why wouldn't consumption double? That is, why should there be a shortfall in consumption merely because the economy produces more?

      How can it be conveniently assumed that all the production were to be sold?

    2. Re:citation needed by JohnFluxx · · Score: 1

      Wait .. the liberal view is _against_ globalization? When did this happen? WHY DID NOONE SEND ME A MEMO!

  56. Re:We can tell if it worked. IT did. by Watson+Ladd · · Score: 1, Insightful

    And 1 billion people still shit in the water they drink. What does it say about the richest country on Earth when people sleep under bridges? What does it say about us as people when we are so willing to turn our backs on the less fortunate? The measure of a nation is not in how it treats the powerful and the wealthy, but the poor and unfortunate. And by that measure we have failed.

    --
    Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further development.-- Frontinus, 1st cent. AD
  57. Re:inspiration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I found not only the smell but the shit itself. He'd forgotten to flush.

    Barack Obama is leading the way in saving the environment by not flushing.

    Maybe that's because he doesn't give a shit

  58. Re:We can tell if it worked. IT did. by Iamthecheese · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Most of those billion poor can best be helped by a few well placed bullets. The US tried shipping them grain, she tried building them pumps and sending economic advisors, The US government and US citizens gave massive amounts of aid for hundreds of years. Change only started when the right tin-pot dictators died.

    --
    If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
  59. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by nuttycom · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Slashdot long ago ceded the technical discussion high ground, simply because it lacks focus. It's difficult for any forum to maintain quality of both breadth and depth, and Slashdot has clearly gone for breadth.

  60. Why a prize at all? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is there a (Swedish Bank) prize in Economics at all? The subject doesn't seem to have:
    - a single matter with a reliable definition (money? labor? value? etc.)
    - any set of units with a reliable basis and measure (dollars? input? output?)
    - any law with any predictable effect.
    Now, if it were called a prize in fantasy...

  61. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    http://earthtrends.wri.org/searchable_db/index.php?theme=5&variable_ID=217&action=select_countries

    As percentage of GDP, China: 33%, USA: 14%

  62. Future nobel lauriates: Karl Marx & Vladimir L by heroine · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Well, no surprise from the committee that gave Mr. Peanut the nobel peace prize.

  63. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by nadaou · · Score: 2, Insightful

    and Endless September dawns upon another soul.

    --
    ~.~
    I'm a peripheral visionary.
  64. Re:We can tell if it worked. IT did. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > the world is much, much, richer than it was 40 years ago

    With a bit more detail, you'll see that the current economic model is not sustainable.

    Sure, the world _in_aggregate_ is richer; however, the rate of accumulation of this wealth does not apply equitably over the population - with the top 5% ever more rapidly accumulating wealth while the majority are hitting a plateau, those at the bottom seeing outright downturns, its obvious that reaganomics is running on fumes.

    > a more womanly male population

    Please sir, do tell us more about in regards to your masculine thoughts - a detailed etching of your pendulous thinking-machine would also not be unwelcome, sirrah.

  65. About Krugman by McCardle and Drezner by pbuxton · · Score: 1

    Krugman predicts doom in 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007...

    "What's the one time that Paul Krugman didn't forecast a recession? That would be when we actually had a recession. It just wasn't a recession that could be blamed on George Bush."

    "Barack Obama is not a real progressive." -- Paul Krugman

    "Iâ(TM)d give up the whole first page of my Google Scholar listing to have written 'The Queen and the Soldier.'" - Paul Krugman

    What's not to like about Paul Krugman?

  66. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go anywhere in the world, and you'll see mostly US-made airplanes (Boeing), turbines (GE, Pratt&Whitney), heavy construction equipment (CAT, Mack, Peterbuilt, etc.), et al

    You've obviously never been to europe...

  67. The problem with you americans by theolein · · Score: 1

    The more I read and hear about this liberal vs. conservative, left wing vs. right wing, the more I think you people are losing yourselves in the very agenda's you just spoke of. The polarisation of your country is doing your society more damage than any white house bail-out, mortgage crisis or foreign war will do.

    What ever happened to reason and trying to listen to other people's positions and thinking about them before writing them off as liberals or conservatives?

    1. Re:The problem with you americans by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Because wrestling with the issues is harder than watching "wrestling" on TV and cheering on your favourite party^H^H^H^H^Hwrestling team ;).

      --
  68. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by Luxusleben · · Score: 1

    In actual fact, the US - as a single state - is the #1 economy in terms of GDP, but if you see the EU as a single economy, it outperforms the US http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal) (not to mention other indicators such as http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_Development_Index ). And while it may be true, that the US has a good standing in heavy machinerie and such, in consumer goods it quite frankly doesn't look as good.
    In my personal opinion, the strongest sectors of the US economy, or rather the ones where the US is still ahead, are military and, to a lesser degree, the tech/software sector. In other areas there's mostly parity between either the US and the EU or the US and Asia. Of course I'm happy to be shown different :)

  69. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by kisak · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Krugman is not denying that US is producing stuff in the article, but he is critizing the notion that the economy during Bush is growing in a healthy way and that the tax cuts for the rich is the reason it is growing. The claim from republicans on slashdot and other internet sites have been for years that the economy is growing almost as strong as during the Clinton years when measured in GDP, and some sort of notion that liberals that claim the economy is doing bad are whiners. What Krugman is pointing out is that the growth coming from borrowed money from China, is not used to increase the US's productivity, but to fund a war and a housing bubble. Today, I guess we can agree that Krugman was right, not the republican talkingheads.

    The most interesting paragraph from the Krugman article is this one:

    Now, any economics textbook will tell you that it's fine to borrow from abroad if the money is used to expand the economy's productive capacity. When 19th-century America borrowed from Europe to build railroads, it was also enhancing its ability to repay its debts later. But we aren't borrowing to build productive capacity. As a share of G.D.P., investment other than housing construction is below its average between 1980 and 2000, and way below its level at the end of the 1990's.

    --

    --- guns don't kill people, people with guns kill people ---

  70. Science Fiction and the rest of the world... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't it sad that, when asked what inspired him to become an economist, his reply began: "That's a little embarrassing. I don't know how many of your viewers read science fiction, but... "

    Apologize for reading SF??

    Sigh. What a reflection of the society we live in.

  71. American Conservatives by bagsc · · Score: 1

    In the 1960s and 1970s, American Conservatives were way ahead of the curve. Tax reform, welfare reform, free trade, deregulation. Now its the American Liberals that are stuck in yesteryear, yearning for the nostalgic 1970s stagflation. Clinton got it. Obama gets it - those old ideas his party is stuck in will never work.

    Republicans aren't the Southern Baptists. They are also libertarians, business professionals, military leaders, and most Republicans are completely sane, patriotic, forward looking people. Democrats have socialists, who hang onto dead ideas of Lenin and Trotsky, and PETA activists telling Ben & Jerry's to use breast milk in ice cream. But they also have progressives and Bill Clintons.

    FWIW, I'm a moderate, and proud of it.

    --
    http://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    1. Re:American Conservatives by OwnedByTwoCats · · Score: 1

      What color is the sky in your world? It's blue here.

      In the 1960s and the 1970s, conservatism stood for segregation. Preservation of a privileged role in society for white males. They opposed workers rights, civil rights, voting by non-whites, and protecting the environment. Conservatives opposed Medicare, calling it "socialism" and using that label as an epithet.

    2. Re:American Conservatives by odourpreventer · · Score: 1

      Democrats have socialists, who hang onto dead ideas of Lenin and Trotsky,

      Do you have any reference to back up this statement? Otherwise, being a socialist, I have to say you're talking out of your arse.

      PETA activists telling Ben & Jerry's to use breast milk in ice cream

      There are nutcases everywhere. Saying it reflects democratic views is a bit of a stretch. On a side note, this is why I distrust so-called environmentalists. Most of them have a loose grasp of reality.

  72. Why not let a homeless guy move in with you. by tjstork · · Score: 1

    The measure of a nation is not in how it treats the powerful and the wealthy, but the poor and unfortunate. And by that measure we have failed.

    If you care so much about these people, why don't you go buy them a house or something? Or, let one of them move in with you? This country isn't some abstract thing, its you and its me and if you want to demand that everyone kick in a dime for these poor, as you say, then what's the measure of YOU, who has not done so?

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Why not let a homeless guy move in with you. by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      Because he should pay the cost of feeding the poor alone, while his taxes ALSO pay for the police and military protection which keeps that same poor person and all his other compatriots from ransacking their house at will.

      People who benefit more from public services should pay a higher price.

      The greater your assets protected by the government (read: tax payers), the more taxes YOU should pay.

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  73. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by smoker2 · · Score: 1

    Way to miss the point.
    The point is that the money "created" by lending on unsafe investments has been used as a basis for lending to other non-housing related sectors. This is why things are in freefall, the whole system has become dependent on a bad market.
    Do you know what an analogy is ?
    Maybe you noticed the implied "snip" in the parents post ?
    But no, that wouldn't suit your bias, so you fired off an angry post instead. You remember the popular broken window fallacy ? Well it seems your economy has been relying on that system being true.
    And your crack about the foreign lenders getting the short end of the stick smacks of US imperialism up the wazoo. Does that mean that your system works perfectly just as long as no-one actually uses it ?

  74. You're missing the mark and proving my point by orthancstone · · Score: 1

    Says the obvious democrat. But seriously, I think you're wrong.

    Or, in other words, you're showing your own bias by your attack. If he's wrong, point it out, but the fact that he's crying "bias" just implies that he's of the opinion that they're biased, not that he feels insecure.

    You're shallow attempts to pidgeonhole me (which miss the mark, btw) only prove my point. I'm not attacking the author for HIS bias; I'm pointing out that we now consider it acceptable to slam someone else for bias without even taking a realistic look at their ideas first.

    You'll notice that I don't deny that Krugman has an agenda, for obvious reasons: HE DOES! But if that's the first and only thing you have to say regarding him winning the award, then you have nothing useful to contribute. That's a sad indicator of where we are going in civil discourse. People need to spend less time being told who stand on which side and more time analyzing different stances on subject matter...well, presuming we want to actually advance ourselves sooner than later.

  75. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While I could agree that US still might be a dominant manufacturer in the world, where is something, anything, to back up being #1... There is a hugh difference between being #1 with 50%+ market share, and being #1 with only 10-20% market share in any particular industry.

    Then the examples given, at least the first two, are not very good especially if you go to Europe (Airbus & Rolls Royce), where one may still see the American brands, but the European brands are dominant. I highly doubt American automobile manufacturers are even dominant within the US market place anymore? Maybe American computer brands like IBM, HP and Dell might be an OK example here, but I don't remember where most of these things are manufactured anymore?

  76. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by evilviper · · Score: 1

    if you see the EU as a single economy, it outperforms the US

    Ahem. The discussion was NOT about GDP, but manufacturing.

    Never the less... Yes, with a population about 170% as large as that of the US, the EU manages to just barely outperform the US in GDP.

    in consumer goods it quite frankly doesn't look as good.

    "consumer goods" are cheap crap, so to speak. Yes, the US imports much of its cheap crap from foreign countries, while exporting heavy equipment and high tech goods at very high prices. On a monetary scale, the US has a huge lead. Per-capita as well.

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  77. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bullshit. Yes, US companies manufacture a lot, but guess what? Number one _exporter_ of goods is not US. Number one importer, yes, and consumer, yes.
    And this is exactly where disparity comes from: relatively speaking, US is soft on producing things, and hard on consuming things. The proof is in a few simple core statistics, start with the one labeled "trade deficit".

    And as to US banks and lending market... you are kidding right? Yes, pain was and is shared, but surely you agree that the falled insurance company and banks (investment and savings) qualify as "failing". And more would fall, if it wasn't for nationalization being done right now.

    Yes, he was dead right.

  78. *sigh* more logical leaps. by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

    Investors can get really rich, but a lot take a beating, thus wealth tends to concentrate. But remember, the name of the game is to get the rich to overproduce. They do, because, they are greedy and want more, and so they invest, and boom. We get the jobs and the benefit of overproduction.

    By what logical leap do you conclude the wealthy will gift us with jobs using that extra money?

    If any jobs are created under such policies, they're created off shore, or moved off shore at our expense.

    Additionally, the "dynamic market" you are referring to is large scale corprate fraud and malfeasance.

    I can't believe you got modded up for this.

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    1. Re:*sigh* more logical leaps. by tjstork · · Score: 1

      By what logical leap do you conclude the wealthy will gift us with jobs using that extra money?

      I've never seen a homeless guy create a job.

      If any jobs are created under such policies, they're created off shore, or moved off shore at our expense.

      So, what homeless guy are you working for?

      --
      This is my sig.
    2. Re:*sigh* more logical leaps. by tjstork · · Score: 1

      Additionally, the "dynamic market" you are referring to is large scale corprate fraud and malfeasance.

      so what kind of car are you driving? Unless you are driving an American car, i would shut up about outsourcing. You know, I love how computer people, with all of this business process virtualization, had no problem throwing manufacturing jobs overseas, but, as soon as it came up to them, well, outsourcing was a huge problem.

      Anyone driving a Toyota in the USA with an Obama sticker is a fraud.

      --
      This is my sig.
    3. Re:*sigh* more logical leaps. by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      i've never seen a wealthy guy advocate healthcare for the 50 million and growing without it.

      What would it cost him? Would he, or his children, or his children's children EVER miss that money?

      Face it, without some regulatory compulsion, these people are about as generous with their money as stones are with blood.

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    4. Re:*sigh* more logical leaps. by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      I drive a hundai.

      It was built in a factory about 100 miles from my current residence, in the USA.

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    5. Re:*sigh* more logical leaps. by tjstork · · Score: 1

      No, it was assembled in the USA. The engines, transmissions and other labor intensive parts are made overseas and shipped to the USA. Plus, Hyundai is non-union. If you really want to do this "help the middle class stuff", maybe instead of, or in addition to, voting for Obama and signing a few angry petitions against globalization, throw some cash on the table and buy the car whose engines and transmissions are made in the USA.... you know, a Ford, a GM, or a Chrysler. Now, you can certainly go on about the quality or price / performance of American cars.. but, ya know, that's really just making the same kinds of decisions that everyone that would condemn are making. Until you adopt the attitude to buy American products, as a matter of culture, any ranting about globalization is just a fraud. You can't reserve for yourself the right to go global when your actions, when taken as an aggregate, practically force companies to do so.

      --
      This is my sig.
    6. Re:*sigh* more logical leaps. by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      Chrysler's engines are assembled in germany.

      Try again.

      Until you adopt the attitude to buy American products, as a matter of culture, any ranting about globalization is just a fraud.

      because I haven't been compelled by the destruction of american purchasing power...

      ou can't reserve for yourself the right to go global when your actions, when taken as an aggregate, practically force companies to do so.

      yes I can, because companies' actions, taken as aggregate, literally force me to do so.

      multinational conglomerates have much greater market power than I do.

      They CAN reverse the trend, while I cannot.

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    7. Re:*sigh* more logical leaps. by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      Specifically, they can RAISE WAGES and HIRE AMERICANS so we actually have a real choice to buy american.

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    8. Re:*sigh* more logical leaps. by tjstork · · Score: 1

      Chrysler's engines are assembled in germany.

      No, not even close. That's just laughably wrong. Chrysler's HEMI engines are made in Salinas Mexico but you'll find the 6's and 4's are both made in Detroit. But of course, Hyundai boy, all of this pro-america stuff you spew out is just so much hooey.

      yes I can, because companies' actions, taken as aggregate, literally force me to do so

      That's a self serving lie. You aren't forced to do anything. There's nothing that stops you from walking into a GM, being a real American, and buying an American car. But, you go right ahead and vote for Obama to feel good about yourself, so you can keep on screwing American workers like you do with your foreign bought filth.

      If you want to help American workers, buy American products.... Obama's stupid socialism won't do a 1/10th of what good would be done if 1/2 of all Toyota buyers switched to GM. But that's a classic liberal for you... go give the gov't or some political group a couple of extra dollars in taxes or donations so you can keep right on doing the thing that's actually causing the problem.

      If you can change the world with your vote, you can certainly change it with what you purchase. And until you are driving an American car, you aren't doing enough. What's the point of a pro-union candidate, when, you throw the union out of work, Mr. Hyundai!

      --
      This is my sig.
    9. Re:*sigh* more logical leaps. by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      No, not even close. That's just laughably wrong. Chrysler's HEMI engines are made in Salinas Mexico but you'll find the 6's and 4's are both made in Detroit.

      Nope, sorry.

      the chrysler crossfire uses the same power plant and base chassis as the mercedes CLK, assembled IN GERMANY.

      The daimler takeover resulted in a great many of their lines incorporating german power trains.

      That's a self serving lie. You aren't forced to do anything. There's nothing that stops you from walking into a GM, being a real American, and buying an American car.

      Yes, I am forced to do so. Compensation has been frozen for 10 years, while inflation has pushed the CPI up 30%.

      This results in domestic products being out of reach.

      Don't claim this vindicates your point on globalism either, because globalism is to BLAME for that situation.

      Until you raise trade barriers with nations which allow american based multinationals to push labor into the ground, this will continue to be the case.

      The common man is screwed and choiceless in this situation, the government must act if it is to be reversed.

      Once again, my position and purchasing habits are not hypocritical.

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    10. Re:*sigh* more logical leaps. by tjstork · · Score: 1

      Nope, sorry. the chrysler crossfire uses the same power plant and base chassis as the mercedes CLK, assembled IN GERMAN

      The chrysler crossfire is a discontinued niche car and it doesn't use a hemi engine or the traditional chrysler 6. So you are just totally wrong.

      Yes, I am forced to do so. Compensation has been frozen for 10 years, while inflation has pushed the CPI up 30%. This results in domestic products being out of reach

      No, you are not. It's not globalism, its you. First off, if your compensation has been frozen for 10 years, that's your dumb fault. You need to find a better job. Secondly, there's plenty of cars that GM makes that you can buy for the same price as a Hyundai. A Chevy Cobalt is about the same price as a Hyundai Elantra.

      Once again, my position and purchasing habits are not hypocritical

      Completely so. You whine about how powerless you are that you deserve your pharoah in chief obama.

      --
      This is my sig.
  79. Preach It by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    "Really? Preach it brother - Name Names of those conservative economists that were screaming about the problems, yet being ignored by the Bush Administration and the Republican Congress!"

    It didn't even take a degree in economics to see this coming, my mental giant of a friend. Bush tried to implement reforms of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to get a grip on the subprime mess in 2003. These reforms (including new regulations, for you lovers of beauracracy out there) were shot down when, surprise surprise, Democrats stonewalled them. In hearing, Barney Frank in particular said he saw no subprime problem at all, that it was alllll a racist attempt to keep poor people from the American Dream of home ownership. And this is according to a bastion of Republican advocacy.

    "Because I never heard anything from any of them - possibly they were too busy talking about how lowering taxes on the wealthy was going to generate an economic boom, the likes of which the world has never seen."

    Or, maybe because you had your head so far up your ass (or in Indymedia... same thing) that you never noticed anyone else yelling about the problem lo these many years.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:Preach It by pugugly · · Score: 1

      I have read the article.

      I do not think it says what you thinks it says.

      But it makes a dandy excuse for not mentioning a single conservative economist that was talking about the housing crisis - {G}.

      Pug

      --
      An Invisible Entity of Vast Power whose existence must be taken on faith alone: Liberal Media
  80. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1

    The hard core left-wing crowd that mindlessly bash everything from the right is just as bad, and, at least appear to be, far more numerous. There are good ideas and bad ideas on both sides. But picking the good from the bad requires the kind of intelligent discussion of policy issues we haven't seen here in some time. Of course if you're buying into the political party nonsense, it's easy to think that everyone on the other side of an issue are drooling morons, while your side is always right...

    Ah. I suppose we can now expect the Left in the US to be treated with some respect, then? Forgive me if I don't hold my breath waiting for it.

    All you have to do to realize that the Right is far more numerous than the Left on Slashdot is to look at the comments and moderation on this very thread. Right at the top is a +5 "Insightful" comment deriding Krugman as some kind of fringe crackpot because he is very critical of the Bush Regime. This is an attitude he shares with fully 80% of the US public, by the way. But no matter. If you do happen to be aware of the fact that most of America hates this President, there are still plenty of other comments to amuse yourself with, including some that actually pretend that Krugman's professional work is completely wrong, and others that pretend Krugman wasn't *actually* awarded a nobel at all. All modded fairly high, so they're easy to find.

    As for there being good ideas on the Right side: I'm sorry, but the Right have had absolutely everything their own way in the United States for most of this decade (including a mostly supine Democratic congress since 2006). So we really don't need to waste a lot of time discussing the verity of the Right's policy "ideas". We can judge them empirically. And the experimental results are these: The country is losing two wars, we are hated even by our allies, our enemies (like Russia) demonstrate their contempt for us in ways we do not dare answer, the size of the national debt has tripled, millions of people are losing their homes, a mid-sized American city was wiped out by a natural disaster and left to rot, unemployment is at its highest in five years, the economy as a whole is in free fall, and the Executive violates essential constitutional rights regularly and with impunity. And I'm sure all of that has the same explanation unrepentant Stalinists offer for the fall of the Soviet Union: "But you never really tried our [conservative/communist/pick your ideology] ideas at all!"

    You know, I'd like to treat your comment with more respect, since it is at least possible that you're sincere in your belief that there is some sort of equivalence of intellectual or moral tone between the US Right and Left wings. But after 8 years of Bush, the multiple disasters his misrule has brought on us as a people, and the sneering and libels the Right have applied to the Left throughout, having to listen to further levels of denial and intellectual dishonesty like this really make it very difficult to do anything but laugh.

  81. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by dangitman · · Score: 1

    That seems a strange comment to make. The hard core left-wing crowd that mindlessly bash everything from the right is just as bad, and, at least appear to be, far more numerous.

    Say what? Hard-core leftists are almost non-existent on Slashdot. Even vaguely liberal comments are lambasted as being socialist or communist around here.

    There's certainly no shortage of right wingers around this place.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  82. Krugman is a mensch,,, by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

    He's one of the nicest famous guys around.

    A few years back, the NYT put all of their columnists behind a paywall (and yes, it was discussed on Slashdot). I was unhappy with this, tracked down an email address for him and wrote him a letter letting him know how unhappy I was with his syndicator. Oddly enough, for a busy professor and writer, he responded to me. He didn't know that this was happening and was not particularly happy about it either. In any case, he wrote back to someone who sent him email out of the blue and I was impressed with his approachability.

    I also saw him in Portland, OR on his book tour for his latest book, "The Conscience of a Liberal". He had a cold, but still managed to stay about a half hour longer than he was scheduled for to answer questions.

    He seems to be the very model of an old school academic. Which is probably why he doesn't take this very seriously and posted a link to Borowitz's humorous critique on his blog. You may not agree with his economics or politics, but he really is a nice guy.

    --
    That is all.
  83. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by evilviper · · Score: 1

    the Right have had absolutely everything their own way in the United States for most of this decade (including a mostly supine Democratic congress since 2006). So we really don't need to waste a lot of time discussing the verity of the Right's policy "ideas".

    Why do you think the right-wing gained it's grip on the government? The Left wing had a huge margin of control for a good 50 years, resulting in numerous recessions, high unemployment, high rates of crime, fraud, and corruption.

    I'm not saying this to deride the Left at all. Merely pointing out that you're selectively picking and choosing your facts. There have been terrible Republican administrations, and terrible Democratic administrations. Neither of which can be conflated with the be all end all of their theologies.

    The country is losing two wars,

    Actually, Iraq is working out nicely now. Sure, it was a terrible situation for 3 years, due entirely to a lack of leadership, but your facts are never the less wrong.

    we are hated even by our allies,

    Our relationship with France is closer and better than it has ever been. It's in part due to the election of Sarkozy, but was a movement developing in earnest for about a decade.

    In France, American Rap music is popular, hamburgers are everywhere, the economy is being de-socialized progressively to appear more similar to the American model. etc.

    our enemies (like Russia) demonstrate their contempt for us in ways we do not dare answer,

    Not at all. Heavy political pressure has been directed at Moscow, which is very likely the only reason for the pullout of Russian troops from Georgia. Putin is actually the one lobbying empty threats, to try and get Washington to lay off.

    the size of the national debt has tripled,

    When there's economic troubles, the national debt is supposed to increase to pay for recovery programs. So this isn't a direct indicator of anything.

    a mid-sized American city was wiped out by a natural disaster and left to rot,

    No, actually just one Parish of a major city was wiped out, and left to rot. It is, of course, an open question if the city should have been there (20' below sea level) in the first place. The poor quality of the levies dates back through several Republican and democratic administrations alike.

    You aren't going to get me to defend Bush at all. Never the less, none of your points has any hope of proving that there are no good ideas on the Right, nor that everything the Left does is therefore good. Jimmy Carter, in particular performed almost as badly as Bush in every area you're criticizing Bush for.

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  84. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1

    "Iraq is working out nicely now"? Suggest you try that particular idiot remark out on some Iraq veterans, or the Iraqis themselves. "An open question if the city should have been there (20' below sea level) in the first place"? Please do me a favor and stand in Union Square and explain that idiotic theory to San Franciscans after the next major earthquake. They'll have some fun hanging you from the nearest lampost and beating your corpse to a pulp. "You aren't going to get me to defend Bush at all." Who, precisely, are you kidding with that bullshit? There's nothing here but a defence of the last 8 years and the Bush Regime. And this crap is +5? I'm sorry, but if you're sincere about this, you clearly think politics doesn't actually have any meaningful impact on real events. And if that's so, you're really too stupid to waste any more time on. Bye.

  85. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by evilviper · · Score: 1

    Suggest you try that particular idiot remark out on some Iraq veterans, or the Iraqis themselves.

    I was talking about it with an Iraq war vet less than a month ago. He was happy to extol all the good work his unit has been doing for the people over there.

    I have numerous friends and relatives currently in the military, and many more old vets. I worked on-base for a military contractor for about a year, not long ago, and had numerous discussions with people about to go to Iraq, often for their 3rd tour.

    They'll have some fun hanging you from the nearest lampost and beating your corpse to a pulp.

    I'm not all that far from SF. Driven there numerous times over the years.

    There aren't any discussions about whether SF is in too dangerous an area to be sustained... There were innumerable such debates about the viability of New Orleans, a very long time before Katrina.

    you're really too stupid to waste any more time on. Bye.

    I have to keep correcting your "facts" and I'm supposedly the "stupid" one?

    I think you've pretty well proven you're just the blind ("drooling morons") partisan I was describing in my first reply... No wonder you think there's so many far-right-wingers on slashdot... Might have something to do with the fact that your (factually ignorant) view of reality is heavily to the left. So far, you've gone out of your way to condemn every little thing that can possibly be ascribed to the Republicans, with no real rational basis for your chosen criticisms. You've also completely failed to realize the Democrats have numerous failings, and the left wing has plenty of shortcomings of their own and flaws in their favored ideology.

    If you were a right-wing moron, I'd criticize you just as much for (a whole different set of) brainless assertions in direct opposition to reality.

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  86. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1

    This fools no one. Your non-partisanship is mostly up your ass, like your "corrections" to my facts. You've selected a tiny portion of the crimes Bush has committed against this country and excused every last one of them with a pack of unverifiable and unsuppported assertions. You're as partisan on the right as I am on the left.

  87. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1
  88. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by evilviper · · Score: 1

    You've selected a tiny portion of the crimes Bush has committed against this country

    I didn't pick ANY of them. YOU picked every last one. I merely responded.

    and excused every last one of them with a pack of unverifiable and unsuppported assertions.

    Pick ANY statement I've made here in the numerous replies in this thread. It's all verified easily.

    Of course, to refute any of my points you'd have to look up the relevant information (and you'd certainly find that I'm correct) instead of depending on your favorite pundits, opinion pieces, etc., etc.

    You're as partisan on the right as I am on the left.

    I don't think there's been any doubt you're heavily partisan. So much so that you (ironically) see *me* (PBS-watching, heavily Dem. voting, etc.) as far right-wing... but I've defended myself more than enough from your baseless personal attacks. Your head just might explode if you ever met a Fox News and AM talk-radio addict.

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    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  89. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 1

    I didn't pick ANY of them. YOU picked every last one. I merely responded.

    Bullshit. Your response was to cherry-pick among the ones I listed.

    Pick ANY statement I've made here...It's all verified easily.

    Shall we start with your alleged location "near" San Francisco and your base-contractor employment and your acquaintance with many Iraq vets? All perfectly verifiable, right?

    So much so that you (ironically) see *me* (PBS-watching, heavily Dem. voting, etc.) as far right-wing...Your head just might explode if you ever met a Fox News and AM talk-radio addict.

    No sale. I run into faux Dem trolls like you all day long. Along with plenty of Bill O'Lielly "moderates" and the usual Limbrains. You're running very true to type. The accusation of "baseless personal attacks" when your utter lack of facts or sense is pointed to and laughed it is a classic response pattern.