Paul Krugman explains how the sainted Ronald Reagan didn’t really have a Southern Strategy at all. It was all just a series of Innocent mistakes.
Colts lose 2 in a row
The Colts’ special teams let them down, allowing the Chargers to score two touchdowns. Then the Colts almost come back but can’t quite pull it off. At the end of the game, they got their first down 10 seconds too late. Had it happened with more than two minutes left, they could have run down the clock, kicked the field goal from close and won the game without giving the ball back to San Diego. The Chargers had used their challenges and couldn’t have challenged the spot. Instead, the officials chose to review the spot; set Indy back a few inches depriving them of the first down. Then, the officiating crew called a phantom false start on the offense. Oh, and let’s not forget the “inadvertent whistle” that deprived the Colts of something like an 80 or 90 yard interception return.
The Colts offense is held together with spit and baling wire at this point, and they still almost won. God I’m pissed right now.
A brief history of DST
Not a lot of new information for a lot of the folks here, but the Berry Street Beacon gives a nice Indiana history of Daylight Saving Time.
Veterans Day
I spent part of this Veterans Day watching Starship Troopers. It seemed vaguely appropriate. “Remember, service guarantees citizenship.”
And, as has become Veteran’s Day tradition here around Masson’s Blog, Dulce Et Decorum Et:
Bent double, like old beggars under sacks,
Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge,
Till on the haunting flares we turned our backs
And towards our distant rest began to trudge.
Men marched asleep. Many had lost their boots
But limped on, blood-shod. All went lame; all blind;
Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hoots
Of tired, outstripped Five-Nines that dropped behind.Gas! Gas! Quick, boys! – An ecstasy of fumbling,
Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time;
But someone still was yelling out and stumbling,
And flound’ring like a man in fire or lime . . .
Dim, through the misty panes and thick green light,
As under a green sea, I saw him drowning.
In all my dreams, before my helpless sight,
He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning.If in some smothering dreams you too could pace
Behind the wagon that we flung him in,
And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,
His hanging face, like a devil’s sick of sin;
If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old Lie; Dulce et Decorum est
Pro patria mori.
Indiana: A National Leader on Foreclosures
Indiana is second only to Ohio in foreclosure rates according to this article in the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette. Apparently a study committee is looking at the issue and the State has launched some counseling efforts, including a telephone hotline and a website. Part of the plan appears to be educating people about what, exactly, it means to have an adjustable rate mortgage.
Going forward, there are ideas being floated such as providing prospective borrowers were summaries of maximum potential rates and maximum potential monthly payments.
But committee member Rep. Randy Borror, R-Fort Wayne, questioned whether this change will make any difference, especially since it will be one more piece of paper in a large stack for the borrower to sign at closing.
“I question that as being a solution to the problem,†he said. “You are signing your name so many times to so many documents. You can push back closing to review the documents if you so choose. You are in control of that process.â€
Borror apparently doesn’t have a very realistic idea of how the home closing process usually works. I don’t disagree that pushing back the closing to review the documents might be possible — unless to do so would be a breach of your purchase agreement — but the home closing process isn’t generally very conducive to a thorough review of documents. Usually the paperwork isn’t ready until the last minute. A good number of people are waiting at the table to get the job done. There’s a good chance that time frames for moving out of your old place and getting your stuff to your new place along with the home seller’s time frame for getting their stuff out of what will be your new house and into their new house are tight. The logistics of the situation put the pressure on to get the closing done. For Borror to say that the borrower is really in control of the process doesn’t seem very realistic.
Other suggestions include eliminating prepayment penalties which would allow people to refinance; increasing penalties for fraudulent lending practices; and include a contact sheet in closing documents identifying everyone involved in the process. There is also the possibility of limiting the practice of accepting “stated incomes” for initiating loans and requiring some sort of actual proof. Some want to hold lenders accountable for activities of the loan brokers or appraisers involved in fraudulent loan transactions.
Borror said the state needs to tighten its laws for appraisers and mortgage brokers, but he cautioned against overregulating the industry.
“We must also understand that there is an element of personal responsibility any time anyone enters into a home contract for a home or car, whatever,†Borror said. “I am not someone who is going to propose multiple regulations across industry lines where we kill the golden goose.
“It’s a delicate balance.â€
All of this might be good for people buying houses in the future, but to get them out of their current situation, it seems to me that there will have to be some combination of lenders accepting less and borrowers paying more. I’m not sure where that comes into these plans.
Wink!
Totally unnecessary picture of Cole being cute:

Mukasey approved as Attorney General by the Senate
Michael Mukasey was approved by the Senate as the next Attorney General. The issue calling his confirmation into question was the fact that he refused to commit to the proposition that drowning an interrogation subject constituted torture. (Technically not drowning, but “waterboarding” in which the subject only thinks he or she is drowning.)
Among those who are comfortable with such ambiguity in America’s position on torture are Indiana’s own Evan Bayh and Richard Lugar. Not voting on the confirmation were Presidential candidates Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, Chris Dodd, John McCain, and Barack Obama.
I tend to agree with Patrick Leahy on this. He suggests that Mukasey is a solid individual, but moral ambiguity on torture is unacceptable. Leahy said, “I am not going to aid and abet the confirmation contortions of this administration. I do not vote to allow torture.” He spoke at more length during the committee hearings:
Nothing is more fundamental to our constitutional democracy than our basic notion that no one is above the law. This Administration has undercut that precept time after time. They are now trying to do it again, with an issue as fundamental as whether the United States of America will join the ranks of those governments that approve of torture. This President and Vice President should not be allowed to violate our obligations under the Convention Against Torture and the Geneva Conventions or disregard U.S. statutes such as our Detainee Treatment Act and War Crimes Act. They should not be allowed to overturn more than 200 years of our Nation’s human rights and moral leadership around the world.
The Administration has compounded its lawlessness by cloaking its policies and miscalculations under a veil of secrecy, leaving Congress, the courts, and the American people in the dark about what they are doing. The President says that we do not torture, but had his lawyers redefine torture down in secret memos, in fundamental conflict with American values and law. …
Some have sought to find comfort in Judge Mukasey’s personal assurance that he would enforce a future, new law against waterboarding if this Congress were to pass one. Unsaid, of course, is the fact that any such prohibition would have to be enacted over the veto of this President.
But the real damage of this argument is not its futility. The real harm is that it presupposes that we do not already have laws and treaty obligations against waterboarding. In fact, we do. No Senator should abet this Administration’s legalistic obfuscations by those such as Alberto Gonzales, John Yoo, and David Addington by agreeing that the laws on the books do not already make waterboarding illegal. We have been prosecuting water torture for more than 100 years. …
I wish that I could support Judge Mukasey’s nomination. I like Michael Mukasey. But this is an Administration that has been acting outside the law and an Administration that has now created a “confirmation contortion.” When many of us voted to confirm General Petreas, the Administration turned around and, for political advantage, tried to claim that when we voted to confirm the nominee, we also voted for the President’s war policies. Just as I do not support this President’s Iraq policy, I do not support his torture policy or his views of unaccountability or unlimited Executive power.
No one is more eager to restore strong leadership and independence to the Department of Justice than I. What we need most right now is an Attorney General who believes and understands that there must be limitations on Executive power. America needs to be certain of the bedrock principles in our laws and our values that no President and no American can be authorized to violate. Accordingly, I vote no on the President’s nomination.
This pisses me off
The Lafayette Journal and Courier is reporting on vandalism to the Tippecanoe Battle Ground monument. Even though I’m not generally inclined to believe in hell, I find myself hoping there is a special place there for the kinds of people who would deface our monuments in this way.
Messages spray-painted on the monument said, “America repent,”
“Justice will be served,” “Coward,” “Give us back our spiritual capital” and “Tecumseh’s not dead.”
Tippecanoe County Parks & Recreation Department superintendent Allen Nail gets it exactly right when he says:
“We see the battlefield as hallowed ground where 196 years ago brave men, red and white, fought and died courageously,” Nail said. “I don’t know how anybody could hope to do honor by doing this sort of thing.”
Hopefully they figure out who did this so they can prosecute and force repayment for the repairs. The Tippecanoe Battle Ground is one of my favorite places to take my kids. This is really appalling to me.
Should Indy Dems Repeal County Option Income Tax?
The Hoosier Pundit has a post commenting on whether Indianapolis Democrats should repeal the controversial county option income tax they forced through earlier this year.
The Democrats in Indianapolis adopted a county option income tax to pay for public safety. (Indy was given special dispensation by the legislature to raise this income tax by itself — other counties had to implement two income taxes designed for property tax relief before the public safety tax was an option.) Indianapolis Republicans railed against this tax increase. I believe mayor-elect Ballard was among them. (Correct me if I’m wrong on that.) I believe there is also a lawsuit challenging the validity of the vote on the tax increase because one of the council members wasn’t legitimately a resident of the district to which the member was elected.
Hoosier Pundit says it would be “vindictive” of the Democrats to repeal the tax. Why? Give the voters and the Republicans what they said they wanted. It might be a little passive aggressive, I suppose, but on what grounds can these people complain? I would be shocked, shocked to find out that the Marion County Republicans would want the political issue of the tax increase to use against the Democrats and the tax revenue they need to actually run the city.
Update I was considering this post and previous comments I’ve made on various boards and trying to figure out why the topic of Indy’s county option income tax and its potential repeal was of such interest to me. I was only mildly interested when it was passed, after all. And, of course, the political gamesmanship is interesting as well. But I don’t think that’s it.
Here’s the thing. Nobody likes paying taxes, but taxes are necessary for a functioning government. A functioning government is necessary to make our communities places where we can live happy lives. It’s tough to prosper in a shit hole.
Was the Indy county income tax a necessary one? I have absolutely no idea. I have no knowledge of Indy’s budget, what expenditures are necessary and what expenditures are unnecessary. But, I think it’s important for political operatives to be judicious in the taxes they oppose. By all means, oppose the unnecessary ones. Citizens will also not thrive if they are taxed for government expenditures that are not beneficial. But, raising a huge stink over a necessary tax increase creates a toxic political environment that leads to a dysfunctional and underfunded government which in turn contributes to our communities turning into shit holes.
And, at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter whether or not I think the Indy tax increases were necessary. The only important thing is whether Indy’s new masters — Ballard and the Republican County Council members regarded the tax increase as necessary but railed against it anyway, purely for political gain. That sort of hypocrisy should be condemned in the harshest possible terms. If they regarded the tax increase as unnecessary and railed against it, that is obviously fine. But, at the same time, they would have no reason not to repeal the tax themselves or basis for complaint if the outgoing Democrats repealed the tax prior to departure.
DST increases pedestrian deaths
A Carnegie Mellon study shows that pedestrian deaths increase almost 200% when daylight saving time ends.
It’s not the darkness itself, but the adjustment to earlier nighttime that’s the killer, said professors Paul Fischbeck and David Gerard, both of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh.
. . .
Fischbeck and Gerard conducted a preliminary study of seven years of federal traffic fatalities and calculated risk per mile walked for pedestrians. They found that per-mile risk jumps 186 percent from October to November, but then drops 21 percent in December.
They said the drop-off by December indicates the risk is caused by the trouble both drivers and pedestrians have adjusting when darkness suddenly comes an hour earlier.
. . .
The reverse happens in the morning when clocks are set back and daylight comes earlier. Pedestrian risk plummets, but there are fewer walkers then, too. The 13 lives saved at 6 a.m. don’t offset the 37 lost at 6 p.m., the researchers found.
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