About TPP

Published on Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Democratic Trade War: Obama Says Warren ‘Wrong’ on TPP as Reid Says ‘Hell No’ to Fast Track

Split among Democratic lawmakers front and center as push for corporate-friendly trade pact heads for key votes in Congress

At a labor rally last week, Sen. Elizabeth Warren said workers “have to fight back” against corporate-friendly deals like TPP. “I’m proud to be with you and I’m going to be with you all the way,” she said. (Image: Screengrab/AFL-CIO)

President Obama on Tuesday evening said that progressives like Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) who have called out the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement for being a corporate-power grab and have vowed to defeat legislation designed to ram it through Congress are simply “wrong” when it comes to the pending deal between the U.S. and 11 Asian and Pacific nations.

Specifically singling out Sen. Warren for her steadfast opposition, Obama defended the TPP in an interview with MSNBC‘s Chris Matthews that aired Tuesday evening.

“I love Elizabeth. We’re allies on a whole host of issues, but she’s wrong on this,” Obama said about the deal.

In op-ed earlier this year, Warren condemned the TPP for its inclusion of a provision known as Investor-State Dispute Settlement, or ISDS, which would allow private corporations to sue governments if they believe laws or regulations are impeding their ability to make profits or adequately compete in a market. “The name may sound mild, but don’t be fooled,” argued Warren. “Agreeing to ISDS in this enormous new treaty would tilt the playing field in the United States further in favor of big multinational corporations. Worse, it would undermine U.S. sovereignty.”

And last week, Warren spoke at an anti-TPP rally sponsored by the AFL-CIO where she told the crowd: “Are you ready to fight any more deals that say ‘we’re going to help the rich get richer and leave everybody else behind’? Workers have to fight back. I’m proud to be with you and I’m going to be with you all the way.”

On Tuesday, Senator Harry Reid, the top-ranking Democrat in the Senate, voiced his strongest opposition yet to pending bills in Congress that would grant the Obama administration what is known as Trade  Promotion Authority, or Fast Track, which would give the White House power to finalize the terms of the deal without oversight or input from lawmakers. If Fast Track is approved, the trade deal would receive only an up-or-down vote in Congress without the ability to make changes.

“You couldn’t find a person to ask this question who feels more negatively about it than I do,” Reid told reporters after being asked whether he supports Fast Track for the TPP.  “So the answer is not only no, but hell no.”

The Senate Finance Committee is scheduled to vote Wednesday on the Fast Track measure, introduced by Sens. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.).

As Politico notes on Wednesday, congressional approval of Fast Track “is seen as integral to both reaching a bilateral agreement with Japan and bringing home the 12-nation TPP agreement — the largest trade deal in U.S. history. But an indication that the fast-track bill doesn’t have enough votes could deal a blow to the negotiations.”

For critics of TPP, passage of Fast Track is basically seen as pre-approval of TPP itself.

On Monday, approximately a thousand people representing a coalition of public advocacy groups, environmentalists, and labor unions marched to the office of the U.S. Trade Representative to voice their strong opposition to both TPP and Fast Track. At a rally preceding the march, political activist Jim Hightower said, “The TPP isn’t a trade deal. It is a corporate coup d’etat that is about to be rammed down the American people’s throats. It would make us poorer and less free and we the people aren’t going to stand by and let it happen.”

What the EU must do now to halt this tragedy on its shores

http://theconversation.com/what-the-eu-must-do-now-to-halt-this-tragedy-on-its-shores-40486?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Latest+from+The+Conversation+for+21+April+2015+-+2662&utm_content=Latest+from+The+Conversation+for+21+April+2015+-+2662+CID_9ce922828832a53bf64a3f1dc27ade0c&utm_source=campaign_monitor&utm_term=What%20the%20EU%20must%20do%20now%20to%20halt%20this%20tragedy%20on%20its%20shores

“How much is a human life worth? How many more people have to die to generate enough momentum for Europe to intervene? Unfortunately these are not rhetorical questions. More than 1,500 people have drowned or gone missing in the Mediterranean on their way from North Africa since the start of 2015.

Many Europeans are wondering how much longer Europe can ignore the tragedy unfolding on its doorstep while politicians and policy makers weigh up the political and economic cost of saving lives at sea.

. . . . . .   ”

Please go to the above link to read more about what Nando says about the tragedy on Europe’s shores.

How do you protect people?

How do you protect people in times of war and upheaval? The German magazine DER SPIEGEL published an opinion piece by Maximilian Popp on this subject. I think the so called “first world” faces a huge problem with more and more displaced people from zones of war and upheaval seeking asylum and a better life. What can humanely be done? How can we suppose that a certain percentage of human beings can be just ignored and left to drown or be killed in zones of  terrible upheavals?

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/opinion-europe-should-protect-people-not-borders-a-1029594.html

Vacation in Berlin

http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/berlin-cracks-down-on-estimated-18-000-vacation-rentals-a-1026881.html

Tourism Troubles: Berlin Cracks Down on Vacation Rentals

Most of Berlin is still sleeping when Julia Krüger packs her backpack in her bare offices on a recent cold winter morning. Krüger, who works for the division of misappropriated apartments in the city’s central Mitte district, takes along her employee ID card, a small notebook, a digital camera, two apples, a sandwich and some chocolate. She’s wearing athletic shoes so that she won’t have any trouble climbing stairs.

Krüger, 24, is preparing to take back a part of Berlin that has been stolen. Today, she’ll be on the hunt for dozens of the city’s illegal holiday apartments, which, Krüger claims, are bad for the city’s neighborhoods. “I have the feeling that I am doing something good with my work,” she says.Krüger, who wears turquoise-colored nail polish and has the determination of an elementary school teacher, has requested the manager of a communist-era apartment building near Friedrichstrasse to meet her on-site at 8 a.m. She will ask him to open the doors to apartments which she suspects are being used as illegal vacation accommodations. “It would be best, of course, if we run into tourists,” she says.

Twelve Million Guests

No German city receives more visitors than Berlin. Last year, almost 12 million tourists checked into hotels, youth hostels or pensions in the city. But many tourists also want to go beyond the Brandenburg Gate and TV Tower; they want to get a feel for the real Berlin — something they can’t find in anonymous hotels. As a result, thousands of them end up in apartments that used to house normal Berlin residents, but are now being rented to tourists, either on a temporary or permanent basis.

Internet portals like Airbnb have created a niche market controlled by a handful of commercial providers that has become massively successful. Anyone can offer up their apartment using the service: All they have to do is write a short description, add three or four photos and, voilá, they’ve made the true Berlin experience accessible to the world. For some renters, Airbnb has become a lucrative source of side income. For others it is even their main earnings source. And for tourists, it provides a much better bargain than hotels.

The Berlin Mietergemeinschaft, a renter’s rights and advocacy organization, estimates that 18,000 vacation rentals are scattered across the city, a number that represents enough housing for a small city. According to research conducted by the University of Applied Sciences in neighboring Potsdam, over 7,000 short-term accommodations in Berlin are being offered by private individuals and commercial operations on Airbnb alone. A short time ago, a number of German media organizations reprinted an artist’s illustration showing the number of Airbnb offerings versus rental apartments in the Wrangelkiez, a popular area of the city’s Kreuzberg quarter. She found 102 vacation-rental listings, but only a single normal apartment for rent on one of the top rental listings websites.

Unregistered Vacation Rental Ban

In autumn of 2013, the Berlin city government passed a law banning all vacation rentals that had not been registered with the local authorities by summer 2014. The city granted an extension to just under 6,000 accommodations, but they, too, will have to be made available on the normal apartment rental market beginning by May 2016.

The ban was imposed to prevent the city from becoming victim to property owners who would rather rent their apartments for €700 per week to tourists rather than offer them to normal residents for much less. The law is also meant to show that city officials in Berlin are taking the fight against gentrification seriously. Julia Krüger’s boss says the idea is to create the impression among the people that the agency has an armada of employees working to stop these illegal rentals.

But that armada is a bit sparse in Mitte, Berlin’s central district, which is also home to the most vacation apartments. Right now it includes only four employees, with only two of those actually conducting inspections outside the office.

Since starting her job six months ago, Krüger has been busy reviewing complaints from residents in the neighborhood who believe their neighbors are operating vacation apartments. Krüger has collected all of them in four binders. During each shift, she inspects two to six properties together with her colleague Diana Schmidt.

Detective Work

The two women approach their work like detectives, piecing clues together as they go. Indicators of a possible vacation rental can be a number instead of a name on the doorbell or the observations of neighbors. But it is seldom that they come across clear evidence. “We often have to rely on our gut feeling,” says Krüger.

If they consider the evidence they have collected to be sufficient, the owners are ordered to rent their apartment to normal renters after a hearing. So far, though, there has not been a single instance in which the complicated administrative procedure has been ushered through to completion.

It’s frigid and dark outside as Krüger and Schmidt, 46, reach the apartment block. The building manager walks across the street with a bunch of keys. Krüger has already taken photos of the gray-brown façade of the dreary East Germany-era apartment building, which looks like it hasn’t changed a bit since the days of communism.

In the hallway, the building manager closes the door to the first apartment on the eighth floor. Inside, there’s a worn out leather sofa and a bed frame that has been taken halfway apart. There is no sign of any tourists and it smells as if the windows haven’t been opened for quite some time.

Krüger walks through the apartment and photographs each room, noting that there are “three rooms, a kitchen, a bathroom” and that it is “vacant”. The smell is even stronger in the second apartment, where someone left household appliances and ruptured trash bags behind on the carpet.

It’s obvious that the sloppily emptied apartments served as vacation accommodations until a short time ago. All the furniture that has been left behind is identical and someone forgot to remove a sign on the inside of one of the apartments reading: “Please remember to close the door each time you leave your apartment.”

The building manager says the apartments have been empty since last summer and that the owner wants to demolish the structure and construct an “exlusive new building” on the property. More than half the apartments have been cleared. The only reason the building hasn’t been torn down yet is due to resistance from a handful of renters who are fighting against being driven out.

Broad Approval for Crackdown

When the Berlin government made the decision to crack down on holiday rentals — just as Munich and Hamburg had previously done — the decision was met with broad approval. The vacation rentals had become a symbol for everything that had gone wrong with Berlin’s apartment market as well as the tourism industry. The city is plagued with rapidly rising rents and the socially weak are being forced out of the more attractive central parts of the city. The city has also been helpless in figuring out how to deal with loud partying tourists and profiteers who are turning parts of the city into an amusement park. Many view the battle against the vacation rentals as being decisive in the effort to wrestle a piece of Berlin back from speculators and tourists.

After two hours and without finding any current vacation rental, Krüger and Schmidt leave. The building manager points to the residential complex across the street and says, “There are vacation apartments all over the place there. You can tell by the curtains, which all look the same.” It looks as though the city employees may have missed their day’s quarry by just a few meters.

“I’m hungry,” Krüger says, packing up her camera. She will later write down “third party complaint” to note the tip-off from the building manager. Both want to return at some point, but first they need to check whether the vacation rental already has a legal extension until fall under the new rules.

There’s another aspect that complicates local officials’ hunt for illegal vacation apartments. Most holiday rentals these days are only listed on the Internet. With a few clicks on Airbnb and other sites, you can peer into the living rooms of “elegant apartments in the Prenzlauer Berg district” or a bathroom in a “comfy studio in Kreuzberg.” Renters almost never provide the exact address of an apartment.

Furthermore, under current rules, Krüger and Schmidt are allowed to search sites such as Airbnb, but they are prohibited from using them to conduct sting operations. Germany’s data privacy law bans them from conducting any form of undercover research.

‘Needle in the Haystack’

“As things now stand,” says Stephan von Dassel, “we’re looking for the needle in the haystack.” Dassel is the district councilor for Berlin-Mitte and is responsible for the implementation of the vacation apartment ban. He is sitting in his office in the third story of city hall, a man with square glasses and sharp ears, who almost sinks into his desk chair. Dassel would like to have software programmed that would put together an address from the clues that a vacation-rental ad leaves behind online. He claims it would be simple from a technical standpoint.

But he will most likely not be able to implement his plan. Berlin’s privacy commissioner considers the use of a computer program like the one Dassel suggests as only being permissible if there is “initial suspicion” — meaning, if the district authority already suspects that illegal vacation-apartments exist in a street.

If the software doesn’t work out, Dassel says, then he only sees one other solution: that a hacker offers him a CD with the addresses of all of the vacation homes in Mitte. “I don’t know if I would be allowed to buy it,” he says, “but I would do it.” The allusion is to a recent wave of CDs and DVDs sold by sources within Swiss and Luxembourg banks to German government authorities for significant sums of money in exchange for data that has helped them identify tax evaders.

It’s now a steel blue morning two weeks after the first failed attempt. Julia Krüger drags herself across the street in a different part of the Mitte district; she has a cold and would rather be sitting in the office. Diana Schmidt is holding a cigarette in her left hand, and, in her right, a piece of paper that might be their key to success today. The women have by chance managed to find an advertisement online that shows the address of a vacation rental.

It is supposedly on the ground floor of a pre-war building in a well-to-do area — nice furniture, 90 square meters, space for six people, according to the ad. It costs as much as €216 per day.

Another Let Down

The blinds are down, and nobody reacts to Krüger’s ringing. The sign with the name on it is nondescript.

Krüger presses on a random buzzer. “Mitte district office. Misusage. Please open the building door,” she calls into the intercom system, when a neighbor answers. Even though most Berliners are in favor of the ban, they are occasionally called names, Krüger says, like Stasi-spy, or they are taken for con artists. People are also sometimes angered by the fact that, according to the law, the women may enter a suspected vacation rental without a search warrant. Dassel, however, thinks it’s unlikely that this right would stand up before the court, if a renter refused them entry.A retired couple in a bathrobe let Krüger and Schmidt into the building and then welcomes them into their home. “I need to sit down, I have unbearable pain,” the man says, by way of greeting, and then slumps onto a stool in the hallway. Then he starts his monologue. He has never encountered any tourists, he claims, “and I know everything that happens in the building.” The man talks and talks, and Julia Krüger rolls her eyes. At some point, his wife interrupts: “To be brief, we don’t know anything.”

Because an online ad is not considered sufficient proof, the case goes into the “hold file.” Krüger and Schmidt don’t have any option except to return another time. And to hope that a tourist opens the door.

Changes in Politics?

From this article I copied only the last part that goes under the heading:

New political solutions

If you want to read the whole article, please go to:  

http://theconversation.com/australian-politics-kodak-moment-spells-trouble-for-the-major-parties-37474?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Latest+from+The+Conversation+for+9+April+2015+-+2621&utm_content=Latest+from+The+Conversation+for+9+April+2015+-+2621+CID_dcebfc58de4f1940deec7160d7328ecb&utm_source=campaign_monitor&utm_

8 April 2015, 10.41am AEST

Australian politics’ Kodak moment spells trouble for the major parties

AUTHOR

David Fagan

  1. Adjunct Professor, QUT Business School, and Director of Corporate Transition at Queensland University of Technology

DISCLOSURE STATEMENT

David Fagan was editor and editor-in-chief of Queensland’s major newspaper The Courier-Mail for a decade and was News Corp’s editorial director in Queensland before joining QUT

New political solutions

We can be confident that the business of government and politics will continue. After all, its survival is legislated. And the public kind of likes democracy.

So far, the politicians and party organisations have dabbled with some of the tools of disruption to protect their positions. Most politicians tweet, share stories on Facebook and line up for selfies with their true believers. But this is at the margins rather than the core of political practice.

Fundamentally, politics is still built around internal loyalties and a win-at-all-costs approach to a range of complex issues. Yet most of the choices they face involve the decisions we must make to share the available resources among a growing population on a finite planet. If the tensions those choices create isn’t disruptive, I don’t know what is.

The changed consumer needs, aligned with technology, must change the practice of politics; the only question is how.

One answer might lie in the latest manifestation of disruption, the evolution of the sharing economy. This involves the use of digital tools to harness unused capacity and put it to productive use: for example, Uber as a ride-sharing app and AirBnB as an accommodation service.

What might this look like in politics? Imagine a mobile app where a third-party provider can harness support for an issue and deliver it as a bloc to a group of politicians willing to make available their legislative capacity.

Fanciful? Well, in effect, that’s what has already happened to the transport industry and the accommodation industry. It will take just one balance-of-power crossbencher in an Australian parliament to take up the idea to give it traction. And isn’t the basis of politics to understand what the public wants and to deliver it efficiently?

If politics follows the pattern of disruption, it will do just that. But the old brands risk falling by the wayside unless they face the reality that hanging on to the old ways almost certainly guarantees oblivion. Just ask Kodak.

Housing Bubbles

http://news.domain.com.au/domain/real-estate-news/australia-is-in-one-of-the-worst-housing-bubbles-we-have-ever-seen-20150327-1m8vao.html?

Lindsay David wrote onMarch 27, 2015:

Australia is in one of the worst housing bubbles we have ever seen

” .  .  .  . since the mid-1990s, Australia’s strategy is for home buyers and investors to borrow heavily from lenders and flip houses to the next buyer who has taken out even more debt to speculate.

Today, all this country has to show for it is a $1.9 trillion mountain of household debt that will make the US credit-fuelled housing bubble of the last decade look like a walk in the park when our housing bubble bursts.

The unfortunate victims of today’s “wealth-creation” strategy are young home buyers and middle-income earners who are either completely priced out of the market or leveraged through the roof.

While our society lacks a meaningful and open debate on the toxic and rising levels of household debt, new home buyers in Sydney and Melbourne are entering the market and taking upon the most illogical sums of debt, courtesy of our over-leveraged banking system.    .  .  .  .   “

Land Tax is often overlooked

http://www.smh.com.au/comment/land-tax-often-overlooked-in-the-tax-debate-20150407-1mfro2.html

Jessica Irvine says:

“Sometimes, the answer is right in front of your face. Sometimes, it’s just below your feet.

As we embark, as a nation, on a sensible and measured debate about tax reform, land tax should be a major part of the discussion.

Land tax is one of the most efficient taxes for precisely the reason it is unpopular: it is hard to dodge.

Of the roughly four things governments can tax – companies, individuals, consumption and land – economists agree that land is by far the most efficient source for taxation.  .   .   .   .   ”

Please go to the above link to read on.

It is important that when it comes to land tax, only the unimproved value should be taxed, not the home!

Kevin Rudd at TED Conference

The following I found in Google and copied it. 

 

http://www.news.com.au/finance/work/kevin-rudd-appears-at-ted-truth-or-dare-conference-makes-terrible-dad-jokes/story-fn5tas5k-1227289956093

Former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has turned out his classic Kevin ‘07 election line, but this time, he’s international.

Formerly, “My name’s Kevin, I’m from Queensland and I’m here to help”, the former Labor Party leader opened with the zinger after he zipped to Canada last month to talk China and US relations at the TED Truth or Dare conference. The full video was uploaded on Wednesday.

In his 20-minute speech, Rudd, billed an “international relations expert”, outlined what the future holds for the “giants of the 21st century” and how their decisions “will affect all of us in ways perhaps we’ve never thought of”.

kevin rudd ted talk

Kevin Rudd made his debut on the TED stage, but his jokes fell flat.

He urged the countries to reflect on history and learn from our previous mistakes and called for the US to engage in a better understanding of China’s culture.

But what’s a Kevin Rudd speech without a Ruddism, or three?

Without fail, he delivered. Here’s the best of the worst.

Kevin Rudd: Are China and the US doomed to conflict?

WEED JOKE FALLS FLAT

If China does become the world’s largest economy, think about this.

It will be the first time since George III was on the throne of England that in the world we will have as the largest economy a non-English speaking country, a non-Western country, a non liberal-democratic country.

And if you don’t think that’s going to affect the way the world happens in the future, then personally I think you’ve been smoking something — and that doesn’t mean you are from Colorado.

HIS HANDS WERE CLEARLY NOT BUILT FOR FARMING

Soft and supple: These certainly aren’t farming hands.

Soft and supple: These certainly aren’t farming hands. Source: Supplied

People ask me why is it that a kid growing up in rural Australia got interested in learning Chinese. This is Betsy the cow. Betsy the cow was one of a herd of dairy cattle that I grew up with on a farm in rural Australia. See these hands, they’re not built for farming.

So very early on I discovered that in fact working on a farm was not designed for me and China was a safe remove from any career in Australian farm life.

KEVIN THE CONQUEROR?

The great thing about learning Chinese is that your Chinese teacher gives you a new name:

“Conqueror of the classics”. Any of you guys called Kevin? It’s a major lift from being called Kevin to be called “Conqueror of the classics”.

KEVIN TALKS ORGASMS

The ambassador began with this inelegant phrase, he said, ‘China and Australia are currently enjoying a relationship of unprecedented closeness’.

I thought to myself, ‘that sounds clumsy, that sounds odd, I will improve it’.

Note to file, never do that. It needed to be a little more elegant a little more classical, so I rendered it.

There was a big pause on the other side of the room.

The blood was visibly draining from their face … when I rendered his sentence … in fact what I said was, ‘Australia and China were now experiencing fantastic orgasm’.

That was the last time I was asked to interpret.

ASKED IF HE HAS A ROLE TO PLAY BRIDGING THE GAP

what we Australians do best is organise the drinks, you get them together in one room and we suggest this and we suggest that, than we go and get the drinks.

kevin rudd ted talk
Talk about a turnout. Source: Supplied

From a Spiegel Inerview with John Cleese

http://www.spiegel.de/international/zeitgeist/spiegel-interview-with-john-cleese-a-1026293.html

I found this Spiegel interview with John Cleese very interesting, especially the following statement where he says that he thinks that it is not possible  that the planet can be run in a rational and kind way —

Here is what he says:

” . . . .  I think you can reduce suffering a little bit, like the Buddhists say, that is one of the few things I take seriously. But the idea that you can run this planet in a rational and kind way — I think it’s not possible. There will always be these sociopaths at the top — selfish people, power-seekers who want to spend their whole lives seeking it. Robin Skynner, the psychiatrist that I wrote two books with, said to me that you could begin to enjoy life when you realized how bad the planet is, how hopeless everything is. I reached that point these last two or three years when I saw that our existence here is absolutely hopeless. I see the rich people have got a stranglehold on us. If somebody had said that to me when I was 20, I would have regarded him as a left-wing loony. . . .  ”

Would you like to comment on this?

Percentage targets for planned burning are blunt tools that don’t work

A more effective plan

http://theconversation.com/percentage-targets-for-planned-burning-are-blunt-tools-that-dont-work-39254?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Latest+from+The+Conversation+for+30+March+2015+-+2587&utm_content=Latest+from+The+Conversation+for+30+March+2015+-+2587+CID_3ea97089c94d786890216c71b60f85c7&utm_source=campaign_monitor&utm_term=Percentage%20targets%20for%20planned%20burning%20are%20blunt%20tools%20that%20dont%20work

. . . . . . .

“A more effective plan

The Victorian Bushfires Royal Commission also recommended that the Victorian government develop risk-based performance measures for bushfire management. In response, the Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning has developed sophisticated methods for mapping risks from major bushfires across the state, and predicting bushfire risk following planned burning.

We strongly support this more sophisticated, regional risk-management approach. After all, planned burning to protect human life and property should naturally focus on places where people are most at risk from major bushfires.

Another new piece of our research, published in the journal Conservation Biology, offers a way to predict how planned burning also influences risks to biodiversity. This will allow land managers to consider trade-offs between protecting people and conserving wildlife when applying planned burning.

Just as the 5% target is an inefficient method for minimising the impact of major bushfires on human life and communities, it also has negative consequences for the resilience of natural ecosystems.

It’s time to drop the simple 5% target. It is a blunt tool, and a risk-based approach more effectively focuses fire protection where it’s most needed: safeguarding people and wildlife.”