This may be a golden era of betrayal. Bernie Madoff, Eliot Spitzer, Chris Brown, Rod Blagojevich, Alex Rodriguez and Mel Gibson are among the liars and cheats who've hurt their biggest fans and chums the most. It justifies July Town & Country's "How Could You?" a smart overview of being screwed by those one holds dearest.
Lynn Sherr, the former ABC News correspondent, suggests that, historically, most who break the basic bonds of trust are romantic cheats, with certainly many political traitors following behind. And, these days, there are the well-documented practitioners of "corporate greed and personal gluttony," the dominantly male cadre which has counted some good percentage of this magazine's own high-demo readers as their victims.
These folks hurt people. The self esteem of the victims plummets. It really is pretty crappy. No wonder what Dante's "Inferno" left the final and worst Circle of Hell for the sin of betrayal, actually after lust and murder. And Sherr herself concedes fury over being shafted by Wall Street and seen her modest holdings vanish, even though she knows she never had a guarantee.
She compiles a Betrayers' Hall of shame here. For example, the public figures include Blagojevich (not the strongest choice, since he may be proof of voter stupidity, not victimization), Brutus, Andrew Johnson, Richard Nixon and Marshal Petain (sad to say that most probably don't recognize this Nazi collaborator). A "strange bedfellows" category includes Bill Clinton, John Edwards, former New Jersey Gov. Jim McGreevey and Spitzer. "Turncoats" includes Benedict Arnold, John Wilkes Booth, Alger Hills, Julius Rosenberg and Salvatore "Sammy the Bull" Gravano."
This opus beckons psychologists, classics scholars and even a country music expert for wisdom. Their contributions include the notion of betrayal commencing with somebody's sense of entitlement and grandiosity; the near certainty that women are victimized more often than men; its centrality in country music simply stemming from its omnipresence; how Greek myths underscore the ways in which virtue is often not rewarded; and the double-edge sword of being able to avoid betrayal only by never taking any risks or trusting anyone.
Even Lucy of "Peanuts" fame got into the act, teeing up Charlie Brown's football for four decades, and then grabbing it away at the very end. It leaves Sherr with the conclusion that we should be careful about giving the football "to the Lucy in your life," while also reading your broker's statement every month and, perhaps the toughest thing, "move on when the guy--or gal---does you in."
"We've created a system that rewards those who win as opposed to those who care," says one shrink here. "There will always be people who will be betrayers." So, this shrink says, be smarter about how much risk we take and move on as quickly as possible once you get the shaft. Easier said than done.
---Town & Country cover girl Angie Harmon, a conservative diehard who loved the McCain-Palin team, best not read June 22 Time, which gives a platform to Republican consultant Mike Murphy, an adroit practitioner of the television-loving art of the provocative political assessment. In "The Ice Age Cometh, a man who once tagged me (and with some accuracy) "The Unabomber" for a somewhat scruffy (the hair was much longer back then) regular appearance on a CNN political talk show, makes the case that demographic change casts the Republican Party adrift, leaving them (as is well-documented) very white and needing to become more socially libertarian, willing to embrace dissent on abortion and not turn off Latinos via "the Republican congressional jihad on immigration."
It's pretty obvious counsel even if it pisses off Rush Limbaugh and the hard core, including that endangered species of gorgeous Hollywood conservative with three kids.
Meanwhile, June 22 Business Week wonders, "Time (inc.) For Parting?" with media columnist Jon Fine suggesting that maybe, just maybe, Time Warner might one day spin-off his magazine empire, as he plans to with AOL. That would be a pretty big deal, with Time being the largest magazine operation, with revenue last year of $4.6 billion. It's pretty obvious, though, that there'd be nobody around really interested in buying the whole operation intact, as opposed to picking off certain titles.
---June 13 National Journal is excellent on "Health Care Reform Faces its 'Super Bowl Moment,'" a look at key health industry lobbyists and how they're dealing with the prospects of change and their generally awful public image (notably health insurers). Some have clearly made conciliatory steps and talked the talk of compromise. But the rubber meets the road on a variety of issues, like some government health care plan, with the certainty of losing even more customers than they do amid the recession, rising premiums and an aging population. And if the Democrats and Obama administration employ the legislative tactic known (ironically so) as "reconciliation," bulldozing through a plan, it actually may just not matter what they think.
---June 22 New Yorker is worth "The Secret History---Can Leon Panetta move the C.I.A. forward without confronting its past?" by Jane Mayer, whose "The Dark Side" was a revealing and depressing account of various secret Bush-era anti-terror gambits. Her interview with the CIA boss is hitching post for a tale of instant moral ambiguity faced by Panetta, a longtime congressional fixture with no real intelligence experience and already surrounded by several folks with distinct ties to the Bush era's torture and secret detention and interrogation programs. One may be left wondering whether a very decent fellow, whose prime professional experience was in the compromise-filled legislative process, is tough enough to deal with the sharks both within his organization and those elsewhere in the bureaucracy seeking to undermine him.
---- "The Capitalist Manifesto: Greed is Good (to a point)" by Fareed Zarkaria in June 22 Newsweek weaves ongoing debate about seeming failures of the free market and the need for greater regulation with his own historically-based qualms and, possibly, slight wishful thinking that, partly as a result of unceasing globalization and its essence, the real answers are to be found by all of us, big and small, looking in the mirror:
"There's a need for greater self-regulation not simply on Wall Street but also on Pennsylvania Avenue. We get exercised about the immorality of politicians when they're caught in sex scandals. Meanwhile they triple the national debt, enrich their lobbyist friends and write tax loopholes for specific corporations--all perfectly legal--and we regard this as normal. The revolving door between Washington government offices and lobbying firms is so lucrative and so established that anyone pointing out that it is--at base--institutionalized corruption is seen as baying at the moon. Not everything is written down, and not everything that is legally permissible is ethical. Who was the last ex-president to refuse to take a vast donation for his library from a foreign government that he had helped when in office?"
"We are in the midst of a vast crisis, and there is enough blame to go around and many fixes to make, from the international system to national governments to private firms. But at heart, there needs to be a deeper fix within all of us, a simple gut check. If it doesn't feel right, we shouldn't be doing it. That's not going to restore growth or mend globalization or save capitalism, but it might be a small start to sanity."
----Chilling tale of the week is surely, "Why Did a Small-Town Girl Have Her Family Brutally Murdered?" in June Texas Monthly. It's a nice bit of reporting by Pamela Colloff to piece together the motives in the killing of Penny Caffey, a pianist at a Baptist church, and her two sons, a fourth-grader and a seventh-grader (the father was shot five times but survived). It was all masterminded by the 16-year-old daughter, Erin, with a boyfriend whom her parents didn't like and demanded that she break up with. The boyfriend and another man did the dirty deeds, including burning the family home, and were convicted, and are in prison, as is the daughter. The boyfriend, who tells the magazine that he's not spoken to her since the crime (and is barred from communicating with her again), opines that, "I don't know what's wrong with her head. She needs to have it looked at." Of course, is one surprised that he still claims to love her?
Hands-down winner of this week's Journey to the Obscure is "On using the DomWorld model to evaluate dominance ranking methods" by Han de Vries of the department of behavioural biology at Utrecht University in the Netherlands. It's found in Issue 146 of Behaviour. Your handy summary:
"Recently, the DomWorld model was used to evaluate five dominance ranking methods. The suitability of the DomWorld model for this purpose is however not without question. The characteristic unidirectionality of most dominance behaviour observed in many monkey species is not found in DomWorld. Besides this, the current paper shows that the additive dominance value updating method in combination with the relative win chance, Pij = DOMi /(DOMi + DOMj ), gives rise to unrealistically large changes in win chance after fights among low ranking individuals. It is shown that this can be resolved by replacing the additive update rule by a multiplicative one. Moreover, this combination of relative win chance and multiplicative update rule is equivalent to the combination of a sigmoidal win chance and additive update rule as employed in the Elo-rating method. It is also shown that, contrary to Hemelrijk's recommendation, David's score is to be referred to the average dominance index. The paper concludes with presenting a differentiated list of recommendations on the use of ranking methods that takes into account the required premises and different aims for which these methods have been developed."
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Who is "Alger Hills"? A turncoat? I thought Alger Hills was a geological feature south of Bellingham, Washington.
< " This may be golden era of betrayal. Bernie Madoff, Eliot Spitzer, Chris Brown, Rod Blagojevich, Alex Rodriguez & Mel Gibson among the liars & cheats who've hurt their biggest fans & chums most." >
BAILOUTS") the SAME week!! .bloomberg .com/apps/ news?pid=2 0601087&si d=a9MTZEgu kPLY&refer =home
You clearly left out THE most important group of all: Barack Obama & the "Democrat" Party.
Now we all knew that "CHANGE!" was an amporphous, imprecise pledge... yet the relish with which Obama has rammed his "GOLDMAN SACHS FIRST, LAST, & FOREVER!" agenda down America's throats is simply stunning.
The media tries to tell us that "Goldman & other Big Wall Street 'financial institutions' are GOING TO PAY BACK their $50 Billion in Bailouts!" as if that will make things OK & justify banksters blatantly going back to their old ways.
But Paulson-Pelosi's Sept. 2008 bailouts, alone, were $700 Billion.
Even if the Pelosi Congress ___"ONLY"___ gave Paulson half of that to dish out to his "former" coworkers at Goldman (et al) - that is still __$350 billion___ -- THREE HUNDRED & FIFTY-BILLION taxpayer dollars.
NOT including Bernanke's CONCURRENT $630 BILLION "Liquidity Injection" (aka "BACKDOOR-
http://www
Then Pres. obama added ANOTHER EIGHT HUNDRED BILLION in his first stab at "BAILOUTS".
We're now at OVER TWO HUNDRED BILLION in BAILOUTS, yet WallStreet, the "financial press", AND the "DEMOCRAT" Party, will try to tell us "$50 billion paid back, we're ALL EVEN NOW" ??!!!!
this is an EPIC BETRAYAL that makes Spitzer's & Gibson's indiscretions look like high-school pranks by comparison.
oops! "TRILLIONS $$" !! -
ctor.) .. .nytimes.c om/2009/04 /01/opinio n/01stigli tz.html
nn.com/cnn /lt_ne/lt_ ne/detail/ 223491/ful l;jsessionid=8117E5224565F6DA46E7C756C9DAC952.live5ib
< "We're now at OVER TWO HUNDRED __TRILLION___ in BAILOUTS, yet WallStreet, the "financial press", AND the "DEMOCRAT" Party, will try to tell us "$50 billion paid back, we're ALL EVEN NOW" ??!!!!" >
Obama & his banksters are trying to pass well over Two TRILLION dollars in Bailouts off as "just $50 billion" -
(As if that wouldn't be bad enough, actually, the true, correct Bailouts figure for past 2 years is northward of TEN TRILLION dollars - fiat, fractional-reserve money" (ie 'funny money' created out of thin air by the PRIVATELY OWNED Fed Reserve - money "created" out of thin air, that Taxpayers must make whole with REAL GDP production !!!
This amounts to a TEN TRILLION+ DOLLAR TAX on American working families, to shore up blatant Wall Street fraud - with Barack Obama now acting as head enforcer, skull-crusher, knee-capper, & loan-colle
Stiglitz: "Bailouts" = ROBBERY of taxpayers.
http://www
David Goldman, CNN money writer: Bailouts cost EIGHT TRILLION $$ -
http://m.c
and
I most adamantly protest your placing Elliot Spitzer in this particular lineup.
Are you nuts? Spitzer was AG - you think it's alright for an AG, a DA or a judge to do the same damn things they prosecute others for?
It's the worst kind of rank hypocrisy.
You've obviously failed to do your homework before blowing up all over this screen.
There's more to news than just headlines.
Poor Mel. Some speech is just more hateful than other speech - which when talked about - over and over and over again.... creates MORE hate of the same protected class or ethnicity.
. some of the pent up hate by other people with NO megaphones ... would subside and not metastasiz e...
It's a vicious circle really.... now if some people with larger megaphones than the rest of us -- would just let some of this stuff go....
perhaps, just perhaps...
just a thought guys.... just a thought
Americans love to be lied to, they prefer lies to the truth as is record, we elect liars not truth tellers... ..we even kill those who tell the truth, as is our very history..!
Simple as that...
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