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Paging Dr. Krugman...
I've just finished The Conscience of a Liberal. Thank you--it was fantastic. I recommend it, along with Jacob Hacker's The Great Risk Shift, tpmcafe's Jared Bernstein's All Together Now, and tpmcafe's Elizabeth Warren The Two Income Trap, as the best books I've seen on what is happening to our country's middle class and poor and where we need to go first on social and economic policy in the progressive movement and the Democratic party.
Here's the thing--I vote Tuesday in Virginia's primary. As of now I am voting Obama. I think he gives us the best chance of beating McCain and helping us get a favorable Congressional balance for the looming UHC battle.
You are supporting Hillary. I want to know why, really. What is it that you know or perceive that leads you to think Hillary is the better bet, to win and help get us a better Congress? A major argument you make in your book is that race is the single issue that has hurt the progressive cause the most in our country. Do you believe that, polls notwithstanding, when push comes to shove, enough Americans are not ready to vote for a person of color for President yet? Is that the fear and concern? If that is not it, what is it? What polling and survey and impressions are you focusing on that leads you to the other conclusion? I want to know because you're a super smart person and the agenda you lay out in your book is one I support wholeheartedly for our movement, our party, and our country.
I get that you think her health care proposal is better as policy and is a better way to get more quickly to a single payer system. If it stands as good or a better chance of passing as any other proposal out there that moves the ball forward, that sounds right to me. The Obama supporters, and Obama himself, do not impress me when they bash the purchasing mandate because without it how do they suggest we get everyone covered and eventually in the same risk pool? If Obama can't move off his present position I'm not sure we're going to get the forward motion we need on this issue. People like me have to hope that he'd be open to revising his current proposal, or that if Dem leaders in Congress can come up with a better bill he'll support it. The purchasing mandate has a major problem of its own, in that lots of our fellow citizens of modest means cannot afford to make the up-front purchase of insurance even though they'd get a tax credit later on.
You realize full well that elections aren't about who is the best policy wonk, I know, or who has the best proposals on paper right now--that we have to win and get a Congress that can help instead of impede in getting a progressive agenda enacted.
A penny for your thoughts, which I really want to hear before I vote on Tuesday. As of now, it's Obama for me.







Comments (6)
If you want to know why Krugman believes what he does about Obama, why do you have any need to go anywhere other than his own, quite explicit, columns addressing the subject?
February 9, 2008 1:28 PM | Reply | Permalink
He's got a blog with comments, it might be easier to get an answer by asking him there:
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/
Of course, you might be using a rhetorical device and don't really have any intent of communicating with him at all?
February 9, 2008 1:52 PM | Reply | Permalink
Not what you asked, but to your list of books I've read only snippets of but am eager to get more into, please add Mr. Anrig's.
February 9, 2008 3:16 PM | Reply | Permalink
Yes, The Conservatives Have No Clothes - Why Right-Wing Ideas Keep Failing is one of the best.
February 9, 2008 4:39 PM | Reply | Permalink
Partly a rhetorical device, sure, but not a rhetorical question at all. My hope was that, as many heads have more eyes than one, perhaps others might know the answer to my question and share that information.
February 9, 2008 5:53 PM | Reply | Permalink
(ok, maybe no one will see this but...)
jhaber and seashell:
Yes! Thanks. Greg Anrig is terrific!
Others I've heard good things about:
The American Dream and the Power of Wealth: Choosing Schools and Inheriting Inequality in the Land of Opportunity, Heather Beth Johnson, 2006. I put this one first partly it's gotten less attention than the others and is on a topic that is underwritten about, I believe.
If there is a weakness in Krugman's book, it is that he is loudly silent about how economic globalization should affect how we think about our "domestic" economic/social policies. This would include but not be limited to how we should think about trade and trade agreements and policies among other areas. (I realize he can't do everything in one book.) At first glance it looks as though most of the books on this short list come at issues Krugman is writing about from a global angle--working "inwards" to consider or imply implications for US policies within that broader context.
End of the Line: The Rise and Coming Fall of the Global Corporation, Barry Lynn, 2005.
Take This Job and Ship It, by the very sharp Senator Byron Dorgan, 2006. (maybe invite him on?) Others could and have compiled anecdotes and data. I'm especially looking forward to seeing what he thinks we should do and not do in response to inevitable job loss, as someone in a better position to gauge political reality and possibility in the Senate.
Making Globalization Work, Joseph Stiglitz, 2006.
Global Covenant: The Social Democratic Alternative to the Washington Consensus, 2004, by the British academic and prolific writer on globalization David Held. I've read this and thought it was good.
Bad Samaritans: The Myth of Free Trade and the Secret History of Capitalism, Ha-Joon Chang, 2007.
One Economics, Many Recipes: Globalization, Institutions and Economic Growth, Dani Rodrik, 2007.
Free Trade Reimagined, Roberto Unger, 2007.
February 10, 2008 10:08 AM | Reply | Permalink
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