tv [untitled] July 26, 2011 10:00pm-10:30pm EDT
10:00 pm
good evening welcome to the alona show where you get the real headlines with none of the mersey i'm coming to you live out of washington d.c. of course i'm not alone i'm filling in for her i'm laurin this are now the death of a is continuing in washington with a default just a week away despite all of the coverage and the speeches from the president will talk about what's missing from the discussion and the u.s. cyber security chief mysteriously resigns after a string of hacking attacks on government agencies some by those behind anonymous
10:01 pm
and lulz sec so could hacktivists have anything to do with driving him out to look into it now lawmakers talk detainees policy on capitol hill today too but is this really just about making sure get no lives on forever we will have all of that for you tonight but first what did the mainstream miss. now as i mentioned the debt debate continues as a deal has not been reached the country is now dangerously close to default and the political theater going on in washington continues to provide a show for the mainstream media and they are deconstructing each play and every new development in this game inside baseball that according to many estimates could take down the u.s. and maybe the global economy but you can imagine the debt ceiling battle right here in the nation's capital is having
10:02 pm
a huge impact on the campaign trail it really was reality t.v. express last night the president and the speaker a commanding me air waves will most people were tuning in to watch the bachelorette or so you think you can dance just one week to go before the default deadline drooling plans are out now raising the limit to our nation. credit card and reducing the deficit. comparing it to reality t.v. the saga continues and the president keeps coming to the podium a network t.v. to make his case usually followed by a response from house speaker john boehner and last night was no exception the president plug what he called the better plan at this point a better path than this crazy road that we're on a plan laid out by senate democrats which raises the deficit or raises the debt ceiling excuse me and makes a small dent in deficit reduction and in what some of compared to telethon tactics the president called on americans to phone in their support. the american people may have voted for divided government but they didn't vote for
10:03 pm
a dysfunctional government so i'm asking you all to make your voice heard if you want a balanced approach to reducing the deficit let your member of congress know. if you believe we can solve this problem to cover much. many people did send a message and websites crashed and his words were of course dissected by cable news every last drop of it just afterwards and they're still being dissected today mostly it's pundits on the right and left wing talking points reacting to the speech as the thing who is compromising who is not compromising but what is missing what about the meat of what's on the table or the lack of it at this point let's look at the plan that obama was touting senate majority leader harry reid's newest plan it calls for slashing two point seven trillion dollars over the next decade in exchange for raising the debt ceiling by about the same amount through the two
10:04 pm
thousand and twelve elections but where is that money coming from just in that two point seven trillion well he's calling for cuts to defense spending ok well look at that he's factoring in a trillion dollars in savings from quote winding down the wars in iraq and afghanistan ok anyone who has heard any number of u.s. officials who have talked about being in afghanistan four years into the future despite a two thousand and fourteen withdrawal deadline may recall their forehead at the assumptions involved in reid's calculations but even without speculating about war policy in the future there is plenty of evidence now that these numbers are imaginary defense savings are based on a congressional budget office estimate that puts the bill for the wars to close to one point seven trillion dollars over the next ten years ok here's the problem as the cvo report obtained by foreign policy's blog the cable shows this as timid is
10:05 pm
based on simple math with no connection to any policy realities they just took this year's cost for the wars and added inflation for every year in the future and if the cable points. the reality is that it is impossible to estimate the costs of the war because policy questions remain unanswered and this projection is a very high one which means most likely those savings are imagined now the numbers are what a former clinton administration budget leader gordon adams writes are what budget people call up plug something they know will be there but they don't really know what it is so they plug in a number and he writes that therefore these savings are missed the logical they're not real so they enforce no discipline on the defense department and there are a fraud on the public who will think a budget deal has cut the defense budget when it has done no such thing and just a note paul ryan's budget that has support of most house republicans also included
10:06 pm
this savings in its production calculation for the deficit to now on top of this these imaginary numbers for defense savings let's look at the big picture you have the fact that the us bases more than fourteen trillion dollars in debt and mounting and that's not including sixty one point six trillion dollars in unfunded liabilities from entitlements that figure from usa today other figures put the us on line for ninety to two hundred trillion dollars and after months of debt debate in washington that threaten to d. rail the global economy by dragging the us to give faults all lawmakers can maybe get now is a plan to save two point seven trillion dollars over ten years with one trillion dollars in fake savings on defense ludicrous and that is what the mainstream media is missing.
10:07 pm
now even though the debt ceiling debate is consuming mainstream media propelling the economy to the top story for the fifth week in a row it's been only. it's entirely driven by the bipartisan fight over raising the debt ceiling and how to cut the deficit and that's according to pew research which tracks this now the part of the discussion that is largely missing what about jobs unemployment is over nine percent in a little over a week we have seen several major u.s. corporations and now it's mass layoffs in the thousands minorities which have been some of the hardest hit by joblessness well low and behold a new atlases census data reveals that the wealth gap is hitting them hard the wealth gap between whites and minorities has grown to the widest levels since the u.s. government began tracking these figures and how long are people unemployed that's at a record high to nine months but guess who help wanted ads indicate need not apply
10:08 pm
people who have been out of work for a while so what is anyone to do well hopefully derek thompson a senior editor at the atlantic can help us figure that out thank you for being here good to be here ok so my first question on jobs we have seen cisco lockheed martin borders announce a combined twenty three thousand job cuts in the last week or so goldman sachs announced that layoff a thousand people. have been other announcements as well i mean forty one thousand planned job cuts were announced in june which is a five percent increase year year over. are we going to see and stead of just really small job growth a loss of jobs is going in the wrong direction was absolutely not going in the right direction fast enough but i think what we're seeing right now isn't necessarily a firing crisis despite what we've seen in the last few months with the news of the mass layoffs at cisco and borders with it being in stores where we really have is a hiring crisis firings have gone down pretty significantly sense the nadir of the
10:09 pm
recession what we're seeing right now is the companies are all staying put there's a big chill and the companies that you expect to hire these multinational companies that are that are sort of seeing record profits over the last two years they're not putting their money back into hiring american workers and putting money either into investments into cash savings or they're hiring people overseas one at the same time you have corporate profits locking in the well but that has been generated in this recession i think they got eighty eight percent of the income growth of praying to a study from northeastern university from may two thousand and nine to the end of two thousand and ten so despite you not thinking that this is a firing crisis why are corporations if they're getting all these profits if they're boarding cash laying people off who corporations are going to hire people when they think that they can fill some sort of domestic demand by hiring a domestic worker and the problem right now is that there's not a lot of domestic demand what you're seeing is that spending is low which means inflation is low which means then wages aren't are keeping up with inflation in the
10:10 pm
not moving that much because the great now what you're seeing is the american spender isn't getting isn't very frothy he's not generating a lot of wealth and so when companies are making all these profits primarily by investing you know in overseas trade or investing in overseas bonds what they're doing is they're plowing that money back into overseas development or they're investing it in american workers but what about the layoffs. well the the bacteria percent of profits drugs in the us you hear about why are these companies laying people off these are to sue the companies that are laying people off the companies that are laying people off borders cisco and the you mentioned there's specific reasons why these specific companies and your cities is one off things having to do with individual companies performance rather than a trend even though we saw a five percent increase year over year and then jan five percent i think is pretty small i don't think we're going to see right now we're going to last year yeah i don't i don't think the problem right now we face is is firing if you look at borders this is
10:11 pm
a company that was just actually destroyed by the internet and how does the publishing industry isn't doing very well cisco is a very specific example of the rest of the tech industry is actually doing quite well and if you look at seattle and austin other cities that are tech savvy you see people doing very well lockheed martin they get a lot of money based on government spending government spending has sort of hit a wall at this point because of the new congress and so that might explain some of their layoffs as well ok so you see those as one of the things that the let's talk about then the lack of the hiring the lack of jobs and let's talk about that that's very much debt ceiling debate today because there is a school of thought among some economists that what is needed in order to spur long term job growth is cutting the debt is reigning in government debt is this debt ceiling agreement and this debt debate that's going on now what is necessary to spur job growth i think it's a great question i think if you take the politics off the table the economics that we're talking about in the debt ceiling debate are not good for the country in any way what we need right now based on a weak private sector and weak private demand is more public spending and more
10:12 pm
public demand we don't want to bring don't ever say it's too soon for going to cut deficits which we should eventually over the next ten years by three or four trillion dollars we need to backload those savings when the economy is healthy or not when we have nine percent unemployment ok here's my question to you that debt is essentially the size of g.d.p. now for the united states typically when a country's debt exceeds ninety percent or. reaches ninety percent of its g.d.p. the currency falls apart social unrest ensues the us according to some estimates is on line for two hundred trillion dollars in unfunded money i think anybody they can do basic math can see that two point two trillion dollars a year that it brings then isn't going to add up to two hundred trillion dollars anytime soon and the government spending that is right given all of that i mean when does the social unrest start if the u.s. keep spending when does the dollar collapse that the u.s. keeps spending right now in terms of public debt the ratio that economists look at when they try to measure the health of an economy is public debt to g.d.p.
10:13 pm
and public debt right now isn't fourteen trillion it's more like nine or ten trillion so we're not yet at the ninety percent mark that up that economists have said is really the threshold for economic and social unrest that others say that it has reached that so we go forward in truly games with you know what some see call an apple and some call an orange i mean some people now in china that way you can get is that ninety percent more than ninety percent of g.d.p. right so the numbers here one so you have g.d.p. which is between fortune fifteen trillion right you've turned out the size of the total debt which includes not only public debt which is owned by people but also dead own within the government by intergovernmental agencies by the social security fund the medicare fund the federal reserve that's about five trillion and that's not what economists are looking at when you're looking at the health of the economy because this is money the government owns to those to itself so i do think i think they're on the same page they're nasty there has to be deficit reduction over the next ten years but the question is how do you do it if you front load those savings to front the spending cuts so that it comes down not in terms of tax increases but
10:14 pm
in terms of spending cuts that primarily impact middle class families or do you say let's wait a few years for unemployment to fall a little bit under nine percent to eight percent seven percent before we start to accelerate on deficit reduction ok my question then to you since you're saying the government's the government needs to spend as kind of the argument that paul krugman make that keynesians make if the economists that say that debt to g.d.p. ratio is too high. that scarily high and social unrest and a dollar crime goals would you be willing to accept that scenario if that's what happened if the government spent its way out of this i yeah i'm willing to stake my prediction right now what's best for the american people is not that we cut one trillion dollars in the next year but rather that we spend probably more than one hundred billion two hundred billion up to five hundred billion more this year that we're in currently slated to spend so that we reduce unemployment by increasing public demand that's going to increase deficit deficits the short term but in
10:15 pm
a way that might seem paradoxical i think that's probably going to reduce deficits in the long term because if we can grow faster now what matters isn't just the size of our debts but like you mentioned that to g.d.p. the size of our economy and i think we can grow the economy faster if we invest in it now rather than cut it really quickly yes or no how are people supposed to get jobs in the private sector when the long term unemployed are a big swath of the unemployed and help wanted ads are excluding that it's a horrible story to see that help wanted ads are saying unemployed need not apply but this is just one of the things that's inherent in the economy right now is that it's a two speed economy you're seeing that in some lanes people that companies are growing really quickly americans are getting much risk much richer much faster the stock market is doing much better than it was two years ago at the same time there are people who as you mentioned have been out of work in an average of half a year and this is this is its own crisis and i think that one of the problems and capital good right now is that they're blinded from the latter crisis because they happen to be surrounded by people that are more like the former category yeah and
10:16 pm
in a celeb would be minorities are having the largest gap between whites in this country it's since they've been calculating in the twenty five years which is something that we're not going to get today but maybe next time thanks so much for being here thank you now still to come tonight the u.s. uses top secret drones and hot spots around the globe we all know that but they soon may be flying over and they here in america will tell you why in a moment and what if the us. all of the perfect taney a get in change by the week as a republican lawmakers began asking the obama administration to clarify detainees policy thought horton contributing editor on legal and national security matters for harper's magazine joins me if you manage to talk about it. you know some good to see a story and it seems so silly you think you understand it and then you glimpse something else and here's some other part of it and realized everything you thought you knew you don't know i'm sorry welcome to the big picture.
10:18 pm
let's not forget that we had an apartheid. i think. one well. that. we never got that says they're very safe get ready for freedom. drones now we know they're the new weapon of choice the department of defense back when robert gates held the secretary of defense position he openly stated that the unmanned aerial vehicles are the future for the u.s. military we must recognize the enormous strategic and cultural implications of the
10:19 pm
fast expansion. and remotely piloted vehicles for reconnaissance and strike. and since then admiral mike mullen has made this comment to back his statement he said we're in a real time of transition here in terms of the future of aviation and the whole issue of what's going to be manned and what's going to be unmanned now the proof though really lies in the statistics where we've told you extensively about the uptick in drone strikes the broad especially in our wars in afghanistan and all of the unofficial wars in yemen libya and pakistan but now drones are gaining attention here at home talking points memo reported this morning that the state of oklahoma wants to section off part of its airspace for you guessed it drone development approximately eighty miles between the cities of fort sill and clinton would be reserved for just drone technology and testing and it would provide
10:20 pm
analysts and developers the ability to test their projects without contacting the a a first now we should know that this is already drawing development central oklahoma state university hosts the multispectral laboratory which specializes in drone enhancement but reserving air space will carry lots of economic benefits for the states as well existing drone projects could be moved to oklahoma and setting up a headquarters if you will brings more workers and their families to the state as well or it could in theory and aerospace analysts are projecting that big hundred thousand drones will be used within the u.s. by the year two thousand and eighteen that's just in the u. s. considering that it's only a few years away from now it puts the whole push for drone production approach into perspective and on a larger scale it proves that drones are inevitably going to be incorporated into the growing domestic production for military equipment and increasingly used domestically yes despite the fact that the topic of drones has been why
10:21 pm
a contentious why. in recent years the u.s. government has made it clear they're sticking with the you waive the route who cares if it's the reason we've killed hundreds of civilians in other countries who cares if there are still lots of legal questions surrounding their use if they're bringing in money and a cheaper alternative to current methods the u.s. government and i guess oklahoma's say let's do it. now ten years after nine eleven ignited the war on terror or excuse me ten years after it ignited what's called the authorization for the use of military force it's also been nearly as long since gone taught him obey first welcomed its first captives now today get mo is still home to prisoners detained and deprived of normal legal protections afforded to criminals not that they're all criminals that's obviously a for dispute now this despite obama's campaign promises to close the detention center and now today the house armed services committee held
10:22 pm
a hearing calling on obama to define detainees policy what is detaining policy will get to that it's still unclear but is this really just about ensuring that get mo is around forever on so we're going to ascot horton he is in our new york studio he's contributing editor on legal and national security matters for harper's magazine thanks so much for being with us great to be with you now today i know attorney general mike mckay sees served under bush george w. bush and he and others testified in favor of a congressional action to clarify the administration's detaining policy what does that even mean in just normal terms. but i think what's going on here is an effort to use congress's power to tie the president's hands i mean i think you the big item you identified upfront and that was keeping one time the mo open for ever so congress has already passed several acts which are designed to make it impossible
10:23 pm
for obama to shut down we even though he's declared that as an objective of his administration fact he promised to do it in his first year and there's another piece of legislation which is the focus of this hearing which promises to two x. to expand the role that guantanamo would would play by trying to to force new counterterrorism cases to be brought before the military commissions in guantanamo and not in federal courts in fact at these hearing started out with an offer of the scotian case involving a somali named war saami that is being who is being prosecuted in the southern district of new york and the republican witnesses all started out crying that. quickly i want to get to the issue of military tribunal and military commissions and trying suspects in guantanamo bay but first on the issue of keeping it open you
10:24 pm
know and perpetuity what's in it for these lawmakers what's in it for these people to have to find why do they want this to continue to go on forever. well i think it a really has to do with a lot of political rhetoric i mean first of all it's establishing the bush administration made no mistakes no opening guantanamo was absolutely the right thing to do and the people who were held there are so dangerous they would slip their throats if they were ever to come to a supermax prison in the united states that's the theme that underlies all of this and of course we have to compare this we look at michael new k.z. testimony today but look at bookmarklet new case he did as attorney general in fact we had sixty six cases involving al qaida terrorists that were prosecuted in the federal courts in the bush administration a very large number of those under michael new k.z. and by contrast three maybe four forward before the military commissions and the
10:25 pm
prosecution the military commissions did not get as positive results there that the prosecutors got in federal court so i think you know an awful lot of the. of the arguments are made are just fantasy that a lie by the facts well i mean one thing i was going to bring up is devil's advocate is but if you know from a case is learning sanity bush administration he discovered that military commissions would really be of better route to try these suspects but you're saying that there wasn't as much of a success rate in military commissions. clearly inferior success rate with military commissions but michael because he said something very interesting at the beginning when he was distinguishing these two things he says the result is certain in a military commission which is maybe he knows something we don't know in theory we have independent military judges and independent military panels who decide cases based on the evidence and that means there's nothing at all certain about these
10:26 pm
cases in fact one of the cases was a huge embarrassment for the prosecution because in the very jury decided that the guy should serve should have time served and be let off and that was their decision why is congress so concerned with this that they've already been successful in keeping want on him obey opana of course the president i don't know how much effort he's made towards really actually closing out and we saw you know with the chaos and case that attorney general eric holder said essentially that he has hands were tied that he had to turn over the case from being tried in civilian court to handing it over to the d.o.d. for a military commission because the congress blocked bunting to let that guy like last time get out from guantanamo so they're successful at one hundred percent getting the absolutely right this one hundred percent politics here that's all it is i mean there's really no substantive discussion of criminal justice policy here it's it's republicans in congress saying they know better than the president they have
10:27 pm
a stronger posture on dealing with counterterrorism cases and then aren't going to let the president make up his own mind about what to do by conversely by the way and republican administrations we heard these very same republican congressman saying the president passed the house before wist of options to pursue you shouldn't tie is hands. what can we say it's that same old washington d.c. game same old game one thing that strikes me though is it's often talked about that the president has a lot of control over foreign policy we saw a great example is libya where the president essentially didn't have to go to congress and order to wage what many would consider a war in libya is this a case where there's a difference there's an exception because you have seen congress has some success here. well i think the libya case is a case where the constitution clearly gave congress a role in congress should have stood up and acted on it and to date still hasn't
10:28 pm
done so even though for instance the french assembly the british parliament they have all acted and passed resolutions the american congress hasn't said either yes or no but the question of prosecutions the constitution is very clear on that issue it says that that's supposed to be exercised independently by professional prosecutors and they're under the supervision of the executive and congress is not supposed to play any role here because even prohibition i'm on what i called bills of attainder that's included in the constitution basically to preclude congress from dictating who is tried where on what charges or conducting trials itself except the impeachment of the president and other officers right so essentially we just see a lot of political posturing a lot more political theater coming out of blushing came today and even we thought i had liking at the debt ceiling debate thanks so much for being here and giving us
10:29 pm
really what's behind this hearing. great to be with you. and still to come here our tuesday edition of show and tell and they are popular and major cities across the u.s. but food trucks are facing a backlash from traditional restaurants more on doubt me plus the cia and the f.b.i. have been hacked recently and now the head of u.s. cyber security is out we will dive into the topic of cockers versus us and. into a little bit with three mechanisms to go to bring justice or. i have every right to know what my government through if you want to know why i pay taxes. so i would characterize obama as a charismatic. the american exceptionalism.
28 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on