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" ... For those who take an inside-the-Beltway view, Obama’s about-face seems inexplicable. But there is a world beyond the Beltway and an increasingly powerful one. Although the point is rarely mentioned in the mainstream press, America is now abjectly dependent on foreign financing -- its net foreign indebtedness has ballooned more than tenfold since 1989 and has recently been increasing by more than $500 billion a year. Not one of America’s major creditors – Japan, China, Germany, and Russia – has any time for Washington’s Middle East policies, though Japan and Germany sometimes provide token support to avoid an argument. Of the four, Russia tends to be the only one prepared to speak its mind. It has repeatedly challenged the United States to make public the evidence against Assad. Russian leaders moreover are now openly hinting that the United States does not know what it is doing. Thus the other day Russia’s deputy prime minister, Dmitry Rogozin, said on Twitter: “The West behaves towards the Islamic world like a monkey with a hand grenade.” ... "
" ... It is hundreds of millions rescued from that abject poverty. And yes, that whole neoliberal agenda of freer trade and free roaming capital is the cause. That those investments have often taken place through tax havens may or may not be quite what you would hope for. But there's no doubt at all that the foreign direct investment undertaken through those havens has vastly improved the lives of those hundreds of millions of formerly abjectly poor. So, you know, good for neoliberal globalisation. ... "
" ... Similarly, he makes all the right noises for me about trade. It's the consumers who benefit from it and why wouldn't we want to benefit consumers? And if we're to worry about the producer morality of it then the people who really gain are those poor, abjectly poor, people out there in other countries who can now make a living selling things to us. Why wouldn't we want to make the lives of the destitute better? ... "
" ... This is not surprising news. Huffman has been masterful in her handling of the public relations aspect of her case. She has been abjectly apologetic and has portrayed herself as an overwhelmed mother of a child with a learning disability who got caught up in Rick Singer’s scheme. According to the federal prosecutor, “[Huffman] took responsibility almost immediately, she was contrite, did not try to minimize her conduct. I think she handled it in a very classy way.” Loughlin, by contrast, has proclaimed her innocence and has accepted no responsibility for her actions. She also paid Singer quite a bit more than Huffman did, although the federal judge in the case has indicated that the amount paid will not be the most important factor in sentencing. ... "
" ... Tour the house and retrace the painter's footsteps—from newly married and delightfully rich to living in sin and abjectly impoverished, (a 17th-century predicament that nevertheless resonates today) in his later years. When his young (wealthy) wife, Saskia, died before her 30th birthday, she stipulated in her will that her widower would be cut off from her (post-mortem) riches—including the funds for their son—if he remarried. That didn't prevent him from taking a lover, however, or one that was twenty years his junior and also his housekeeper. When she became pregnant with his child, the two were judged to be living in sin. By then, Rembrandt was rendered effectively penniless. ... "