Delaware Liberal

Dec. 13 Open Thread: James Bond, Meet Maria Butina

A team of Australian public health officials at what must be Sherlock Holmes University issued a report that sounds like parody: After studying the cinematic evidence, they concluded that James Bond has a drinking problem. Not only does 007 consume 109 alcoholic beverages in about 52 hours of screen time, the authors also note, quite accurately, that Bond often engages in risky behavior, including fistfights and high-speed car chases, after imbibing. Yes, this sounds like the easiest research ever, but remember they had to sit through that George Lazenby film, too.

Real-world spies don’t operate that way anymore. These days all Russia has to do is send a young woman to an American university in Washington, have her profess a love of guns and conservative politics, and Republicans will welcome her with open arms. That’s all Maria Butina had to do, according to her guilty plea and cooperation agreement. Although I can’t swear no alcohol was involved.

Besides, the Russians don’t need spies when they’ve got Trump in their corner. It’s so bad that the nation’s spooks are going public, albeit anonymously, telling WaPo that Trump ignores their briefings and makes public statements that contradict what he’s being told. My guess is that this story was planted to put more pressure on Republicans to do their jobs. GOP senators already know this, but now we know they know it.

Anyone unclear about why social unrest is breaking out might get a clue from this Economic Policy Institute report on the reasons for growing economic inequality over the past 40 years, focusing on the labor market. Their conclusion is that the right’s war against unions had a major effect. If you don’t care for economic arguments, here’s the key factual point: In 1978, the bottom 90 percent got 58% of the total paid for labor. That figure is 46.6% today. The difference represents about $10,800 in income per household.

Exit mobile version