Mooretoons

Comics and illustration portfolio of Kevin Moore
  • Fetch
  • Otherwordly Goods
  • Past Comics
    • Wanderlost
    • Learning Curve
    • In Contempt
  • Portfolios
    • Caricatures
    • Illustrations
    • Individual Pieces
    • Sketchbook
  • Contact
  • Store

No Tomorrow, No Dead End in Sight

by kevinwmoore on August 7, 2011
Posted In: politics

People have always been saying America ain’t what it used to be, even though it never was, because it satisfies some mopey instinct we have to pine for a lost America rather than try to create a country that we can all thrive in. The S&P downgrade and the poorly handled debt limit crisis are sparking a new round of this chorus. Understandable, because it is shocking to think that even our most jaundiced view of American politics is still too naive to perceive its inherent dysfunction.

But it’s still myopic to believe in a past glory of responsibility and shared interest motivating policy makers at the highest levels of government. Yes, they were certainly more competent in the old days; they had ways of balancing elite interests with the popular that did the poor and middle classes much more good than was we experience now. Yet our dire straits did not happen overnight. Wage stagnation, job insecurity, the debt-incurring costs of higher education, the terrible state of the rest of public education, attacks on the social safety net — all of these and so much more have been in the works since I was in elementary school in the 70s.

Blame the teabaggers all you want — they surely deserve much of it for accelerating our trip on the road to ruin — but they wouldn’t be so effective were not their rhetoric and policy preferences enabled by the elite business classes, the consensus ideology of corporate-funded centrists, and the pundits who routinely fellate them.

Spread the joy:
Share
Comments Off on No Tomorrow, No Dead End in Sight

In Denial? Out of Touch? What Do We Mean By Recession?

by kevinwmoore on August 5, 2011
Posted In: politics

Reading this morning’s news coverage of yesterday’s significant losses at the stock market, I notice certain phrases keep popping up that seem to indicate a sense of denial or delusion about the actual state of the economy. Let’s use this WaPo article as Exhibit A, it’s chockfulla.

The very first sentence starts off with a bang: “Fears that the global economy could be slipping back toward recession….” Slipping back? Did it ever leave? Look, I know there are strict definitions about “recession” that economists favor; but two consecutive periods of negative growth does not begin to describe the persistently high levels of unemployment, mortgage default, deflation, homelessness, etc. the world has been suffering.

The same complaint can be lodged against the phrase “while the chance of another U.S. recession” thrown in a couple paragraphs later, the implication being the chance exists, it hasn’t happened yet. No, it has not stopped happening. It is ongoing.

Granted, I think the word “recession” itself is a euphemism of denial. I have already lived through several of them in my 41 years — an average rate of two a decade seems about right — and while a few might sit happily within the textbook definition, others seemed awfully closer to mini-depressions. Perhaps my view on this is skewed by having grown up in a Rust Belt town like Buffalo, NY, which lost good-paying industrial jobs that never came back, forcing workers to either pack up and leave town or to find work in the low-wage service sector. Either way, my hometown suffered decades of “negative growth” as a result. And it has not been alone: witness Detroit, parts of which look more like post-Taliban Kabul than a bummed out American city.

Anyway, here’s another marker of denial or delusion: “The United States’ recovery is stalling” appears in the second paragraph of this story. Again, what recovery? Who has recovered? Let’s jump over to Paul “Shrill” Krugman for a little perspective:

Yes, officially the recession ended two years ago, and the economy did indeed pull out of a terrifying tailspin. But at no point has growth looked remotely adequate given the depth of the initial plunge. In particular, when employment falls as much as it did from 2007 to 2009, you need a lot of job growth to make up the lost ground. And that just hasn’t happened.

Consider one crucial measure, the ratio of employment to population. In June 2007, around 63 percent of adults were employed. In June 2009, the official end of the recession, that number was down to 59.4. As of June 2011, two years into the alleged recovery, the number was: 58.2.

These may sound like dry statistics, but they reflect a truly terrible reality. Not only are vast numbers of Americans unemployed or underemployed, for the first time since the Great Depression many American workers are facing the prospect of very-long-term — maybe permanent — unemployment. Among other things, the rise in long-term unemployment will reduce future government revenues, so we’re not even acting sensibly in purely fiscal terms. But, more important, it’s a human catastrophe.

When you read phrases like “for the first time since the Great Depression” — and you can find those just about anywhere in economics reporting — that should be a signal to stop thinking in terms of quaint concepts like “recession” and more urgent realities that the D-word suggests. Yet it is this kind of denial/deluded thinking that pervades policy making around the globe, in particular in Warshingtun, where libertarians and flat-earthers have taken over the debates, while winning both legislative and ideological concessions from more sober minded folks who should know better. Or maybe they shouldn’t — maybe they, too, are incapable of seeing how bad things are, because they long ago drank the neoliberal Kool-Aid that a few policy tweaks here and there will bring things around, no need for fundamental changes or — heavens! — risking a rise in the deficit.

All of which brings us to the next phrase, again taken from the first sentence of this article (such a good sentence, so packed with meaning, intended and otherwise): “…economic and financial problems around the world fueling a vicious cycle that risks spiraling beyond the control of governments.” Let’s pair this one with a paragraph key to this whole terrible story:

Investors are increasingly afraid that the world’s leading governments, weighed down by debt and wounded by the last economic downturn, might not have the wherewithal to keep the emerging crisis in check.

Investors caught up with the rest of us: our governments are failing us. Ironically, it’s the very teabagger movement so happily endorsed by the Rick Sentellis of the investor class not so long ago that has made this failure a reality.

Edited to Add: Quoted later in this same article, here is a guy clued into reality. His breakdown of our problems should be put in bullet points in a memo sent to the White House and Congress, including that SuperCommittee that will be tasked with slashing gubmint spending.

“The whole debate over the debt ceiling sent four negative messages to the markets,” said Ethan Harris, chief North American economist for Bank of America-Merrill Lynch. “That we have a big debt problem, that we can’t fix it because we have a dysfunctional political system, that it’s okay to use the threat of default to achieve political ends, and that there’s no safety net if the economy goes into recession because we’re not going to have any more fiscal stimulus.”

Solving our debt problems without a safety net and a fiscal stimulus = dumb.

Spread the joy:
Share
Comments Off on In Denial? Out of Touch? What Do We Mean By Recession?

Whiny Whitey Has a Sad

by kevinwmoore on August 4, 2011
Posted In: politics

Get your waders on, it’s time to step in the knee-jerk muck.

Marvel Comics recently announced that the Ultimate universe Spider-Man will be a working class nerd of black and Latino ethnic heritage. Miles Morales replaces Peter Parker, whom the Green Goblin killed.

So far the only break from tradition here is the ethnic heritage. Everything else carries on. Spidey is a nerd. He lives in a working class neighborhood in New York City. His name alliterates. He will probably be fighting the Green Goblin, once GG finds out that there is a new web-slinger in town. I hope that a new character will bring on new enemies, but it’s not as if Peter Parker took his rogue’s gallery with him to the grave. From a writer’s POV, it would be foolish to not exploit established bad guys who are well defined, bring instantly recognizable menace, and are no doubt fun to play with, creatively speaking.

Judging from common tater reaction to this story, Marvel will need all the continuity it can get. Breaking with the habit of casting white guys as superheroes is enough to twist the panties of whiny whiteys everywhere. Your laundry list of predictable reactions:

“Political correctness gone absolutely bonkers.”

“I am really getting tired of all of the racial stuff.”

“Captain America could become anti Afghanistan war, turn neutral and rebrand himself as Captain Switzerland.”

“And while we are at it, lets turn snow white to snow latino. LOL :D”

“Do we still need to ram this ethnic diversity banter down our necks???”

“This is ridiculous! They probably killed him off to make him mixed-race. Who are they trying to please here?”

And so on. To be clear, there are many more comments arguing that diversity is good; the Marvel Universe is actually several dimensions to avoid continuity problems while marketing to different demographic profiles; that Peter Parker lives on in many of these dimensions, not to mention comic strip, Broadway and cinema incarnations. In fact, Parker is so iconic, there is no chance ever that he will be cast aside, any more than Bruce Wayne will ever stop being Bat-Man. Sure, they’re both ordinary mortals who dress up as critters to fight crime out of a mix of vengeance and duty; other obsessive psychotics could take their place when old age or untimely demise render them incapable of putting on the suit. But Parker, Wayne, et al. are the originators, the characters who define their superhero alter-egos, they are integral to the origin story. No discarding that.

All of which means white guys should shut up and chill out. No need to fear. Yet go to any news site featuring this story and the reactions are always the same. So some fair play turn-about: if making one incarnation of Spider-Man a mixed-ethnic character is a sign of PC Armageddon, then surely the heated knee-jerking off from white guys reflects the pathological insecurities that inform the teabagger assault on racial equality programs, social services, public employees, undocumented migrant workers (in racist parlance, “illegals”), public education and libraries, a mosque in your neighborhood, and the occasional census report documenting a higher mix of ethnicity in the country.

Obviously one Spidey out of multiple variations of the character not being a white dude is at the front lines of a coming race war. He’s probably a Kenyan Muslim Socialist!

Spread the joy:
Share
1 Comment
  • Page 44 of 78
  • « First
  • «
  • 42
  • 43
  • 44
  • 45
  • 46
  • »
  • Last »

What is What

This site collects all of my comics and illustrations. Current projects:

  • Fetch (2015 – 2017)
  • Otherworldly Goods – Fetch’s current adventures in the courts of the Fae (begun 2018)
  • The Nose (in development)

Use the top menu or the links below to see the newest pages or my past work. Fans of In Contempt: those old strips are coming soon.

Comics

  • Fetch  (157)
    • 2025  (1)
    • Saucer of Milk  (7)
    • 2022  (26)
    • 2023  (41)
    • 2016  (32)
    • 2017  (48)
  • Off My Chest  (2)
  • Otherwordly Goods  (209)
    • Ch 7: All the Ails That Cure Us  (17)
    • Ch1: Return of the Native  (29)
    • Ch2: Crude and Feckless  (35)
    • Ch3: Mag Mell That Ends Well  (31)
    • Ch4: The Stolen Child  (32)
    • Ch 5: The Summer Court  (32)
    • Ch 6: All the Cures that Ail Us  (33)

Latest Comics

  • All the Ails That Cure Us — Page 16
  • All the Ails That Cure Us — Page 15
  • All the Cures That Ail Us — Page 14
  • All the Ails That Cure Us — Page 13
  • All the Ails That Cure Us — Page 12

image link to Patreon page
Please support my Patreon. Every little bit helps!

Please help promote Fetch by voting for it on TopWebComics.com — Thanks!
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy

Member of The Internet Defense League

Tags

afghanistan capitalism cartoons cats celtic folklore celtic mythology comics Congress digital sketchbook donald trump economy education election fae faeries fantasy fascism Favorite Webcomics fetch gentrification health care hillary clinton humor immigration Iran iraq irish folklore Made with Paper militarism Nazis news media obama otherworld political cartoons politics presidential election racism religion Russia sketchbook social media trump war war on terror winter court

Categories

Scalia

©2008-2025 Mooretoons | Powered by WordPress with ComicPress | Subscribe: RSS | Back to Top ↑