tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-62376508506398133852024-03-05T04:40:58.577-05:00NYLiberalStateOfMindA forum for sensible Liberal ideas and serious critiques of right wing policies explaining their destructive effects on the everyday fabric of American life.RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.comBlogger147125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-6927503538704549752010-11-09T12:30:00.001-05:002010-11-09T12:51:43.480-05:00Sarah Palin On Inflation - Umm, Actually The Opposite Is True<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh_dy1YLFTtSrCv-RXpk8f59XrPVK6kPo_eGh4HzMq3pCYwfcjbAxRnRGPqxmDS4mBLgHPqOUp1VSr2MUwOqjf9gHMITpVGaYv4ILJS4vZY_52aN4xELrUaplhCiouaouyFKmEpKIHsU2y1/s1600/stupid_voter1.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh_dy1YLFTtSrCv-RXpk8f59XrPVK6kPo_eGh4HzMq3pCYwfcjbAxRnRGPqxmDS4mBLgHPqOUp1VSr2MUwOqjf9gHMITpVGaYv4ILJS4vZY_52aN4xELrUaplhCiouaouyFKmEpKIHsU2y1/s200/stupid_voter1.jpg" width="179" /></a></div>The UK <i>Guardian</i> reported this yesterday:<br />
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<i>Palin [declared] that she was "deeply concerned" and would call on the US Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, to "cease and desist" buying up government debt.</i><br />
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<i>"If it doesn't work, what do we do then? Print even more money? What's the end-game here? Where will all this money printing on an unprecedented scale take us? ... All this pump-priming will come at a serious price," Palin will say, according to snippets of the speech obtained by National Review. </i><br />
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<div style="color: #cc0000;"><i>"Everyone who ever goes out shopping for groceries knows that prices have risen significantly over the past year or so. Pump-priming would push them even higher," Palin adds, putting a populist slant on monetary policy. </i></div><br />
<i>Her remarks place her firmly, if awkwardly, in company with an international chorus of critics opposed to a US policy that many fear is not only designed to ward off deflation but to drive down the value of the dollar and of US debt.</i><br />
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In reality, in all of 2009, inflation was MINUS 0.4%. Prices DEFLATED. So, last year, if you were paying "significantly" more across a broad spectrum of purchases, you were getting rooked. <br />
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And thus far in the 10 months of statistics available for 2010, inflation is running at about 1.6% on an annualized basis. <br />
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Furthermore, inflation has NOT gone above 4% per year since 1991. That's almost 20 years of very low inflation. <br />
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One can see that the Tea Partiers and their accomplices in the Republican Party are still trading on fear.<br />
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In their ignorance of all things great and small, the beastie boys and girls have yet to discover that at this moment it is DEFLATION that is the danger to the national and world economies. A bit more inflation would actually <i>help</i> us.<br />
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Where are the Democrats who should be calling this gang of political hoods out on this hooey?<br />
<span style="color: white;">.</span>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-10903232757120037742010-11-08T13:22:00.000-05:002010-11-08T13:22:41.373-05:00Why Can't Obama Get Mad?<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh8Ps-3q6mWuFeU1ORLUwJY9A_LC0PaDR2F2MdA2Bt9XdpbcKN_hAghBBu7PQrxhfk8aUq4yhEVRjjjmgY-yvJTWElOdWV3cvQMfVTZZHZKUXmCEzH17wv6QvS8iZrEkpA-uF8Blj8d_ebb/s1600/Angry.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="135" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh8Ps-3q6mWuFeU1ORLUwJY9A_LC0PaDR2F2MdA2Bt9XdpbcKN_hAghBBu7PQrxhfk8aUq4yhEVRjjjmgY-yvJTWElOdWV3cvQMfVTZZHZKUXmCEzH17wv6QvS8iZrEkpA-uF8Blj8d_ebb/s400/Angry.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"></div>I'm as in favor of "cool" as the next guy. I also like a good snide remark, a nuanced response, a snippy reply. But a little controlled anger can be an excellent political tool as well. <br />
<br />
Being the battler-in-chief presiding over a nasty, ugly sport - politics - a sort of Beyond The Thunderdome played in business suits - does not confer on the President the right to persist in rising above the messy fray obsessively, pathologically. We want a leader, not a powder puff. <br />
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Mr. Obama wears white gloves when he needs to be wearing work gloves.<br />
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Or better yet, boxing gloves.<br />
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Obama clings to cool. <br />
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One suspects at first that he is reluctant drop the smoothness because he just really, really likes his ultra cool, jazz world sang-froid. We suspect him of a form of narcissism. <br />
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Or one can ascribe it to his upbringing in Hawaii, one of the epicenters of laid back behavior. (Honk your horn aggressively there and they're ready to call the men in the white coats. Jaywalk and citizens go into convulsions - politely, of course.)<br />
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Perhaps we suspect Obama's inner coil because, in his rise to the political heap, he didn't have to scrap for decades like a Nixon, fight a world war like Ike, endure speculation about his intellectual worth like Truman, nor overcome a devastating disease like FDR. Regardless, his is a hard soul to plumb.<br />
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This is not to say that Obama hasn't had obstacles to surmount. Lord knows that becoming the first black president is an accomplishment that took enormous effort and considerable elan. Overcoming the perverse reactions to the color of one's skin, poverty, and feelings of being an outsider are nothing to sneeze at.<br />
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Which brings us to the Angry Black Man of mythology and history, for I believe it is that burden that prevents Obama from lambasting his relentless, unscrupulous attackers.<br />
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The rage of Malcom X, the glorious in-your-face attitude of Muhammed Ali, the raised fists at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City seem relics of another day. <br />
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The 1960s were an angry time - far angrier than today - when war atrocities came with your bacon and eggs, when we regularly saw dogs and hoses turned on our fellow citizens, when women were regularly put down without a whiff of ramification, when an adolescent boy could catch a beating for having long hair, when children were treated as chattel, and the leaden hangover from World War II imbued society with a relentless conformity.<br />
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It was those social norms that led to rioting, massive demonstrations, bombings, and a left-right polarization the likes of which those under 45 can scarcely fathom.<br />
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Woven throughout this rebellion was the Anger of the Black Man. It was, and is, inescapable - unless you are President Obama, who seems intent on not indulging himself in this anger, on not using it to gain noble political ends.<br />
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He is terribly, terribly wrong to avoid doing so.<br />
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The caricaturing of him as everything from a monkey to a watermelon farmer to Adolph Hitler to Stalin should have been enough.<br />
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The attacks on everything from his birthplace to his clothing to his wife and girls to his "Muslim background" should have been enough.<br />
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The mindless attacks on his relatively mild policies should have been enough.<br />
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We are reminded of the righteous anger of FDR after Pearl Harbor. We are reminded of the battle cry that partisans shouted to Truman - "Give 'em hell, Harry!" Of Reagan's battle-horn blaring - "Tear down this wall." We are reminded of JFK's first inaugural address suffused with controlled anger - "Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe, in order to assure the survival and the success of liberty." (A word of warning to the truculent Soviets.) <br />
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Mr. Obama: you must be willing to pay any price, bear any burden, even if it means flirting with the stereotype of the Angry Black Man. <br />
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You must find it in your belly to rise up and strike down the radical right wing harshly, filled with piss and vinegar, with blood and guts. The left, and I believe the center and perhaps even the center right, aches to hear you fight back using righteous controlled anger. We all want you to succeed. <br />
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Other presidents - all white, obviously - have loosed their anger to work for them and the country. You need to find the meaningful core of your own anger and outrage - we know it's there, you're human after all - and express it full-throated and powerfully against the enemies of progress.<br />
<span style="color: white;">.</span>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-31237198089180339372010-11-05T13:09:00.001-04:002010-11-05T15:28:55.429-04:00What The Swing Really MeansFor the last two years, the right wing never acknowledged that the Democrats had won a series of truly resounding victories in Congressional and Senatorial elections, a creeping tide that crested in 2008. Indeed, the right seemed to repudiate fair and square elections using terms like "ramrodding" and "oppressive majority" to describe the Democratic uber majority's enacting of historical legislation.<br />
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Now, of course, the Republicans want everyone to acknowledge their own resounding victory this past Tuesday. But face it folks, a majority of 5 in the House, given how polarized the country is, would have been as good as the bloated one handed to the right wing. Having a 20 seat majority is meaningless in terms of putting the country - and world - on a firm economic growth trajectory. <br />
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The right wing seems to have immediately forgotten that they are in the minority in the Senate and do not occupy the White House. The House still has to reckon with the Senate and the veto power of the President, should the Senate falter in fear. <br />
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Leaving aside that logistical problem, the Republicans cannot rise to the occasion because their DNA will prohibit them from doing so. <br />
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This is my hunch. Given the ideological nature of both the Republican leadership and rank and file, I believe they will not be able to address the joblessness/growth problem, because, once facts are faced, the economic philosophy that needs to be utilized is a Keynesean model and not the tired supply side economics of Milton Friedman. The Keynesean approach was used, albeit timidly, during the short "summer" when Democrats owned the whole farm. But really, where $3 trillion in stimulus was needed, less than $500 billion was tossed into the hopper.<br />
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Let's say that all the current Republican proposals that are in the wind are enacted. Let the Bush tax cuts stand as they are today. Allow the health care reform to go unfunded or underfunded. (A Constitutional crisis in the making.) Cut out all earmark spending. (It accounts for between 1 and 2% of all Federal spending.) Trim entitlements or growth of entitlements by 10%. Even trimming the sacrosanct defense budget by 10% would only account for $80 billion per year.<br />
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[A further aside on earmarks: since 2006, while Democrats have controlled Congress, earmark expenditures have fallen by 40%. That is down off the high of $29.5 billion under the Republicans of the previous Congress. Do the math. Let's say we cut out ALL of the remaining $18 billion in earmarks. Over ten years that would equal $180 billion to be put against a debt of $12 trillion or thereabouts. Keep in mind that many earmarks - while often portrayed as a part of a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing - are directed to positive, necessary projects like safer drinking water systems, school construction, and rail and road improvements. Many earmarks are also part of the defense budget structure.] <br />
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It is clear that we cannot budget cut our way out of the Great Recession. This is neither ideological nor pedantic. Cutting roughly $250 billion per year from the budget would return less than the stimulus plan and it is a proven axiom that budget cuts, especially in times of recession, have about a $1.03 return on the dollar. Infrastructure spending, by contrast, returns over $1.60 on the dollar. <br />
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This is why a move like New Jersey Governor Christie's shut down of the second rail tunnel to Manhattan will prove to be so deleterious to the economy. 6,000 highly-skilled construction jobs were immediately lost. All of the service and maintenance jobs that would have been created because of the increased rail traffic are now lost. A further 70,000 jobs will not be created in all the various economic sectors in which New York and New Jersey have so long partnered: finance, tourism, retail, law, advertising. New Jersey's roads, already the most crowded in the country, will witness even more gridlock, wasted gasoline, increased pollution, and wasted time by the 45,000 commuters who would have availed themselves of the easier travel. On top of this, New Jersey will have to pay back $315 million already spent on the project.<br />
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Contrast this, as I have done before on this blog, with the building of the Erie Canal in the second and third decades of the 19th century. It was built entirely by the State of New York through public financing. In today's dollars, the canal would cost $125 billion. Christie's tunnel to nowhere would have cost about $10 billion. Just a quick reflection on that contrast reminds us of why we hold the early founders of prosperity in such high esteem. They had vision and guts.Christie has the gut part down, anyway. <br />
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We can be the world's leader in alternative energy products and generation. We can be the world's leader in high speed Internet access. We can be the world's leader in rail transportation of both goods and people. We can be the leader in clean automobiles and smart automobiles that practically drive themselves. We can be the world's leader in many, many fields, some that haven't even been imagined yet.<br />
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But, like the building of the Interstate Highway System over the past 60 years, it will take government leadership and business's willing participation.<br />
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Republicans have no plan to be the leaders of anything, except in keeping the struggling down, sending the super rich to even higher wealth accumulation levels, and ruining the American future.<br />
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While we need to acknowledge that Democrats have scarcely been better during the current crisis, we need to understand that at least the leftist, Keynesean economic model is the one that has far greater potential to take us into a better tomorrow. Plant the seeds now, reap the benefits later.RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-57624621210767884622010-11-03T11:56:00.000-04:002010-11-03T11:56:15.054-04:00Why The Democrats Took A Beating And What Can Be Done Starting TodayFor Democrats of every stripe, from dedicated left-wingers to Blue Dogs who cozy up on the Republican right wing lap, it is clearly time to reappraise. The awkward phase.<br />
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To understand ourselves right now we need to look at the first false steps taken after we captured the House, Senate and Presidency by comfortable margins. <br />
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Surprisingly, I do not want to speak of which legislative opportunity slipped away, which job creation program worked or did not, whether TARP was a good idea, the compromises with the greedy devils of Wall Street, or which budget would have been better or worse.<br />
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I want to talk about what George Bush (I) described as "The Vision Thing." <br />
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We, the Democrats, had no over-arching vision beyond winning the 2008 election. None. Zero. We won because we could. <br />
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Can anyone reading this, young or old, retired or just beginning his or her life or somewhere in between, envision America in 2050?<br />
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Envision it in the way the dreamers of The Declaration of Independence did for their time, Lincoln for his, Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson for theirs? <br />
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Franklin Roosevelt said in his first inaugural speech, outlining the powers that had to be harnessed to end the Depression: "It is... the old and permanently important manifestation of the American spirit of the pioneer."<br />
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John F. Kennedy's visionary rhetoric is part of the national mythology. And, like his policies or not, so is the rhetoric of Ronald Reagan. <br />
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Curiously, President Obama, the candidate with the most soaring campaign rhetoric, gave us bones to pick on once he was elected. <br />
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While there is pencil-sharpening to be done, none of us should allow America to be turned into a nation of accountants, watching pennies while wondering what the hell to do with the dollars, or worse, doing nothing at all with them.<br />
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There are a half dozen urgent matters that must be resolved, everything from energy to our ill-conceived wars, from transportation to education.<br />
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Democrats did not hammer one of those problems during their brief ascendancy and we can be reasonably assured that Republicans have neither the wherewithal nor the urgency to solve them, either.<br />
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I reject the idea that health care reform was anything but a middle of the road palliative that swept structural problems under the rug. <br />
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So, what to do? What about vision? <br />
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Here is a short manifesto:<br />
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1) In order to lift up the whole nation, we have to lift up the income and security of the vast but shrinking middle class and perhaps more urgently, the upper middle class.<i> <span style="color: #990000;">Democrats must advance and support all efforts of unions to grow again, unions being the front line of defense against predatory practices by foreign economic interests.</span></i> Unions must get to organizing white collar workers as their traditional blue collar base shrinks numerically. What the right wing has torn down, the left must build up again. <i><span style="color: #990000;">Likewise, leaving aside the question of immigrants' legality and illegality, we have to stop the influx of cheap labor from undermining the aspirations of workers already in our country.</span></i><br />
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<i style="color: #990000;"><span style="color: black;">2) </span>End the fruitless monopoly that has been given to the health care industry.</i> It is the lack of competition that has brought us to the current pass. Legal monopoly in such a key sector is damaging to our country. If the market had been free, or almost free, we never would have gotten into the health care rhubarb in the first place. More insurance providers, more doctors, more hospitals, more primary care clinics. Stimulate and de-regulate. (The latter not something you hear often from the left.)<br />
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3) Choose a handful of regions in the country - one East or West Coast, one in the South (ideally New Orleans), and one in the upper Midwest - and make them the <i style="color: #990000;">showcases for tomorrow's energy, environmental and transportation technologies.</i> Not only those things that we already know, but the things that are still on the drawing board, in the imaginations of our best innovators. Make those regions something like uber World's Fairs that stretch for hundreds of miles. Call together the leaders of industries of today and tomorrow to the White House - not the money-changers but the money-makers - and get a plan together.<br />
<br style="color: #990000;" /><span style="color: black;">4)</span><i style="color: #990000;"> Create high speed wireless Internet connections for every single inch of the country. Just as electricity, the telephone and television have become universally accessible, the wireless Internet is a crucial key to tomorrow's economy. </i><br />
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<span style="color: black;">5) </span><i style="color: #990000;">Bring all the troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan within 6 months, the consequences be damned. </i>End the left's pointless pacifism that brings us half measures leading to the deaths of our service people. At the same time, <i style="color: #990000;">inform any and all countries who foster terrorism in any way that they are subject to devastating attack by air or sea.</i> We should not be losing our young (and not so young) people to the violence of mindless barbarians. We have spent trillions in technologies that lay idle as we worry about alienating countries with whom there is no diplomatic future. They are nihilists and need to be dealt with accordingly. Make the problem of terrorism their problem. <br />
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<span style="color: black;">6) </span><i style="color: #990000;">Cut the defense budget in half.</i><span style="color: black;"> </span><br />
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<span style="color: black;">7) </span><i style="color: #990000;">Create a new Peace Corps with our best partners</i> - Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Australia, Brazil and Chile - and in conjunction with pivotal countries in different regions - Indonesia, South Africa, Uganda, Egypt, Vietnam, Argentina - that will show the face of modernism and aspiring modernism to backward countries. <br />
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<span style="color: black;">8)</span><i style="color: #990000;"> Engage India.</i> <i><span style="color: #990000;">Engage India. Engage India.</span></i> Multicultural, English-speaking, democratic, forward-looking, a counterweight to China... where is our common sense here? Why continue to choose Pakistan as our lynch-pin ally in the region?<br />
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<span style="color: black;">9) T</span>his may sound a tad off beat and Utopian at a time like this but - <i><span style="color: #990000;">we need to reemphasize the liberal arts on all levels of education.</span></i> The quantification of education has been an unmitigated disaster for the country. We have to buy out of the notion that, for instance, turning out more engineers like flapjacks is a great idea while our culture becomes debased, less literate, and more utilitarian.<br />
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10)<i> <span style="color: #990000;">Stay focused on imagining what tomorrow looks, feels, and sounds like. </span></i><br />
<div style="color: #990000;"><br />
</div><div style="color: #990000;"><span style="color: black;">We know that the right is tight, is scared and runs on fear. The only antidote is vision, clarity and hope.</span><i> </i></div><div style="color: #990000;"><i><span style="color: white;">.</span> </i> </div>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-64021120829433013432010-10-08T09:27:00.000-04:002010-10-08T09:27:57.218-04:00The Tunnel To Nowhere, The Party To Nowhere<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhDPztGRH2haEt_QPBRhoKb6tKjXQCDEIlkMlSVPfuGvJlJx_LoX2Df5wGOMSASmfBogQrGlIymK1qPbf5Blyg4e9B0fou8P7E0br53kx1149GahXKNVXdyBW6_4dEez9as4bXiBMVCzKpl/s1600/chris-christie-2009-11-4-3-10-33.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="231" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhDPztGRH2haEt_QPBRhoKb6tKjXQCDEIlkMlSVPfuGvJlJx_LoX2Df5wGOMSASmfBogQrGlIymK1qPbf5Blyg4e9B0fou8P7E0br53kx1149GahXKNVXdyBW6_4dEez9as4bXiBMVCzKpl/s320/chris-christie-2009-11-4-3-10-33.jpg" width="320" /></a></div> If you were entertaining the cozy fireside notion that there is such a creature as a moderate Republican, slap yourself in the face and wake up. The Party of No Ideas, the Backward-Facing Party, the Anti-People and Anti-Future Party has struck again. <br />
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The decision by New Jersey's Governor Chris Christie to kill (for the moment) a new train tunnel that would allow for the doubling of rail commuters into Manhattan from 46,000 daily to 90,000 is both a tragedy and a window into the vision-less soul of the Republican Party. <br />
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Christie's pretense is that there would be unacceptable cost overruns, and that the state would have to pony up $3 billion it doesn't have. Both objections are worse than ludicrous whose real motives is supporting the gas, oil and car lobby in New Jersey. <br />
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Certainly some cost overruns - whether in the public or private spheres - are the result of corruption. The vast portion of overruns, however, are due to a) changes in engineering specs, b) unforeseen circumstances encountered during the actual build phase, and c) inflation.<br />
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Plus, a government doesn't reach into some Brobdingnagian pocket and slap $3 billion on an equally large table and ask for a receipt as if it were paying for a dinner out. It pays over multiple years. In this case, the tunnel project would be spread over a few decades, meaning it would cost the citizens of New Jersey about $20 each per year, about the cost of 7 cups of Starbucks latte. <br />
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On the drawing board for almost 20 years and recommended since 1957, the tunnel project, known as ARC (for Access to the Regional Core), has already been started and $600 million already been spent in the initial phases. The canceling of the project will cost 6,000 construction jobs within the year, most of which would have been filled by Jerseyans. It is also projected that over the course of the ten years that would have followed completion, 40,000 additional jobs will have been lost.<br />
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70,000 tons of carbon per year would have been removed from the atmosphere because 22,000 cars per day would have stayed in their garages.<br />
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The glee with which Steve Carellas, New Jersey's representative to the National Motorists Association, a group that promotes more driving and is against, among other things, DUI checkpoints and red light cameras, is illustrative of how drugged up the gas and auto lobby is. "Wow! Smart decision," Carrellas said after hearing the news. "We were upset that Port Authority and turnpike tolls went to support the tunnel. Here we have a governor doing exactly what he said he was going to do, and not being taken for a ride."<br />
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Neysa Pranger, a spokeswoman for the Regional Plan Association, said Christie’s decision "casts a dark shadow over the economic future of New Jersey." Canceling the project will effectively cost New Jersey homeowners $18 billion dollars. That’s how much home values would have increased as a result of the tunnel’s construction, according to a study by the planning association, based on the impact of three previous rail projects. The study found that the value of homes within a half mile of a rail station would have increased by $29,000, while homes within two miles would have appreciated by $19,000.<br />
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On a less dramatic note, the tunnel would have meant that the tens of thousands of people who have to stand during their 50-minute ride into the city would have had seats every morning.<br />
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Predictably, environmental and pro-rail groups have decried the Governor's ham-handed action.<br />
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But what is worse is this. Christie and his acolytes believe not in actually saving money, but putting it toward deleterious ideas - like more road building and smaller tolls on the New Jersey Turnpike and Port Authority tunnels and bridges. They will be asking that the original $3 billion federal contribution go toward replenishing the state's bankrupt Transportation Trust Fund. It is not as if they are saying, "Here, Federal Bad Government, take our $3 billion and put it toward paying down the deficit." They are saying, "Give it to us so we can keep more cars on the roads, pollution high, employment low, and retard the future, which everyone knows is going to be based on mass transit."<br />
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Why is the trust fund in the nation's most crowded and car-infested state bankrupt? The state government cannot locate the backbone to raise the gasoline tax by 1 penny per gallon. Never mind that New Jersey has the lowest gas prices ($2.63 per gallon as of today) in the northeast and is well below the national average ($2.80).<br />
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The tom-tom beats out the refrain: elections have consequences. In this case the election of one short-sighted, poorly-informed man is helping to undermine the most important economic region of the country. <br />
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Come November, we can vote for the future, as raggedy and sloppy as it may be under Democrats, or we can vote for the (lack of) right wing policies that have been tried and failed.RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-87804122911845013592010-09-30T09:27:00.001-04:002010-09-30T09:30:04.882-04:00Mugwumps And Other Parties That Go Bump In The NightOnce upon a time, third parties gave their associations some truly entertaining and descriptive names. As with the Tea Party, such names had nothing to do with the efforts associated with the mayfly groups.<br />
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In New York, the names of the parties have been quite entertaining up until recently when more pedestrian monickers have taken over, such as Liberal, Conservative, Working Families, and Right To Life. Zzzzzz.<br />
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Back in the day, as they say, party names such as Locofoco were the vogue. Locofoco? The Locofocos were a radical workingman's party in New York City in the 1830s whose slogan was <i>"Bread, Meat, Rent, And Fuel! Their prices must come down!"</i> Their actual name was the Equal Rights Party, and they attempted a kind of sit-in at the Democrats' Tammany Hall, upon which the main-streamer Democrats turned off the gas lights to clear the building. In turn, the radicals lit the newly-invented safety matches whose brand name was - Loco Foco. The Whig press in the city slapped the Locofoco label on them, which the splinter group eventually embraced.<br />
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The Soft Shells-Hard Shells - yes, as in crabs - denoted a rapprochement between two separate branches of the Democratic Party in New York. The Soft Shells were pro-slavery nationally in the 1850s and the Hard Shells anti. (New York State had abolished slavery in 1825.) Fernando wood won the city mayoralty in 1854 under the Soft Shell-Hard Shell banner, uniting the factions over local issues. <br />
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Wood, who had come to loggerheads with Tammany, won again in 1859, this time running on the Mozart Hall ticket, Mozart Hall being the rival clubhouse within the Democratic Party positioned against Tammany.<br />
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From the Civil War onward for about 60 years or so, the party name game slowed down. The Fusion Party, a nice musical, we-are-the-world party popped up, sure.<br />
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But nothing much happened until Fiorello LaGuardia, a hybrid Italian-Jewish Congessman, ran for re-election in 1937 on the City Fusion-Progressive-American Labor-Republican ticket. He ran against Jeremiah Mahoney who ran on the Democrat-Trades Union-Anti-Communist ticket.<br />
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In 1945, Newbold Morris, descended from the famous colonial Morrises and husband to the daughter of Judge Learned Hand, ran on the No Deal Party ticket and garnered almost one-quarter of the vote. And in 1950, Vincent Impelliteri won the mayor's office running for the Experience Party.<br />
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In 1961, Louis Lefkowitz lost while running on, among other party lines, the Non-Partisan ticket.<br />
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Perhaps the most entertaining and famous third party with New York roots is Teddy Roosevelt's "Bull Moose" party, really the Progressive Party. Sad to say, though, the over-the-top name was taken from T.R.'s running mate in 1912, California governor, Hiram Johnson who said, "I'm as strong as a bull moose!"<br />
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I have a letter in to the Tea Party leaders suggesting that, in New York State anyway, they strongly consider changing their name to the Crackpot Party. Truth in advertising, my friends. Truth in advertising.RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-32077137525335450662010-09-27T18:38:00.002-04:002010-09-28T14:39:55.626-04:00They Call Them The Squanderers<div style="text-align: center;"><i><span style="font-size: x-small;">What immortal hand or eye <br />
Could frame thy fearful symmetry? </span></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-size: x-small;">- William Blake</span></div><br />
There is a fearful symmetry when one compares the Bush presidency with the Obama presidency, regardless of where on the political spectrum you place yourself.<br />
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Bush first came into office amidst acrimony over Florida's hanging chads and the recounts. He and his coterie of right wing advisers were soon handed an unsought but nevertheless welcomed political gift in the form of the 9/11 attacks. Taking a righteous first step in Afghanistan, Bush was, just a few years later so far off course courtesy of the invasion of Iraq that he could never recover. Falling prey to a combination of blind anger, some sort of oedipal hangover, and shoddy or invented intelligence, his administration went on a war spending spree that was compounded by exhilaratingly unfair tax cuts for the wealthy.<br />
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The result? Trillions of dollars in public debt that a healthy financial system would have had trouble digesting, and which, as we know, an overheated, corrupt system simply could not cope with.<br />
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The lingering image of George W. Bush will be his look of surprised consternation as things began crumbling around him in 2006. He looked like someone who had just had a wet towel snapped at him in the boys' locker room. Everyone, including himself, knew he was out of his depth. <br />
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Very few people have doubted Obama's innate intelligence, his mental toughness or his high level of education. Yet, the President is turning out to be one of the most curious cases in American political history.<br />
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He, too, felt the sting of acid tongues during his campaign and immediately after. The gift-wrapped political present he and the Democrats received was, of course, the Great Recession.<br />
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He also received another present, sort of a cherry bomb in the mailbox - that is, the virulent, racist antipathy of the everyday right wing and that of the radical, shadowy Tea Party backers and its rank and file.<br />
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That kind of vitriol certainly has been of no help in helping the country recover economically. The Republicans have insulted while Rome burns. <br />
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But Obama missed a number of golden moments in the first year of his administration, as well. Instead of creating a seemingly technical "package" of health care reform measures, more urgently he needed to sell it to the nation as a way for individuals and small businesses to save money, save money, save money and be safe from the predations of big health and pharma. <br />
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The altruism of the bill is clear to clear-thinking people. But altruism wasn't a big sell to the middle and upper middle classes as they watched their home equity and savings erode before their eyes, and as they suddenly become horrified at the prospects looking their children in the eye.<br />
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For a person who was almost too absorbed in image building in 2008, Obama became absurdly aloof from such concerns once he was sworn in.<br />
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Piled on that has been a perceived lack of focus, occasionally in policy choices, and almost always in presentation of some excellent legislation and its benefits. A whistle stop tour of 50 stimulus projects in 50 states would have been a good common touch. Maybe he should have ruled from the road one week a month to personally oversee the reconstruction efforts. That goes double for the oil calamity in the Gulf. <br />
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In the cowardly new world of avalanches of web site info and solitary interaction with those data and images on a hyper-privatized screen, the political "consumer" was left on his and her own to make sense of what in god's name was happening. Imagine FDR only relying on fireside chats on radio to keep the American public's morale up in the 1930s.<br />
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Completely mystifying is what appears, to an average consumer of television news, a complete abandonment of the "youth market." While the President was on his tour of 50 projects in 50 states, he could have stopped at 50 college campuses to speak, not about our current travails, but about education and tomorrow's leaders and the Future as an American idea, which is sunnier than anyone can imagine right now.<br />
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18 to 23 year-olds would not have hammered him on his birth certificate, his faith, his family vacation choices. They would have been thirsty to have heard news about tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow. Youth is innately narcissistic - tell them about their coming days. If nothing else, he could have shown a hearty thanks to one of the constituencies that put him in the White House.<br />
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Bush came to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue with little political capital and when he accidentally found the entire world behind him ready to seek a multinational way to eradicate terrorism, he reverted to 19th century jingoism and go-it-alone policies that have killed hundreds of thousands and cost a trillion dollars. It's jaw dropping how much Bush and his cronies squandered.<br />
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Obama, who came into the White House with the whole country and most of the world ready to follow us into recovery, has stumbled not so much in a material way, but in what, in the final analysis, counts the most: leadership. He has squandered time and his substantial personal appeal as he has failed to take on the right wing in a consistently tough way. (Where's Joe Biden when you need him?)<br />
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Perhaps we are in a new country, like Alice Through The Looking Glass. We find ourselves, thanks to almost ten years of mis-management and wasted money and spirit, Americans in Squanderland.<br />
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<span style="font-size: small;">Leave it to the morally and intellectually bankrupt Republicans to come up with a plan that proposes our country take a number of giant leaps backward. Meanwhile, they assert with a straight face that these proposals show they are not The Party of No. Interesting concept... NOT The Party of NO. </span><br />
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<span style="font-size: small;">It reminds me of a lyric from the 1956 Broadway show, L'il Abner, whose song <i>Jubilation T. Cornpone, </i>mockingly portrayed a cowardly, incompetent Confederate General:</span><br />
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<div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><i>When we fought the Yankees and annihilation was near,</i></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><i>Who was there to lead the charge that took us safe to the rear?</i></span></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><i>Why it was Jubilation T. Cornpone...</i></span></div><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">The first thing that these inhumane monsters on the right want to do is say NO to, to repeal, or at least hamstring health care reform enough so it limps along accomplishing nothing. So, people with pre-existing conditions, poorer children, marginal wage-earners, the almost-old and a host of others will find themselves tossed off the gurney and into the unknown. </span><br />
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<span style="font-size: small;">The second thing the radicals want to do is to say NO to spending the rest of the stimulus package. This at the very time when the funds yet to be spent will be pumped into infrastructure, education, and towards mitigating the housing crisis. </span><br />
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<span style="font-size: small;">The radicals are also saying NO to Social Security and Medicare at a time when millions and millions of Baby Boomers are reaching age 65. In the jolly spirit of their Know-Nothingism, though, Republicans have not made clear the specifics of how cuts would be carried out. </span><br />
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<span style="font-size: small;">They also are saying NO to federal funding of abortions. NO to non-traditional marriage. NO to the rescission of the odious "Don't ask don't tell" policy in our armed forces. NO to a pathway to citizenship for aliens who serve in the armed forces. NO to a tax rise for the rich who are the only group to have achieved any personal economic growth in the last 15 years. NO to any legislation that the radicals believe is "unconstitutional," meaning anything they disagree with. NO to any sort of deficit spending, one of the pillars of modern state-interventionist economics. </span><br />
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<span style="font-size: small;">What is absent from the New And Unimproved Contract On America? </span><br />
<ul><li><span style="font-size: small;">Any mention of <u>education funding</u> whether for Head Start, English-As-A-Second-Language Programs, Anti-Drop-Out funding, or higher education funding. In other words, NO. </span></li>
<li><span style="font-size: small;">A mention, even in passing, of a coherent <u>energy policy</u>. Not even one that is pro-oil, which we might understandably expect. So, NO again.</span></li>
<li><span style="font-size: small;">Some sort of viewpoint on the continuing degradation of the <u>environment</u>? NO.</span></li>
<li><span style="font-size: small;">Proposals on how to deal with our increasingly at-risk <u>food supply</u>? NO.</span></li>
<li><span style="font-size: small;">Thoughts on how to deal with the continuing <u>off-shoring of American jobs</u>? NO.</span></li>
<li><span style="font-size: small;">Cutting <u>out-of-control defense spending</u>? NO.</span></li>
</ul><span style="font-size: small;">The impulse to blame government for every ill in society is a strong one, and it occurs in equal measure on the left and right. </span><br />
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<span style="font-size: small;">The chief difference is that the left generally believes in the perfectability of government, really an optimistic position that is about our own personal perfectability, and one that reflects the positive or "YES" nature of leftist politics through the centuries. </span><br />
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<span style="font-size: small;">The right simply wants to burn the social contract and scatter its ashes, believing deep down that government <i>per se</i> is evil, that the individual is all that matters, that the accumulation of personal wealth at the expense of the commonweal is the preferable condition of society. In spasms of atavism, they wish to return to an existence in the "state of nature" that Hobbes so famously described</span> as "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short." Let's see how they're doing. <br />
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<u>Solitary</u> - play each of us off against the other politically. Fear thy neighbor, especially if he or she has a different-color skin or religion. <u>Check.</u><br />
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<u>Poor</u> - the decline of the middle and lower middle class over the last 30 years. Destroy unions, import cheap illegal labor, ship well-paying jobs overseas, allow under-priced imports into country. <u>Check.</u><br />
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<u>Nasty</u> - prevent people of the same sex from choosing their marriage partners. <u>Check.</u><br />
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<u>Brutish</u> - shouting down opponents at town hall meetings, toting guns to political rallies, portraying a President as a (take your pick) monkey, a dictator, a terrorist. Don't exactly wear a Brown Shirt, but, you know, like, um, act like you're a Brown Shirt. <u>Check.</u><br />
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<u>Short</u> - those without health insurance die almost 6 years earlier than those with it. <u>Check.</u><br />
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In painstaking detail, Harrington detailed the effects of race, ethnicity, gender, education, vocation and geography upon the material well-being of 1/3rd of our population. There were, and are, two Americas.<br />
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As Barron Laycock said in a reconsideration and review of <i>The Other America </i>earlier this decade<i>:</i><br />
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<i>It is a sad truth that Harrington's book is as timely and as shocking today as it was some forty years ago. His account of the fate of millions of impoverished people of color and ethnicity remains as cogent and as relevant as it was then. Despite the long and tortured history of the social legislation that attempted to rework this problem in the decades since, the reality of the situation seems to be that nothing much has changed in terms of the life-chances and hopes of the members of the underclass.</i><br />
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The government announced yesterday that there are 44 million people living below the poverty line. Although the census data from which that number was drawn has yet to tease out the rest of the story, one can be reasonably certain that there is an equal number of people living in the next tier up from abject poverty. Further, we can add in the individuals and families who are struggling from the effects of the Great Recession and who, while perhaps not definitionally poverty-stricken, have found themselves staring into an abyss heretofore only populated by men, women and children very different from themselves.<br />
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So we can safely say that 100 million people in the United States live in poverty or are so close that for all intents and purposes they live in a psychological impoverishment that intensively affects their quality of life.<br />
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That's 1/3rd of our population, 40 million of whom are children under 18, few of whom will ever escape the poverty cycle if past history is any sign post.<br />
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The entire shadow hoard of poor, near poor and the poor-in-waiting is the bitter fruit of not only slavery, ethnic hate, and sexism, but today is also the product of the most despicably disingenuous government policies that favor the wealthy to an obscene extent.<br />
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<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"></div>Even more crazily, the most hopeless of the poor live but a few minutes or miles from the insatiable rich, like serfs prostrate at the gates of the barons' castles.<br />
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A perfect illustration of the two Americas exists in Fairfield County, Connecticut, a mostly suburban county outside New York City. Its largest city is Bridgeport.<br />
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Twenty-one per cent of Bridgeport's population lives below the poverty line; another 41% live in the next level just above the poverty line. Sixty-two per cent of a city of roughly 135,000 souls - or 84,000 - people live in poverty. Meanwhile in the town of Fairfield, 4 miles away from Bridgeport meaured downtown to downtown, a mere 4% of the population hovers in the two zones below or just above the poverty line. <br />
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In 2006 Fairfield was ranked as the ninth best place to live in America, and the second safest by Money Magazine. Its murder rate is less than one per year.<br />
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On the other hand, Bridgeport's violent crime rate is 1.6 times the national average.<br />
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"Coincidentally," Bridgeport is 30% African-American and 33% Hispanic while Fairfield town is more than 95% white.<br />
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Now the struggle rages in Congress about whether to allow the Bush tax cuts on the wealthy to expire.<br />
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The argument for keeping those cuts in place is that those earning over $200,000 create jobs with the money that otherwise would be going to taxes. In Bridgeport proper, the unemployment rate is 19%. The percentage of people who have <i>never</i> worked (and thus are unaccounted for in such statistics) is 12%.<br />
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The Bush tax cuts have been in effect for the better part of 10 years. So much for the job creation theory. <br />
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To circle back to Michael Harrington and <i>The Other America:</i> deepening the travesty is the virtual blackout imposed upon this story by the (dreaded) mainstream media.<br />
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Where are the special segments, the documentaries, the 5 part articles in the<i> New York Times, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune</i>, etc.? <br />
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The frivolous media - right <i>and </i>left leaning - collectively turns its head. Instead, they luxuriate inside their silly echo chamber whose compass points are The Beltway, Wall Street, angry white America, and Lindsay Lohan (or other suitably fashionable proxy). Unjust, immoral and irresponsible. The Fourth Estate not only doesn't mitigate the problem, but helps perpetuate it by turning the blind eye.<br />
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<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">Thomas Carlyle wrote in his <i>Heroes and Hero Worship in Histor</i>y (1841) that Edmund Burke once said:</span><i><span style="color: black;"> </span></i></span><br />
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<span style="font-size: small;"><i><span style="color: black;">"...There were three Estates in Parliament, but in the Reporters Gallery yonder, there sat a fourth Estate more important far than they all."</span></i></span><br />
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<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">But that was one upon a time, very long ago<i>.</i></span></span><br />
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<span style="font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"><i><span style="color: white;">.</span> </i> </span></span>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-68167112339120916212010-09-14T17:17:00.001-04:002010-09-14T17:21:03.536-04:00Saudi Arms Deal And Burning The Koran<div style="text-align: center;"><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-decoration: none;"><i><span style="font-size: x-small;">After the torchlight red on sweaty faces<br />
After the frosty silence in the gardens</span></i><i><span style="font-size: x-small;">...<br />
- T.S Eliot (The Wasteland)</span></i></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-decoration: none;"></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span style="font-size: small;">About two weeks ago a mutton-chopped nobody claiming to be a pastor - a perversion of the word and an abomination to all good people of the cloth - announced the now infamous Koran burning.</span></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span style="font-size: small;">Never mind that the promised bonfires evoked the eternally painful Nazi book burnings of the 30s and 40s. Never mind that Brecht, Hemingway, Gide, Freud, Gorki, Kafka, Einstein, Helen Keller, Proust and a host of other cultural standard-bearers' works were burnt in town squares and in country fields all over Germany and the rest of the Reich. Never mind that many, probably most, of us have fathers or grandfathers who fought, were wounded and died in the war to stop such savage acts. Never mind we Americans are a people who pose and perch on the high diving board of tolerance and freedom. </span></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span style="font-size: small;"><br />
</span></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span style="font-size: small;">All Islam is the enemy, said "Pastor" Terry Jones. All Islam is represented by the acts of a few hundred terrorists - so much so that an Islamic community center near Ground Zero faces bitter opposition. </span></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span style="font-size: small;"> </span></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span style="font-size: small;">So what happened just the other day? The State Department announced that the sale of $60 billion in advanced weaponry </span><span style="font-size: small;">to Saudi Arabia </span><span style="font-size: small;">was approved. </span></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span style="font-size: small;"><br />
</span></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span style="font-size: small;">Where is the caterwauling by Pastor Mutton Chops now? Where is the righteous indignation of the aggrieved families of the 9/11 victims? Where is the outpouring from the right wing radicals who so roundly denounced the Islamic center and stood silent as tombstones in the face of the threatened Koran burning?</span></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span style="font-size: small;"><br />
</span></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span style="font-size: small;">Just to be clear, the reason we are arming the Saudis is to serve as a counterweight to Iran's Islamo-fascist regime. Makes sense, right? Take one Islamic absolute monarchy and play it off against the demagogue, </span>Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and his merry band of nuke-makers. (Of course we are, now that our former comrade-in-arms, Saddam Hussein, is a footnote in history, and Iraq is an unholy mess. Beef up the Saudis and let them do the dirty work.)</div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><br />
</div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;">The other reason the deal is going through is that the arms industry here and abroad has been reeling during the recession and, well, we all know who has the big bucks to spend on weapons. And why - our addiction to oil.</div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><br />
</div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;">So, not only is there the unbearable hypocrisy of the home front spitting on American Muslims as we sell arms to the epicenter of anti-Western Islamic fervor, but we also get the chance to support a regime that is backwards, repressive, maltreats women and gays, and squashes any and all opposition. </div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><br />
</div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;">Crown Prince Abdullah has often defended Saudi Arabia's position on human rights, going as far as to say in front of a human rights conference at the United Nations that, "It is absurd to impose on an individual or a society rights that are alien to its beliefs or principles."</div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;">He sounds like the kind of guy out of whose hands I would keep most advanced weapons, let alone weapons that make his country one of the most modern military presences in the world. </div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"></div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"> </span><br />
<a href="http://www.infoplease.com/t/lit/wasteland/thunder.html#ixzz0zXSH29Y9" style="color: #003399;"></a></div></div><script src="http://rss.brainyhistory.com/link/historyevents.js" type="text/javascript">
</script>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-41574606878306314732010-09-05T12:30:00.000-04:002010-09-05T12:30:53.831-04:00A Must Read, Speaking Loudly - The St. Louis Dispatch<span style="font-size: small;">It's rare that we read anything radical in a mainstream newspaper anymore. Indeed, it is like seeing a pterodactyl perched on the local church steeple, so accustomed are we to reading the bland protests on the editorial pages of the New York Times or listening to the sweaty, drug-induced rages on FOX. </span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><br />
</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">Radicalism from the left? A sighting:</span><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: small;">Here is a link to a piece in the St. Louis Dispatch on September 3rd that hearkens back to the radicalism of the 1930s and other angry eras when the people who really make this country work last got riled up over economic issues. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: small;">Click: <b><a href="http://www.stltoday.com/news/opinion/columns/the-platform/article_9ba769c2-b79d-11df-a22f-0017a4a78c22.html">Labor Day 2010: Puppets of the plutocrats</a></b></span><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: small;">There are echoes of another, long-ago America in the piece, one where the majority of people worked physically rather than at a desk. So, there is a bit of a disconnect between the exhausted worker at the metal speed press or on the railroad on one hand and the counter person at Wendy's or the "tech rep" on the other end of your call to your cell phone provider on the other hand.</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;"><br />
</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">But the spirit and the goals of labor today ought to be the same today.</span><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: small;">Make no mistake, business is exploiting the latter today just as business exploited the industrial worker of the past. And the only way for those workers to get their just desserts is to organize themselves. (If you think that a disruption by labor in steel manufacturing had dire consequences 80 years ago, just imagine what a stoppage in wireless service today would do.) </span><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: small;">Not only is labor not organized and not protesting, but their sinister nemeses - </span><span style="font-size: small;">the Tea Partyers and the radical right wing</span><span style="font-size: small;"> marching in the name of some cryptic populist urge - are being financed by the very billionaires who want to further drive down wages and ruin the country. There is class warfare and those of us who are preparing to walk off the stage of our working life should not be leaving such a world to our children. </span><br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: small;">Workers of the new millennium, unite... you have nothing to lose because you've already lost most of it: your well-paying jobs, your homes, your dignity. What else would you like to turn over to your new masters? </span>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-28037086631144220542010-09-03T08:42:00.001-04:002010-09-03T08:43:01.000-04:00The Ghost Of Barack ObamaAs we've witnessed in the last two years plus, politics is one very dirty game. Depressingly dirtier than most of the games the rest of us play to earn our daily bread.<br />
<br />
Barack Obama is one of the more elegant, almost regal Presidents we've ever had. His high style and rhetorical mastery begs on bended knee comparison with John F. Kennedy and Franklin D. Roosevelt.<br />
<br />
But, "Turning and turning in the widening gyre/The falcon cannot hear the falconer." <br />
<br />
The President has mysteriously become a leader more in the mold of a Calvin "Silent Cal" Coolidge, and to many eyes and ears, appears cold, aloof, slightly supercilious and often tone deaf. The wisp of shallowness that appeared during the presidential campaign is now a full blown smoking stack.<br />
<br />
Where are the ringing speeches, the great aspirations, the appeals to hope over fear? Gone, as far as we can tell. What happened?<br />
<br />
There is no other place to lay the blame but to a kind of moral cowardice.<br />
<br />
It seems Obama doesn't really believe in the Progressive vision. Was embracing it merely an election strategy? Either government is a constructive, positive force in our common life or it's a bystander.<br />
<br />
No other developed country (and very few developing or so-called emerging countries) argue over this point. For instance, France is rated by the World Health Organization as having the best health care system in the entire world. Japan and even Brazil rank above us in the quality of their national mass transit systems. Our real literacy rate, which one approached 99% is now hovering around 85%. <br />
<br />
Obama seems to forget that there are tangible problems that need government intervention and financing regardless of what any of the dangerous right wing fanatics shout. While he should be nailing his own 95 Theses to the door of Congress, he appears content to fiddle and adjust and essentially cower. Remember - he is the most powerful single person in the world, and even if a Progressive agenda doesn't pass legislative muster, simply using the bully pulpit will serve as a countervailing force against the reactionaries.<br />
<br />
Presidents like FDR, Ronald Reagan, and the sadly sidetracked Lyndon Johnson had strong beliefs in a core set of values. Whether you agreed with them or not, one can easily summarize the three president's major stands, and we admire them for their courage if not the ultimate effects their beliefs had upon us.<br />
<br />
So, advisory number one to the President: <i>"Define your core principles, your ultimate philosophies, and sell them. Hard and often."</i><br />
<br />
Another side of the President that is lacking is quite a bit more concrete.<br />
<br />
He seems to consider himself above the ribbon cutting, baby kissing, the complimenting of the mayor's wife's new hat, walking the streets with a state senator who feels her district is slipping backward, or showing appreciation for the small business owner's dedication to achievement and her/his family. God is in the details, Mr. President. As the pundits put it, he gets an F in "the stagecraft of the Presidency."<br />
<br />
His bumbling, half-baked touch was most evident during the oil catastrophe in the Gulf. He could not have plugged the leak himself, but he could have sent Joe Biden or a couple of Rear Admirals to set up a permanent base camp in New Orleans in order to "show the flag."<br />
<br />
There have been literally thousands of stimulus bill projects around the country, yet we seem not to sense the President's, and therefore the Democrats', stamp on them. Everything seems theoretical under Obama's leadership. It keeps smelling as if he doesn't believe in his own actions. <br />
<br />
But it goes beyond that. One of the most important accomplishments of his 20-month tenure thus far is the winding down of the war in Iraq. It will save lives and save trainloads of money. Yet the initial announcement and his nationally-televised speech seemed lethargic, lacking ardor. We should be dancing in the streets and the President should have been leading the band music. But we saw a ghost of passionate, intense candidate Obama.<br />
<br />
As Yeats wrote in "The Second Coming," The best lack all conviction, while the worst/Are full of passionate intensity."<br />
<br />
Second advisory to Mr. Obama, coming from the left, for now a still-friendly if disquieted quarter: <i>"Learn how to get your hands dirty."</i> You can't glide above it all for much longer without completely losing the gains of the last few years.<br />
<br />
<span style="color: white;">.</span>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-21762244990554612062010-08-31T14:00:00.003-04:002010-08-31T14:03:27.053-04:00Pop Quiz For The Christian Nation Living Within America(Answers below) Four points for writing your name. Eight points each for correct answers. <br />
<br />
High over the entrance to the Supreme Court is a frieze filled with statuary. Seated in the middle is Moses with two tablets.<br />
<br />
1) <i>The tablets represent:</i><br />
a) The Ten Commandments<br />
b) The Bill of Rights<br />
c) Moses' endorsement of Tylenol<br />
d) Not a stinkin' thing<br />
<br />
2) <i>On either side of Moses are the Greek law-giver Solon and:</i><br />
a) Homer<br />
b) Homer Simspon<br />
c) Confucius<br />
d) Cotton Mather<br />
<br />
Inside, on the south and north walls of the courtroom itself are two other friezes. <br />
<br />
3) <i>There are how many Jews depicted?</i><br />
a) None<br />
b) 2<br />
c) 5<br />
d) 6, but they are reformed Jews so they don't really count<br />
<br />
4) <i>How many Catholics?</i><br />
a) 5<br />
b) 10<br />
c) 100<br />
d) Just St. Francis of Assisi to soften the tone of the joint<br />
<br />
5) <i>How many Muslims?</i><br />
a) None, Muslims aren't really Americans<br />
b) None, Muslims aren't really human beings<br />
c) You're not allowed to depict Muslims in picture or sculpture<br />
d) 1<br />
<br />
6) <i>There is one Babylonian, Hammurabi. How many pharaohs?</i><br />
a) King Tut is up there and a couple of others who have pyramids and stuff<br />
b) 1, but you'll never guess his name<br />
c) Pharaoh's daughter is depicted because she was known as Little Lady Lawgiver<br />
d) Steve Martin<br />
<br />
7) <i>How many famous ancient Greeks and Romans?</i><br />
a) 2<br />
b) 3<br />
c) 5<br />
d) none<br />
<br />
8) <i>How many Protestants?</i><br />
a) 3<br />
b) none - they refused to appear with members of other faiths on the frieze<br />
c) 19<br />
d) zillions, 'cause this is a Christian nation<br />
<br />
Who said the following?<br />
<br />
9) <i>"The Constitution of the U.S. forbids everything like an establishment of a national religion."</i><br />
a) Billy Graham<br />
b) Graham Nash<br />
c) James Madison<br />
d) Barack Hussein Obama<br />
<br />
10) <i style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: small;">"</span><span style="font-size: small;">Every other sect supposes itself in possession of the truth, and that those who differ are so far in the wrong. Like a man traveling in foggy weather they see those at a distance before them wrapped up in a fog, as well as those behind them, and also people in the fields on each side; but near them, all appears clear, though in truth they are as much in the fog <span class="style2">as any of them.</span>"</span></i><br />
<span style="font-family: arial,helvetica; font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica;"><span style="font-family: Times,"Times New Roman",serif;">a) Ben Cartwright</span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: arial,helvetica; font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica;"><span style="font-family: Times,"Times New Roman",serif;">b) Diderot</span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: arial,helvetica; font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica;"><span style="font-family: Times,"Times New Roman",serif;">c) Ben Franklin</span></span></span></span><br />
<span style="font-family: arial,helvetica; font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica;"><span style="font-family: Times,"Times New Roman",serif;">d) Joe Don Baker</span></span></span></span><br />
<br />
<span style="font-family: arial,helvetica; font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica;"><span style="font-family: Times,"Times New Roman",serif;">11) <i>"</i></span></span></span></span><i><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica; font-size: small;">Whoever shall introduce into public affairs the principles of primitive Christianity will change the face of the world."</span></i><br />
<span style="font-family: arial,helvetica; font-size: small;">a) Newt Gingrich</span><br />
<span style="font-family: arial,helvetica; font-size: small;">b) Knute Rockne</span><br />
<span style="font-family: arial,helvetica; font-size: small;">c) Ben Franklin</span><br />
<span style="font-family: arial,helvetica; font-size: small;">d) Franklin Pierce</span><br />
<div style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: small;"><br />
</span></div><div style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: small;">12) <i>"</i></span><i>There is no need for temples; no need for complicated philosophy. Our own brain, our own heart is our temple; the philosophy is kindness."</i></div><span style="font-family: georgia,bookman old style,palatino linotype,book antiqua,palatino,trebuchet ms,helvetica,garamond,sans-serif,arial,verdana,avante garde,century gothic,comic sans ms,times,times new roman,serif;">a) the Dalai Lama</span><br />
<span style="font-family: georgia,bookman old style,palatino linotype,book antiqua,palatino,trebuchet ms,helvetica,garamond,sans-serif,arial,verdana,avante garde,century gothic,comic sans ms,times,times new roman,serif;">b) Dolly Parton</span><br />
<span style="font-family: georgia,bookman old style,palatino linotype,book antiqua,palatino,trebuchet ms,helvetica,garamond,sans-serif,arial,verdana,avante garde,century gothic,comic sans ms,times,times new roman,serif;">c) Salvador Dali </span><br />
<span style="font-family: georgia,bookman old style,palatino linotype,book antiqua,palatino,trebuchet ms,helvetica,garamond,sans-serif,arial,verdana,avante garde,century gothic,comic sans ms,times,times new roman,serif;">d) Thomas Jefferson</span><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="font-size: small;">Answers </span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">1) b, Bill of Rights - according to the sculptor </span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">2) c, Confucius</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">3) b, 2: Moses and Solomon</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">4) a, 5: Justinian, Charlemagne, King John, Louis IX and Napoleon</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">5) d, 1: Mohammed</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">6) b, Pharaoh Menes</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">7) c, 5: Lycurgus, Solon, Draco, Octavian and Justinian</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">8) a, 3: Hugo Grotius, John Marshall and Sir William Blackstone</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">9) c, James Madison</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">10) c, Ben Franklin</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">11) c, Ben Franklin</span><br />
<span style="font-size: small;">12) a, </span><span style="font-family: georgia,bookman old style,palatino linotype,book antiqua,palatino,trebuchet ms,helvetica,garamond,sans-serif,arial,verdana,avante garde,century gothic,comic sans ms,times,times new roman,serif;">the Dalai Lama. Astoundingly enough he said it to Dolly Parton...</span><br />
<span style="font-family: georgia,bookman old style,palatino linotype,book antiqua,palatino,trebuchet ms,helvetica,garamond,sans-serif,arial,verdana,avante garde,century gothic,comic sans ms,times,times new roman,serif;"><span style="color: white;">.</span></span>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-13268713293445142222010-08-30T13:51:00.001-04:002010-08-30T14:04:25.716-04:00What Cicero Had To Say About Traitors - The Radical Right Wing Cashing In On Hatred And Fear<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWmQY3IwKktm4a7Ke66o0zj9CniP737PHCDeVUz35KqK_63lHKnmhhS1KjdOUvyLONekhDMq5f_BMdhz9GXR5SUkY0zbHXFEvk6x-RcqxYIJx28B8JCgLK7OoDQ8ew4ZMRS3lV_SHJ9TVt/s1600/CiceroKing.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><br />
</a><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWmQY3IwKktm4a7Ke66o0zj9CniP737PHCDeVUz35KqK_63lHKnmhhS1KjdOUvyLONekhDMq5f_BMdhz9GXR5SUkY0zbHXFEvk6x-RcqxYIJx28B8JCgLK7OoDQ8ew4ZMRS3lV_SHJ9TVt/s1600/CiceroKing.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="215" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWmQY3IwKktm4a7Ke66o0zj9CniP737PHCDeVUz35KqK_63lHKnmhhS1KjdOUvyLONekhDMq5f_BMdhz9GXR5SUkY0zbHXFEvk6x-RcqxYIJx28B8JCgLK7OoDQ8ew4ZMRS3lV_SHJ9TVt/s400/CiceroKing.jpg" width="400" /></a></div><br />
Everyone should be angry, anxious and ready to counter any and all challenges from the extremist right wing after the fear and hatred extravaganza this weekend at the Lincoln Memorial.<br />
<br />
The effrontery to the memory of Martin Luther King and all he stands for is self-evident. The insensitivity is beyond calculation. King had a dream. Beck offers America an Ayn Randian nightmare where radical individualism - the worst of Social Darwinism - will rule our lives.<br />
<br />
Should the radical right seize much power, from cradle to grave even the well-educated let alone the poor and struggling, will struggle for a shirnking piece of a shrinking pie. <br />
<br />
It sounds like hyperbole, but in all seriousness, this right wing is dangerously anti-American. They are the anti-patriots. <br />
<br />
Cicero, in the late 1st century B.C. in one of his speeches, said of different traitors in different times:<br />
<br />
<i>A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. </i><br />
<br />
<i>But it cannot survive treason from within. </i><br />
<br />
<i>For the traitor moves amongst those within the gate freely, <span style="color: #990000;"><span style="color: black;">his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself.</span> </span></i><br />
<br />
<i><span style="color: #990000;">For the traitor appears not a traitor; he speaks in accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men.</span> </i><br />
<br />
<i>He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist.</i><br />
<i><br />
A murderer is less to fear. The traitor is the plague</i><br />
<br />
Speaking of baseness, here are some thumbnail sketches of "Tea Party" type candidates:<br />
<ul><li>There's health industry executive Rick Scott, the Republican nominee for Governor in Florida whose former company was forced to pay $1.7 billion in fines for Medicare fraud committed during his tenure and who led one of the most birulent anti-health reform groups last year. He's already spent $50 million of his own money to buy the race. </li>
</ul><ul><li>There's Joe Miller, running for Senate in Alaska. He's questioned the constitutionality of unemployment insurance and wants to phase out Social Security. </li>
</ul><ul><li>There's Dan Maes, Republican candidate for governor in Colorado, who asserted that efforts in Denver to promote bike riding could "threaten our personal freedoms." (Seriously, he said it.)</li>
</ul><ul><li>There's Sharron Angle, running for Senate in Nevada, who said she believes there are "domestic enemies" serving in Congress and has urged using "remedies" under the Second Amendment to change that. (Why use ballots when you can use bullets, eh?)</li>
</ul><ul><li>And then there's Rand Paul, the nominee for Senate in Kentucky, who has said he wouldn't have supported key provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Americans With Disabilities Act. (Spoken like a true son of privilege.)</li>
</ul><ul><li>Carl Paladino, the Tea-Party-backed Republican candidate for governor of New York, sent an email that shows a video of an African tribal dance, entitled "Obama Inauguration Rehearsal," while another depicts hardcore bestiality. </li>
</ul><ul><li>A leading Tea Party funded Republican candidate for Tennessee's 6th congressional district, Lou Ann Zelenik, condemned the plans for a mosque's expansion in Murfreesboro.</li>
</ul>According to a University of Washington study, 46% of Tea Party'ers believe "if blacks would only try harder, they would be just as well off as whites." That racist sentiment, held by nearly half of all Tea Party supporters, had already been established by a USA Today poll, and WU study strongly confirmed their findings from July:<br />
<blockquote><i>Nearly half say blacks lag in jobs, income and housing "because most African Americans just don't have the motivation or willpower to pull themselves up out of poverty." </i></blockquote>Over half of all Tea Party'ers believe that immigration (not illegal immigration, mind you) is "changing the culture in the U.S. for the worse" (54%), compared to 32% for everyone else.<br />
<br />
<br />
When asked if we should single out Muslims or Middle Easterners for airport security stops, 63% of Tea Party supporters said we should, compared to 43% of all voters, a disturbing percentage of all Americans.<br />
<br />
Over half of Tea Party'ers believe gays "have too much political power" compared to "the size of their group."RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-86469618435042095892010-08-18T12:34:00.004-04:002010-08-18T12:46:59.514-04:00Dr. Pepper's Bad Prescription For People - More Union Busting<div style="color: #990000; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIPT-vloc4VquevCrgHYtFDkY6h7UZG_fusY7t5QDppeO4cRvPr-BB_hKvc8yyxy9tZ9GtVKUgmZjpi7htPLeZM7MqYJnr7o7Rl7_LI1SBLCSCUQXgJcS9lkeX3VEOmnOOdzUAxhrTNChd/s1600/Motts+No.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="307" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIPT-vloc4VquevCrgHYtFDkY6h7UZG_fusY7t5QDppeO4cRvPr-BB_hKvc8yyxy9tZ9GtVKUgmZjpi7htPLeZM7MqYJnr7o7Rl7_LI1SBLCSCUQXgJcS9lkeX3VEOmnOOdzUAxhrTNChd/s320/Motts+No.jpg" width="320" /></a><i><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span class="body"> </span></span></i></div><div style="color: #990000; text-align: center;"><i><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span class="body">The man who has his millions will want everything he can lay his hands on and then </span></span></i></div><div style="color: #990000; text-align: center;"><i><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span class="body">raise his voice against the poor devil who wants ten cents more a day.</span> </span></i></div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #990000; font-size: x-small;"> - Samuel Gompers</span></div><br />
Dr. Pepper-Snapple owns Mott's Apple Juice among its 50 brands. (7-Up, Hawaiian Punch, Sunkist, Stewart's Root Beer, etc. <a href="http://www.drpeppersnapplegroup.com/brands/">Go to their site and click "Our Brands" to see the others</a>)<br />
<br />
Stop buying and drinking their products.<br />
<br />
The company, which saw record profits of $550 million in 2009, is hammering union workers in its Rochester, NY, area apple juice plant, asking for give backs and pay cuts, and hiring scab workers in the depressed, job-hungry upstate region. The union is the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union International (RWDSU, for short).<br />
<br />
What is at issue here is whether people with 15 years experience who are making around $19 an hour in skilled jobs should give back $3 an hour to a corporate giant making more than a half billion dollar a year profit.<br />
<br />
What is also at issue are livable wages for a dedicated, profit-producing group of UFCW workers with families, children, hopes and dreams. The mega-corporation wants to take back gains the workers have struggled for over decades, and throw them into the crocodile pit of cheap labor. Shamefully, the company has already begun replacing some of the workers who have been striking since May.<br />
<br />
The $40,000 per year wage is a decent living for a Rochester area worker (the plant is located in Williamson, NY). But no one is getting rich on it and, if you calculate a working life of 25 years, you'll see that one can buy a modest house, 3 or 4 cars, take some non-luxury vacations but never save enough to send the kids to college. And probably a worker can go bankrupt in a flash if some unforeseen catastrophe should hit. So this is the kind of life that the barons who own Dr. Pepper-Snapple want for their workers - 16% less in pay and benefits, and no retirement fund.<br />
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The underlying issues concern corporate greed. Keep in mind that when that $550 million dollar profit is divvied up, it goes to shareholders of Dr. Pepper-Snapple, who we can rest assured are not generally of the blue collar class. The corporation's logic tells us that people in the ownership class need the money more than the workers at the Mott's plant.<br />
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And how much will it mean to the greedy shareholders?<br />
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By our calculations, this oppressive restructuring of wages would save about $1.5 million per year on the backs of the 300 workers who could be affected at the plant. This would redistribute about 6 cents per share to the owners, while it cuts back on worker earnings by about 16%. <br />
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6 lousy cents.<br />
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Meanwhile the Dr. Pepper-Snapple stock has gone up in value over 42% in the last 52 weeks.<br />
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This is the America we want to leave our children and grandchildren? Decline in earning power so someone can have a cheap, over-sweetened drink from Dr. Pepper?<br />
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According to the <i>New York Times</i>:<br />
<br />
<i>Tim Budd, a 24-year employee who belongs to the union’s bargaining team, said he was shocked by one thing the plant manager said during negotiations. </i><br />
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<i> “He said we’re a commodity like soybeans and oil, and the price of commodities go up and down,” Mr. Budd recalled. “He said there are thousands of people in this area out of jobs, and they could hire any one of them for $14 an hour. It made me sick to have someone sit across the table and say I’m not worth the money I make.” </i><br />
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Have a glass of water from your tap the next time you feel like reaching for one of Dr. Pepper's products.<br />
<span style="color: white;">.</span>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-73972582892431961492010-08-17T20:27:00.000-04:002010-08-17T20:27:49.343-04:00The Radical Right: The Great DismantlersTomorrow is the 90th anniversary of the <b>Nineteenth Amendment</b>, which gave women the right to vote. It passed the Tennessee legislature by <u>one vote</u>, its approval ushering in the era of equality between the sexes in the voting booth. The amendment's journey was slow and painful and was thwarted for decades by reactionary, anti-social elements in America. These have not disappeared entirely as we know from the behavior of Palin, Gingrich, Kyl, et al. And they are as dangerous to the ture American way of life as ever.<br />
<br />
Everywhere, in every way, the radical Republicans are intent on tearing things down. No wonder they are so fanatical about their handguns and assault rifles. They seek to dismantle so many things important to our social fabric that we will surely descend into anarchy if they get their way even on just one of them.<br />
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Let's start with the brouhaha du jour, the Islamic Center in lower Manhattan. Is there something actually wrong with the <b>First Amendment</b>? And is there something inherently unpatriotic about defending it? It's been around since 1791 and was written and shepherded by one our greatest Presidents and political philosophers, James Madison. Of all the amendments it is the most fundamental to our national identity.<br />
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Yet, like termites at the foundation of our 220 year-old spiritual and political house, the radical right gnaws and gnaws at. Their message? If you're white, Protestant and conservative, fear nothing. If you're anything else, be very afraid.<br />
<br />
Next there's the attack on the <b>Fourteenth Amendment</b>, the one that confers automatic citizenship upon individuals born on American soil, with a few technical restrictions such as children of foreign ambassadors. The fourteenth is a mere stripling at 142 years old. And what is really awful about the reactionaries' attack is that it is just an attack - there's no new text for us to sit down and discuss, just raw and ugly emotion aimed at foreigners. The only thing we're left with is a contemplation of xenophobia.<br />
<br />
But the <b>Fourteenth Amendment </b>is also known as the "equal protection" amendment because it states unequivocally that "no state shall... deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." Such as the right to marry whomever you want? Such as the right to go your way unhindered without fear of random stops by local police looking for undocumented people from south of the border? (The amendment's history is deeper and broader than today's controversies, so a full discussion would actually take a book to cover it all.) <br />
<br />
Switching gears a bit, how about the propsed dismantling of <b>Social Security</b>? Sane, civilized people can surely understand the need to gradually raise the retirement age for benefits collection since people are now, and will be, living longer than when the program was first instituted.<br />
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To completely privatize the system, however, is the hope only of madmen and women. If the system had been private in 2008 when the crashing began, 40% of all value would have been wiped out and would still be wiped out. So, a person who was expecting $1400 per month would be receiving only $840 per month, IF there was still a decent yield on his or her principle to be had. Consider the chaos that might have ensued.<br />
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Let's talk about the <b>Presidency.</b> No one can make an argument that George W. Bush was attacked in a vociferous and occasionally virulent way. He was not, though, held to be any of the following: non-American, un-American, a member of a Muslim terrorist sect, a Socialist, a Communist, a monkey, the Joker, Mao, Che or Satan. George Bush was compared to Hitler quite a number of times, although not as many times as Obama. Bush was never depicted as either eating or growing watermelons on the White House lawns. <br />
<br />
If a more centrist President had been elected - such as a Bill Clinton - the hue and cry would have hit different notes, but it would have been as ugly, because at bottom, the radical right, (which pretty much now runs the Republican Party), despises the Presidency most of all among government institutions. It's hated it since Abe Lincoln, whom the reactionaries murdered. They stepped it up when Theodore Roosevelt began forcing through sorely-needed reforms. FDR? Well, talk about the Great Satan! They killed Kennedy, whipsawed LBJ, laughed at Carter, and tried to depose Clinton. We shouldn't be surprised at how our first African-American progressive President has been treated.<br />
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What else has the radical right wing (and I include Republicans, Dixiecrats and Blue Dog Democrats under that banner) dismantled? The <b>Glass-Steagall Act</b> which kept banks and investment banks from speculating with deposits, mixing their functions. They've been hammering at <b>Medicare </b>and<b> Medicaid</b> since Richard Nixon's administration, an era that now seems moderate compared to the extremism his party now deploys. The right to a speedy trial guaranteed in the <b>Sixth Amendment</b>. And don't even get started with the <b>Sixteenth Amendment</b>, which allowed for the levy of an income tax.<br />
<br />
They don't believe in government, which means they don't believe in society. They believe in an Ayn Rand steroidal nightmare of a viciously individualistic social order. <br />
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Out with all of this civilization stuff and nonsense says the right wing.<br />
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Shall we go on to campaign finance and the <b>Citizens United case</b>? Or how about <b>removing environmental safeguards</b> that might well have prevented the Gulf oil catastrophe?<br />
<br />
What the radicals want is for all people without a huge income or super strong assets to begin a war against each other day in and day out. (Think of the <b>dismantled unions</b> which directly put workers to struggling against globalization and low wage illegal aliens.)<br />
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They welcome the disarray, the anarchy, the divisions among Americans because it will further drive down wages and distract us from the real inequalities running uncontrolled in our society. They seek nothing more than law and order and a complete dismantling of the middle class.<br />
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If you're happy and you know it, clap your hands.RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-72772020045899856822010-08-16T11:14:00.000-04:002010-08-16T11:14:00.562-04:00The Manhattan Islamic Center, American Religions and the Presidency - Some Other Bigotry Worth ContemplatingThere has been but one Roman Catholic President of the United States: John Fitzgerald Kennedy.<br />
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Aside from JFK, there have been two other Roman Catholic candidates for President: Al Smith in 1928 and John Kerry in 2004.<br />
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There have been 3 Roman Catholic Vice-Presidential Candidates: William Miller (R-1964), Ed Muskie (D-1968), and Sargent Shriver (D-1972)<br />
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There has been one Greek Orthodox Catholic candidate for President, Michael Dukakis.<br />
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There have been no Jews nominated. <br />
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No Mormons. No Atheists (that we know of).<br />
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Certainly no Buddhists, Hindus or Muslims.<br />
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Thus far, the score is:<br />
<br />
WASPs 42 <br />
Catholics 1<br />
Black Protestants 1<br />
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A bit lopsided?<br />
<br />
That it is primarily white Protestants leading the charge against the Islamic Center in lower Manhattan should speak volumes to the rest of us about the priorities of the (barely) majority Protestants. Of course many Protestants do not fall into this hysterically xenophobic group. And, sadly, there are many Catholics - led by the likes of xenophobe-in-chief, Pat Buchanan - who are lining up against the center.<br />
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If you fall outside the pale of mainline white Protestantism, however, recall that you, or your near ancestors, suffered this exact same kind of intolerance. Think long and hard about what your forebears suffered and poke around in the vast computer knowledge files to see how similarly they were portrayed in the press as are Muslims now. <br />
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Meanwhile, even with the election of a black President, I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for a Catholic or a Jew, among others, to move into the White House.RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-8095281599423583162010-08-15T14:41:00.000-04:002010-08-15T14:41:54.309-04:00On The Matter Of The Islamic Center in Manhattan<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi1Z2yhKKNNVwLlpC-XdPR1Gcnru9LExSvawh9QulAx1Z1cQ_n0mAN7a8bYwaSzPWwk6PuFVQpYMN02VTfYSAZmaA9oJgCEpoEu_RSDqEFzTXdui2dTicpl9gE1Yhk1NTvYq6rcb77By2m1/s1600/gwflierlarge.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi1Z2yhKKNNVwLlpC-XdPR1Gcnru9LExSvawh9QulAx1Z1cQ_n0mAN7a8bYwaSzPWwk6PuFVQpYMN02VTfYSAZmaA9oJgCEpoEu_RSDqEFzTXdui2dTicpl9gE1Yhk1NTvYq6rcb77By2m1/s400/gwflierlarge.jpg" width="308" /></a></div> James Madison, known as the Father of the Constitution, made clear the difference between Liberty and toleration in religion. Toleration is a grant made by a majority to a minority, giving the minority some sort of permission to build, meet, worship, believe. Liberty, said Madison, is a self-evident, natural right. It cannot be denied by the majority because the right to so deny does not repose in the majority.<br />
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Writing from Montpelier, Vermont, in 1823 in a letter to Edward Everett he said: "...if new sects arise with absurd opinions or over-heated imaginations, the proper remedies lie in time, forbearance, and example..."<br />
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Note the words "forbearance" and "example." Forbearance encompasses patience and understanding. Example is an answer to those who argue that many - but not all - majority Islamic countries restrict the freedom of others. That argument says we should stoop to their intolerance, become not even better in our Western beliefs, but wallow in the mud of backwardness. Surely that is no argument at all. <br />
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Perhaps we should amend the First Amendment to read "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, except for Islam and other religions we might find somehow offensive at any time for any reason."<br />
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Among other things, the hysterical response to the Islamic center is a proxy for protest against the failed policies of two administrations in Iraq and Afghanistan. <br />
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There are a number of constituencies against the Islamic center. One has a barely valid claim - the families of victims of the attacks. Another constituency is the vehement new Nativist Movement that seems to despise anyone and anything that is not completely embraced by the myths of white Christian America. The third, and possibly the most despicable, is the cynical right wing of the radical Republican Party.<br />
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First, the families. While I appreciate their continuing anguish, a society cannot always take into account the ongoing feelings of all families of murder victims at all times. It is an impossible task. A better way to remember the dead beloved would be to recommit ourselves to the bedrock of American rights: freedom of choice in most important matters. Hard? Yes, of course. Our Founders had that courage, but apparently, we have so little faith in our way of life that some are looking to reform the 1st Amendment. But one certainly cannot believe that all 1.2 billion Muslims are evil, or even vaguely support terrorism. In reality, most Muslims are dead set against it, having witnessed first hand terrorist acts in their own countries. Would we as Americans want to be judged on the behavior of a William Calley who, along with his men, murdered 500 Vietnamese civilians? I think not. Would we want to be known as supporters of Timothy McVey? Of course not. How do we feel as a people about the ruination of Native American Indian peoples, or how about slavery? Are we collectively responsible? We know the answer because it is written in our traditions dating to ancient Greece, Rome and Medieval Europe and refined and set in stone by the thinkers of the Enlightenment. We are individually responsible for our own actions. Holding all of Islam responsible for 9/11 is absurd even if tens of thousands of their coreligionists are sadistic, nihilistic fiends. Each of the murderers and whoever provided support or comfort and those who continue to hide the masterminds are responsible. That might number thousands of people, but it surely is not ALL of Islam. And the huge majority of Islam deserve a place at the table in the same way most of our ancestors were given their place.<br />
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The next group against the Mosque - the people who are stirring every ethno-religious pot in sight since President Obama was elected - rest their arguments on hate and their strategy upon neutralization and possibly annihilation of their "enemies." In other circumstances and places today, illegal immigrants are their target, or poor black people. In the past, Know-Nothings and Klansmen targeted blacks, Jews, Catholics, Irish, Italians, Greeks, Mormons, and the Amish. (The largest mass-lynching in this country was in New Orleans in 1891 and its victims were Sicilian/Italian-American laborers and fruit merchants.) Eradicating this kind of hate thought and speech remains a challenge. The arguments of hate-mongers deserve no hearing in a democratic society and we would all do well to watch over their incitements to violence. They demean and debase our liberties in the most insidious ways.<br />
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Finally, and I say the worst, are the right wing politicians who hope to make electoral hay on this matter. The John Boehners and Sara Palins of this scurrilous gang of political hooligans use the arguments of both the survivors and the hate-mongers in order to further cripple what is currently a fragile national unity. Their motives are clear, their ends are contemptible. "Raise my party up swearing patriotism upon the graves of the honored dead," so the x-ray of their minds would show.RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-27900501148317675352010-08-13T14:22:00.002-04:002010-08-13T14:32:32.825-04:00Illegal Workers And $600 Million More On "Border Security"<div style="font-family: Times,"Times New Roman",serif;"><i><span style="font-size: x-small;">The highway is alive tonight<br />
But nobody's kiddin' nobody about where it goes<br />
I'm sittin' down here in the campfire light<br />
Searchin' for the ghost of Tom Joad</span></i><span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> </i></span></div><div style="font-family: Times,"Times New Roman",serif;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><i> - Bruce Springsteen</i></span></div><div style="font-family: Times,"Times New Roman",serif;"><br />
</div><span style="font-size: x-small;">Tom Joad: </span><span style="font-size: x-small;"><i>They're workin' away our spirits, tryin' to make us cringe and crawl, takin' away our decency. </i></span><br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"> - John Steinbeck</span><br />
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The problem of illegal workers in this country has one primary fount: the employers who hire them.<br />
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No jobs, no work. No work, no illegal workers. No illegal workers, better employment prospects among lower level American workers and legal immigrants.<br />
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Employers who hire illegal workers are by definition predatory, anti-American-worker, and cheat the system in many ways while exploiting people who are in dire need of work. Let it be remembered that, before and now especially during the Great Recession, many American workers have been shut out of low and middle-level jobs because of nefarious hiring practices.<br />
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Which workers suffer the most? African-Americans, <i>legal</i> immigrants, and poorly-trained whites.<br />
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Once unions had been castrated, the path was clear for this kind of anti-social economic predation. (And the following in no way is meant to denigrate the lives and efforts of the workers who come to the United States seeking jobs, leaving countries that offer little in the way of opportunities. While we are busy solving this problem, they must be treated humanely and with dignity. Developing Mexico and the rest of Latin America is a larger discussion.)<br />
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Let's choose a couple of industries to draw examples from - construction and light regional manufacturing.<br />
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The employer scam works this way: <br />
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1. Determine that the wages paid American workers can be halved or even cut by two-thirds by hiring illegal workers. Send word via the immigrant grapevine that such jobs are available. A laborer would earn $10 per hour versus his/her American counterpart's $15 to $30, while an unskilled assembly line worker without documentation would earn $8 versus $12 to $25 per hour.<br />
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<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"></div>2. Gloat that because the U.S. has relatively humane laws concerning free health care, the employer does not have to cover the item while the American taxpayer does. 62% of illegal immigrants have no health coverage at all. Another 30% have inadequate coverage. <br />
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3. Further off-loading of costs are accomplished through not paying disability insurances, unemployment insurance, and by not heeding workplace safety rules. Because, who can protest it? Certainly not the illegal worker.<br />
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4. Have a firm understanding that illegal workers not only have no right to organize, but, in fact, have almost no rights at all. <br />
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5. Work closely with smugglers who have a call on some portion of the illegal workers' pay, so the worker further is in thrall to the employer's rules of non-law. Numbers 4 and 5 are modern versions of some aspects of the <i>padrone</i> system that victimized Italian immigrants, and the Irish gang labor practices prevalent until banned in the early-middle part of the 20th century.<br />
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6. Learn how to cry out in great consternation over the clamping down on illegal workers because it would "hurt the economy."<br />
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7. Exploit Nativist sentiment that states, in a nut shell, that the illegal workers are really leeches and should be repressed even more. This spreads fear and cowardice not just in the illegal group but those legal workers seeking better pay and conditions. The fear factor.<br />
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8. Off load more expenses onto tax payers such as lost local, state and Federal revenues that go toward facilities that not only the illegal workers but their families use as well: roads, sewers, water, schools, recreational facilities, etc. If illegal workers had a state of their own, it would rank right behind Ohio. An entire state that doesn't pay taxes only to the benefit of rapacious employers.<br />
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9. Create and perpetuate the myth that American workers "don't want these jobs." Look at ANY hiring site, job fair, or any other place that offers positions and you will see hundreds of applicants for low and middle skill jobs.<br />
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10. Count profits that are partly the result of the savings on wages and benefits, partly on taxes and fees the employer would be liable for if they paid American workers.<br />
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11. Utilize local and state law enforcement agencies not to "send them back," but rather as instruments of fear. The illegal worker now has to become more of a phantom in our society due to state initiatives such as the one found in Arizona.<br />
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Today, the Obama administration announced the appropriation of $600 million to "secure the border." Troops, fences, electronic surveillance. So, once again, we are forced to subsidize employers who will continue to wave around the honey pot promise of good jobs to nationals from countries where there are none.<br />
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There are rather stringent penalties under existing law to put the hammer down on the employers. Yet disturbingly, the average penalty is roughly at 10% of the strength of the maximum allowable by law.<br />
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<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman;"><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"></span></span></span></div><div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman;"><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"></span></span></span></div><div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman;"><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"></span></span></span></div><div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman;"><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: small;">Sec. 274A of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) and 8 U.S.C. 1324a, makes it unlawful for any person knowingly to hire, recruit or refer for a fee any alien not authorized to work. An employer that violates these laws can face penalties of:</span></span></span></span></div><div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman;"><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="font-size: small;"><span style="font-family: Times,"Times New Roman",serif;"> </span><o:p style="font-family: Times,"Times New Roman",serif;"> </o:p></span></span></span> </span></div><div style="font-family: Times,"Times New Roman",serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"> </span></span><br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in; text-align: justify; text-indent: -0.25in;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">·<span style="font-size-adjust: none; font-stretch: normal; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; line-height: normal;"> </span>$250 to $2,000 fine for each unauthorized individual; </span></span></div><div class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in; text-align: justify; text-indent: -0.25in;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">·<span style="font-size-adjust: none; font-stretch: normal; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; line-height: normal;"> </span>$2,000 to $5,000 for each employee if the employer has previously been in violation; or </span></span></div><div class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in; text-align: justify; text-indent: -0.25in;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">·<span style="font-size-adjust: none; font-stretch: normal; font-style: normal; font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; line-height: normal;"> </span>$3,000 - $10,000 for each individual if employer was subject to more than one cease and desist order. </span></span></div><div class="MsoNormal" style="margin-left: 0.25in; text-align: justify; text-indent: -0.25in;"><o:p><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"> </span></span></o:p><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"> </span></span></div><div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"><br />
</span></span></div><div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">The <span style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;">employer can also be fined $100 to $1,000 for each individual “paperwork” violation. </span></span></span></div><div class="MsoNormal" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif; text-align: justify;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"><br />
</span></span></div><div class="MsoNormal" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif; text-align: justify;"><o:p><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"> </span></span></o:p><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"> </span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">The criminal penalties for a pattern and practice violation can be up to $3,000 for each unauthorized alien, imprisonment up to six months, or both.</span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"><br />
</span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">The rub is this - it is very hard to prove such allegations against an employer. Only about 1% of illegal employers are ever convicted.</span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"><br />
</span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">Illegal workers benefit <span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">by the system </span></span>on the macro level to some degree. The bigger winners are the employers. </span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"><br />
</span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">If you own a construction company that employs 10 workers at $10 rather than $20 per hour, you are saving $800 per day. Over the course of a 10-week project, that's a savings of $40,000. </span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"><br />
</span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">Meanwhile, taxpayers pick up that remaining difference that should be going toward taxes, health costs, and other costs. </span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"><br />
</span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">Now multiply all that by thousands and thousands of illegal employers. How many billions does it make per year? How many trillions over 10 years?</span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"><br />
</span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText" style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;">And to put the cherry on top of this sinister sundae, stir in the impoverishment, demoralization and degradation of our fellow citizens who cannot get even those lower pay jobs. </span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"><br />
</span></span></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhIOOALV0z84OqqoKR_p3V60xeif6Ff1tLdYsSBTTpEBr7NzNgXhMF4ryMIEEQxyzUxjFRJ0WWvko_cGl0m-eyWYPXs_56JagTr47XNc26DPXNCMD7QGxrrwAPzkpO8C2aSt_Omv35L5_GI/s1600/borderfence.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhIOOALV0z84OqqoKR_p3V60xeif6Ff1tLdYsSBTTpEBr7NzNgXhMF4ryMIEEQxyzUxjFRJ0WWvko_cGl0m-eyWYPXs_56JagTr47XNc26DPXNCMD7QGxrrwAPzkpO8C2aSt_Omv35L5_GI/s320/borderfence.jpg" /></a></span></span></div><div class="MsoBodyText"><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"><br />
</span></span></div><span style="color: black; font-size: small;"><span style="color: black;"></span></span></div>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-38886279290437420192010-08-09T13:34:00.000-04:002010-08-09T13:34:16.970-04:00Relax - It's Radio The Way It Was meant To Be<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"></div><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"></div>Try it. <span style="font-size: large;"><b> </b></span><br />
<span style="font-size: large;"><b><a href="http://songza.com/listen/liberal-state-of-mind">Click Here</a></b></span><br />
<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><img border="0" height="310" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgpt39rs2TVCnHqhTJ0lcW5OONuS0BuGvOoJ1jqAERAJ4N7CvLVD9gW_Xpabto8Nwyy_suK2XRu_AZ3le-RIrxLE8gA3vOfo3f4qIeeQd2hWGkWOeVDllyI1anSX_K_suswroiyj70Sw47V/s320/Shirt+pocket+radio.GIF" width="320" /></div>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-50297072497164252282010-08-04T10:30:00.003-04:002010-08-04T18:40:41.826-04:00Coked Up Winged Monkeys Fly In From The Right<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj0mlx099LbWYPOzLTzb8NC-cMt6Lz0zKWnEnUDXC53jd0kgh1xqdsujX472e3rORTkf_qa1NoHkktL6B52Pv69dOatmnhTGiLUpnOoQ3_zrr-fbOgqYbOBgkZT9XL7OysvdxjliBVJyHBX/s1600/monkey3.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj0mlx099LbWYPOzLTzb8NC-cMt6Lz0zKWnEnUDXC53jd0kgh1xqdsujX472e3rORTkf_qa1NoHkktL6B52Pv69dOatmnhTGiLUpnOoQ3_zrr-fbOgqYbOBgkZT9XL7OysvdxjliBVJyHBX/s200/monkey3.jpg" width="146" /></a><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgMtPiwYjIPXVi5IZiwGLJueVXFMd95YTWhxYIhLqYAzJVjn_bciOR6jnJpw4WTFZx1zHQh5Qpq3JrtTVOiIuOe0ohLgUuXZU-_xc22rlDapKKafihJeKk9vbc24Db-nAB4OZ7UcimGMOjs/s1600/mccain3.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgMtPiwYjIPXVi5IZiwGLJueVXFMd95YTWhxYIhLqYAzJVjn_bciOR6jnJpw4WTFZx1zHQh5Qpq3JrtTVOiIuOe0ohLgUuXZU-_xc22rlDapKKafihJeKk9vbc24Db-nAB4OZ7UcimGMOjs/s200/mccain3.jpg" width="148" /></a></div><br />
Rarely did the film version of The Wizard of Oz reach the level of real darkness. But when those bellboy-suited winged monkeys were unleashed by the Wicked Witch of the West, there was an undeniable creep factor. In L. Frank Baum's novel, the Winged Monkeys were incredibly destructive - shredding the Scarecrow and using his innards as bedding, dropping the Tinman into a craggy ravine, degrading and enslaving the Cowardly Lion as a dray animal. And let's not forget the kidnapping of Toto, too.<br />
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Enter the Republicans, authors of the 1 trillion dollars-worth of wars in southwest Asia and a $1.5 trillion tax cut for the super rich, with their critiques of stimulus spending. A sort of political version of winged monkeys themselves, the arch-conservatives, as we already know, have no regard for any of the following:<br />
<br />
Science<br />
Economic justice<br />
History <br />
Plain old facts <br />
Civil rights beyond the 2nd Amendment<br />
Normal politicial dialogue<br />
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The right-winged monkeys are led by the once quasi-honorable John McCain, embittered and mortified by his presidential election loss, as they seize upon a few sometimes bizarre-seeming awards under the huge stimulus plan. (McCain is ably assisted in his mindless lashing out by Senator Tom Coburn of Oklahoma.)<br />
<br />
As one would expect, they are off base about almost every single project they buffoonishly criticize. The truth, indeed, is always the first casualty.<br />
<br />
Let's start with an unhappy accident - no pun intended. BP America was awarded a $308 million grant for a clean energy project in California. That was before the ghastly Gulf disaster. But, the project has attracted 7x the amount in private investment that the goverment is investing and will directly create at least 1,600 jobs.<br />
<br />
<i>A pause here to note that the numbers bandied about when discussing employment impact almost exclusively discuss the direct creation of jobs, never minding the fact that there is a multiplier effect because materials, shipping, provisioning the workforce, taxes paid and consumer dollars spent spin off even more jobs.</i><br />
<br />
Forward to the "exotic ants" study to be conducted by the California Academy of Sciences in the Indian Ocean. Of course, like a bunch of high school boys, the right wing thinks this is a waste of money. (Hey Charlie... how about them exotic ants, heh, heh? ) It appears that exotic insect species, because of brisk global trade and transportation, pose a particularly dangerous threat to agriculture. Studying the insects in their native habitat is crucial to understanding how they breed, behave, etc. California is the largest agricultural state in the Union.<br />
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There is also Fort Jefferson (1846) in the Dry Tortugas 70 miles west of the southernmost Florida Keys that has been deteriorating through lack of funding for the last 35 years. It is known as the Gibraltar of the Caribbean. The fort is the main tourism attraction on the little island that lives exclusively by tourist dollars and is served by a modern ferry that employs dozens of people. It is also one of the most magnificent pieces of military architecture in the country. Is their argument that we should just let this piece of history and prime tourist destination crumble into dust? <br />
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Then there is a $762,000 grant to design a computer program that can monitor and subsequently recreate on screen (and eventually on line) the movements of a particular choreography. Students and faculty will design and build the entire system from scratch. On the surface it sounds like an arts program - dreaded amongst the anti-cultural right wing - but in reality it is a computer project that will have applications far beyond dance - such as orthopedics, sports medicine and performance, gerontology and human-centric design of products. This is exactly the kind of basic research and application an intelligent government should be funding. <br />
<br />
In Glassboro, New Jersey, $1.2 million will go for the restoration of a wooden train station that dates from the 1860s and operation of a museum within. The station will also make for a stop on a planned light rail system that would connect Delaware Valley towns with Camden and Philadelphia. Currently the only way to navigate to those places is by car. Moreover, the Delaware Valley is reliant on tourism to keep its economy humming. Glassboro - once the East Coast's center of glass-making, as one could have guessed - is in the process of an enormous rehabilitation of its downtown area focused on Rowan University's various constituencies. Finally, Glassboro was the site of President Johnson's historic meeting with Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin in 1967 - a key moment in Cold War detente, and was also the site of an American President's first address to a high school graduating class (by Ronald Reagan, 1986). What's history got to do with anything?<br />
<br />
Know Nothing ignorance, the cynicism of the defeated, the lack of alternatives all further taint the right wing radicals. Make no mistake: they despise the America that most of us love and they want to turn it into a second-rate nation. They are destructive - the Winged Monkeys of a very dark movie.<br />
<span style="color: white;">.</span>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-20533592200039689632010-07-30T16:49:00.002-04:002010-07-30T16:50:59.644-04:00Moody's Analytics Becomes Low Down "Democrat" Tool - Gives Republicans Serious Agita<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i>Great video at the end of today's blog. Check it out. </i></span><br />
<br />
Arguing with the Republicans is like arguing with the neighborhood drunk who sits at the end of the bar at the corner tavern. You say Williams, he says DiMaggio. You say Magic, he says Larry Bird. You says FDR, he says - Herbert Hoover?<br />
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And now, in spite of the fact that both the sober-as-a-judge Moody's Analytics and the bipartisan CBO pretty much agree on how best to stimulate the economy, the Republicans are crying, "It ain't necessarily so..." <br />
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What are they disputing? These little tidbits will illustrate, courtesy of Bob Cesca's marvelous website:<br />
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1. For every dollar of money spent on extending the Bush tax cuts, there's only a 32-cent return on investment in terms of pass along economic stimulus in the United States.<br />
<br />
2. For every dollar spent on unemployment benefits, there's a $1.61 return in economic stimulus. You save people from untold suffering and blows to dignity AND stimulate the economy.<br />
<br />
3. Cutting the corporate tax rate - also a 32-cent return in economic stimulus on the dollar here at home. <br />
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4. Infrastructure spending? $1.57 return on the buck. And you get bridges, tunnels and broadband in the bargain. <br />
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5. Capital gains tax cuts? 37-cents on the dollar.<br />
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6. Even a temporary increase in food stamps? $1.74 in return. No such thing as a free lunch? Well, pretty darn close. <br />
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So, what are the right wing's big beefs? (or is it beeves...)<br />
<div style="color: #990000;"><br />
</div><span style="color: #990000;">Republican objection:</span> we can't really be sure what infrastructure even is. (See italics below.)<br />
<span style="color: #990000;">Answer:</span> if it's got a brick, a fiber optic, concrete, steel, etc., it's infrastructure. Imagine being a teacher and having these right wingers in your high school social studies class.<i></i><span style="color: #990000;"> </span><br />
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<span style="color: #990000;">Republican objection:</span> there is too much corruption in food stamp programs.<br />
<span style="color: #990000;">Answer:</span> as opposed to... what Wall Street? The health care industry? Defense contracting? Big Oil?<br />
<br />
<span style="color: #990000;">Republican objection:</span> not keeping capital gains taxes at current historically low levels will be a "jobs killer."<br />
<span style="color: #990000;">Answer:</span> kinda sorta... it will be a jobs killer in India, Indonesia, South Korea, Vietnam, etc. <i>American</i> corporations have created 8 times as many jobs in other countries in the last 20 years as they have in the United States. Keep that excess cash here at home and at least we'll have something to show for it rather than more lost jobs. (For instance, we can build infrastructure.)<br />
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<span style="font-size: x-small;"><i>(For the drunks at the Republican Club Bar avidly poring over this blog, <a href="http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/17/despite-recession-8-big-projects-lumber-on/">click here for an article on the 8 public mega-projects going on right now in New York City.</a> Then there's the rebuilding on the World Trade Center site, and about 160,000 new housing units in the works. Also, although it's hard to keep track, there are approximately 8 new 45-plus-story office towers that have just been completed in Manhattan. Oh, and two huge replacement bridges are being put up over two of our tidal estuaries. Now... right wingers, you have an elementary idea of what infrastructure is.) </i></span><br />
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<span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="font-size: small;">On to the video. Who better than the Moody Blues? </span><i></i></span><object height="385" width="480"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/qLgdcGEqgcw&hl=en_US&fs=1?color1=0x2b405b&color2=0x6b8ab6"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/qLgdcGEqgcw&hl=en_US&fs=1?color1=0x2b405b&color2=0x6b8ab6" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="480" height="385"></embed></object>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-59987391220743625812010-07-29T12:31:00.001-04:002010-08-13T16:08:29.024-04:00The Boomer Solution To Our Intractable Reading And Math Proficiency Problems<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhn-9ycJtzCzpImyIVwI-lTOQvy-A4LqmqzvJyq17dvNZBNku1YfoSdQW-0WH8y_y-AvTlg0nEi-Pk0cLSW6jKYdJLR0wqvSU_-E6e68oc3hjFZrofVwc6h0PvIRq7QQhg7uJnry50cOuB_/s1600/seniors+reading.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="285" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhn-9ycJtzCzpImyIVwI-lTOQvy-A4LqmqzvJyq17dvNZBNku1YfoSdQW-0WH8y_y-AvTlg0nEi-Pk0cLSW6jKYdJLR0wqvSU_-E6e68oc3hjFZrofVwc6h0PvIRq7QQhg7uJnry50cOuB_/s400/seniors+reading.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>The strategy is - put people back to work and teach young children to read well. Below are some tactics to get there, at least in part.<br />
<br />
Last week NPR reported that the unemployment rate among the 55-and-older set hit 7.2%, the highest since the end of World War II. And while that may be lower than the overall rate, older workers tend to stay unemployed longer, with the average length of the job search more than 35 weeks.<br />
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A Pew survey shows that 1 in 3 unemployed older workers hasn't had a paycheck in more than a year. As a result, in 2009, 3 million older workers have simply given up and declared early retirement and have begun drawing Social Security benefits. <br />
<div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;"><br />
</div><div style="background-color: transparent; border: medium none; color: black; overflow: hidden; text-align: left; text-decoration: none;">Yet this is the best-educated, most highly-skilled cadre in our society as of this moment and it is being pulled from service. </div><br />
Meanwhile, disadvantaged students in the first grade have a vocabulary that is approximately half that of the average advantaged student (2,900 and 5,800 words respectively). The first grade! For the underprivileged, the race is essentially lost before the starter's pistol has been sounded.<br />
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And, if you can't read well, the chances you will do well in math are next to nil.<br />
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The marriage of Boomers and needy preschool children is of urgent importance.<br />
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Almost anyone with a few years of college and beyond, or even those with a solid high school education, are capable of reading aloud to and giving basic reading, writing and math instruction to a 4, 5 or 6 year-old.<br />
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The Boomers who want to retire because of difficulty in finding new employment should be entered into a new program dedicated to transmitting these basic skills to deprived and neglected youngsters.<br />
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The Boomers would receive a stipend that would not be taxable and that would not affect their Social Security payment levels. The reading and math sessions could easily be conducted in schools before or after hours, in community centers, in the halls of religious institutions, libraries, even outdoors. The sessions could be for two hours per day, four days per week.<br />
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Let's say there were 1,000,000 of these "into-the-breach" senior tutors. And let's say they received $1,000 per month. That would cost $12 billion per year. The extra money added to the average retiree's $1,170 per month in SS money would help immensely, raising their monthly income to $2,170 per month. One can fairly assune that the extra money, like unemployment benefits, would immediately be recirculated into the economy in the form of consumer spending.<br />
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By contrast, we are spending over $100 billion per year on the two wars in southwest Asia, plus another 700 billion on defense in general. Corn subsidies cost us about $10 billion per year. Tax and other incentives to the petroleum industry cost us about $105 billion per year.<br />
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The benefits to the children who would be affected by such programs are not immeasurable, although the following statistics would serve to astound even the most skeptical among us.<br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;">(Stats are from <a href="http://www.readfaster.com/education_stats.asp">http://www.readfaster.com/education_stats.asp</a> - there are plenty more at their site.) </span><br />
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It is estimated that the cost of illiteracy to business and the taxpayer is $20 billion per year.<br />
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It is estimated that more than $2 billion is spent each year on students who repeat a grade because they have reading problems. <br />
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The educational careers of 25 to 40 percent of American children are imperiled because they don't read well enough, quickly enough, or easily enough.<br />
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Children who have not developed some basic literacy skills by the time they enter school are 3 - 4 times more likely to drop out in later years.<br />
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One-fifth of high school graduates cannot read their own diplomas.<br />
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Let's say of the 1,000,000 Boomers employed, they each affect 8 to 12 students per day. That is, obviously, 8 to 12 million students per day.<br />
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The children would receive the benefits of all the cumulative applied knowledge of the Boomers. They would stay in the school and learning environment for a longer amount of time each day. They would be sheltered from detrimental home situations, from excessive TV watching and video game playing.<br />
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The Boomers - with all their phenomenal skills coming back into play - would find a new sense of purpose plus a reasonable new source of income.<br />
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That income would help in a directly stimulative way to reinvigorate our struggling economy.<br />
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Volunteerism is all well and good, but the educational crisis is reaching high tide and it needs to be treated with early in a child's life. Volunteers are wonderful, but this is a different kind of predicament. <br />
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Maybe this is the new WPA or CCC. Spend money directly on things that are of dire importance to our future. And do something intrinsically good in the bargain. <br />
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</tbody></table>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-45129163376530525552010-07-27T09:30:00.008-04:002010-08-04T19:01:48.391-04:00Illegal Immigration, The Decline Of Unions And... Prohibition<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjrnHPW5-aKhiDK6zpQbGDiK_WcgR_bDP7jnnj510I20M2_H46wNdPRzGrjJ2O7Sxy2pgueXPgg1pdnrwq5dOy7wq1p1NXCNfB_dbAXm9bzor6Bv4kUpQdlviLVQnM04lPtIXbt3FTVy1y8/s1600/thenationdecreed.gif" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjrnHPW5-aKhiDK6zpQbGDiK_WcgR_bDP7jnnj510I20M2_H46wNdPRzGrjJ2O7Sxy2pgueXPgg1pdnrwq5dOy7wq1p1NXCNfB_dbAXm9bzor6Bv4kUpQdlviLVQnM04lPtIXbt3FTVy1y8/s320/thenationdecreed.gif" /></a></div><br />
Yes, Prohibition. The mother of all unintended consequences spawned by modern social meddling.<br />
<br />
Every quasi-educated individual knows the Prohibition Cliff Notes by heart:<br />
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A gaggle of reactionary, business-led, do-gooder blue-noses pushed to "dry out" America in a quest to stop rampant drunkenness, promote money-saving, stop domestic abuse and improve industrial man's work habits. What they didn't bargain for was Al Capone, mayhem on the streets, an enthusiastic disregard for Law with a capital "L," and not much of a rollback in drinking.<br />
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Now to the decline of unions. From 1948 to 1975, the percentage of people who belonged to unions was remarkably stable. The high water years were 1952 through 1955, participation averaging around 32%. The level stayed right around 29 to 31 per cent those 27 years.<br />
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Today's mark is the lowest ever at around 10%.<br />
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More shocking is the decline in real earning power.<br />
<br />
As union membership has declined, so too have real wages across the board. Figures are given in 1982 dollars for easy comparison. In 1954, average weekly wages were about $319 for all workers. In 1983, they were about $277. Latest figures show that today they are about $272.<br />
<br />
This trend accelerated beginning with Ronald Reagan's 8 years of union busting. He was the "Great Communicator" and the message he conveyed so clearly to American blue collar (mostly male, white and black) workers was this: "Go to hell."<br />
<br />
Turns out it wasn't morning in America at all, but rather the beginning of a long, cold night that shows no signs of ending. Adding insult to injury, hours worked have risen during that same long period of wage decline.<br />
<br />
A good part of the blame falls on so-called right-to-work states - AL, AZ, AR, FL, GA, ID, IO, KS, LA, MS, NE, NV, NC, ND, OK, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA and WY. (Notice a pattern here? Right-to-work equals right wing for the most part.) This backward kind of legislation began the scramble for ever-lower-wage workers. <br />
<br />
Enter the illegal aliens, like stock characters in a depressing morality play.<br />
<br />
Who wrote them into the script? Certainly not native-born American workers, who had much to lose, and indeed have lost out, to the imported low-wage workers.<br />
<br />
Illegal aliens cannot organize, they cannot lobby, they cannot demand the humane benefits - good wages, health care, safety standards, payment for sick days, paid vacation, etc. - we once upon a time associated with the American way of life.<br />
<br />
Who wrote illegal aliens into the script? Business interests and their right wing political handmaidens who think the once-proud and productive American worker has had it too good. <br />
<br />
Depending on which traditionally typical union industries you examine, the wage differential between union and non-union pay is staggering. Overall, union jobs (including benefits) pay an astronomical 28% more than non-union jobs. There's the difference between the good life and the slave life.<br />
<br />
While neither outright condemning nor fully supporting illegal aliens seeking better opportunities in the United States, it is clear that de-unionization has led to a labor free-for-all that has thrown more and more unskilled and semi-skilled workers into the same boiling cauldron. This has a natural spillover effect on even better paid white-collar, and stereotypical pink and light-blue collar wage-earners. The ever popular war of all against all is on. (To boot, many illegal workers are paid in cash, so they and their employers avoid paying taxes and Social Security and disability insurances.)<br />
<br />
Further, these recently-arrived low-wage workers have children and grandchildren, so a new culture of low expectations in terms of pay and benefits settles in pretty quickly. Not to mention a certain docility when it comes to employer demands and a general sense that one's destiny is consistently in the hands of others.<br />
<br />
Poured into the cauldron come the effects of "Free Trade" and "Globalization."<br />
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How much further can our real wages fall?<br />
<br />
A lot. One little-heralded Congressional Budget Office report has said that real wages might fall as much as another 10% in the next 10 years. The forecast for unskilled and semi-skilled Americans-by-birth is even grimmer. The CBO predicts their wages will fall by 22% in real terms. There is a particularly ominous message in that for many African-Americans.<br />
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To circle back around to Prohibition... at least it ended through the efforts of F.D.R.'s administration and a general sense among the electorate that it was an almost entirely idiotic policy. Although its after-effects live on in the general lawlessness that we experience as Americans. (For instance, in the early 1900s, the United States had the <i>lowest</i> murder rate in the developed world. That rate become the highest by the mid-1920s and we take that dubious honor to this day.)<br />
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The decline of organized labor and the attendant rise in the number of low-wage workers shows no sign of abating.<br />
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Border fences and random stops are not the answer to the illegal immigrant problem; persuading, if not compelling, low wage workers - regardless of their origins - to join unions in order to feel empowered, to become part of the historic American Dream, is one large step toward solving the puzzle.<br />
<span style="color: white;">.</span>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6237650850639813385.post-81179856334681482192010-07-26T19:24:00.000-04:002010-07-26T19:24:19.861-04:00Credit Cards: How The Poor Subsidize The RichYou know what happens when you swipe this or that card. You rack up miles or points, or receive a special discount, or any of the seemingly innocuous rewards that credit card companies pass out like lollipops at a kid's birthday party.<br />
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Guess who's actually paying for the party? Lower income America.<br />
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It's another manifestation of the way poor people subsidize the excesses of the rich according to a report by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. <br />
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Here's how it works: A credit card user goes to a store and buys what should be a $10 item. Tacked onto the price, however, are the fees and percentages that the credit card company charges. The item ends up costing $10.38. Fair enough for the credit card user who gains a number of advantages by charging: deferred payment, a computerized or hard-copy record, sometimes loss or damage insurance, and those little rewards spoken of above.<br />
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If you pay cash, you pay $10.38 just like the card user even though you don't receive the benefits of using a credit card.<br />
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The cash purchase's extra 38 cents goes mostly to keep down the cost of merchandise to credit card users at the point of sale because merchants generally do not (and mostly cannot) set differential prices for card users. (Some gas stations feature differential prices in order to build traffic.)<br />
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Simply put, this means that the price of the $10 item for cash users ought to be $10, and for credit card users it ought to be $10.76. <br />
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In general, disproportionately, the poor use cash and the better off use credit cards. The Boston Fed says:<br />
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<i>Because credit card spending and rewards are positively correlated with household income, the payment instrument transfer also induces a regressive transfer from low-income to high-income households in general.</i><br />
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<i>Credit card spending and rewards are positively correlated with household income, the payment instrument transfer also induces a regressive transfer from low-income to high-income households in general. </i><br />
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<i>On average, and after accounting for rewards paid to households by banks [credit card issuers], the lowest-income household ($20,000 or less annually) pays $23 and the highest-income household ($150,000 or more annually) receives $756 every year.</i><br />
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This spreading of costs is imposed not by government mandate, but by credit card companies themselves. (So much for the right wing and business being against over-regulation.) The Boston Fed explains:<br />
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<i>Merchants may want to recoup the merchant fee only from consumers who pay by credit card. In practice, however, credit card companies impose a "no surcharge rule" (NSR) that prohibits U.S. merchants from doing so, and most merchants are reluctant to give cash discounts.</i><br />
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Shamefully, the heaviest users of credit cards - that is, the very rich and rich - receive progressively the most in subsidies from the cash users, i.e., the lower middle class and underclass. As the Fed report puts it:<br />
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<i>This regressive transfer is amplifi ed by the disproportionate distribution of rewards, which are proportional to credit card sales [of] high-income credit card users.</i><br />
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In other words, the higher you go, the higher you go yet again. On the backs of the poor.<br />
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When we consider that virtually every kind of store and service takes credit cards, this "tax" on the cash-paying poor is likewise virtually universal. And what does a person who makes $20,000 per year mostly buy in shops?<br />
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After housing expenditures are taken out, the poor spend about 90% of their income on food and other household items, clothing, transportation, and medicine. So, the poor pay about 4% more for everything they really really need in order to subsidize the vacations and other luxe items of the rich. (And this on top of the most regressive form of tax, the sales tax, which hurts the poor even further.)<br />
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In the wishy-washy financial reform just passed in Washington, debit cards attached to checking accounts will fall under increased regulation regarding fees and overdrafts. Credit card company practices such as the one described above will remain untouched.<br />
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<b>Pop Quiz:</b> Guess which Senators stripped enhanced credit card regulation out of the bill? "Moderate" Republican Senators Snow and Collins of Maine and Brown of Massachusetts. That was the cost of their crossing the aisle and joining the Dems on reform. <br />
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<span style="color: #cc0000;">If you would like to see a copy of the full Boston Fed report, write to Liberalstateofmind@gmail.com</span><br />
<span style="color: white;">..</span>RDLhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07636714018417878696noreply@blogger.com0