Where are mainstream Republicans these days? What has happened to the party of Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt and Eisenhower? Prior to the Reagan years, Republican women were front and center in volunteering for planned parenthood, supporting the ERA, and working for abortion rights. First Lady Betty Ford was a proud feminist and one of the first women to put women’s health issues–including women with drinking problems and breast cancer–on the map. President Richard Nixon was responsible for many of the agencies that protect the environment. The current party is chock-full of science denying Theocrats and economics-denying Corporate Fascists. It’s making a sham out of the two party system. We may now have a window open wide enough to stop some of this. We should ready ourselves with the facts and act now.
An online conversation has been initiated with the publication of Ron Brownstein’s article in the National Journal on Thursday called ‘State’s Rights’. It is front and center in starting a discussion among Democratic bloggers, journalists, and other liberal/progressive sympathizers. States rights was code for the right to own slaves during the first 100 years of this country’s existence. It is now code for the right to discriminate against the GLBT community, insert the government into an individual woman’s gynecological care, and bust unions. The racial overtones have not gone away since the worst of the hateful verbiage is aimed at stopping any policy goal attempted by President Obama.
Any one who has read me over the last few years knows that I am not a big fan of this President and I’m even less of a fan of his zealous followers. However, it would take a fairly dim bulb to not see the racism implicit in many of the Republican attacks against him. Attacks range from the extremely bizarre personal assertions that he is a secret Muslim, foreign born, and a devout socialist/communist to a complete rewrite of any policy initiative.
Obama is about as conservative of a Democrat as one can find these days which has been one of my issues with him all along. His actions and words have not stopped the endless attacks on absolutely everything he attempts by Republicans and their monied interests. These tactics were first used against former Democratic President Bill Clinton but have reached some kind of hyper-extortionate apex today. It’s to the point that I firmly believe some of these Republican extremists would rather take the country down with them than negotiate something other than an ideologically pure outcome. Brown’s article and examples focus on the current bloc of extremist Republican governors with their take no prisoners policies. While his focus is mostly on the impact on Obama, I believe his larger point should entice us to think bigger.
But one senior Obama administration official, who also had a close view of Clinton’s interaction with Republican governors, contends that ideology is trumping interest for the governors in many of these new disputes. Health care reform, for instance, asks states for no new financial contribution to expand coverage through 2016 and only relatively small participation thereafter; because 60 percent of the uninsured live in the states where a Republican holds the governorship, their residents would receive the most new federal aid if the law survives. “One had the sense in the mid-1990s that conservative governors were doing whatever was in the best interest of their state,” the senior official said. “This time, the Republican governors appear determined to make an ideological point, even if it costs their state a great deal.”
Whatever the governors’ motivations (one man’s posturing, after all, is another man’s principle), their unreserved enlistment into Washington’s wars marks a milestone. It creates a second line of defense for conservatives to contest Obama even after he wins battles in Congress. It tears another hole in the fraying conviction that state capitals are less partisan than Washington. And it creates a precedent that is likely to encourage more guerrilla warfare between Democratic governors and a future Republican president.
American politics increasingly resembles a kind of total war in which each party mobilizes every conceivable asset at its disposal against the other. Most governors were once conscientious objectors in that struggle. No more.
I can remember attending Republican conventions in the early 1980s during the first hint of the unholy alliance between religious fanatics along the line of a Christian Taliban with the John Birch Society version of libertarians. It was a terrifying spectacle. At the time, the more pro-business and hoity-toity conservative elements in the party were willing to use them like pet pit bulls because they were incredibly organized at the grass roots level and they voted. Republicans traditionally had a much more difficult time turning out voters and their GOTV machines were dwarfed by the Democrats who could rely on well organized and managed union membership. This is one of the reasons why there is also the huge attack on the last standing unions now. They’re worth a fortune come election time and no Republican campaign strategist worth anything underestimates them. We can clearly no longer underestimate the religious zealots or those gullible to the rants of Glenn Beck. They’ve become a contagion.
Back in the day, the young me argued that this form of big daddy government intervention put forth by religionists and Birchers was basically enabling powerful business monopolies and drop kicking the constitutional mandate to deny the establishing of a state religion. It was against the very core ideology of historical Republicanism. I got no where. This was especially true as Nixon’s southern strategy began to work its evil influence on bringing in the remaining racist elements of the old Dixiecrats who frankly were all for the government taking care of any one that wasn’t like them. This added the last nail in the traditional coffin of the party of Lincoln. That sin is now manifesting in the xenophobia against Muslims and Hispanics in addition to African Americans topped by the anti-science bias from the religionists and the pro-monopoly market creation from the corporatists.
It appears that many old school Republicans now see the results of opening this Pandora’s box. They are horrified and have been trying to stuff the demons back into the chest. Now, you see those same folks that opened their kennels filled with poodles to the pit bulls are now acting absolutely appalled by the rising influence of absolutely whacked extremists like Glenn Beck. Scarborough, Rove, and Kristol are currently trying to put the Beckheads back into the box. Those of us that don’t vote Republican could afford to ignore this if it were just some intraparty feud. It’s gone beyond that with the rise of tea party hysterics and billionaire libertarian Daddy Warbucks’ propaganda machines. In many states, the Republican party infrastructure has been commandeered by the pit bulls. The poodles–like Arianna Huffington and Markos–have long left their confines. They are morphing traditional Democratic Party concerns. The same divisive issues that used to motivate the base to do the GOTV and show up at the polls has managed to bring this new crop of Republican governors and congressional members to a critical mass. They refuse any middle or even right of middle ground. They won’t negotiate on the usual country club Republican issues. It’s no longer a GOTV ploy for them because they are true believers.
Keep in mind, it’s ideology, not practical concerns, that lie at the heart of these governors’ reactionary moves. The states turning down investments for high-speed rail, for example, were effectively handed a gift — jobs, economic development, improved infrastructure — but Republicans like Rick Scott and Scott Walker turned down the benefits because of a philosophical opposition, deliberately hurting their state in the process. The administration was effectively throwing a life-preserver to a Republican who’s drowning, only to be told, “We don’t like government life-preservers.”
The same is true of health care, which would be a boon to states, but which far-right governors resist for reasons that have nothing to do with public policy.
Bill Clinton faced a watered-down version of these Republican pit bulls over a decade ago. Dealing with them is how he got his reputation for triangulation. He seemed uniquely placed to make some small progress then–that now seems impossible now–because of his past position as a southern governor with a decidedly homespun and folksy manner. President Obama has none of this going for him. He is surrounded by Businesscrats that are unlikely to fill the void. The only thing he’s managed to do is to gain the ear of the Chamber of Commerce types. These folks are hardly going to be sympathetic to social justice or middle class bread-and-butter issues. Additionally, right wing media sources and timid main stream media sources are playing into the hands of the outrageous. We have media enablers instead of investigative journalists.
That is why it is absolutely essential that whatever is left of the Democratic grassroots need to make one extremely loud noise right now. It is unconscionable that a rewrite of history, science, and economic is taking place while many of us are simply standing around with gaping mouths. I’ve spoken many times about the absolute lack of economics that is driving austerity programs. It’s already showing signs of slowing economic growth down at a time when unemployment is unacceptably high. This is only going to multiply as the days and months unfold. Ask yourself if we can really afford another recession?
Near the forum’s conclusion, Massachusetts Institute of Technology climate scientist Kerry Emanuel asked a panel of journalists why the media continues to cover anthropogenic climate change as a controversy or debate, when in fact it is a consensus among such organizations as the American Geophysical Union, American Institute of Physics, American Chemical Society, American Meteorological Association and the National Research Council, along with the national academies of more than two dozen countries.
“You haven’t persuaded the public,” replied Elizabeth Shogren of National Public Radio. Emanuel immediately countered, smiling and pointing at Shogren, “No, you haven’t.” Scattered applause followed in the audience of mostly scientists, with one heckler saying, “That’s right. Kerry said it.”
Such a tone of searching bewilderment typified a handful of sessions that dealt with the struggle to motivate Americans on the topic of climate change. Only 35 percent of Americans see climate change as a serious problem, according to a 2009 poll by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press.
It’s a given that an organized and well-funded campaign has led efforts to confuse the public regarding the consensus around anthropogenic climate change.
These extremists are even rewriting the already right wing Ronald Reagan’s legacy to make it seem more extreme to support the legitimacy of their radical agendas. Here’s an example I found this morning on ThinkProgress on Reagan’s views on unions. Scott Walker’s fantasy world includes his vision of being Reagan’s heir. Yet, here is Reagan himself on the union movement in Poland during one of his radio addresses to the nation.
REAGAN: Ever since martial law was brutally imposed last December, Polish authorities have been assuring the world that they’re interested in a genuine reconciliation with the Polish people. But the Polish regime’s action yesterday reveals the hollowness of its promises. By outlawing Solidarity, a free trade organization to which an overwhelming majority of Polish workers and farmers belong, they have made it clear that they never had any intention of restoring one of the most elemental human rights—the right to belong to a free trade union.
The one thing that I learned early on when dealing with these people from within the Republican party itself in the pre-Reagan and early Reagan days is that they believe their courses are so righteous that they will lie and do anything to support them. If we do not hold their actions and lies to the light of day, our country will be completely overrun by by folks that are anti-science, anti-economics, anti-rational thought, and anti-democracy. We’ll have a theocratic plutocracy in fairly short order.
It is absolutely imperative that we put pressure on the media and Democratic politicians to fact check these people, stand up to them, and expose their lies to the public. It is possible that we’ve caught a tipping point in their overreach process. If this is the case, it means we have to work with the momentum now. Nothing short of our democracy and our children’s future is at stake here. We cannot be complacent and we cannot be left with mouths wide opened. We also cannot rely on leadership from the very top. If you’re in one of those states that is acting up, act now!!! Find and support your version of the Wisconsin 14.
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I’ve worked in both the public and private sector. I’ve also worked in union and non-union shops. Additionally, I was part of the collective bargaining process for community college instructors in a right to work state some time ago so I’m familiar with the process. I’ve been a manager and economist that has done strategic budgeting and planning so I’m used to salary and benefit surveys even though I’ve no experience in HR. I also check my facts before taking any one else’s words or wishful thinking. It’s easy to look for a scapegoat for the budget woes of states. The answer lies more in the nature of governors and legislators getting to balance a budget when funds are pouring in than it does in the joy that some people appear to be getting by scapegoating public sector workers and their unions.
For some reason, there’s this idea floating around that public sector employees are raking in the bucks at every one else’s expense. Also, there’s another canard out there that it’s public employees and their generous pensions that are breaking the back of state budgets. I know that’s not really the case for several reasons. The first one is that I know how the collective bargaining process works for a public employee because I’ve done it and the resultant salaries and benefits packages usually aren’t up to private sector levels. It’s based on bringing a rubric of like institutions in like communities and like jobs to the negotiating table. You basically point to that rubric and say here’s the top, bottom, and middle salaries for people in similar jobs in similar institutions. You point to their numbers and then you point to your institutions numbers and you suggest what it would take to put your institution in line with those averages. You negotiate to averages. You can’t negotiate to the best circumstance or you’ll be taken to labor “court” by management and the judges will force you to concede to a more reasonable position. The only time I’ve seen institutions go for the top salary positions is when they’re making a concerted effort to increase their academic standards and recruiting like the Duke Business School did awhile back. That, however, was a complete outlier.
As a union negotiator, you bring the rubric of institutions that would give your membership the best deal in the first round. The institution brings the rubric of institutions that give them the best deal. That rubric has to reflect similar circumstances to your membership. You can’t compare yourself to Harvard if you’re not an Ivy league school. You can’t compare yourself to Hawaii if you’re in the Midwest. Your rubric has to be a set of best matched institutions.
If everything works according to plan you negotiate a joint rubric that represents a middle ground and that middle ground will determine the end package that will likely stand for several years. If you can’t get that done, you declare an impasse and go to the NLRB or some other government entity that decides which rubric you’re going to use and that settles the situation. This happens with both benefits and salaries. It’s repeated every time negotiation year begins. It’s not an outrageous process at all. In the end, the membership either accepts it or rejects it. In my experience, teachers are generally pretty wimpy when it comes to accepting offers. I loved negotiating at a combination technical and community college because the craft people were used to unions and negotiations and were pretty good negotiators. The lead negotiator was a scrappy heating and air conditioning instructor of Italian and Sicilian heritage. I just loved talking strategy with him. Usually, the academic faculty would roll over easily for any scraps. This is a two way negotiating street. It only works when both parties sit down and are willing to hammer out a deal.
The reason this is not working in Wisconsin right now is that one side is refusing to negotiate at all. Not only that, but one side is changing the rules in the middle of the game. If there is no offset, there is no middle ground. This is the only way to get raises in public institutions. I can tell you that since I left that situation and moved to public institutions in Louisiana where you don’t get raises unless you have a governor that’s willing to fight the legislature for an across the board raise for every one. As a faculty, you live and die by whatever salary you got at the onset or you quit. In my experience, the best and the brightest do just that. They bring their new offers and see if they’ll be matched. If not, they move on. I’ve seen the institution then go to the job market and hire much younger and less experienced professors for much bigger salaries after not being able to offer even half that much to a recently tenured one. No one wants to be the one to offer a raise because every one will then want their salary raised to market level. It’s easier to let the good ones go instead. This is especially true in the econ/finance areas and also engineering and computer science because you can easily go to Wall Street or the private sector and make major amounts of money. If you’re represented by a negotiating unit, you come out with a decent cost of living raise annually and if your particular job has had an increase in marketability, you’re salary will move closer to the market. You never approach a private sector equivalence.
I’ve never seen anything in the public sector remotely approach a salary you can get in the private sector. The benefits tend to be better but the monetary compensation is almost always worse. I’ve given you an example from the salary survey done by the AFT in 2010 in the table at the top. It reflects the national salary survey of 2010 done by the Bureau of Labor Statistics which is the government’s data collector on labor markets. That’s the same people that collect unemployment statistics and inflation statistics. They have no ‘agenda’ but to collect the data. Individual groups just use the data to learn what the going market rate is for public and private sector jobs.
Now, I want to give you examples of things from the state of Louisiana. I’m going to use two resources. First, is a search engine set up by The Times Picayune of all state employee salaries. Use it to search out only one thing. The job title clerk. Clerks in state government have a union. So, just stick clerk in the job title and submit. You’re going to see there’s quite a few “pages” of clerk names, departments, and salaries. Six lucky people on the first page make high salaries for having that clerk title. The next group on the next few pages make between about $25,000 to $35,000 annually. You’ll see that the vast majority of these folks basically make around $15,000 -19,000 annually by the time you get pass about 3- 4 pages out of a total of 14 pages of names. I would like to remind you that the poverty level for a family of four is $22,050 annually. For a family of two it is 14,570 and for one person it is $10,830. These levels are for the entire country.
There’s another graphic that you can check that shows exactly who the top paid employees are and how much they make. I can assure you that none of these folks are covered by the state employees unions and none of them have any peers who have lower or higher salaries or benefits depending on when they entered service alone. These people are mostly political appointees of the governor. In this case, they are political appointees of Bobby Jindal. I’m going to show you the graph that is relevant. (It’s down below this section.) The salary structure is top heavy. You can go back and search who has the top money. You will see that it is top university administrators and coaches. Even these salaries do not stack up to private sector CEOs or coaches. It isn’t the clerks that are making outrageous salaries and it isn’t their bargaining unit that is at fault for any of this. You’ll also see if you got that page that many state workers are attorneys, engineers, teachers, nurses and doctors. These are professional people. You cannot expect to recruit and retain the best professional, well-educated service workers if you do not offer them a competitive salary. The most mobile ones will leave eventually if you don’t offer them raises and benefits commensurate with the private sector. You can go to any of the BLS salary surveys and you will see what the AFT put in that nice graphic above year after year after year. You will not get a compensation in the public sector that is more generous than the private sector at those levels of expertise. If there is a private sector ‘competitor’ for offering the job. Believe it or not, not every one is an English teacher that might likely wind up as a waitress. Here in New Orleans, most of the English teachers at my university would make better money if they’d wait tables or pour cocktails in the French Quarter. The only difference is that English teachers get a pension and insurance and they get to do the job they love.
Okay, now I’m going to go all economist on you. When you are a teacher, a firefighter, or a public health or safety worker, you face what is called a monopsony. That means there is likely to be one source of jobs and so you face the buyer’s version of a monopoly. What this means is the chips will be stack against you coming out with a ‘competitive’ wage. For example, how many forensic scientists do you suppose work outside of the local police departments? You may face a number of municipalities that could hire you in this situation. It is not, however, illegal for municipalities to collude on setting standards for salaries and benefits. Hence, you may face the same situation in city after city.
There seems to be this mindset that public servants should be public slaves from some quarters. Why should the clerk who fills out your driver’s license form be treated differently than the clerk that fills out your bank deposit slip? Why this double standard that public employees can’t be represented by unions? Well, first, I think many people still believe that public employees served by unions some how get a better deal than the others. This generally is not the case for all things. The only items that have held together for state employees that are not as available in the private sector tends to be the pension benefits and probably the insurance. One of the reasons that the insurance tends to be not such a big deal is that many states self insure and they have huge pools of employees so they can be more generous with benefits at a lower cost. I’ve generally lived in states where the biggest employer is the state. That’s a lot of people and insurance gets cheaper as the pool grows larger.
I think one of the other reasons is that people in nonunion jobs feel helpless about their futures and they are angry that they really don’t have the same safety in numbers that you see with union shops. You can’t be bullied by an employer when there is a union in place. This does have a tendency to protect even the worst employee, but when you work for capricious bosses, and we all do, you’ll never be safer than when you have union representation. You also are more aware of when your number will be up during downsizing and you will get a recall if they start rehiring if you’re a member of a union. This type of job security is generally the most important thing to a state employee which is why they work for lower monetary compensation. But again, why begrudge others what you could have if you’d just organize your work place?
I’ve been seeing way to many sites discuss ‘greedy’ teachers who selfishly walk out of the classroom to protest their right to organize. I really don’t get this meme at all. Wouldn’t you fight for your family’s livelihood if it were threatened? Why are teachers supposed to be treated differently than any one else?
A Governor or any other publicly elected official isn’t just held to account on voting day. Democracy is a day-in-and-day out process. Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker was elected to handle the budget. He immediately cut $117 billion in revenues coming from businesses and created a $130 billion deficit. His answer to covering his self created deficit was to change the terms of thousands of previously negotiated commitments to public employees. He backed out of the state’s commitment. He’s also refused to remove the union busting portions of the bill in exchange for salary and benefit concessions. How is this anything but dogmatic and unfair to state employees? Who makes heroes out of people that break commitments? Each of those families made plans based on the sanctity of the promise the state of Wisconsin made to them. They were part of the agreement and they should be part of renegotiating the agreement because that’s the rules of the game there. Changing the rules of a game in the middle of play is cheating.
If Governor Walker was so interested in frugality, then he should’ve started by not passing those $117 million in tax breaks. An election victory is not a blank check in a democracy.
Within days of becoming governor, Mr. Walker — who hung a sign on the doorknob of his office that reads “Wisconsin is open for business” — began stirring things up, and drawing headlines.
He rejected $810 million in federal money that the state was getting to build a train line between Madison and Milwaukee, saying the project would ultimately cost the state too much to operate. He decided to turn the state’s Department of Commerce into a “public-private hybrid,” in which hundreds of workers would need to reapply for their jobs.
He and state lawmakers passed $117 million in tax breaks for businesses and others, a move that many of his critics point to now as a sign that Mr. Walker made the state’s budget gap worse, then claimed an emergency that requires sacrifices from unions. Technically, the tax cuts do not go into effect in this year’s budget (which Mr. Walker says includes a $137 million shortfall), but in the coming two-year budget, during which the gap is estimated at $3.6 billion.
Democrats here say Mr. Walker’s style has led to a sea change in Wisconsin’s political tradition.
“Every other Republican governor has had moderates in their caucus and histories of working with Democrats,” said Graeme Zielinski, a spokesman for the state’s Democratic Party. “But he is a hard-right partisan who does not negotiate, does not compromise. He is totally modeled after a slash-and-burn, scorched-earth approach that has never existed here before.”
Asked about “when you hear of a disagreement between state or local governments and unions that represent government workers,” more Americans say their first reaction is to side with the union (44 percent) than with state or local governments (38 percent). And substantially more Americans see union contracts as ensuring that workers are “treated fairly” than as giving workers an “unfair advantage.”
According to Wisconsin campaign finance filings, Walker’s gubernatorial campaign received $43,000 from the Koch Industries PAC during the 2010 election. That donation was his campaign’s second-highest, behind $43,125 in contributions from housing and realtor groups in Wisconsin. The Koch’s PAC also helped Walker via a familiar and much-used politicial maneuver designed to allow donors to skirt campaign finance limits. The PAC gave $1 million to the Republican Governors Association, which in turn spent $65,000 on independent expenditures to support Walker. The RGA also spent a whopping $3.4 million on TV ads and mailers attacking Walker’s opponent, Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett. Walker ended up beating Barrett by 5 points. The Koch money, no doubt, helped greatly.
When there is big corporate money in elections, there is only one offset these days. That would be the money and free labored offered up by unions. Undoubtedly, the public sector unions are some of the last big unions standing. I can only imagine how much the Kochs and others would like to gut the fund raising and GOTV efforts of unions that are usually made available to candidates that thwart their Bircher plots. After all, there’s very little standing right now to check the power and political donations of megacorporations. This fact alone should make any one support the few unions left standing. However, the bigger question remains. Why do so many people begrudge public workers a voice in the terms of their employment?
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Gail Collins messed with Texas today. I’m rather glad she did because it shows exactly how much Texas seems to exist in a vacuum of its own making. The head denier of reality is its wacko Governor who appears to get elected by saying the right things and doing very little. The state that forces its antiquated views through textbooks onto the rest of the nation has a huge problem in the numbers of children having children. This leads to all kinds of social problems that I probably don’t have to discuss here.
But, let’s just see how bad it gets down there with the denier-in-chief who seems to think abstinence education works and the Texas education system works when Texas’ own statistics show that they don’t work at all. Republicans get elected spewing untruths and he’s a prime case in point. The state’s out of money and like my governor Bobby Jindal, the first place Republican governors look is for cuts to education rather than look for new revenue sources. What is worse, they talk about improving children’s future while doing draconian cuts to children’s schools. How do they get away with it?
“In Austin, I’ve got half-a-dozen or more schools on a list to be closed — one of which I presented a federal blue-ribbon award to for excellence,” said Representative Lloyd Doggett. “And several hundred school personnel on the list for possible terminations.”
So the first choice is what to do. You may not be surprised to hear that Governor Perry has rejected new taxes. He’s also currently refusing $830 million in federal aid to education because the Democratic members of Congress from Texas — ticked off because Perry used $3.2 billion in stimulus dollars for schools to plug other holes in his budget — put in special language requiring that this time Texas actually use the money for the kids.
“If I have to cast very tough votes, criticized by every Republican as too much federal spending, at least it ought to go to the purpose we voted for it,” said Doggett.
Nobody wants to see underperforming, overcrowded schools being deprived of more resources anywhere. But when it happens in Texas, it’s a national crisis. The birth rate there is the highest in the country, and if it continues that way, Texas will be educating about a tenth of the future population. It ranks third in teen pregnancies — always the children most likely to be in need of extra help. And it is No. 1 in repeat teen pregnancies.
Which brings us to choice two. Besides reducing services to children, Texas is doing as little as possible to help women — especially young women — avoid unwanted pregnancy.
For one thing, it’s extremely tough for teenagers to get contraceptives in Texas. “If you are a kid, even in college, if it’s state-funded you have to have parental consent,” said Susan Tortolero, director of the Prevention Research Center at the University of Texas in Houston.
Plus, the Perry government is a huge fan of the deeply ineffective abstinence-only sex education. Texas gobbles up more federal funds than any other state for the purpose of teaching kids that the only way to avoid unwanted pregnancies is to avoid sex entirely. (Who knew that the health care reform bill included $250 million for abstinence-only sex ed? Thank you, Senator Orrin Hatch!) But the state refused to accept federal money for more expansive, “evidence-based” programs.
“Abstinence works,” said Governor Perry during a televised interview with Evan Smith of The Texas Tribune.
“But we have the third highest teen pregnancy rate among all states in the country,” Smith responded.
“It works,” insisted Perry.
“Can you give me a statistic suggesting it works?” asked Smith.
“I’m just going to tell you from my own personal life. Abstinence works,” said Perry, doggedly.
There is a high cost to a state to living in this kind of denial. Teen moms and children of teen moms are generally not a productive group of citizens. You pay to prevent this realistically or you pay for their and your mistake to do so throughout their entire lives. But, this seems to be the way of the new brand of Republican governor. These guys start running for president the minute they hit the mansion. They do so by following a litmus test of Republican items–regardless of the consequences to their states–that will make them sound like purity experts when they hit Iowa and New Hampshire. They will undoubtedly leave their state in ruins, but that won’t be the story by the time they’re on the lecture and talking heads circuit for higher offices.
The Governor of New Jersey is doing the same thing. He can read off a litmus list for the republican inquisition while at the same time ensuring the people of the state he governs languish. Again, he screams about the importance of the future of the children while simultaneously downsizing it.
In a clear shot at congressional Republicans over calls for curbing entitlement programs, he said, “Here’s the truth that nobody’s talking about. You’re going to have to raise the retirement age for Social Security. Woo hoo! I just said it, and I’m still standing here. I did not vaporize into the carpet.
“And I said we have to reform Medicare because it costs too much and it is going bankrupt us,” he continued, later comparing those programs to pensions and benefits for state workers that he’s been looking to reel back.
“Once again, lightning did not come through the windows and strike me dead. And we have to fix Medicaid because it’s not only bankrupting the federal government but it’s bankrupting every state government. There you go.”
Clearly looking to blunt criticism of his famously combative style, the former federal prosecutor said there is a method to the battles he picks, insisting, “I am not fighting for the sake of fighting. I fight for the things that matter.”
The speech was titled “It’s Time to do the Big Things,” and Christie suggested the items that Obama called for as “investments” in his State of the Union address were “not the big things” that need Washington’s focus.
“Ladies and gentlemen, that is the candy of American politics,” Christie declared, adding that it appeared to be a “political strategy” – or game of budgetary chicken – that both Republicans and Democrats are playing.
“My children’s future and your children’s future is more important than some political strategy,” he said. “What I was looking for that night was for my president to challenge me … and it was a disappointment that he didn’t.
It’s difficult not to scream when you hear these folks talk about our children’s futures while cutting education, telling children abstinence fairy tales, turning down money for infrastructure improvements —like the nitwit Republican Governor Rick Scott in Florida–that will likely create better environments for business and jobs, and refusing to look at their tainted tax systems that usually punish the poor and flagrantly ignore the assets and the incomes of the rich. It is clear whose children they have in mind. It is not yours or mine or the majority of the people who live in their states.
These guys seem intent on turning their states into third world countries. Many people seem more intent on letting them do it as long it doesn’t cost them anything immediate. Our fellow citizens appear beguiled by fairy tale promises and bribes of low taxes. They should not be surprised then by a future where they and their adult children live in rented shacks together with few available public services. They better just hope they don’t get robbed, the shack doesn’t catch fire, and there are no grandchildren needing public education. They’re voting to downsize these things into extinction.
There continues to be a total disconnect between the role of high unemployment and a slow growing economy in deficits. It appears now to be an excuse to cut programs and experiment on children. I’ve grown up expecting Republicans to lie. They lie about science. They lie about economics. They lie about people who they’ve assigned ‘enemy’ status. They lie about climate change. They lie about history. They lie about evolution. They lie about their sex lives. They lie about being crooks and starting secret wars. They just lie whenever they feel like it.
What I never thought I’d see is a continued Democratic party led onslaught against programs that have clearly kept people out of poverty and helped them to achieve and stay in the middle class. They either believe these same lies spun by Republicans or they are acting willfully against the good of the nation in ways that perpetrate those lies. Either way, this hurts our country.
Recently, we’ve experienced massive privatization of clearly public goods. This has especially been true in the military since DDay Rumsfeld took over the pentagon. It is becoming equally true for education. Private companies that feed off government contracts are the worst of the worst. They messed up Iraq and Afghanistan. They messed up the Gulf Coast after Katrina, Rita and BP. They’ve messed up our schools, our infrastructure and our recovery down here. The only thing that was done right was the Superdome and that’s only because it’s part of the bread and circuses pogrom and the big bucks of the plutocrats were involved. It was also symbolic. Symbolic was supposed to convince you all that we’re hunky dory down here. We are not. Now they want to extend that model to you. Please, don’t let them. Save your children. Save them now.
President Barack Obama‘s budget plan would cut $100 billion from Pell Grants and other higher education programs over a decade through belt-tightening and use the savings to keep the maximum college financial aid award at $5,550, an administration official said.
Nearly $90 billion of the projected savings would be achieved through two changes, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of Monday’s release of Obama’s 2012 budget. The spending plan applies to the budget year that begins Oct. 1.
The first edict–if passed by congress–basically means spring semester grants must be used for summer school. Separate summer school loans will not be available. The second proposal means that interest will accrue on graduate students taking loans while they are in graduate school. This would especially impact medical school students who frequently require huge loans to go to school then come out saddled with unbelievable amounts of debt that they must begin to pay while doing low paying, high intensity residency jobs. Yes, pile more debt on us all individually. Bankrupt us with individual debt while scaring us that the government’s the one that could (NOT!!) go bankrupt.
We’re continuing to see the Obama administration pit the poor, the working class, and the middle class against each other. They’re already noticeably doing that via an education policy called Race to the Top. Rather than direct per pupil subsidies for needy students, schools must now compete for federal funds based on some pretty arbitrary and questionable standards. Poor districts must fight for scraps on the floor and it’s expensive and potentially damaging to fight for those scraps. They must fight via increases in test scores that have so much statistical variation and resultant margin of error, that you could literally place in a high or low performing school district depending on which side of the error margin you randomly land.
Why aren’t we seeing removal of funds for items that clearly aren’t working for students or any one? I can come up with a few off the top of my head. Say, why don’t we dump abstinence ‘education’ or funds for religion based programs like the ones that pay Michelle Bachman’s husband who claims to be able to ‘ungay’ gays? Instead, we see a Democratic President pass ‘reforms’ that don’t even fall under the category of triangulation. Clintonian triangulation would be a giant leap forward compared to what’s happening now in funding our kids’ education. (And don’t tell me Hillary Clinton would be doing this if she were president. Hillary Clinton worked on education in Arkansas. She didn’t pull this type of sorry ass policy out once.)
Exactly why do schools with many, many children in poverty have to compete for federal funds? Why support school in the fall but not in the summer? Why start tacking on additional interest to students seeking graduate and professional degrees? Why not put the taxes back to the Clinton years, end two unnecessary wars, and start a jobs program to end the devastating unemployment that is causing the reduced revenues and need for more government services?
Why do we live in this world were not only Republicans, but Democrats now deny history, data, and theory coming out of decades of study using the scientific method? Why are they making decisions based on differences within the margin of error and wishful thinking? Didn’t they learn statistics or take math? Why is a Democratic president enacting failed policies that have only worked in the minds of a few Reagan worshiping right wingers? Do you notice that the worst policy appears to come when Geithner is standing next to Obama?
Well-known education researcher, professor and critic Diane Ravitch plans to tell a crowd at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee tonight that their city’s system for offering poor children publicy funded vouchers to attend private schools has been a failure.
“Everyone has sort of given up on Milwaukee and Cleveland,” she said, referring to the only other Midwestern city that has a similar voucher program. “The studies of vouchers here have proven they don’t make a difference. The researchers used to have a huge debate … and now there seems to be a consensus on both sides: no bigger gains in voucher schools than in public schools.”
And about those reforms that the state’s largest teachers’ union just embraced? Performance pay and student-assessment driven teacher evaluation systems, which are also being championed by reformers around the country?
Ravitch, 72, thinks those efforts are pretty futile, too.
There’s no extra money to fund extra pay for teachers, she said. And test scores used as accountability for teachers rather than diagnostic tools to help kids improve only make educators teach to the test.
Ravitch’s Milwaukee stop is part of a nation-wide tour she’s been on for the past year to promote her 2010 book, The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice are Undermining Education. In it, she denounces her previous support for school choice, accountability and the No Child Left Behind law. She spoke to School Zone during an afternoon interview at Hotel Metro, before heading over to UWM Thursday.
In a highly publicized flip-flop, Ravitch’s now advocates for a national curriculum and a holistic education program that includes more arts and less standardized testing. She also now supports children attending their neighborhood schools.
“Public services shouldn’t have to compete for customers,” she said. “You should be able to have available for you high-quality schools. That’s the obligation of government.”
Ravitch spoke to a group of New Orleans educators recently. Her speech is being broadcast here on our ETV. I wish I could send it to you. You may know that they’ve basically used New Orleans as an incubator for privatization schemes. She supported the charter school movement until she did research on it. This is similar to what economists who were the earlier buyers of Reaganomics–like Bruce Bartlett–have done. They supported it until the data proved it wrong.
So, why are we running our school systems with the same policies that failed in Iraq and Afghanistan? Why are funding Halliburton and KBR and their university and public school counterparts while defunding university students and public schools?
I understand why Republicans are still clinging to lies because that appears to be what the new brand of Republicans do. They lie about climate change. They lie about evolution. They lie about deficits both ways, depending on who is president. What I want to know is why is a Democratic administration buying and selling these kinds of lies using the futures of our children? Some where there must be a way to do a naked short sell on this so that a group of hedge fund masters will make a bundle when the bubble bursts on these privatization schemes. In the interim, a bunch of fee sucking no bid contractors are eating up the proceeds from offering no succeed services.
Why is the Obama Administration leading a war on students and education?
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