Friday, June 04, 2004

No lipstick for this pig

I went to a couple of Democratic MeetUps this week. There was some general grumbling about what appears to be a lack of initiative on the part of the Kerry campaign to actively define the candidate. Kerry campaign coordinators entreated us to "be patient." I understand the urge to encourage Kerry to start shouting a la Al Gore. However, it's hard to imagine Kerry being able to shout loud enough to be heard amidst the din of Bush screw ups. Plus, I think adding extensive fuel to the fire would be perceived as piling on.

That doesn't mean the Kerry shouldn't say what he thinks. Don't worry, he is. The simple message he puts forward in this interview with Salon is that George Bush has lost credibility. In order to regain credibility for the nation, we need a new president. Rather than call for the resignation of the entire administration, or for immediate impeachment, as Ralph Nader does, Kerry says the fastest way to deal with it is to run against him.

The likelyhood that events will overtake Bush may support Kerry's strategy. The release of the 9.11 report in August, continued exposure of contracting violations committed by Cheney and Rumsfeld as they outsourced the war in Iraq will play badly in Peoria. Meanwhile, people like Anthony Zinni are pounding Bush's clumsy approach to the war. It will be difficult for the President to win points on his record in Iraq, even if the newly appointed interim government miraculously thrives or even treads water. And then there is Chalabi, chief sneak and embezzler, who fed the Neocons a steady diet of whatever-you-want-to-hear in order to precipitate the US invasion of Iraq for the benefit of...Iran? Whoa. Let's not forget the investigation into GOP hacking of congressional Democrat's email and the investigation by Cheney Energy Task Force into how the nation's energy policy was somehow written by and for the Energy Industry. Finally, Bush has hired a lawyer to advise him as the investigation into who in his administration committed treason by leaking the name of undercover CIA operative, Valerie Plame, moves closer and closer to the truth. Then there's the deficits, the assault on the environment, education, worker safety...

Even the amazing Republican spin machine can't put lipstick on this pig. I think Kerry is playing it right.

Meanwhile,

In the "Too Close to Home" department check out this spot-on cartoon:

Chalabi sleeps with Iran.

Wednesday, June 02, 2004

If I vote for you, will you make me poor?

This lovely little piece of anonymously authored misinformation has been circulating around the Web since the 2000 election. It found its way to my inbox for the second time yesterday. It is a classic work of rightwing propaganda, blending questionable facts with specious reasoning. There is a reasonably thorough analysis of this email at Snopes. The article puts forth the idea, encapsulated in a fake quote from an imaginary author that states:

A democracy is always temporary in nature; it simply cannot exist as a permanent form of government. A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates who promise the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that every democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal policy, which is always followed by a dictatorship.


The article then lists a series of "facts" that are meant to scare the beejeezus out of the casual reader. Of course the whole point is to "prove" that America is going to hell in a hand basket because most of us are on the dole, supported by those who vote for Bush. From the email:


In aggregate, the map of the territory Bush won was mostly the land owned by the tax-paying citizens of this great country. Gore's territory mostly encompassed those citizens living in government-owned tenements and living off government welfare...


The facts of this piece don't stand close scrutiny. It would be easy and kind of fun to tear it apart. Alas, it would be boring. It is far more interesting to disassemble the argument itself. How often have you heard a talking head or one of your acquaintances spit out the typical Republican harangue against a culture of entitlement? Often enough, I'd wager. It is particularly timely to examine this thread in light of Bush's recently released 2005-06 budget, the one Paul Krugman calls Dooh Nibor Economics (Robin Hood in reverse). When the numbers are examined in any kind of detail, it is immediately clear that the President means to continue to aggressively pursue reducing taxes, cutting social spending, and using government money and power to better the bottom line for big business and rich people. That's why it's called Robin Hood in Reverse: You take from the poor and give to the rich.


But doesn't this cause somewhat of an ideological train wreck for Republicans? Like the theme of the piece of trash above, it is a part of the Republican story that Democrats vote to give handouts to undeserving freeloaders sucking their sustenance off the government tit while doing absolutely nothing to pull themselves up by their bootstraps, all of which will ultimately lead to our enslavement. Yet the Bush and the Republican-controlled House and Senate have made themselves pigs at the public trough in a way that is truly unprecedented. It is true that Democrats tend to focus on socially progressive legislation and that this legislation can be viewed as "entitlements" for individuals. But the expense of these programs is nothing, nothing when compared to the expense to the American people of the richest corporate handouts in the history of the country. Three Consecutive tax-cuts for the wealthiest Americans. The Medicare bill. Healthy Forests. Clear Skies. The nation's Energy Policy. Each is a carefully wrapped gift, hand delivered to corporate America by President Bush. I truly believe that enlightened capitalism harnessed through the American economy is the most powerful force for positive change in the world. What does enlightened mean? It means we don't rig the system to favor the big guys; it means everybody has a shot; it means we take care of the earth and people in the system.The people, the workers and executives are the soul of the system. We can't crush the soul of the system. In this election, it's the people, stupid.


A recent report from the Brookings Institution addresses The Effects of Recent Fiscal Policies on Today's Children and Future Generations. It unequivocally states:


Recent and proposed fiscal policies—the tax cuts, proposals to make them permanent, and the Medicare prescription drug bill—will hurt economic prospects for most of today's children and all future generations. The programs will leave economic growth largely unchanged, but will redistribute resources from future to current generations and, within each generation, from low- and middle-income families toward an affluent minority. These effects exacerbate the impact of underlying federal budget trends and processes that will place significant, imminent pressure on funding for children's programs. An expanded program of investments in children is both feasible and desirable.


Oh yes, the treasury is being pillaged. But it isn't by people living in tenements in big cities. It isn't by the working poor in fly-over land, who by the way, supported Bush in 2000. The treasury is being pillaged by President Bush and the wealthy Republican supporters who paid for the privilege. As a result, negative social consequences will emerge. If Bush is re-elected and his policies become permanent, they will mark the character of the near American future. Families and small businesses can expect an increase in bankruptcies. Those on the edge of the poverty line will move closer to poverty through lower median incomes. Many workers will feel the bite as the workplace becomes hostile. Of particular concern is of course the effect on children as foreclosures increase and health insurance gets harder to come by. The distribution of these consequences will be weirdly ironic. The Bush policy agenda is aimed squarely at those good working people in the red states who support Bush.


The Red States (aka. Bush country, or flyover land) are populated by lower income, agrarian, social conservatives-- the exact people for whom Bush policies are an unmitigated disaster. Yet these are the people who steadfastly support the president, even when it is, by most objective standards, against their self-interest to do so. This point is eloquently argued in April's issue of Harper's magazine by Thomas Frank, in Lie Down for America, How the Republican Party Sows Ruin on the Great Plains:


Let us pause for a moment and gaze across this landscape of dysfunction. A state is spectacularly ill served by the Reagan-Bush stampede of deregulation, privatization, and laissez-faire. It sees its countryside depopulated, its towns disintegrate, its cities stagnate - and its wealthy enclaves sparkle, behind their remote-controlled security gates. The state erupts in revolt, making headlines around the world with its bold defiance of convention. But what do its revolutionaries demand? More of the very measures that have brought ruination on them and their neighbors in the first place.


What are we to say to people who vote themselves into poverty? Who rebel against a "culture of entitlement" by entitling those who earn one hundred, two hundred, one thousand times more than they do to take more of what little they have? I think for me, it begins by identifying the common ground. Something like, "Hi, my name is Chris Dykstra. I'm a Conservative American. That's why I'm voting for John Kerry."

Tuesday, June 01, 2004

The real Memorial Day

Yesterday was Memorial Day, a day to remember the men and women who died in our nation's military service.

Casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan are now to the point where each of us is really only separated by one or two people before we can identify someone who has died there. I just learned today that the son of Lizbet's boyfriend has died in Afghanistan. She writes movingly in her blog of a father and son who left nothing unsaid. So, Joe, today I remember you. Today I remember all of you doing the nation's hard business in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Do everything you can to stay alive; do what you need to do. Come home safe.

That sentiment doesn't mean I am letting Joe's civilian taskmasters off the hook. Support for the troops doesn't necessarily mean support for the mission or support for how the mission is led. Not when mistakes are measured in grief.

I supported the US intervention in Afghanistan. We had international support. We had evidence of state sponsored terrorism. But this administration toppled the Taliban, then all but abandoned our efforts there which very possibly let Al Qaeda regroup. Bush robbed Peter to pay Paul by siphoning off $700 million in post-9/11 emergency funds to prepare for war on Iraq. Bush, Cheney, Powell, Rice, Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz weakened our international standing, and ultimately sacrificed their integrity to a haze of questionable evidence and outright lies... all to invade Iraq.

I opposed the Iraq war before it was a war and I oppose it now. As I said in an earlier essay, it is not that I am anti-war, I am anti-folly. The troops serve the nation and for that I am grateful. I remember and honor them. But for me, the real Memorial Day was not yesterday. The real Memorial Day will be on November 7, 2004. That is when I will remember Joe as I cast my vote for John Kerry.

Sunday, May 30, 2004

Flying in the face of secrecy

Bill Moyers opines about the role of journalism in democracy in An Eye On Power. He also gives us a ground-level view of the state of American journalism. Between the Bush administration's attempt to keep secret after secret after secret after secret after secret after secret after secret after secret after secret after secret after ...well you get the idea. Add to that the corporate roll up of small newspapers, radio stations, magazines and television and we suddenly find ourselves in a place where the independence of the media is completely suspect.

If we are not vigilant, if we do not fight and win the small battles for access to information, we can assure ourselves of complete ignorance of the workings of our government.

So, from the department of not quite so fast, bub, there's this:

Kudos to Time Magazine for digging up an email that shows that, guess what, Cheney knew and approved of Halliburton Iraq reconstruction contracts. Now be honest, are you really surprised when you read Cheney denying any knowledge or influence in the contracting process...


Vice President Dick Cheney was a guest on NBC's Meet the Press last September when host Tim Russert brought up Halliburton. Citing the company's role in rebuilding Iraq as well as Cheney's prior service as Halliburton's CEO, Russert asked, "Were you involved in any way in the awarding of those contracts?" Cheney's reply: "Of course not, Tim ... And as Vice President, I have absolutely no influence of, involvement of, knowledge of in any way, shape or form of contracts led by the [Army] Corps of Engineers or anybody else in the Federal Government.

...only to discover an email that says exactly the opposite later:

The e-mail says Feith approved arrangements for the contract "contingent on informing WH [White House] tomorrow. We anticipate no issues since action has been coordinated w VP's [Vice President's] office." Three days later, the Army Corps of Engineers gave Halliburton the contract, without seeking other bids.

I think in most circles Cheney's statements would be called a lie. But we'll just add it to the list of secrets that will slowly leak out from this administration. In the end, this is a big reason why Bush will lose in November. Both he and Cheney are the wrong fit for America. We, the people that is, have a right to know what our leaders are doing and we like to exercise that right via the press. Get it Dick and George? Open government, transparant negotiations, freedom of information...Stay with me here. But they won't. They don't believe you have the right to know or participate in your own government. That's one reason you won't vote for them, will you?