wednes: (Default)
wednes ([personal profile] wednes) wrote2002-08-21 10:28 am

Local MoFo Announces Plans to Chill:

I know this guy who just finished law school and is waiting to hear about his results on the Bar exam. He sent me this (from the New York Times), and I thought I'd share it, maybe start a bit of a dialogue:

August 20, 2002
> By PAUL KRUGMAN

> Don't tell, maybe they won't ask. That was the message of a
> July memo from an official at the Department of Veterans
> Affairs, posted by Joshua Marshall at
> talkingpointsmemo.com. Citing "conservative OMB budget
> guidance" for spending on veterans' health care, the memo
> instructed subordinates to "ensure that no marketing
> activities to enroll new veterans occur within your
> networks." Veterans are entitled to medical care; but the
> administration hopes that some of them don't know that, and
> that it can save money by leaving them ignorant.
>
> It's not the sort of thing you'd expect from an
> administration that wraps itself so tightly in the flag -
> not, that is, unless you've been paying attention. For
> stories like this are popping up more and more often.
>
> Take George W. Bush's decision last week to demonstrate his
> resolve by blocking $5.1 billion in homeland security
> spending. This turned out to be a major gaffe, because the
> rejected bill allocated money both to improve veterans'
> health care and to provide firefighters with new equipment,
> including communication systems that could have saved lives
> on Sept. 11. Recalling those scenes at ground zero that did
> so much to raise Mr. Bush's poll numbers, the president of
> the International Association of Firefighters warned,
> "Don't lionize our fallen brothers in one breath, then stab
> us in the back."
>
> Or what about the trapped coal miners? After their rescue,
> Mr. Bush made a point of congratulating them in person -
> and Michael Novak, writing in National Review Online,
> declared Somerset, Pa., the "conservative capital of the
> world."
>
> But Mr. Novak didn't mention the crucial assistance
> provided by the federal government's Mine Safety and Health
> Administration. That would have raised some awkward
> questions: although the Bush administration's energy plans
> call for major increases in coal mining, its spending plans
> cut funds for mine safety. More conservative budget
> guidance.
>
> The point is that there is an inexorably growing gap
> between the image and the reality of the Bush
> administration's policies.
>
> Mr. Bush is a master of photo-op populism; his handlers
> seek out opportunities to show him mingling with
> blue-collar workers. But the reality is that this
> administration loves 'em while the TV crews are around,
> then leaves 'em when it comes to actual policy. And that
> reality is becoming ever harder to conceal.
>
> The federal budget is now deep in deficit, and everyone
> except the administration thinks it will remain there - not
> because of runaway spending, but because most of last
> year's tax cut has yet to take effect. And as my colleague
> Frank Rich points out, to offset the revenue losses from
> his tax cut, Mr. Bush would have to veto a $5 billion
> spending proposal every working day for the next year. Mr.
> Bush can no longer pretend, as he did during the 2000
> campaign, that there is enough money for everything. Now,
> to justify that tax cut, he must hack steadily away at
> programs that matter to ordinary people.
>
> Still, don't tax cuts also matter to ordinary people? It
> depends. Last year's rebate went to a lot of families. But
> the items still in the pipeline are income tax cuts for
> upper brackets - especially the top bracket - and
> elimination of the estate tax. For a married couple, only
> income in excess of $297,000 falls in the top bracket, and
> only an estate larger than $2 million pays any inheritance
> tax. Firefighters and coal miners don't make that kind of
> money.
>
> In other words, behind the photo-ops, the administration is
> busy squeezing programs that benefit firefighters, police
> officers, coal miners, veterans and other "humble people of
> America" (Mr. Novak's phrase), in order to make room for
> tax cuts that mainly help a handful of not at all humble
> people. That's not demagoguery, it's the plain truth. And
> it's a truth that will become ever harder to disguise.
>
> What are the political implications? When Al Gore wrote an
> Op-Ed article condemning the elitist policies of the Bush
> administration, pundits - and many Democratic politicians,
> including his former running mate - jumped on him with both
> feet. Populism, everyone insisted, doesn't work in American
> politics.
>
> Yet conservatives enthusiastically rely on populism - fake
> populism, based on staged shmoozing with ordinary Americans
> and attacks on the imagined cultural elitism of the liberal
> media. Why shouldn't liberals, who actually have the facts
> on their side, try engaging in the real thing?
>

It should go without saying that I am pretty damn liberal. And I am damn suspicious of this whole W thing, have been ever since that cheap-ass "election". Plus, since our last two presidents were admitted drug users, couldn't we maybe halt this whole "drug war"? Please...

Post a comment in response:

If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

If you are unable to use this captcha for any reason, please contact us by email at support@dreamwidth.org