Thursday, September 17, 2009

The Democrats are better but not by much.

Politics--
back on the deck, while we wait for dinner to cook, sip more wine, a cold beer, or iced tea if you don't drink, and continue the conversation. Blackie wants to join in.

So there have to be good guys in all this, right? When you find fault with something, you want to offer a reasonable alternative. What would that be today? I am as disgusted with Democrats as I have been with Republicans. Well actually not as disgusted as nobody can go as low as the Republicans have gone but still that doesn't leave Democrats winning prizes. Our options are fascism (Republicans) or socialism (Democrats)? Isn't there an option C?

What happened to a reasonable approach to the budget, to health care, to wars, to torture, to pretty much anything out there? Is there no party who is not bought and paid for by corporate interests? What makes Democrats into such wimps that they can't make decisions if Republicans (at least one or two) don't agree? Is this the party of-- I want you to like me-- or the one of Franklin Roosevelt? Democrats too often have become the party of yes we can without thinking how they can or what happens after we can.

And they have their own no we can't where it comes to letting insurance companies compete wherever they wish. It makes no sense to me why competition has been blocked by regulation. I don't think it would help a lot as they tried trial states (California and Texas) where they had tort reform and it didn't bring down insurance rates. So Republicans say not enough limits on the lawsuits.
[A brief aside: The problem with tort reform is making doctors or hospitals who commit egregious errors pay for them without holding doctors or hospitals accountable for all mistakes. This isn't easy. A lot of medical science is trial and error and everyone's body is different. An all-is-well physical where the patient drops dead of a heart attack the day after didn't mean the doctor or testing goofed. It means medical science is not one where all results can be guaranteed. But to remove the wrong organ, to leave equipment in a patient after surgery, to use unclean practices, to ignore well known symptoms, there are things that should be punished financially. If doctors though, who do these things, can buy insurance that protects them, than the patient pays and the doctor is never penalized anyway; so tort reform is complex.

Actually the very issue of insurance is a question of socialism but in a corporate setting. Insurance doesn't help our medical care get better. It doesn't find new and better ways of treating disease. What insurance does is take money from us to pay for our medical care if we should need it. For this they have costs. If they were government, they would have 5.5% overhead; if they were non-profit, they would have just under 10% overhead; but if they are for profit, they consider it necessary to have 31% overhead which means 20% is for profit or higher salaries than government or non-profit would pay.]
One of my first disappointments with Obama was who he appointed to the Treasury positions. It didn't look good and still does not. Gaming the system? We can ask if it's true but the fact is that big players like Goldman Sachs didn't get hurt by the downturn like ordinary people. The question might be why.

Then he let Congress (Democrats in control) run the stimulus package spending. It was not an encouraging sign for what would come with health care. A typical democrat, he believes in working together to solve problems. (Democrats aren't so prone to want divine leaders as Republicans.) That put the so-called recovery spending into the hands of those who have never shown much control over spending. Well they aren't rewarded when they do because somebody else (who might as well be Republican) jumps in and gets the pork.

In a lot of cases with the stimulus/recovery money, it counted on each state being responsible for what would create shovel ready jobs. The party, who wants to control everything-- according to the right-- passed the buck to the states. The worst part was they didn't have the buck to pass and who knows how a lot of this will be funded. Promissory notes? You can only borrow for so long and Bush pretty much got most of it for a sinkhole war and tax cuts (thanks to the Republicans who could care less about bipartisanship unless they must).

When the right attacks the left by saying privatization is good and publicly run is bad, does the left come back with so you want to hire mercenaries to be your local police force? That's worked so well in Iraq and Afghanistan, hasn't it (if you have followed the investigations over there)? Every time I hear them say this will be socialism, I want to scream. First they don't understand what socialism is (means of production is in the hands of the government) and secondly we have government doing a lot of important jobs already and for good reason. Privatization isn't always good.

Did you read the articles about how fire departments used to be privately run and their failures and corruption led to the excellent system we have today which we all count upon-- public.

Yes, police and fire departments are different than health care. The first two we might need. The last one we know we will need but it's supposed to be better run privately. Tell that to those who can't afford their co-pays for a catastrophic illness, got fired, had their insurance company drop them over some pre-existing condition (which often didn't even relate to the current illness), overran the limits, or couldn't afford the premium from the get-go. These problems are real and the solutions aren't going to happen by magic.

Okay-- here's the hard truth. There is no tooth fairy. There is no angel waiting for the right words and then providing a magical solution. We are a people, left and right, who expect magical solutions. Too fat-- get a pill or have surgery. It's no wonder we think that we can spend all that money and not worry about from where it will come. Cut taxes during a war, don't worry there's plenty more from where that came. Propose new programs with no way to pay for them, it'll work out.

Too often, the tough issues are not being faced by either party. Try reading David Brooks for a reminder of how difficult this is, how partisanship (on both sides) is blocking any real change.


Although I very much liked Obama's speech on health care to Congress, I am still looking at him skeptically. I have never heard a satisfactory explanation for the deal with the pharmaceuticals.

There were some easy ways to get the price of prescription drugs down without a sell out. Let Medicare bargain for lower prices like the VA. Let Americans buy them (without using their insurance) through the Internet from other countries. We could get ours for the same price of our co-pay or sometimes less.

I learned that the block on our purchasing our drugs from say Canada was due to a 'trigger' that Congress put into the bill when they voted on it. The trigger would be pulled under certain circumstances they all know will never happen. Triggers, such as Obama and the Democrats seem ready to accept on the Public Option, are only ways to make it look like you did something but you know you didn't.

Have Democrats forgotten how to fight for what they want? Did they ever know? they not only got the presidency but a 60 vote majority in the Senate and even more in the House. That wasn't enough? What! They want god's light to shine down from heaven as proof it's okay? They seem unable to make hard choices if they can't get Republicans to go along. Are they the party of no responsibility?

Ted Kennedy may have done good things (the No Child left Behind bill has me suspicious about that), but this idea of compromise always being the right idea to me is just plain wrong.

Isn't it possible that sometimes when you get half a bill, it'd have been better to have gotten nothing? How many times has a good idea been sabotaged by half an idea that sounds good, makes people think they did something, but in reality nothing good came from it?


Too often, with Democrats, whenever they have had power (which it evidently takes more than the presidency and a majority to get), there has been a rush to do something, like the poverty programs which we can easily see the failure but more recently the carbon tax credits which may not do anything except once again make money for some special interest. Wait, do we really have a two party system?

On the highest level, we Democrats talk good. We want to see a world where we all help each other, solve suffering, work for world peace, fix environmental problems, and we too often ignore how we pay for it or even where our results lead. We start programs and then don't evaluate their success. Gore did a lot of talk about sunsetting programs; but how long before they sprang back up if they were some Congressperson's pet project? Farm subsidies is a good example. They get tweaked now and then but soon are back where they were-- hiding the true cost of our food.

Today, I think a good start for Democrats is to learn to fight as effectively as Republicans but not as nastily. Good grief, I hope never as nastily. We need to keep our eye on the ball and one of those balls needs to be the deficit. What about going back to the tax rates before Bush cut them during the war (had to get that in there) but let's be sure they are put back on those who got the original cuts. Whenever you hear taxes being whispered, it's quickly shushed by both parties. Raising taxes is too unpopular. Somehow miraculously everything will work out on the deficit. Yeah right. Heard that before.

I could go on and on with my disappointments with the Democratic party right now (Iraq, rendition, Afghanistan, secret prisons, investigations of crimes committed by the Bush administration, pork spending, weakly presented health care plans, can't do anything without Republican agreement, etc.).

The astrologer Lynn Hayes (linked in the blog list) says that we are in a time of tug of war between Saturn and Uranus which fits with the tug of war we see in the US with those who want to stay with the status quo-- Saturn-- and those who want new ideas tried-- Uranus.

Unlike the right wing nuts, I don't want a revolution. If the Democrats bow before the same corporate masters as the Republicans, then I will want a viable third party that is fiscally conservative and socially liberal. I want reasonable leaders who can quit applying an antiquated religion to things like full gay rights, who will stand up to those who do. Maybe some Democrat and Republican leaders would even like to join that new party.

It's not like there aren't good people in each party-- just not enough. Listen to [Representative Anthony Weiner] discuss health care. I saw him on Bill Maher really laying out the facts. We need more like him in both parties. Where are they?

So many things are simply common sense but not being applied. I mentioned earlier ways that prescription drugs could be brought down. Here's another. How about blocking them from advertising on television? It used to be against the law for them to do that. Isn't it the doctor's job to know what antihistamine I should take? It would also spare me from ever seeing again that stupid bathtub scene, which is advertised frequently during my evening news entertainment program, about fixing sexual dysfunction. Incidentally... shouldn't that be one bathtub if they really want to imply it's fixed?

Oh and I think our problems won't really be fixed until we find a new way of funding campaigns. The McCain-Feingold Act made a stab at dealing with this but more has to be done. I hear the right wingers yelping now about freedom of speech. This isn't about freedom of speech. It's about unions, banks, corporations, buying elections. A bought and paid for Congress is not likely to worry first and foremost about wise choices.

Is all of that asking too much? I think it is right now; but when the next sensible, viable (see above) third party candidates present themselves, I'm signing on. What's Jesse Ventura doing these days?

(This was my last tirade for awhile-- I hope. I am as sick of writing about politics as most everybody else probably is of reading about it. I will still be reading and keep up on what's going on but hope for awhile to get away from writing about it. There is more to life. There has to be. I hope for the best for our country but having young grandchildren, I am very concerned about our future if we don't deal with things better.)

14 comments:

  1. A few notes:
    True Socialism is a system where the land, capital, and means of production are owned in common and administerd by a centralized government. Most countries that have claimed to be socialized states were ruled by an elite class that lived higher on the hog than the common people. I don't think true socialism has ever been tried.

    One of the dangers of the huge decicit is that we are financing it by borrowing from other countries. We have become a debtor nation. During the fifties Eisenhower was able to get the British out of Lebanon by threatening to call in the loans we had granted to them. China is one of our biggest creditors. They are not our friends. They could easily cause the financial collapse of our country by refusing to loan us more money. Our politicians assure us that we are all so economically inter-dependent that China would never do that. As if governments acting irrationally is something that never happens. I predict that China and perhaps other countries will soon dictate the behavior of the American government, using our debt to them as a persuader.

    I believe a taxpayers revolution is in order. While we are still a democracy we should use that domocatic apparatus, the voting booth, to turn outh these corrupt politicians. Each American should know who his congressman and senators are and communicate with them regularly. In this computer age it is easy to email your elected representatives and express your opinion of ther behavior and voting record. Passive, uninformed or willfully misinformed voters are speeding the dissolution of our American democracy.

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  2. Good points, Wally and accurate definition of socialism which so many don't understand.

    It doesn't take being a right or left winger to see that those in power have fed at a trough that is hurting us all.

    I feared worse the fascism that I saw developing the last 8 years. Fascism uses the tools of patriotism (false obviously) and religion (again false) to blind the people to what is happening. We got into the early stages of it and those who want to use it are still there. Socialism has never worried me nearly so much as fascism, not that we want either here.

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  3. Rain . . . I don't know where you found Wally, perhaps this is his first reply to one of your carefully considered posts. Regardless, his comments are right on the money. Dixon

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  4. As long as our politicians have to spend obscene amounts of money to get elected there will never be good government. I think that is where we really need to start. The influence of the lobbyists on legislation is outrageous.

    I think we need a much shorter election cycle and more legitimate debates. Forget those pretty boys on the evening news acting as moderators. Use teachers of political science and debate instructors as moderators. The rules of debate should be strictly adhered to. TV time for the debates should be free. And independent fact checkers should automatically reply as to the truth of the information aired by private ads on the media.

    In a perfect world we would then have a chance to elect men and women who would govern for the good of the people instead of the good of corporate greed. Alas, it will never happen.

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  5. I've thought that there are some good reasons for term limits on our senators and representatives. That might help to keep them from becoming so obligated to special interests. But this would have to apply to all states and I'll admit that I don't know how to then handle congressional leaders. I just feel held hostage to professional politicians.

    Another good thing would be if no one were allowed to add anything to a proposed bill that doesn't directly relate to the original bill. If someone wants to build a bridge to nowhere, for example, let them get such a bill passed on its own merit, not tack it onto something totally unrelated.

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  6. Paul Krugman had a good analysis of Senator Max Baucus's Democrat plan for health care reform. As I have said before, the wrong plan will be worse than nothing for the country and even currently un-insured families. I read the general gist of it in a front page analysis from an Eastern Oregon newspaper. I am not sure how it will keep costs down-- hope?

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  7. I fear that the final health care bill will be a boon to the insurance companies and a burden to the middle class (what's left of it).

    Darlene made a good point about the lobbyists. Lobbying our representatives is a legitimate process whereby groups can exert influence on the legislature. But, I would ask the question, why does money have to enter the picture? Can't our congressmen be influenced without receiving campaign contributions, gifts, vacations, etc? Where is the line drawn between lobbying and bribery?
    Some would argue that lobbying is not the same as bribery because there is no quid pro quo. Actually, taking bribes is more honest than succumbing to the temptations of the lobbyists. Lobbying as it is practiced today is the "three card monte" of politics. It's the obfuscation and fuzzy legalization of purchasing influence for cash or favors. While assuring us that they have not obligated themselves to the bearers of gifts, our elected representatives have sold their souls to the corporation.

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  8. Today when my husband and I went for a walk in the woods, I was thinking what a beautiful song a bird was singing. My husband then commented the woods sure is terribly quiet today. I asked him if he heard the bird, yes but it is terribly quiet. Then this afternoon I recieved an e-mail from our congressman Kurt Schreader telling ma bout the Student Assistance Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2009. He has as promised gave education the highest priority. And without adding to it because in 10 years it will strengthen the work force with educated prepared citizens and they will return 10 billion additional revenues to help pay for the the defecit.

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  9. True Socialism or as close as you could get to it was tried by the Pilgrims at Plymouth. And they discovered that it does not work. The able bodied men started slacking off on their farming and hunting duties because they still got the same amount of food and provisions and heat as the people that were not working at all. After the colony was nearly wiped out, Governor Bradford started his "if you don't work, you don't eat" policy. And that should have been the end to collectivism.

    I have thought that term limits for the Senate and House would be a good thing. There is no need for these people like Byrd or Thurmond or Kennedy or Biden to be in there for 40 plus years.

    If we cannot get term limits maybe a mandatory retirement age. Since term limits has not done much to help California. Our legislature is more messed up than ever before and we have term limits.

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  10. I hope your are correct Parapluie, but I am not as optimistic that it will help that much. I think it is very important to offer a low cost college education and I think that historically that was a good part of the reason that California was such and economic powerhouse. Our State Colleges are very good and pretty cheap. But a good portion of this bill seems like it is just feel good fluff and a power grab by the Federal Government.

    The Student Assistance Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2009 will

    Increase the Pell grant, but not as fast as college tuition is rising.
    Keeping subsidized loan rates, but have the Federal Government take over the program from private banks. So more growth of the federal government which seems to be Obama's primary goal.
    Increasing access to the Perkins Loan program.
    Further simplifying the FAFSA form.
    Investing $1.2 billion in historically Black and minority colleges. So I guess white kids don't deserve to get help going to college as much as minority kids?
    And Stanford and Berkeley have a lot of Asian and Hispanic students. I wonder how much they get?

    Expanding access to kindergarten and early education programs. Are there any kids left in America that do not have access to kindergarten?

    Let us just keep spending ourselves into oblivion. Pretty soon half the people in the country will work for the Federal Government and the other half will be moving to China to look for a job.

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  11. Wally is right about keeping in touch with your legislatoCongressman Kurt Schrader's news letter and blog makes it easy to keep in contact. I e-mailed ingeneer's question about the Student Aid and Fiscal Representative Act of 2009. I have also followed his link to the Library of Congress and read the detailed summary. It corrects some of the bad aspects of the past bill. Grants are not distributed to minorities of the population as a whole. They will go to under-represented people in the particular college or university which will enrich the education of all students. Private and government grants will work together.I think the sour grapes on all legislation comes from being depressed about how government worked in the past.
    the govenment will improve and the internet is a great tool for successful government.

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  12. The internet is a great tool for a successful government. I helps us constients that care enough to know keep track of what our representatives are doing and who they are taking donations from and who they are doling out tax payer money to.

    I know it is a noble cause, but I have a fundamental problem with giving out college aid based on skin color. It goes against Dr. King's dream and I went to school with minority kids that were getting help even though they came from wealthy parents. I was the first person to graduate from college in my family and had to work 2 or 3 jobs at a time to put my self through school. When I tried to get a job at the Minority Engineering Program they told me I was at the wrong place. That is just one instance of discrimination I faced in college due to my color or gender.

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  13. I also disapprove of aid being given to students based on a college wanting to have more kids from big families; or more of a certain religion; or who live in the country or don't; or whose parents went there or didn't; or skin color; or economics. It is to our benefit as a culture to have an educated populace at least all those who are capable of getting higher education.

    I believe that today college is needed for success and so would like to see it made affordable for all students as it was when I went to college. It should be based on grades attained in high school and every kid with a B average or better should know they could go.

    Sounds socialist to some but what is happening right now is the poor and the rich get a chance at college and the middle class is being pushed out. Who decides that a college needs more of this or that ethnicity? It seems very unfair as it stands; and personally I see it as part of the threat to the middle class.

    I benefited a lot from a different philosphy when I was that age. I would like to think I am not so selfish now as to deny it to any kid who works hard in high school. Some know they could never afford it and they give up at young ages.

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  14. And that doesn't mean free tuition. Back in the days I went a kid could afford it based on a part time job that didn't demand that many hours. Today it's more like ingineer describes. The unfortunate part for many kids is if their parents don't see the value in higher education, it's hard for them to graduate without a huge debt.

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