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					<title>Inland Valley Democratic Club : Forum / posts</title>
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						<title>Point of View re: There is no Worthwhile Republican Alternative in November</title>
<link>http://www.ivdemocrats.org/e107_plugins/forum/forum_viewtopic.php?41</link>
<description><![CDATA[I have written a new <em class='bbcode italic'>Point of View</em> for publication in the <strong class='bbcode bold'>Inland Valley Daily Bulletin</strong>. At least I hope it is printed. I will submit it as soon as I sleep on it to think of changes and edits. Here it is in full as it stands now:<br /><br /><div class='indent'><span style='color:#0000ff'>Point of View<br />The Inland Valley Daily Bulletin<br />July 1, 2010<br /><br />Teabag summer is turning out to be a wild and reckless ride, thanks to the GOP’s decision to hide its old unchanged ways behind a loud wall of Teabag agitation in these pages and elsewhere.  That unchanged party wants to win back Congress in November by giving us even more of what put us in the middle of a Great Recession.  Need proof?  Look at what Republicans are actually proposing right now, while we teeter on the verge of a second wave of recession.<br /><br />Now that it is in opposition, the Republicans have gone back, as they always do, to cross dress as deficit hawks.  Which is an ironic act for that party to play, seeing that the GOP gave us deficit spending on steroids nearly every year it held power over the budget in Washington, from 1981 to 1993 and from 2001 to 2009.  But now that it is imperative to convince us of its deficit-fighting sincerity after all that recent history, how do Republicans in Congress propose to fight deficit spending?   Not by fighting corporate welfare, but by fighting against the extension of unemployment benefits to those hundred of thousands of Americans who have become the long-term unemployed in our time of deep recession.  Some prominent Republicans have even slandered the unemployed as lazy and unworthy of these benefits, which the unemployed themselves paid into all their working lives.  Blame the unemployed/ let British Petroleum off the hook.  How is this a new Republican tune?  Where is the change?<br /><br />Besides which, going on a binge of social program cuts, spending cuts to reduce the deficit, and tax cuts for the wealthy, which is what the TEABAG Republicans promise, will only make the recession worse, and may bring on another Depression.  Remember, in spite of what so many believe to be true, FDR came very close to producing balanced annual budgets from 1933 till WWII broke out in 1939.  What good did that do him, do us?  Full employment and the end of the Depression only resulted when he ran the deficit as a percentage of national GDP from zero in 1937 to 30 percent in 1945.  If we swallow the GOP Kool-Aid about deficit cutting at this time, as Obama nowadays seems to be doing, we’ll be repeating the mistake every government of the early to mid 1930s did, which turned a major world recession into a decade long world Depression. <br /><br />And what about the wars the GOP started in Iraq, and started and abandoned in Afghanistan?  House Minority Leader Boehner has urged that the age of Social Security retirement be raised to 70 years immediately, and that benefits be cut, with the savings used to pay for the Iraq and Afghan wars.  Not a word about ending them ASAP.  <br /><br />And haven’t we seen this pattern before?  Once again, the GOP has its gun-sight on our Social Security.  Not a peep from the GOP about the obvious means of keeping Social Security solvent, which is to lift the cap on income on which individuals pay FICA taxes from the present $106,800 annually.  Why should all those huge corporate and Bankster bonuses, ranging from the millions to the hundred of millions of dollars per year, and handed out even in hard times, be each limited to only $6,621.00 a year in individual contributions to the Social Security fund?    <br /><br />Speaking of the Banksters: are we so dumb to believe that the Republicans intend to protect us from a repeat of the Bank frauds and bailouts of 2008?  Is not the GOP’s current near total opposition to having the Banks put their own funds into a future bail-out fund nothing else but a virtual guarantee that once again we, the taxpayers, will pony up billions to bail them out?  And we will, considering that unregulated banks have twice had to be bailed out in the last thirty years, (does anyone still remember the Savings and Loan bailout?), and both times under Republican misrule.  If they don’t fund their own bailouts, we will most certainly have to. <br /><br />Even our own Congressman Dreier has revealed his refusal to change from his corporate-lackey ways.   Recently he voted against the DISCLOSE act, which meant that he voted against requiring corporations, unions and advocacy groups to disclose their full participation in federal elections.  Moreover, by his NO vote, Dreier refused to ban federal election spending by corporations holding over $10 million in federal contracts and by corporations controlled by foreigners.  Can we expect any different by re-electing Dreier in November?<br /><br />It is easy to lash out at the Democrats for the outright failures and betrayals rampant in today’s Washington.  In spite of some valuable reforms, such as the passage of a Health Care Reform Bill, too many Democrats holding power today, most notably in the Obama administration, have not broken away fast and full from the practices and the outlook of the Bush and Clinton years.  Too many in office have failed to serve homeowners, the jobless, and other average, and very hurting Americans with the same speed and care as they have served and protected corporate powers, the banks, the warmongers, and now: the gross polluters.  A lot has got to change further and faster than it has.  <br /><br />But is voting Republican anyway to do it?   Frankly, does today’ GOP offer any real alternative?  Has it promised in any way to change its old patterns?  I could point out a lot more to show us all that it hasn’t.  We will NOT turn anything around by handing the levers of governmental power to the current crop of Republican nominees.  <br /><br />The GOP is just plain clueless and thus hopeless, and the TEA-baggers are just phony populists.  We have a better chance of getting what we need by electing real populist, peacemaking, anti-corporate Democrats.  We need to send a message through the kind of Congress we elect that will force Obama and Washington to do the right and the brave thing on so many fronts.  We may be on the edge of a second recession or even a real Depression.  Therefore, the stakes are way too high to otherwise let the next two years be surrendered to gridlock or to retreat from fundamental change.  <br /><br /><br />Larry Hernandez</span><br /></div>]]></description>
<author>uplandgreen@nospam.com (Larry Hernandez)</author>
<pubDate>Wed, 30 Jun 2010 23:45:10 -0400</pubDate>
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						<title>Reply to Ruby Simpson's POV of May 7th.</title>
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<description><![CDATA[Today, the <strong class='bbcode bold'>Daily Bulletin</strong> printed the following, which is a response to my POV printed April 30th and shared with you in the previous post in this forum.  Here it is:<br />---------------------------------<br /><div class='indent'>Point of View<br /><em class='bbcode italic'>Nothing sinister going on in Tea Party movement<br />Ruby Simpson<br />Created: 05/06/2010 06:00:52 PM PDT</em><br /><br />The Point of View written by Larry Hernandez ("Tea Party movement's `platform' points need scrutiny," April 30) deserves a response.<br /><br />Mr. Hernandez states that that Tea Partiers clearly " do not hold equal love for the emerging new Americans" who are "exerting themselves into the sunshine of power and respectability."<br /><br />Who are these new Americans? It sounds to me like Mr. Hernandez is calling Tea Partiers racists, and implying that the movement is really about keeping minorities out of power. If Mr. Hernandez will attend a Tea Party, he will see plenty of minorities standing shoulder to shoulder with the rest of us protesting big spending and the relentless surge of government into every facet of our lives.<br /><br />The second argument Mr. Hernandez makes is that Tea Partiers cannot really be protesting high taxes because 47 percent of Americans pay no federal income taxes, which means that we will all have to " give up something to get out of our growing deficit."<br /><br />The something we should give up, Tea Partiers would respond, is the massive and unprecedented growth of government and its corresponding big spending.<br /><br />The comment he makes about the GOP and its "proven tradition" of legislating on behalf of privileged Americans like Warren Buffet and Bill Gates, besides being untrue and such a tired old Democrat cliche (Mr. Hernandez fails to note a single instance) is actually hilarious. Warren Buffet is a leftist Democrat, while Bill Gates generally<br />declines to state his affiliation. Neither of them is a Republican. Neither is George Soros, by the way.<br /><br />Mr. Hernandez then takes Tea Partiers to task for not arguing against prior years of ballooning deficits; he comments that $1trillion of debt was authorized and passed by the outgoing Bush administration.<br /><br />True enough, but Democrats were in charge of both Houses of Congress, which by the way has constitutional spending authority. I can't speak for other Tea Partiers, but I can attest that I was furious when the stimulus bill was passed. I thought it would be a disaster and I was right.<br /><br />Mr. Hernandez suggests that once the Republicans are returned to power the Tea Partiers will take a long vacation. Wrong-o, Mr. Hernandez. Read the papers. Sen. Bennett in Utah is having a dickens of a time with his re-election. He's a Republican big spender and the Tea Partiers are holding him to account. And then there's Charlie Crist of Florida. He was a Republican until Marco Rubio (one of those "new Americans," whose parents fled to Florida from Cuba) endangered Crist's Senate election bid. Crist has left the Republican Party and is running as an Independent while Rubio welcomes Tea Party support. Most Republicans and all Tea Partiers would say good riddance to Charlie Crist, another big spender.<br /><br />Last of all, Mr. Hernandez suggests that Tea Partiers are sheep following "hidden wolves." What hidden wolves would those be?<br /><br />The entire point of view intimates that Tea Partiers are some secret and dangerous group working in a darkened, smoke-filled back room. In fact, they are out in the open. There is nothing sinister going on here, Mr. Hernandez.<br /><br />Come on over to the next Tea Party and give us some of that scrutiny you say we need. All you have to lose is your ignorance.<br /><br /><em class='bbcode italic'>Ruby Simpson is a reader member of the Daily Bulletin editorial board. She lives in Upland.</em><br /></div><br />--------------------------<br /><br />Here is my reply to Ms. Simpson of Upland:<br /><br /><div class='indent'><em class='bbcode italic'>The Inland Valley Daily Bulletin<br />Reply to a Point of View<br />May 7, 2010</em><br /><br />Ruby Simpson’s Point of View (“Nothing sinister gong on in Tea Party movement,” May 7) offered in response to my earlier Point of View (Tea Party movement’s ‘platform’ points need scrutiny,” April 30) richly calls for its own response in return.  <br /><br />First, concerning the racism charge allegedly pinned on the movement by me, I stand by what I said, which refers to evident preoccupation among many TEA rally participants with the prospect of a looming minority majority American demographic.  I didn’t characterize this as ‘racist’ because I don’t think it necessarily is.  Ms. Simpson ties to refute my alleged charge of racism by asserting that that there were “plenty of minorities standing shoulder to shoulder with the rest of us protesting ..”. Really?  TEA rallies demographics alone cannot be used to refute charges of anti-minority sentiment.  Not when news sources and reputable polling note that the TEA movement is overwhelming older and whiter than the surrounding population as a whole, be it across the nation or in California.  <br /><br />And need I now mention, which I purposefully did not in my original POV, the racially charged signage and vocalizations that has been evident in no-too-few TEA rallies?  This has been documented as being repeated in different rallies across the nation, and over a lengthy period of time. So, isn’t it clear to assume that any effort by the organizers to stop it has either not materialized at all, or has been ineffectual?<br /><br />Simpson’s other criticisms amount to a game of rhetorical dodge ball.  She states: “The comments he makes about the GOP and ‘proven “tradition” of legislating on behalf of privileged Americans like Warren Buffet and Bill Gates, besides being untrue and such a tired old Democrat cliché (Mr. Hernandez fails to note a single instance) is actually hilarious.”  Where do I start?  The two great tax cuts of the last thirty years that proved such a bonanza to the most privileged of all Americans, Democrats and Republicans alike, the Reagan tax cuts of 1981 and the G.W. Bush cuts early in his first term, admittedly had the help of weak-willed, unprincipled Democrats all along the way.  But ultimately, they were initiated by Republicans, passed largely on the vote of Republicans, and signed into law by Republicans.  And Ms. Simpson, when the Bush tax cuts were enacted early in his first term, the Republicans, not the Democrats, controlled Congress.  <br /><br />As for refuting the return of the long four to eight year lunch by TEA partiers when the GOP returns to power, offering up the present agitation by the TEA party doesn’t cut it.  If Simpson could show that first time young activists dominate the movement, then she would have strong grounds to argue its sudden emergence is the start of something new.  But it isn’t anything like this.  Certainly most all of the leaders, and the majority of the participants, quite possibly Simpson herself, are veteran proponents of anti-tax and other conservative or libertarian causes.  Which is why their uncharacteristic muted response while Republicans were in power twenty of the past thirty years stands out.  And all that she lists, from the problems of Senator Bennett of Utah to those of Governor Crist of Florida, which she rightfully attributes to TEA efforts, are happening now under what?  A Democrat in the White House and a Democratic controlled Congress!  It still remains to be seen if any of this would be occurring if the GOP controlled both.  What is happening now does not disprove that the TEA movement isn’t a pro-GOP contrivance.<br /><br />As for the closing shot, that there are no hidden wolves:  what about Freedom Works and Dick Armey, the Koch brothers and Fox News with Glenn Beck?  All have helped the movement all along by either funding the TEA movement, by offering organizational support, or have served as megaphones urging turnout at events.  Locally, what about John and Ken of KFI?  They are all there, behind the scenes, disavowing any influence, but pulling strings for their own agendas.  While there is a lot of sweat equity from average folks involved, don’t pass this off as a wholly tin-cup, grass roots endeavor.  It isn’t.<br /><br /><em class='bbcode italic'>Larry Hernandez</em><br /></div><br /><br />We'll see if the <strong class='bbcode bold'>Daily Bull</strong> actually prints it.]]></description>
<author>uplandgreen@nospam.com (Larry Hernandez)</author>
<pubDate>Fri, 07 May 2010 13:28:24 -0400</pubDate>
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						<title>New Point of View to the Daily Bulletin, RE: Recent TEA Rallies</title>
<link>http://www.ivdemocrats.org/e107_plugins/forum/forum_viewtopic.php?39</link>
<description><![CDATA[In response to the latest rounds of TEA Rallies on April 16, especially the one in Rancho Cucamonga, I wrote and submitted the following Point of View to the Daily Bulletin.  I could have said a lot more, but that just increases the likelihood that the Daily Bull will not print it.<br /><br />Why not write up and submit your own letter or Point of View?  Every week, like clockwork, the local GOP and TEA types dominate the opinion page with their letters.  Why should we concede this ground to them endlessly?<br /><br /><br />Now on to my latest submission:<br />----------------------------<br /><br /><div class='indent'>The Inland Valley Daily Bulletin<br />Point of View<br />April 17, 2010<br /><br />The April 16 TEA Party rallies certainly got our attention, but have they gotten enough scrutiny?  They certainly merit it.<br /><br />From the start, it is clear to many of us, no matter what our politics are, that a lot of deep, systemic problems plague the present and threaten our common future.  To question the TEA movement is not to argue that the TEA rallies are much about nothing.  And there is no doubt in my mind that the overwhelming majority of those who attended the recent TEA rallies deeply love our country.  That we have in common.<br /><br />However, on a fundamental level, it seems abundantly clear that they do not hold equal love for the emerging new Americans.  Indeed, underneath all their stated grievances, what really appears to animate them is a drive to protest the rise of the many kinds of new Americans, citizens who are exerting themselves into the sunshine of power and respectability.  Starting, of course, with our president, and winding down to people like me, and perhaps you.<br /><br />Putting that aside for the moment, even taking them on their own grounds finds that they just don’t make much sense:  <br /><br />First, arguing that federal income taxes are personally hurting the majority of fellow Americans, including these attendees, makes no sense at present!  Especially, given that an unprecedented 47 percent of all Americans in 2009 paid no net federal income taxes.  To be sure, that will not endure.  We will all, in short time, have to give up something to get out of our growing deficit.  It is inevitable.  Yet when it happens, one truly wonders if the TEA folks will still be out protesting when the GOP, following its proven tradition, once again legislates on behalf of privileged fellow Americans, like Warren Buffet and Bill Gates, so they can pay lower rates of taxes, such as at the capital gains rate of 15% flat, as they have been doing for years now? <br /><br />Which brings up the second point: where was their anger and their protest when first Reagan, and then the Bushes ballooned the federal debt each and every year they served, which was twenty of the past thirty years?  Most of these TEA protestors certainly were old enough at the time to speak out and to rally; so where were they?  Why no TEA rallies while these three Republican presidents created the overwhelming bulk of today’s staggering $12.9 trillion overall debt?  And it is pure blarney to argue that Reagan and the Bushes submitted modest budgets only to have Democratic congresses lard them over.   <br /><br />Moreover, why today do the TEA folk singularly blame President Obama for the 2009 annual federal deficit of $1.4 trillion when at least $1 trillion of that spending was authorized and passed on by the outgoing Dubya administration?  The problem, for sure, is Obama’s now, but not all the blame.<br /><br />And third, why so much silence from the TEA party on so many other fronts?  For example, in response to reports, which are emerging daily, telling us that the very same Republican leadership, which is egging on these protests, is simultaneously holding behind-closed-doors negotiations with the very same financial services industry that bears most responsibility for blowing up the economy and bringing on the current Great Recession.  And what is being negotiated?  A trade off consisting of these politicians working to weaken or scuttle effective regulation of critical financial services, such as banking and credit.  And for what?  Very likely, a redirection towards the GOP of upcoming campaign contributions by these firms.  We should expect a howl, on just this one front alone, from the TEA protestors, but can we?<br /><br />All in all, how can anyone take the particular protests of these folks seriously?  Think of their most peculiar proven record of going into effective public hibernation whenever the Republican Party regains power in Washington  (And No!  Muttering over the morning coffee or in List/Serves doesn’t cut it, folks!).   So why should the rest of us count on them to continue to protest if the Republicans once again regain power and responsibility over the debt and the tax code?  While keeping a critical eye on whose minding the government should always be ongoing, it is most critical to bear down on one’s own party when it is in power.  Democrats do a lousy job of this, Republicans even worse, and the TEA folk?  They take a long four to eight year lunch.<br /><br />Based on the incoherence and incongruity of the TEA platform, are we just witnessing the action of sheep, following the directions of hidden wolves?  First being made ready for the shearing, and then for the slaughter?<br /><br />----------------------------<br />Larry Hernandez<br /></div><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />]]></description>
<author>uplandgreen@nospam.com (Larry Hernandez)</author>
<pubDate>Sun, 18 Apr 2010 00:40:25 -0400</pubDate>
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						<title>Letter to the Daily Bulletin RE: Campaign Finance Reform</title>
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<description><![CDATA[Below is my latest point of view to the <strong class='bbcode bold'><em class='bbcode italic'>Daily Bulletin</em></strong> in response to the breaking news of arrests and possible further action in the County deal with Colonies Partnership.  My tone is not outright partisanship because that would be sheer hubris.  This could easily have been something happening in a county that is effectively run by Democrats, like Cook County in Illinois.  Good government is a unifying issue and could help to loosen some of the TEA bag folk away from being unwilling pawns of the GOP and its corporate backers. <br /><br />------------------------<br /><em class='bbcode italic'><strong class='bbcode bold'>The Inland Valley Daily Bulletin</strong></em><br />Point of View<br />February 12, 2010<br /><br />Dear Editor:<br /><br />In light of the recent arrests and charges leveled against members of the San Bernardino County Republican machine, and the strong possibility of further action against so-far unidentified co-conspirators looming, the rot in Washington and Sacramento has now become the rot in our own backyard.  The fate of over a hundred million of our scarce tax dollars are currently at stake, and if we do not rectify the local laissez-faire attitude towards big and small political corruption, such as what is involved in the Colonies Partners settlement deal, many hundreds of millions more will follow soon enough. <br /><br />People are waking up and they are angry.  Across the American political spectrum, from the far right to the far left, and all points in between, one thing is coming to unite us all.  We all have accepted the all-too-clear evidence that those we elect to serve us, be they Republican or Democrat, from the White House to the local council-person, much too often decide public matters, and the use of public monies, with the interests of big campaign donors first, second and third in mind.  If the general public good enters into the mix, it is somewhere far down the line, below partisan considerations and pleasing the base (whatever that is).   Of course, not everyone in elected office is criminally corrupt, indeed, most are not; but it is very fair to think that nearly all know of it, tolerate it, and don’t act to expose or rectify it.  They seem to shrug at it as if saying: “It’s Chinatown.”<br /><br />And the situation will only get worse, once corporations start to take advantage of the new freedom to flood all kinds of elections with campaign donations and self-serving advertisements.  They can’t be stopped and why should we even try?   The problem is not that the Jeff Burums of this nation and now, the world, give truckloads of money to our politicians; it is that our politicians are largely free to take the money, either directly or laundered, as apparently much of the corrupt money flowing into local races is.  We can’t effectively change the predatory behavior of the many wannabe Masters of the Universe among us, but we can and should severely limit the ability of public servants to take the money flowing towards them.  <br /><br />Let us, as a county and in our own cities, demand limits on individual campaign contributions to all candidates, as Claremont has.  Furthermore, let us restrict the ability of people on the public payroll or their family members to form or benefit from political action committees or all other ingenious devices of laundering payoff monies.  And to prevent a deferred payoff, let us also severely jam-up the revolving door between leaving public service and taking a position with any firm doing business with local or county government.  Such an action may limit the pool of applicants, but it will effectively winnow out the money-chasers from those truly committed to public service.  Today, the mood is to thrown the bums out, and many should go.  But if the existing system of campaign finance and related matters is not radically fixed, then nothing will have changed.<br /><br />No one is forced at gunpoint to stand for election or to take a public job, therefore, if the people demand the erection of a wall between their servants and big money, accept it or resign.  Let us have a government that we can trust and that works for us.<br /><br />Larry Hernandez<br /><br /><br /><br />]]></description>
<author>uplandgreen@nospam.com (Larry Hernandez)</author>
<pubDate>Fri, 12 Feb 2010 01:53:25 -0500</pubDate>
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						<title>New Letter to the Bulletin</title>
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<description><![CDATA[Below is a copy of my latest letter submitted to the <strong class='bbcode bold'>Daily Bulletin</strong>.  They may not print it because of length, or because it hits way too hard at the Golden Calf.  Funny isn't it?  The <strong class='bbcode bold'>Bulletin</strong> routinely prints long teabagger diatribes and yet is such a stickler to its rules when anyone from the left submits a piece.  Even submitting it as a Point of View piece really doesn't change that dynamic.  But I still try.<br /><br />Here is a link to the WAPO article cited:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/01/AR2010010101196.html <br />And here is my letter:<br /><br /><span style='color:#0000ff'>Letters to the Editor<br />The Inland Valley Daily Bulletin<br />January 3, 2010<br /><br />If there is any underlying explanation for why so many local letters to this page have been unrelenting in their criticism of President Obama, his policies, the proposals of Congress or so much else, it is that so much of what occurred beforehand needs to hidden away by distraction.  And what needs to be hidden?  It is the realization that the previous stretch of conservative-dominated government in Washington, AKA the Bush/Cheney years, gave this nation pitifully little improvement in the bread and butter issues that really matter to us all.  In terms of increased wages, job creation, and average net household worth, the kind of government these critics desperately yearn to return to, produced zilch.<br /><br /> As reported in the article “Aughts were a lost decade for the U.S. economy, workers,” by Neil Irwin in the Washington Post on January 2, 2010, the last decade was nearly a bust for the average working American.  The details are simply miserable:  While the economy remained productive during the decade, rising 17.8% as measured in Gross Domestic Product (GDP), take home pay stagnated.  Working Americans produced more that fattened the bottom line of their employers, and got very little out of it for their families.  Similarly, while the household net worth of the average American rose 44% in the 1960s, 28% in the 70s, 42% in the 80s, and 58% in the 90s, it fell -4.0% in the 2000s!  We left the decade actually poorer than we entered it.  <br /><br />And in the all-important area of job creation, the Bush/Cheney years, which supporters constantly depicted on this page as a “New Golden Age,” produced a whopping zero in net job creation.  Compare this performance to the previous decades and the difference is stunning:  24% growth in the 1950s, +31% in the 60s, +27% in the 70s, +20% in the 80s and in the 90s, now compared to Zero, in the decade mostly presided over by the “Great Decider.”  <br /><br />Clearly, this is not just the fault of the Republicans.  Wage stagnation has been persistent under both Reagan and the Bushes, and under Clinton and now Obama.  Democrats in Congress have done pitifully little to change a dynamic that has been in place since Reagan first took office, which is that while profits have soared and productivity has climbed, take home pay for the common working person has not kept pace.  While Wall Street players and corporate CEOs have “porked out” at the trough, the average worker has stayed afloat mostly through heavy borrowing and taking out loans against previously rising home values.  And now that game is up.  <br /><br />Thinking that somehow returning the GOP to a share of power will change any of this is sheer delusion.  I am not at all pleased with the present course taken by Obama and the Democrats, but through electing better Democrats, we have a chance to return to what worked so well in the past.  With the alternative, we have already experienced all we could expect.  Think about it?  Is anyone hearing anything new or better from that crowd?<br /></span><br />]]></description>
<author>uplandgreen@nospam.com (Larry Hernandez)</author>
<pubDate>Mon, 04 Jan 2010 01:13:01 -0500</pubDate>
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						<title>No Matter What We May Think of It, the Senate Bill Has a Certain Goodie For Us.</title>
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<description><![CDATA[Speaking only for myself, the final version of the Senate's health care reform bill is mostly a big disappointment for me.  It just doesn't deliver on the need to seriously control medical costs, which have for a long time, doubled the rate of inflation year in and year out.  It could have done this any number of ways.  It could have provided a vigorous public option to create public competition for the private insurers.  Or it could have tightened regulations on the insurance industry or even converted it into something akin to a public utility.  But NO! What we have in the bill is a seriously counterproductive combination of very weak oversight and regulation of the insurance industry and individual mandates that will force millions to become their customers at the price the industry sets.<br /><br />Sure, there are a number of promising pilot programs in the Senate bill that could tighten up the widespread wasteful spending in Medicare.  But these may not survive the aroused and deceived onslaught of seniors being goaded into protest by the GOP and by providers of lucrative Medicare Advantage plans.  <br /><br />But there is good, unmixed news within the Senate bill.  Thanks to little noticed provisions of the 1974 ERISA legislation, California, like all other states, is largely prevented from using federal medicaid funds, which supports our own MediCal program, to fund any state-generated alternative to the status-quo.  The Good News is that this restriction has been lifted by an amendment, authored by Senator Bernie Sanders, and added to the final bill.  So, if that provision survives the conference process with the House, we in California, could be free to experiment with our own public option or single payer plan.  We could be the Saskatchewan of the USA, and our next Democratic governor, its Tommy Douglas.<br /><br />However, first we must get a Democrat successfully elected.  And due to the toxic aftereffects of the GOP and Teabagger demonization of the reform process, our candidates cannot make this front and center of their campaign.  But as long as we know we are not supporting a corporate lackey, once a Democrat is in place, and once calmness and reason return over the land, then let us all be prepared to take advantage of this possible opportunity, and run with it.  <br /><br />In the meantime, we can hope that the House conferees restore integrity and stronger cost-control measures to the melded bill, and that Harry Reid can get a majority vote to approve it.  The good news here, as far as I can ascertain, is that the filabuster cannot be used at this last stage.  Its either an up or down simple majority vote. <br /><br />I think Boxer is a cinch to support an invigorated conference-generated bill, but Feinstein is problematic.  So we need to lobby her to stay on course.<br /><br />And, thank God, we will then be able to get all attention onto the job of creating jobs and giving our nation a truer taste of what we thought we were electing in November 2008. <br /><br />After months of being force-fed New Coke, after eight years of being force-fed swill of a different sort, I want to drink Democratic Classic Coke after all these long years!]]></description>
<author>uplandgreen@nospam.com (Larry Hernandez)</author>
<pubDate>Sat, 26 Dec 2009 14:07:49 -0500</pubDate>
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						<title>Here We Go Again.... Is 2010 Going to Be a Repeat of 1994?</title>
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<description><![CDATA[Over this Thanksgiving weekend, the <strong class='bbcode bold'>Daily Kos</strong> gave us a turkey of a warning about what may be in store for the Democratic majority in Congress come next November.  Here is a link to the story:<br />http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/11/27/808503/-Weekly-Tracking-Poll:-New-Feature-Paints-Ugly-2010-Picture  <br /><br />We should all be deeply worried by this poll.  It portends a repeat of what happened to the Democrats and Bill Clinton in the first midterm after his 1992 victory.  <br /><br />If you remember, as I am certain everyone does, in the midterm election of 1994, Newt Gingrich and the GOP cleaned our clocks big time.  On that first Tuesday of November, a very large majority that we enjoyed in the House and a significant majority we had in the Senate, vanished in a tidal wave of Republican victories. And with that wave, washed out any chance for Clinton to implement whatever progressive change-plans he and Hillary had in mind.  Instead, the Republicans seized their chance to start up investigations of, and to unleash Ken Starr on, our Democratic President.  And we certainly remember where that went. <br /><br />While much of the Media still carries on with the self-serving Right Wing spun narrative that tells us that the GOP won in 1992 because a tide of "angry white men" swamped the Democratic vote, smart research tells a different story.  We now know that while the Republican leaning vote was not much larger than what could be expected, the expected Democratic vote fell through the floor.  We lost because we didn't show up.  What should have been a small GOP pick-up became our nightmare by our own lack of participation.   <br /><br />And why didn't we show up in November of 1994?  Because, too many of us were caught up in the same disappointment funk that we are in today.  Instead of getting off to a good start, President Clinton was outmaneuvered by the GOP and betrayed by the Blue-Dogs in Congress.  He  retreated on Gays in the military, was routed on health care reform, and spent his remaining capital on pushing NAFTA down the throat of a Democratic Congress, which discredited many up-for-reelection incumbents and embittered his gay, labor and blue-collar support.<br /><br />Now we are very likely seeing a repeat unfold before us today.  Although it is a good thing to get Health Care Reform passed ASAP, that in of itself will not compensate for the bitter let-down many Democrats and Independents feel today over the Main Street ravages, and Wall Street rip-offs of the Great Recession of 2009, and a prolonged stalemate in Afghanistan.  In addition to Health Care Reform, we needed a bold package of changes and job stimulation from the get go, and we got what?  A economic program that might as well have come courtesy of Goldman Sachs and an Afghanistan policy that emboldens the Right Wing. We needed progressive leadership and got what?   Rahm and company, who have chosen to try to give a proven disasterous policy of Clintonian triangulation another shot by catering to the Blue Dogs and demonizing the Congressional left.  How is that working for us this time, Rahm?   <br /><br />Barack Obama might be playing a game of chess with all this counter-intuitive gamesmanship, but if it ends up depressing the base vote next November, there will be no grand master championship coming his or our way anytime soon.  Between now and then, we need a quick series of reasons to have hope again.  Time is running out fast, and for every day that Summers, Geithner and Rahm keep their jobs, we are going to lose another seat.]]></description>
<author>uplandgreen@nospam.com (Larry Hernandez)</author>
<pubDate>Sun, 29 Nov 2009 17:42:18 -0500</pubDate>
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						<title>What Kind of Monster Is This?</title>
<link>http://www.ivdemocrats.org/e107_plugins/forum/forum_viewtopic.php?34</link>
<description><![CDATA[Now that this summer of teabagger/deather/birther/ and overall right-wing derangement has settled down somewhat, it is time to look back and to wonder:  “what the hell was all that?”  <br /><br />Some of “what the hell was all that” has been approached by my previous posts, so I won’t regurgitate them here.  What has been on my mind for the last week or more are the deeper meanings of it all.  <br /><br />In that frame of mind, I am led to ask:  “has anyone other than me noticed that much of what comes out of the right wing/tea-bagger crowd in the way of ideas and the underlying philosophy surrounding these ideas, seems to be the product of a truly confused mix of intellectually contradictory components?”  <br /><br />Specifically, I am thinking of the weird meshing of right-wing religiosity, standard conservative yearning for authoritarian answers to today’s problems, and a resurgence of lines of thought that come straight out of the school of Ayn Rand?  Normally the first two bodies of thought and the third (Ayn Rand’s) should be as mutually exclusive as water and oil, but I hear all three sound-out from the same mouth and mind when today’s Right speaks.  <br /><br />Rather than to delve in my own words into what it is about the notions (I hesitate to call it a philosophy) of Ayn Rand that are so staggering in their incompatibility with Christian moral philosophy or the broad streak of yearning for authoritarian control that underlies modern conservatism, I direct you to two links.   These links will elucidate the connection between much of today’s conservatism with Rand and authoritarianism, and the incongruities created by adhering to all three simultaneously.  <br /><br />Here first, is a link to a recent review of two new Ayn Rand biographies made by Jonathan Chiat in the New Republic: http://www.tnr.com/article/books-and-arts/wealthcare-0?page=0,0   <br /><br />And second, the link to a discussion in Daily Kos about the link between so many of today’s Right Wing and authoritarianism:   http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2006/9/4/17201/25419   <br /><br />In his review, Jonathan Chiat gives a very useful overview of Rand that should ring loud bells in our minds as we try to square her thinking both with:  1) what we hear far too often from the teabag and other rightist crowd, and 2) with traditional Christian moral obligations, such as:  responsibility toward the poor, of unselfish service to the common good, of the obligation to share.  While Rand squares just right with what we are hearing from many of today's conservatives, she doesn't square at all with what I understand as traditional Christianity.<br /><br />Even an agnostic like me can see that the two just don’t square in any logical manner or in any sense that is faithful to the essential teachings of Jesus of Nazareth.  One can argue that is far easier to make a case that one can be a Marxist and a Christian at the same time than to be simultaneously a follower of Rand and a committed Christian.  <br /><br />In regard to the second link, a case can be made that while Rand’s line of thinking excluded yearning or submitting to authoritarianism, as Chiat demonstrates, her life was a study in the practice of authoritarian control.  Rand would have made a first rate dominatrix.  Perhaps that is what it is in Rand that draws muddle-headed conservatives to her like flies to dung.  <br /><br />As progressive Democrats, we must seek to inform our neighbors of the Frankenstein’s Monster-like nature of the thinking they are being pulled into by the deranged wing of the Republican Party and the conservative movement.  Likewise, we have to confront the local Right-wing and seek to exploit the contradictions among its members.  Obviously, they are all too eager to paper over these internal differences, but we shouldn’t help them at it by keeping silent.  <br /><br />And those of us who are Christians or Jews have an even more pressing obligation to call out the frightfully un-Christian or un-Jewish thoughts and practices that are present in a crowd that too often proclaims itself as superior in its religiosity.  I can’t do it because I have little legitimacy on these issues, but you do.  Think seriously about it.  Do you want future generations to adopt their ways as representative of your belief system?  <br /><br /><br /><br />]]></description>
<author>uplandgreen@nospam.com (Larry Hernandez)</author>
<pubDate>Mon, 05 Oct 2009 18:31:38 -0400</pubDate>
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						<title>Pondering the limits of Democracy</title>
<link>http://www.ivdemocrats.org/e107_plugins/forum/forum_viewtopic.php?33</link>
<description><![CDATA[Three weeks ago, I heard on KTLK radio a report on a new survey. conducted on the anniversary of the collapse a year ago of Lehman Brothers, which purported to show that a startling large majority of respondents (I believe some seventy or so percent) would rather have preferred the outright failure of all the many firms that were, instead, bailed-out by the Bush and Obama administrations.  Meaning of course, the banks, the Wall Street firms, General Motors, and others.  Not just selective collapses, but a total hands-off policy.  <br /><br />While I disagreed with the scope and the manner of bail-outs as they were actually implemented, to have just stood back and let it all come tumbling down was the last thing I or anyone else should have chosen.  Thus the news that a vast majority of my fellow Americans would have done so shook me terribly because as a Jeffersonian, I hold to the notion that at all times, a majority of the American people can be trusted to exercise democratic control of their own government.  It is deeply disturbing to realize that on this most vital of national economic decisions, the majority is just, plain wrong-headed.  If our national leadership had actually listened to and obeyed this majority sentiment across the board, we would all be in the midst of a second Great Depression.<br /><br />Think of it, this large majority of our fellow Americans today, if transported back to the winter of 1929 or to 1930, would actually have supported the inaction of Herbert Hoover far more than the interventionism that FDR would bring three years later.  Such a finding makes me reappraise Hoover.  Maybe, such economic Darwinism has always been hard wired into majority opinion.  So, rather than being out-of-touch, Hoover in his inaction, acted out of being too finely tuned to what the majority back then demanded.  And back to the present, if this economic Darwinism is still working its mischief in the minds of the American majority, is it little wonder that the timid, so far-- less than adequate reforms of Barack Obama are so widely as well as grossly mischaracterized as vast government overreach?  <br /><br />Of course, as Jefferson understood, my faith in democratic rule presupposes an educated public engaged in debate that lifts up rather than dumbs-down.  And we all know that in 2009, that is no longer a presumption we can make about many of our fellow citizens. To underline this last point, around the same time, about three weeks ago, many of us heard a news story that high school students in the state of Oklahoma failed at the rate of 97% the same, ten question, basic citizenship test that would-be citizens routinely pass at a rate of over 90%.  Passing the test required only six out of ten correct answers, and the questions were as basic as:  “Who was the first American President?” or “The U.S. Supreme Court is made up of how many justices?”  <br /><br />Luckily for our own good, our constitution does not provide for direct democracy and the rule of a panicked or ill-informed majority.  But the political and constitutional process, which has prevented a popular plunge over the cliff, gives little reason to be heartened.  It is just tragic that too many of our elected officials, in Congress and in the executive branch are proving at this time to be timid, confused, ideologically closed-minded, or just plain corrupt.  <br /><br />We moderate-progressives are quite alone, stuck between a complacent majority, a deranged minority and what seems an unresponsive, corporate-owned government.  It is like the old rock song:  “Jokers to the right of us, fools to the left, here I am, stuck in the middle with you!”  It is obvious that we have to double-down in our efforts and take back our government and our national imagination.<br /><br />]]></description>
<author>uplandgreen@nospam.com (Larry Hernandez)</author>
<pubDate>Mon, 05 Oct 2009 18:17:39 -0400</pubDate>
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