Archive for June, 2008

New Iraq

Recently a New York Times article suggested that we are making progress in Iraq. The judgment was based on increased security. 

When will we learn? The whole point is to have a stable society in Iraq. We need a government that functions. We need jobs for the young people rather than high unemployment. The war destroyed much of the infrastructure in Iraq. We need utilities to be stable, public services to be regular and dependable. Before the war Iraq was a leading oil exporter, and should be again. 

One of our major problems during the past five years is that our true emphasis has been on security . The argument is that until we have security it is very difficult to build a nation. That seems true, however it is misleading. Our military conquered Iraq quickly but our rebuilding is extremely slow and poorly managed. Instead of utilizing locals, we tend to import companies and workers to do the job. As a result unemployment increased rapidly. In addition some people in Iraq came to resent us, and young, unemployed males are a recruiting ground for our enemies. 

It is sad that we learned so little from the aftermath of WWII. The “greatest generation” sensed that a destroyed Europe was bad for us. We needed stable allies and trading partners, so we devised the Marshall plan which stabilized western Europe. I believe those actions stimulated our prosperity of the 1950s. Maybe a generous rebuilding plan in Iraq would help our own economy. It is worth a try.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Playing “chicken”

 This week the US Senate, in their wisdom, decided to play games with Medicare. I know that congress has played games with funding bills before, but seldom in an election year. 

The problem is that medical payments to physicians are scheduled to be cut by more than 10 percent starting June 1, 2008. The House passed a bill to fix the problem but President Bush did not like it. So the republicans in the Senate stonewalled and refused to budge. According to the “rules”, without support of 60 Senators, a bill won’t come to a vote (and is not veto proof anyway). So the entire effort stalled and Congress adjourned for the Independence Day vacation.  

Why so much political fighting? What reasonable person would expect a treating physician to attend to a patient for 10 percent less when prices are increasing dramatically? This being an election year with a president who has very low approval ratings that are making some republicans drop the word “republican” from their campaigns, how could a republican Senator allow this. This action alone may cost them election in November. What reaction do they expect from a senior who is denied medical care due to politics? Don’t the republicans know that the democrats will blame them – and use this as a campaign issue? Will this hurt McCain, who I believe still wants to win Florida with its millions of seniors.   

This delaying strategy on federal funding is not new. The republicans and democrats have fought over spending bills for decades. In most years funding for the VA and Department of Defense have been subjected to “continuing resolutions” because congress will not negotiate a budget. Continuing resolution, which simply allows spending at a previous years budget, are a nightmare for administrators of federal programs. I have a tough time comprehending how congress, who typically has six to nine months to approve a budget, is unable to complete the task on time. 

Do we need a different breed of congress person? We need people in congress who focus upon the job the people elect them to perform. When the political fighting is so intense it leads to inaction, I believe that the members are fighting for “special interests” instead of the people. Before I vote in November, I intend to insist that my representatives commit to handling federal funding with responsibility. I want people in congress who actually represent the people. What about you?

 

 

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People helping people

Recently I watched a TV news panel discuss the housing crises. One of the participants, a young lady of perhaps 30, spoke with disdain about the idea of bailing out people who’s troubles resulted from their own bad decisions. Granted, the contracts they signed were “con jobs”, but they should have exercised caution. I often hear this view, that helping a person in trouble economically denies their learning from their mistakes. Part of the point is that “welfare” is bad and that people need to take responsibility for their decisions and their life.

 

 

Why is it that we willingly bail out large corporations that make bad decisions but view helping individuals as morally weak? During my life, we have bailed out, to name only a few, the railroads (Amtrak), the airlines (United), the automobile (Chrysler), and the saving and loan business.

When a business goes bankrupt and asks for a bail out, it is because managers made bad decisions. How will they learn from their mistakes if we keep bailing them out? Why should our attitude toward business failure be so different from our attitude toward individual people?

I realize that a successful business impacts upon people. Business provides products or services we want and jobs that people need. But, individual people have an impact on us too. Good creative people invent devices and procedures that improve productivity. Good industrious people sustain a business and help it prosper. People who work pay taxes. People who are unemployed and poor, still purchase products that stimulate our economy. And most important they are people in need.

When our founders settled this land they worked together and helped each other. What happened to that hospitality? When did we stop caring for one another? The attitude I saw on TV is a genuine shame.

We must adjust our attitude. Helping people recover from their economic troubles impacts upon us all. As a society we do need business to provide jobs. But we also need people as taxpayers and consumers.

People make mistakes, I know I make mistakes. Let us give people who struggle enough help to bring them back fully into our society. It is the least we can do to honor those who pioneered this land.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Change Congress?

Recently I read an editorial by Fareed Zakaria in June 16, 2008 Newsweek. In my opinion, Fareed is one of the better commentators today. Try to read this column.He explained how our economy is in trouble and why it is unlikely to improve very soon. The basic problem appears to be a reluctance to be bipartisan. Party loyalty is viewed as vital on most issues. If a candidate or congressman strays they are viewed as mavericks, traitors, or worse. I have been thinking, with such low bipartisan activity, very little will ever get done. The only sure things could be the famous “earmarks” – that violate the process with mostly “pork”.

The upshot of all this is that very little progress is made on the most important issues of our time…while local areas get their boondoggle projects like the bridge in Alaska that had little purpose for anything but a multi million dollar decoration.

Bottom line is that we have a congress populated by many people whose primary interest is in getting elected and staying popular. Very few really work with enthusiasm. Zakaria seems to have it right.

Somehow, I thought that members of congress “worked” for the people of their district or state. They use earmarks to appear to be focused upon local needs. Unfortunately most earmarks do little for this nation, and usually (eventually) increase either our taxes or our debt. Most people in Congress actually work for special interest groups. This is to be expected since those groups support them with campaign cash and many benefits.

Do we need to turn out most of congress? Do we need fresh new faces who will pledge to work for the people and deny “special interests” that are not directly working activities that are benefitting their constituents? I will be very pleased if that could ever happen. How about you?

 

 

 

 

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Is it Advocacy?

 
 

Why is it?

I do not understand the media – especially the all news networks. During the very long primary season the networks seemed to suggest it was important that one on the candidates get a majority of the popular vote.

This claim seemed especially vital to CNN and MSNBC. So I watched Hillary Clinton win in states like California and Ohio, most of the large states. Barak Obama, on the other hand won many more states but the mostly the ones with smaller populations, like Wyoming and Montana.

It appeared quite important to folks like Wolf Blitzer and Keith Obermann that in the larger states the delegates were divided by the percentage of the vote. So that the winner of a state like Ohio would receive more delegates but not all of them. These commentators made the system seem fair.

Now, however, we are hearing about the importance of the electoral college. They put up a map and explain that the coming election battle is about the red and blue states. A candidate will get all the electoral votes from a state if they win the state. Considering their previous opinion, does that seem strange to anyone else?

How is it fair to divide the delegates to a nominating convention by the percentage of the popular vote when we live with the electoral college system? I don’t remember a constitutional amendment mandating the direct election of the President.

Like I say, I find this strange. Who would invent a system where the logic of the nominating process is contradictory to the election process?

I know that the media did not invent the current system, but one would think that they could report more accurately. Instead CNN and MSNBC appeared to demand that the nominating process could only be fair if it were based upon winning the popular vote. That is not reporting it is advocacy.

 

 

 

 

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