mykeystrokes.com

"Do or Do not. There is no try."

GOP Congressman Equates Purchasing Health Insurance With Buying An Expensive Vacation Home

Just when you thought it could not get more ridiculous, GOP Congressman and Chairman of the House Appropriations Labor-Health and Human Services subcommittee, Denny Rehberg, has come up with a novel idea. He wants the Congressional super committee to solve $1.2 trillion in deficit reduction by simply killing off the expansion of Medicaid and the subsidies that will open the door to health care for millions of Americans.

In making his argument, Rehberg noted that expanding the Medicaid safety net program, and providing subsidies to low and middle class workers, is akin to the “expensive vacation home” that the average American would choose not to buy if that American was facing a deficit as serious as the nation’s.

Before getting to the heart of Rehberg’s suggestion, one can’t help  but wonder what makes the Congressman think that the “average” American  can afford an expensive vacation home (or any vacation home for that  matter) on what the average American earns, even if that American is not  in debt?

But should we be surprised by the Congressman’s view of the world?  This is the same Denny Rehberg who is not only listed as number 23 on  the list of the wealthiest members of Congress, but is the same Congressman Rehberg who had no idea what the minimum wage was in his own state (check out this video as it is priceless.)

Of course, far more important is Rehberg’s inability to grasp that  getting treatment for cancer or unblocking that clogged artery that is  going to make someone a widow or widower is not quite the same as  purchasing a vacation home—expensive or otherwise.

And while life might not be worth living for Rep. Rehberg and friends    without that idyllic home on the lake, the average American would   still  prefer to remain alive, thank you very much, which is precisely   why  Medicaid coverage was extended to more people and subsidies are to  be made available to the   working poor and middle-class so that medical  care will become an   option in their lives.

When asked how low and middle class  Americans will manage to purchase   health care, should the mandate requiring them to do so be  found to be Constitutional by SCOTUS, Rehberg answered that Health and  Human Services would be able to grant waivers to those who cannot afford  coverage without Medicaid or subsidies.

Thus, Rehberg’s solution is to simply leave millions of Americans without coverage by way of a waiver. Nice.

Health Care For America Now’s Executive Director, Ethan Rome, put it this way:

Rep.  Rehberg’s proposal is yet another part of the Republican assault on the  middle class. Denny Rehberg says that basic health care is a luxury  item, as if a mother in Montana taking her children to the doctor or a  cancer patient getting treatment is the same as buying ‘an expensive  vacation home.’

Considering that estimates place the uninsured under age 65 in Montana at somewhere between 16 percent and 20 percent of the population, a number well in excess of the national average, I suspect that Rehberg’s fellow Montanan’s might disagree with his approach.

Let’s hope they voice that disagreement at the ballot box next November.

 

By: Rick Ungar, Mother Jones, October 6, 2011

October 7, 2011 Posted by | Class Warfare, Congress, GOP, Ideologues, Income Gap, Medicare, Minimum Wage, Politics, Republicans, Right Wing | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

“Occupy Wall Street” Picks Up Where The Tea Party Sold Out

The federal bank bailout masterminded by  President George W. Bush and his Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson ignited the  grassroots anger that created the Tea Party. But the populist group betrayed  its roots when it went corporate in 2009 after the friendly takeover by  Rupert Murdoch and the Koch brothers. The Tea Party sellout may be the reason  why the group’s negative ratings have doubled in national polls in the last year.

The Tea Party had every right  to be angry in the fall of 2008. The  finance industry spent $64 million  lobbying Washington in 2008, and  the bankers and hedge fund managers got a  great return on their  investment. The feds came up with $770 billion dollars to  bail out the  bankers and billionaires who created the economic meltdown that led  to  millions of Americans losing their jobs and then their homes.

Americans were justifiability horrified at the  single biggest  federal welfare payment of all time. Not only did the feds bailout out  Wall Street  but they failed to do anything to help the millions of  Americans who lost  everything they had because of corporate wrongdoing.  Meanwhile, Citibank used  $15 million of their fed bailout bucks to buy  the naming rights to the new stadium built for the New York Mets.

National surveys show that large majorities of  Americans favor  ending federal tax freebies for bankers, billionaires, hedge  fund  managers, and corporate jet setters. The public also wants to end tax   giveaways for the oil companies and the Benedict Arnold corporations  that send  American jobs overseas. But few people in Washington listen,  the Tea Party  punted, and thousands of courageous Americans are taking  to the streets.

To add fuel to the fire, the Bank of America  announced this week  that it would charge consumers $5 a month to use their own  debit cards.  After the Tea Party became a subsidiary of corporate America, it  was  just a matter of time until somebody rushed into the vacuum to channel  the  hostility that exists towards big business.

 

By: Brad Bannon, U. S. News and World Report, October 6, 2011

October 6, 2011 Posted by | Big Business, Class Warfare, Congress, Conservatives, Democrats, Economy, Elections, GOP, Ideologues, Jobs, Middle Class, Republicans, Right Wing, Taxes, Voters | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Government Spending Is Just What Our Economy Needs

Our  nation’s economy is approaching a precipice. The continuing housing market  crisis has stripped about $10 trillion from families’ assets, and nearly 1 in 10 workers are unemployed. Nearly 1 in 10 others are either working less than they want or have given  up their job search. Family income is now back where it was in 1996, in  inflation-adjusted dollars.

This all  means there is less money flowing through our economy. That’s just math.

The lingering consequences of the Great  Recession—the housing crisis, the jobs crisis, the fear among businesses to  invest their earnings despite record profits—continue to pull against faster  economic growth and job creation. Because customers have less money to spend  due to the collapse of the housing bubble and the ensuing high unemployment,  businesses have little incentive to hire and invest.

Even  Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke says there is a role for fiscal  policy. Monetary authorities have  already pushed interest rates down to zero. And they have few levers left to  spur growth, although there are some steps that would continue to help  on the margin.

In short, the economy continues to suffer from a  lack of demand.

The federal government can help with this. We know that government spending  can help restart an economy. Over the past two years, increased investments in  infrastructure have saved or created 1.1 million jobs in the construction  industry and 400,000 jobs in manufacturing by March 2011. Almost all of these  jobs were in the private sector.

Money  targeted toward the long-term unemployed helped not only those individual  families hardest hit by the Great Recession but also kept dollars flowing into  their local communities, keeping an average of 1.6 million American workers in jobs every  quarter during the recession. But now, the threat of jobs again disappearing looms  large.

Unless Congress acts, the private sector will  continue to generate insufficient demand. A  sweeping consensus of economists and forecasters across the political divide  now calls for the government to forcefully intervene in precisely this way, to  create demand for goods and services, which will in turn boost hiring and  business growth. Goldman Sachs, for example, said the positive effect of the  president’s American Jobs Act would increase U.S. gross domestic product by 1.5  percent in 2012.

Conservatives want us to believe that America’s broke,  that we cannot afford to address our most pressing issue—mass unemployment and  stagnating incomes. The reality is that there are clear steps that we can take  to pave the way for economic growth. Congress just needs to act.

 

By: Heather Boushey, Economist-Center for American Progress, Published in U. S. News and World Report, September 27, 2011

October 6, 2011 Posted by | Businesses, Congress, Deficits, Federal Budget, GOP, Government, Ideologues, Ideology, Middle Class, Republicans | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Mitt Romney, The Quiet Extremist

At the last GOP presidential debate, Americans of all political persuasions were shocked when the audience loudly booed Stephen Hill, an openly gay soldier who sent in a video question from Iraq about the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. We were even more shocked when it dawned on us that not a single candidate on stage was going to step up to defend Hill or even thank him for his service to the country. Rick Santorum, the only candidate to respond to Hill’s question, accused him of receiving “special privileges” for “sexual activity” and called the new policy that allows him to serve openly “tragic.” None of his fellow candidates contradicted him.

Similar scenes unfolded in earlier debates, when crowds cheered Texas’ record breaking number of executions and applauded the idea of an uninsured man dying of a treatable illness.

These reactions hopefully say little about the average GOP voter — most decent people of any party recoil at the idea of insulting an active servicemember or of a sick neighbor dying — but the candidates’ silence spoke volumes. Today’s Republican presidential candidates, even the supposed moderates, live in fear of crossing a small base that has developed an alternate view of reality and a dangerously skewed notion of liberty. Chief among these is Mitt Romney, who started his career as an East Coast moderate but now knows that extremists are the only thing that can keep him from the GOP nomination. The former moderate is now, paradoxically, the most beholden to the extremist fringe.

Romney is still trying to have it both ways — to retain what little is left of his “moderate” persona while cheerfully appeasing the most extreme elements of the corporate and religious Right. He is banking on being able to get through the primary with both of his personas intact. Unfortunately for him, it’s not working.

In fact, Romney’s eagerness to appease has placed him solidly in the far-right — and increasingly unpopular –Tea Party camp of the GOP.

Romney wears his pro-corporate politics with the pride of a Koch brother. He told an audience in Iowa recently that “corporations are people” — a bold statement, even for a multi-millionaire who made his fortune partly on the profits from outsourcing American jobs. And he hasn’t backed down from his claim — in fact, he keeps repeating it.

Romney may think that corporations are people, but he seems to think that they deserve more care and concern from the government than working, tax-paying, family-feeding citizens. His economic plan calls for the vast deregulation of financial markets, whose lack of constraints in the Bush era led to the catastrophic economic collapse from which we’re still digging our way out. In contrast with his policies as governor of Massachusetts, where he helped close a budget gap by eliminating $110 million in corporate tax loopholes, Romney has now signed a pledge rejecting all efforts to raise revenues by making the wealthiest pay their fair share in income tax or closing loopholes that help companies ship jobs overseas. Instead, he has called for reducing corporate income tax, which is already so low and riddled with loopholes that some mammoth companies didn’t pay any last year. When a debate moderator asked the GOP candidates if they would accept a budget compromise that included $10 in spending cuts for every $1 in revenue increases, Romney joined all the others in saying he would reject it.

It’s perhaps not unexpected that Romney has joined the Tea Party herd on fiscal policy — after all, he’s a wealthy man himself and stands to lose a little if Bush’s tax breaks for the wealthy and other hand-outs to the most fortunate are rescinded. But he has also, in more of a stretch, wholeheartedly embraced the social extremism of the Religious Right.

Romney’s still distrusted by many on the Religious Right — he was for abortion rights before he was against them, once promised to establish “full equality for American gay and lesbian citizens” and distributed pink fliers at a gay pride parade, and, of course is a Mormon. But that hasn’t kept him from kowtowing to the Religious Right leaders who still hold enormous sway in the Republican party.

In the most recent illustration yet of Romney’s quiet acceptance of the Radical Right, he is scheduled to speak at next week’s far-right Values Voter Summit, a Washington get-together sponsored by designated hate groups the American Family Association and the Family Research Council. At the event, Romney will take the stage immediately after AFA spokesman Bryan Fischer, a man whose record of outspoken bigotry is so shocking he would be an anathema to any reasonable political movement. Fischer wants to deport American Muslims, says gays are responsible for the Holocaust and claims Native Americans are “morally disqualified” from controlling land. He also claims that non-Christian religions don’t have First Amendment rights – among the faiths he has singled out as exceptions to the free exercise clause is Romney’s own Mormonism. I have called on Romney to distance himself from Fischer’s bigotry before handing him the microphone on Saturday… but don’t hold your breath.

Participants at the Values Voter Summit rarely check their less savory values at the door. At last year’s event, which Romney also attended, FRC president Tony Perkins managed to simultaneously insult both gay troops and several allied nations by insisting that nations that allow gay people to serve openly in the military “participate in parades, they don’t fight wars to keep the nation and the world free.” Neither Romney nor any of the other GOP luminaries present spoke up in response.

At the Values Voter Summit, as in the GOP debates, Mitt Romney will doubtless attempt to slide under the radar, never openly condoning extremism, but never contradicting it either. As he emerges as the GOP frontrunner, it needs to be asked: is Mitt Romney more moderate than his fellow candidates, or is he just better at strategically keeping his extremism quiet?

 

By: Michael B. Keegan, President: People for The American Way, October 4, 2011

 

 

October 5, 2011 Posted by | Class Warfare, Conservatives, Corporations, Economy, Elections, GOP, Ideologues, Ideology, Politics, Republicans, Voters | , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Grover Norquist “Is Paralyzing Congress”

Rep. Frank Wolf (R-Va.) is one of just six Republican in Congress who haven’t signed Grover Norquist’s anti-tax pledge. On the House floor Tuesday, he attacked Norquist for single-handedly enforcing this hard line within the GOP, creating a destructive impasse in the legislative process. “Everything must be on the table and I believe how the ‘pledge’ is interpreted and enforced by Mr. Norquist is a roadblock to realistically reforming our tax code,” Wolf said. “Have we really reached a point where one person’s demand for ideological purity is paralyzing Congress to the point that even a discussion of tax reform is viewed as breaking a no-tax pledge?”

Wolf also attacked Norquist personally, claiming that he has “deep ties to supporters of Hamas and other terrorist organizations,” as well as to Jack Abramoff and other “unsavory groups and people.” Norquist fired back by accusing Wolf of racism. “I’m married to a woman who’s Muslim, and it’s sad and it’s disgusting,” Norquist told Yahoo News. “He’s going to spend a lot of time apologizing for getting into the gutter and anti-Arab and anti-Muslim bigotry.” Norquist claims Wolf is targeting him because he’s been unable to persuade his colleagues to budge on their anti-tax pledge.

Americans for Tax Reform continued the counterattack on Wolf in a series of e-mail blasts on Tuesday evening. “Frank Wolf Admits He Supports Trillions in Tax Hikes,” ATR titled one e-mail, calling the congressman’s support for the Bowles-Simpson commission’s recommendations an endorsement of a “net tax increase of $1-3 trillion over ten years.” (In fact, Bowles-Simpson raises $2.3 trillion in revenue by lowering rates but eliminating deductions and exclusions.) ATR also accused Wolf of borrowing the “Obama/DCCC Playbook to Craft Lies About the Tax Pledge,” saying that the pledge allows for the elimination of tax breaks so long as overall level of taxation doesn’t increase.

Wolf’s hit on Norquist was an unusually open attack by a conservative against the anti-tax absolutism that Congressional Republicans have almost uniformly embraced. But there have been earlier signs of this rift within the GOP. Sen. Tom Coburn (Okla.), a staunch fiscal conservative, pitted himself against Norquist by proposing to eliminate tax breaks for ethanol. Norquist insisted that ending such subsidies would only be acceptable if the revenue was used to pay for more tax cuts.

Wolf, in fact, referred to Coburn’s feud in his denunciation on the House floor yesterday: “When Senator Tom Coburn recently called for eliminating the special interest ethanol tax subsidy, who led the opposition? Mr. Norquist.” The question is whether other Congressional Republicans will join Wolf and Coburn in openly pushing back against the Norquist, anti-tax orthodoxy that has been at the heart of the bipartisan struggle to reduce the deficit.

Update: Another Republican is pushing now back against Norquist. Sen. John Thune (S.D.), who signed the ATR anti-tax pledge, suggested that such pledges could be broken to achieve broad-based tax reform in a Wednesday interview with MSNBC.

 

By: Suzy Khimm, The Washington Post, October 5, 2011

 

 

October 5, 2011 Posted by | Democracy, Economic Recovery, Economy, Federal Budget, GOP, Ideologues, Ideology, Lawmakers, Politics, Republicans, Right Wing, Teaparty | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment