Reversions
Holy shit. This story fell under my radar yesterday:
It's not irony, it's calculation and action. Conservatives in power know that every opportunity that arises must be maximized without any PR at all- otherwise their policy choices will be exposed as the greedy mess that they are. So they just do them.
This article tells us that we've nearly completely had the rug pulled from under us through the political opportunism of these negative GOP values. We were debating the best of the good, the ways we could further help Habitat come rebuild lost homes. Hell, the President was there with Habitat yesterday for a photo-op- that's how they do it. Because simultaneously, his backtalking crony politicians were screwing all potential buyers to protect the contractors, their pals, in the destroyed region.
This is the ethic of the new millenium- and it looks exactly like the corrupt ethic of every dark age of American ultra-consumerism. The worst kind. The kind that cares absolutely nothing for the American citizen.
Dispicable.
As Hurricane Katrina put the issue of poverty onto the national agenda, many liberal advocates wondered whether the floods offered a glimmer of opportunity. The issues they most cared about - health care, housing, jobs, race - were suddenly staples of the news, with President Bush pledged to "bold action."
Conservatives have already used the storm for causes of their own, like suspending requirements that federal contractors have affirmative action plans and pay locally prevailing wages. And with federal costs for rebuilding the Gulf Coast estimated at up to $200 billion, Congressional Republican leaders are pushing for spending cuts, with programs like Medicaid and food stamps especially vulnerable.
"We've had a stunning reversal in just a few weeks," said Robert Greenstein, director of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal advocacy group in Washington. "We've gone from a situation in which we might have a long-overdue debate on deep poverty to the possibility, perhaps even the likelihood, that low-income people will be asked to bear the costs. I would find it unimaginable if it wasn't actually happening."
Mr. Greenstein's comments were echoed by Representative Rosa DeLauro, Democrat of Connecticut: "Poor people are going to get the short end of the stick, despite all the public sympathy. That's a great irony."
...
Indeed, even as he was calling for deep spending cuts last week, Representative Mike Pence, Republican of Indiana, who leads the conservative caucus, called tax reductions for the prosperous a key to fighting poverty.
"Raising taxes in the wake of a national catastrophe would imperil the very economic growth we need to bring the Gulf Coast back," Mr. Pence said. "I'm mindful of what a pipe fitter once said to President Reagan: 'I've never been hired by a poor man.' A growing economy is in the interest of every working American, regardless of their income."
...
In 2004, about 12.7 percent of the country, or 37 million people, lived below the poverty line, which was about $19,200 for a family of four. The figure was 7.8 percent among whites, 24.7 percent among blacks and 21.9 percent among Hispanics.
Hurricane Katrina gave those figures a face as no statistic can.
"As all of us saw on television, there is also some deep, persistent poverty in this region," with "roots in a history of racial discrimination," President Bush said in a Sept. 15 speech from New Orleans. Using the language of the civil rights movement, Mr. Bush pledged "not just to cope, but to overcome."
But liberal critics say his policies will have the opposite effect.
The week before his speech, Mr. Bush suspended the Davis-Bacon Act, a 1931 law that prohibits federally financed construction jobs from paying wages less than a local average. The administration argued that the suspension, which applied only to storm areas, would benefit local residents by stretching financial resources.
Critics said the savings would come at the expense of needy workers.
Likewise, the president suspended rules requiring federal contractors to file affirmative action plans, which his allies called cumbersome.
It's not irony, it's calculation and action. Conservatives in power know that every opportunity that arises must be maximized without any PR at all- otherwise their policy choices will be exposed as the greedy mess that they are. So they just do them.
This article tells us that we've nearly completely had the rug pulled from under us through the political opportunism of these negative GOP values. We were debating the best of the good, the ways we could further help Habitat come rebuild lost homes. Hell, the President was there with Habitat yesterday for a photo-op- that's how they do it. Because simultaneously, his backtalking crony politicians were screwing all potential buyers to protect the contractors, their pals, in the destroyed region.
This is the ethic of the new millenium- and it looks exactly like the corrupt ethic of every dark age of American ultra-consumerism. The worst kind. The kind that cares absolutely nothing for the American citizen.
Dispicable.
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