Posts Tagged ‘liberal’

Robert Reich: The GOP Ticket in 2012: Romney-Rubio

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January 4, 2011

 

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Robert Reich: The GOP Ticket
in 2012: Romney-Rubio

The GOP Ticket in 2012: Romney-Rubio, RobertReich.org, January 2, 2012, by Robert Reich, used with permission, quoted verbatim:

Since my New Year’s prediction that Obama would select Hillary Clinton for his running mate in 2012 (and Joe Biden would become Secretary of State), I’ve been swamped by requests for my GOP prediction. Here goes.

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You can forget the caucuses and early primaries. Mitt Romney will be the nominee. Republicans may be stupid but the GOP isn’t about to commit suicide. The other candidates are all weighed down by enough baggage to keep a 747 on the tarmac indefinitely.

For his running mate, Romney will choose Marco Rubio, the junior senator from Florida. Why do I say this?

First, Romney will need a right-winger to calm and woo the Republican right. Tea Partiers are attracted to Rubio – an evangelical Christian committed to reducing taxes and shrinking government. Rubio’s meteoric rise in the Florida House before coming to Congress was based on a string of conservative stances on state issues.

Rubio is also a proven campaigner, handily winning four Florida House elections starting in 2002, and then beating popular incumbent Republican governor Charlie Crist in 2010 — with the help of Tea Partiers.

Moreover, he’s only 40, thereby giving the GOP ticket some youthful vigor.

And he’s Hispanic – a Cuban-American – at a time when the GOP needs to court the Hispanic vote.

Rubio’s only baggage is the “son of exiles” controversy – his suggestion that his parents were refugees forced out of Cuba by Castro when in fact they moved to the United States before the Cuban revolution.

But this isn’t the sort of slip that would keep him off the ticket. In fact, Romney has defended Rubio, saying “I think the world of Marco Rubio, support him entirely and think that the effort to try to smear him was unfortunate and bogus.”

Finally, and most critically, Florida is a crucial swing state. Rubio would help deliver it.

So it will be Obama-Clinton versus Romney-Rubio.

And what’s my prediction for Election Day? Obama-Clinton hands down.

I warn you, though. Political predictions, economic forecasts, and astrology differ in only one respect. Astrology has a fairly good record of being correct.

Robert Reich was the nation’s 22nd Secretary of Labor under Bill Clinton and is Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations. In 2008, Time Magazine named him one of the Ten Most Successful Cabinet Members of the century. He has written eleven books, including “The Work of Nations,” which has been translated into 22 languages. His recent book is “Supercapitalism.” For Professor Reich’s book page for Supercaptialism at Amazon, go here. Reich’s newest book, Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future has been released September 21, and is available for ordering at this link (Amazon.com). The above article is from Reich’s new blog, and can be viewed here.

Robert Reich’s commentaries are available for listening to at Publicradio.com. Watch the video Aftershock: The next economy and America’s future (about his new book). Thanks to Professor Reich for permission to publish his articles on an ongoing basis.

Romney narrowly beats Santorum in Iowa caucuses

Logos57: A Caring Community
January 4, 2012

 

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Romney narrowly beats Santorum in Iowa caucuses

Logos57: A Caring Community, January 4, 2012, by Paul Evans:

Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney narrowly beat out surging Rick Santorum by just eight votes, 30,015 to 30,007, or about 25 percent of the vote each. Ron Paul finished in a fairly close third place, with about 21 percent of the votes cast.


That Romney had such close competition underscores his vulnerability with the conservative, religious Republican base, who have never really accepted Romney as a leader or candidate in the party. Santorum, who exclaimed “Game On” after the vote was announced, had the backing of conservative Christian groups, which can be decisive for the evangelical and fundamentalist voters in the upper Midwest.

Newt Gingrich, somewhat savaged by strong attacks put out by Romney’s superPAC, fell into fourth place after actually leading in Iowa polls about ten days ago. Christian dominionist Rick Perry, who finished in a distant fifth place, said he was headed back to Texas to reassess his candidacy. Michelle Bachman garnered only 5 percent of the vote.

Joe Scarorough, conservative MSNBC host and former Florida congressman, who often makes controversial analyses in political matters, said that there will be blood if Romney wins out in Iowa and New Hampshire.

In recent months, Republican contenders for the nomination have attempted to attack Romney as too “moderate.” The split in the Republican Party between fiscal conservatives who are often social moderates, and a very strongly Christian and conservative base, will be likely to continue to trouble the party.

After a hard loss in his attempt to secure the GOP nomination in 2008, Romney appears to have regained momentum towards the nomination. Meanwhile, while the several Republican candidates attempt to thrash out a road to the nomination, Obama has been quietly building a strong, robust organization for the 2012 election.

For More on Road to the Republican nomination, see the following sources:

See Iowa’s razor-thin result indicates a fierce battle for conservatives is ahead, Yahoo News — The Ticket, Yahoo News, January 4, 2012, by David Chalian.

Recommended: Iowa Caucus Winners and Losers, ABC News The Note, January 4, 2012, by Amy Walter.

See Romney squeaks out victory in Iowa, Reuters on Yahoo News, January 4, 2012, by Jane Sutton and Eric Johnson.

Also See Scarborough Says ‘There Will Be Blood’ If Romney Wins Iowa and New Hampshire, The Blaze on Yahoo News, January 2, 2012.

Also See GOP: Romney beats Santorum by 8 votes, AP on Yahoo News, January 4, 2012, by Associated Press.

Watch a slide show with 31 photos, Romney ekes out 8-vote win over Santorum, by Reuters on Yahoo News.

Also See Live blog: Romney beats Santorum in Iowa caucuses, USA Today, January 4, 2012, by Catalina Camia.

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Santorum proposes bombing Iran’s nuclear facilities

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January 2, 2012

 

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Santorum proposes bombing
Iran’s nuclear facilities

UPDATE: See Iran threatens U.S. Navy as sanctions hit economy, Reuters on Yahoo News, January 3, 2012, by y Parisa Hafezi.

Santorum proposes bombing Iran’s nuclear facilities, The Raw Story, January 2, 2011, by Andrew Jones: Logos57: A Caring Community is proud to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news.

Rick Santorum continued the tough rhetoric from Republican presidential candidates on Iran Sunday morning.

OCInkjet.com 250x250 banner,<br /> image is updated by season.

When asked by Meet The Press host David Gregory what he would do differently than President Barack Obama towards Tehran, Santorum was adamant in how aggressive he would be.

“I would be saying to the Iranians, you either open those facilities, begin to dismantle them and make them available to inspectors or we will degrade those facilities though air strikes,” he said. “And make it very public that we are doing that.”

Gregory replied: “So you lay out a red line and if they passed it, air strikes by President Santorum?”

“Iran would not get a nuclear weapon under my watch,” he said.

Watch Rand Paul “The Rest Of The Republican Field Is Jumping Up & Down Saying NO! I’LL BOMB IRAN, Mox News on YouTube, January 1, 2012.

Also See Fickle Iowans and a consistent message give Santorum a chance to win, Yahoo News, January 2, 2012, by Chris Moody.

Also See Obama has ‘failed’ on Iran: Romney, The Raw Story, January 1, 2012, by Agence France-Presse.

InformIT (Pearson Education)

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Supply Side Economics, The Bush Tax Cuts & John Boehner Completely Discredited

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December 31, 2011

 

Supply Side Economics, The Bush Tax Cuts
& John Boehner Completely Discredited

The Bush Tax Cuts and Supply Side Economics
by Now Should Be Completely Discredited
as Economic Evidence, History Show

Logos57: A Caring Community, edited version published December 31, 2011, original version May 15, 2011, by Paul Evans: This article is dependent on John Boehner says Bush tax cuts created 8 million jobs over 10 years, PolitiFact Truth-O-Meter, May 11, 2011, The Laffer Curve in Real Life, Atlanta Journal Constitution, September 15, 2010, by Jay Bookman, and other sources, especially the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

Also Published on OpEdNews.

Be Sure and Watch Top 10 Greatest GOP Moments of 2011 on Video.

Starting Point: FALSE: John Boehner says Bush tax cuts created 8 million jobs over 10 years

In 1980, Ronald Reagan swept into office on the corpse of Jimmy Carter’s “stagflation” (economic stagnation with increased unemployment + inflation of about 17.5 percent, I remember it well). Republicans were chanting a new mantra called supply side economics, which stated, basically, cut taxes, particularly cut taxes for the rich, and this will result in economic growth. They even had so-called mathematical theory to back them up in a graphical representation known as the Laffer curve.

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A cursory look at the literature on the economic successes of recent administrations shows that Boehner’s claim and supply side economics in general are base lies. The only real reason for supply side economics is to raid the nation’s resources (hopefully for the right wingers in terms of cuts to entitlements, or at the least privatization of them), to make the rich richer. The record, as documented below, shows that higher tax rates, particularly higher tax rates on the wealthy, have resulted in 1.) higher GDP economic growth, 2.) lower deficits and 3.) a healthier economic climate with lower unemployment.

In private meetings, the wealthy chortle over their success at hoodwinking the American people into lowering taxes for the wealthy. In an article by Mark Weisbrot called Extending the Tax Cuts: The Ninety-Eight Percent Solution, published in at least 29 newspapers or websites, the snobbery and effrontery of the rich is laid bare:

George W. Bush summed it up at an $800-a-plate dinner back in 2000 with a joke: “This is an impressive crowd – the haves and the have-mores,” he said. “Some people call you the elites; I call you — my base.” What made the joke really funny is that it was true.

Getting back to the PolitiFact article, from which I take one of the main subjects of my own article, that is, John Boehner’s claim about the Bush tax cuts (in other words, one of the main of examples of supply side economics in practice) and these tax cuts’ economic effectiveness, PolitiFact introduces the subject as follows:

During an interview on NBC’s Today show (May 10, 2011), House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, offered some job-creation statistics to cast a favorable light on the tax cuts passed under President George W. Bush in 2001 and 2003.

Host Matt Lauer said to Boehner, “You talk about creating jobs. When the Bush era tax cuts were passed in 2001, unemployment in this country was 4.5 percent. Today it’s at 9 percent, just down from 10 percent. So why are the Bush era tax cuts creating jobs?”

Boehner responded that the tax cuts “created about 8 million jobs over the first 10 years that they were in existence. We’ve lost about 5 million of those jobs during this recession.”

Let me state, before we get into the Bush tax cuts and supply side economics, with a summary of PolitiFact’s arguments and also additional evidence, that PolitiFact’s conclusion was that, essentially, Boehner’s statement is FALSE. PolitiFact examines Boehner’s claim about the Bush tax cuts in the time frame of 2001 to 2009, but an examination of the U.S. economy in a larger time frame is more instructive, as we shall see.

There were two Bush tax cuts, the first passed in June, 2001. PolitiFact points out that this means that Boehner’s contention cannot be true, in that ten years have not passed since the tax cuts (the first package) went into effect. They note, moreover, in the first place that there is no direct evidence that it was these tax cuts which accounted for the job growth during the Bush administration at all. Any rational examination can put job growth during these years as the result of a housing bubble and stock speculative bubble, and not true economic growth with a valid basis — but that is just my opinion, although it is held by many.

Let’s look at PolitiFact’s numbers more closely. There are actually two measures of job growth used by economists. By the most commonly used measure, the “Current Economic Statistics” or CES figures, here is what PolitiFact found was true for the Bush years:

June 2001: 132,047,000 people employed
January 2008: 137,996,000 people employed
Increase during that six-and-a-half-year period: 5,949,000 people

That’s roughly 6 million jobs — significantly below the 8 million Boehner cited.

Now let’s turn to the jobs lost during the recession. We once again calculated the numbers in the way most favorable to Boehner — from the peak of employment (January 2008) to the lowest point (February 2010). Here are the figures:

January 2008: 137,996,000 people employed
February 2010: 129,246,000 people employed
Decrease during the roughly two-year period: 8,750,000 people

That’s almost 9 million jobs lost — almost twice what Boehner had said on Today.

Don’t you love the way politicians throw numbers around without checking the facts? (Many times, of course, they are well aware of the facts and are just baldly lying.) Here please note that the figures indicate that in the time, thus far, since the Bush tax cuts began, that is, from June, 2001 to the time at which PolitiFact’s analysis ends, February 2010, or less than nine years, the economy actually lost about 2.8 million jobs, by the CES statistics. (Boehner’s claim for jobs created by the Bush tax cuts was for ten years.)

As it turned out, Boehner got his figures as provided by that paragon of intelligence, Michael Steele, and from a different set of economic numbers, the “Current Population Survey” or CPS data, and those figures more or less bear him out, to some extent:

June 2001: 136,873,000 people employed
January 2008: 146,407,000 people employed
Increase over about six and a half years: 9,534,000 people

January 2008: 146,407,000 people employed
February 2010: 138,698,000 people employed
Decrease over about two years: 7,709,000 people

So using the CPS figures, Boehner actually underestimated the jobs created after the passage of the Bush tax cuts, rather than overestimating them. And his number of jobs lost in the recession was closer to the CPS number than to the CES number.

Politifact is not stressing the main point here, that Boehner was making his claim of job growth owing to the Bush tax cuts for a span of ten years, and that even by the CPS numbers, only about 1.75 million jobs have been created (thus far). His figures for jobs lost during the recession, while somewhat inaccurate by either measure, are somewhat closer to the mark, but so what? Bush caused the economic and regulatory climate which led to the recession, did he not?

PolitiFact does in fact examine the job creation numbers over a much wider time frame encompassing various recent presidents, citing numbers from Gary Burtless, a labor economist with the Brooking Institution. Burtless looks at the first 81 months of several presidencies, examining only those presidents who served two terms:

Employment under Bush grew by 4.5 percent using CES and 7 percent using CPS, whereas employment grew by double digits under presidents Bill Clinton and Ronald Reagan, and also under the combined eight-year administrations of Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, who finished Nixon’s term after he resigned, and John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. Only under Eisenhower was job growth more sluggish than it was under George W. Bush, and even then, it was only the case using one of the two BLS statistics. (Burtless did not compare job growth during the administrations of George H.W. Bush or Jimmy Carter because they served only one term each.)

Where does all this leave us? First, under the most common yardstick for measuring employment — the CES data — Boehner’s claim is significantly overstated. Second, while Boehner is closer when using a different statistic, it’s only more accurate if he uses a time period much different than the one he stated in the interview. And third, his suggestion that the tax cuts are primarily responsible for subsequent job growth is contentious at best (and the job growth he points to is modest compared to previous administrations).

So the numbers Boehner offers are accurate only with significant adjustments. Overall, we find his statement too flawed to give it a rating higher than False.

Score one for PolitiFact. It’s good to see centrist news and politics websites which claim to discern the truth of politicians’ statements get it right. Let’s look at a similar, but more devastating analysis by Jay Bookman, The Laffer Curve in Real Life, Atlanta Journal Constitution, September 15, 2010. There is no better way to describe this analysis — and it is devastating to any who would maintain that supply side economics and tax cuts for the rich are good for the economy — than to make an extensive quote from the article:

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So how do we gauge the effectiveness of supply-side theory in practice? I propose we look at three specific measures:

  • The core claim of supply-siders is that tax cuts spur investment, so we’ll look at growth in private investment;
  • Supply-side theory also claims that tax cuts increase government revenue, so we’ll look at whether that actually occurred;
  • And since growth in gross domestic product is the ultimate aim of any economic policy, we’ll include that in the analysis as well.

(Note: All data below have been adjusted to account for inflation.)

Private investment:

After the ‘81 Reagan tax cuts, private nonresidential investment over the next seven years grew at an annual rate of 2.8 percent.
After the ‘93 Clinton tax hike, private investment over the next seven years grew annually at 10.2 percent.
After the 2001 Bush tax cut, private investment grew annually at 2.7 percent. (Data source: CAP/EPI study, Sept. 2008,, based on Bureau of Economic Analysis data.)

Federal revenue:

From 1981-1993, federal revenue increased by 20.7 percent over 12 years.
From 1993-2001, federal revenue grew by 46.6 percent over 8 years.
From 2001-2009, federal revenue decreased by 13.9 percent. (Even if you don’t include the deep recession year of 2009 — you might say we’re invoking the mercy rule — revenue increased just 3.3 percent over the eight years of Bush’s presidency.
(Source: OMB Historical Table 1.2)

GDP growth

From 1981-1993, real GDP grew by an annual average of 2.97 percent.
From 1993-2001, real GDP grew by an annual average of 3.56 percent.
From 2001-2009, real GDP grew by an annual average of 1.56 percent.
(Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis)

In conclusion, in all three categories central to the claim of supply-side proponents, the economy performed significantly better in the wake of tax increases than it did in the wake of major tax cuts.

Also see In Addition to Geithner, Republican Economists Also Argue That Tax Cuts Do Not Pay for Themselves, Center for Economic and Policy Research, August 5, 2010, no author, in which both Timothy Geithner and Douglas Holtz-Eakin, “a prominent Republican economist who was the chief economic advisor to John McCain in his presidential campaign,” dismissed the contentions that tax cuts pay for themselves as “myths.”

Come on people. We are not fools. Looking at Jay Bookman’s analysis, which seems pretty formidable to me, as it would to any logical thinker, and giving credence to Timothy Geithner as well as the PolitiFact analysis, I believe supply side economics, the damned Laffer curve, and the Bush tax cuts should be pretty thoroughly discredited. And the American people think so too! According to a recent look at Americans attitudes on taxes, Americans Believe in Tax Equity, Center for American Progress, April 15, 2011, by James Hairston, we overwhelmingly want progressive tax rates and dislike the Bush tax cuts:

  • More than four-fifths of Americans favor a surtax on federal income taxes for people earning more than $1 million a year, according to a recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.
  • Almost 7 out of 10 Americans favor eliminating the Bush tax cuts for households earning $250,000 a year or more.
  • (Also): The least popular deficit-reduction proposal is turning Medicare into a voucher program where seniors get government coupons for private insurance, as House Republicans have proposed.

Here it is worthwhile to note that Representative Ryan’s budget plan to gut and privatize Medicare, according to the New York Times (CEPR article), “would add $30 trillion to the cost of buying Medicare equivalent plans over Medicare’s 75-year planning horizon.”

This is not the sum transferred from the government to beneficiaries. It is the increase in total costs — waste to the government, income to insurers and health care providers. This $30 trillion figure is approximately 6 times the size of the projected Social Security shortfall. It comes to almost $100,000 for every man, woman, and child in the country.

Well, Boehner and the Republicans have had their way, and by way of budget blackmail, the Bush tax cuts have been extended for two years.

These tax deals have been going on for some time, either with Obama’s complicity or out of political necessity. See the Guardian.co.uk, in an article by Dean Baker of CEPR, about tax cuts for the rich passed at the end of 2010. On this also see Tax Cut Deal: Extends Current Programs, Provides Little Spur to Further Job Growth, CEPR, December 7, 2010, by Eileen Applebaum, an article originally published in The Hill. Again, this was an earlier giveaway that Republicans forced Obama to make to the rich.

Now we have at least two more years of the Bush tax cuts, thanks to Boehner’s and the Republicans’ blackmail, and the political necessity of accepting a deal to get a budget which Obama faced passed. At this point, there are a few things we should know about these tax cuts. They won’t stimulate investment. And there is no evidence they will create much job growth or overall economic growth in the economy. At least if history means anything. All it will do is line the pockets of the Republicans’ real base, and their real masters, the rich and very rich.

Top 10 Greatest GOP Moments of 2011 on Video

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December 31, 2011

 

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Top 10 Greatest GOP Moments
of 2011 on Video

Top 10 Greatest GOP Moments of 2011 on Video, ABC News, December 30, 2011, by Amy Bingham, excerpt quoted verbatim:

It’s that time of year again when broadcasts, podcasts and webcasts inundate the airwaves with the Top 10 lists of 2011. ABC has counted down everything from the top political scandals and campaign moments to the most popular tablet computers and legal cases.

Now the Democratic National Committee has joined the year-in-reflection bandwagon, releasing a video countdown today of the top 10 GOP moments that could make the Democrats’ road to re-election a tad bit easier.

The video, released in an email to supporters on Friday, strings together some of the most notable gaffes of the Republican presidential contest in 2011. The Democrat’s countdown is complete with carnival music and a circus-style ring of GOP elephants. ….

Top Ten GOP Moments
of 2011 on Video

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Compassionate conservatism? An open letter to Newt Gingrich from the child of a janitor

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December 30, 2011

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Compassionate conservatism? An open letter
to Newt Gingrich from the child of a janitor

Compassionate conservatism? An open letter to Newt Gingrich from the child of a janitor, Daily Kos, December 29, 2011, by Chaunceydevega, excerpts quoted verbatim:

Newt Gingrich has repeatedly shown that he is an existentially ugly person. Therefore, his repeated comments about the black poor, and “inner city” communities, where people “don’t have a work ethic” are not at all a surprise. Time has demonstrated that “compassionate conservatism,” an oxymoron if there ever was one, is not particularly kind, just, or humane.

Paul Krugman: Income Inequality
and the Middle Class

As demonstrated by his Wednesday editorial on the website Human Events, Newt Gingrich is apparently wedded to the idea that young black and brown kids should have the “privilege” of becoming janitors in their schools in order to learn about the value of “hard work.”

There are any number of problems with this argument. Primarily, Gingrich is recycling the ugly and deeply racist belief that black people are inherently lazy: poor children who don’t see people around them working apparently grow up to be lazy adults, who are on welfare, dependent on the state, and have no understanding of how to put in an honest day’s work. He gives no consideration to the stigma that child janitors would experience, and the taunting and bullying that would inevitably result from being one of the students who carries a pail, mop, or broom around their school.

Newt Gingrich is also blindly ignorant of the issues surrounding structural unemployment in poor inner city communities, and where it is not a deficit of work ethic or drive, but a lack of desperately wanted job opportunities—especially for young people—that drives urban poverty. Given the Right-wing’s assault on unions, and the social safety net, more broadly, Gingrich’s smearing of school janitors as an enriched and craven class of greedy public employees is just more red meat for an agenda that wants to destroy the American middle and working classes.

In all, Newt Gingrich is offering up a Dickensonian fantasy of workhouses in which African American wastrels and street urchins learn the value of hard work from benevolent white folks like him.

Of course, Newt Gingrich’s children, and those of the moneyed classes who he represents, would never be asked to pick up a mop and broom at their schools—as their kids’ responsibility is first and foremost to prepare and study for college, and the bright future which awaits them.

And I must wonder, what lessons have the children of the financier class, the trust fund baby and inherited money types who brought about the Great Recession, been taught about the value of hard work from observing the destructive behavior of their parents during this time of economic calamity?

Over the years, I have developed a pretty thick skin regarding these matters. However, there is something particular offensive about Newt Gingrich’s repeated insistence that poor black kids become janitors in order to learn about the merits of “hard work” that demands engagement. It would seem to his eyes that janitors are disposable people with easy jobs. Moreover, to him, a janitor’s job is so simple that anyone, even an elementary or middle school student, could do it well.

As the refrain goes, the personal is political. I am the son of a janitor. I try not to break kayfabe, or to drop the mask too often. Nevertheless, sometimes it is necessary to speak up for yourself, as well as for the many other people who may not have either the privilege, or opportunity, to speak truth to power.

In that spirit, please take this as an open letter of sorts to Newt Gingrich (and the particular brand of compassionate conservatism which he represents).

These are not details designed to elicit a tear; they are details of a full life, the human experience that stands behind words such as “janitor,” “teacher,” “unions,” and “working class.” These are perennially good titles, now transformed into slurs, by people like Newt Gingrich and his conservative brethren.

Read the full article, here.

Comment by Paul Evans: I strongly feel that the whole so-called recovery was deliberately engineered and orchestrated so that only the rich, the investment banks, and the big corporations would benefit. One interesting note about this is that as of February of 2011, the unemployment rate for those making $100,000 a year or more was 3.2 percent, whereas the unemployment rate for those making $20,000 a year or less was 31 percent. Such an income inequality and basic unfairness in my opinion is anti-American, and indecent.

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The Big Promises and Bigger Lies of Mitt Romney

Evans Community of Caring
December 27, 2011

 

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The Big Promises and Bigger
Lies of Mitt Romney

Welcome to Evans Community of Caring

Welcome to the new Evans Community of Caring! With a three year run as Evans Liberal Politics and Evans Liberal Christian Politics, having a content centering around building a caring society, with news and political articles hoping to point in that direction, we thought it was time to shake things up a little. In our new incarnation, we are hoping to bring more articles dealing with a focus on caring, building a caring society, inspirational articles, and economic and social justice. If that means we often continue bring you political articles, this is only because of the great extent to which politics has a bearing on what kind of a society we build and strengthen.

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While to a large extent we come from a Christian (and liberal) perspective, we hope that we can downplay any sort of emphasis on any kind of doctrine, and anyone and everyone are welcome here. It’s about caring as a way to live our lives, following in the footsteps of Jesus and many other wonderful, giving people, from whatever belief system they might come from. We are also hoping to make the website more interactive. We are emphasizing our chat room, and hoping our readers start asking each other for help, and that all of us will step up to the plate and love and care for one another. ~ Paul Evans

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The Big Promises and Bigger Lies of Mitt Romney, Daily Kos, December 27, 2011, by Avenging Angel, excerpt quoted verbatim:

In the election of 1928, the Republican Party of Herbert Hoover promised voters “a chicken in every pot and a car in every backyard.” (We all know how that turned out.) Now, Mitt Romney is pledging that “If I’m President” every college graduate will be guaranteed a job, Iran will have no nuclear weapons and the United States will dominate the 21st century. And when Romney isn’t making fantastic promises about what he’ll do when he gets to the White House, he’s slandering the current occupant, Barack Obama. ….

Read the full article, here.

Comment by Paul Evans: Lately I have been fairly surprised at what I am learning about Mitt Romney. I had thought that perhaps (at least in terms of a Republican), Romney might not be all that bad. What I am seeing is a man filled with such an ambition to be President that he basically doesn’t care what he has to do to get there. I also see a man who seems to want to go to war with Iran. His lies are obvious lies, and he makes ridiculous statements, in particular about Barack Obama. The amazing thing is that so far he has fully gotten away with it. I guess maybe the Republican base is so used to the venom and lies that people like Rush Limbaugh (or even Newt Gingrich, for that matter) tell matter of factly, that they are no longer able to discern a bald faced lie when they hear one. I can only hope and pray that when the Republicans finally do pick one of these jokers, that America will not have blinders on, and will stand up for what is right and true.

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Another Face of the US Recession: Homeless Children

Evans Community of Caring
December 26, 2011

 

A Caring Place Where People
May Help Each Other
and Talk Politics or Religion

Another Face of the US Recession:
Homeless Children

© 2011 Reuters, Common Dreams.org, December 25, 2011, by Tom Brown for Reuters.

As her mother sat in a homeless shelter in downtown Miami, talking about her economic struggles and loss of faith in the U.S. political system, 3-year-old Aeisha Touray blurted out what sounded like a new slogan for the Occupy Wall Street protest movement.

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“How dare you!” the girl said abruptly as she nudged a toy car across a conference room table at the Chapman Partnership shelter in Miami’s tough and predominantly black Overtown neighborhood.

There was no telling what Aeisha was thinking as her 32-year-old mother, Nairkahe Touray, spoke of how she burned through her savings and wound up living in a car with five of her eight children earlier this year.

But how dare you indeed? How does anyone explain to kids like Aeisha and countless others how they wound up homeless in the world’s richest nation?

In a report issued earlier this month, the National Center on Family Homelessness, based in Needham, Massachusetts, said 1.6 million children were living on the streets of the United States last year or in shelters, motels and doubled-up with other families.

That marked a 38 percent jump in child homelessness since 2007 and Ellen Bassuk, the center’s president, attributes the increase to fallout from the U.S. recession and a surge in the number of extremely poor households headed by women.

Recent data from the U.S. Census Bureau provided a sobering backdrop. Based on new or experimental methodology aimed at providing a fuller picture of poverty, the data showed that about 48 percent of Americans are living in poverty or on low incomes.

Under the bureau’s so-called Supplemental Poverty Measure for 2010, issued last month, the poverty level for a family of four was set at income anywhere below $24,343 per year.

“I see it every day,” said Alfredo Brown, 73, a retired army officer and deputy director of the non-profit Chapman Partnership, when asked about child homelessness.

The organization, funded largely by a 1 percent food and beverage tax on larger restaurants to bankroll homeless programs, operates two sprawling homeless shelters in Miami-Dade County.

“I see so many children and mothers that are homeless and sleeping in their car or an abandoned building, an old bus. It’s a sad situation that we live in a country that has so much and many people have so little,” Brown said.

Child homelessness is a relatively new social problem in the United States, where being on the street and the stigma attached to it has long been associated with adults with alcohol or drug dependency issues.

IMPOVERISHED MOTHERS

Families accounted for less than 1 percent of the U.S. homeless population in the mid-1980s, according to Bassuk, but they now comprise about a third of the homeless population. A lot of children are dependent on poverty-stricken single moms.

“There’s sort of a Third World emerging right in our backyard. You know, we talk about developing countries but look at what’s going on here,” Bassuk said.

To put a face to the breadth and depth of the homeless problem, a team of Reuters journalists fanned out across the country in the past week, for interviews with parents and children who are down on their luck.

From Skid Row in Los Angeles to the South Bronx in New York, a common thread of economic devastation from the recession ran throughout many of the stories these people told. ….

Read the full article here.

Read About the Campaign to End Child Homelessness

Donate to Save the Children’s Global Action Fund.

Visit Child Fund International (formerly Christian Children’s Fund).

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