Posts Tagged ‘progressive news’

Prop. 8 overturned in California, court says state can’t ban gay marriage

Logos57: A Caring Community

 

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

Prop. 8 overturned in California,
court says state can’t ban gay marriage

Prop. 8 overturned in California, court says state can’t ban gay marriage, The Lookout on Yahoo News, February 7, 2012, by Liz Goodwin:

The 9th Circuit Court in California struck down as unconstitutional the state’s voter-passed ban on gay marriage Tuesday, ruling 2-1 that it violates the rights of gay Californians.

[View a slideshow of demonstrations around Prop. 8 here]

“Proposition 8 serves no purpose, and has no effect, other than to lessen the status and human dignity of gays and lesbians in California, and to officially reclassify their relationships and families as inferior to those of opposite-sex couples,” Judge Stephen Reinhardt wrote in the decision. The court concludes that the law violates the 14th Amendment rights of gay couples to equal protection under the law. Access to gay marriage will remain on hold pending appeals to the decision.

Visit MarriageEqualityUSA. Here at Logos57: A Caring Community, we maintain a strong faith in God yet have liberal values. One of the most cherished of American rights is the right to equality under the law. It is for that reason that we support the LGBT community in it’s fight for that full equality. It is for each person to stand justified or condemned before God, not constrained in rights by man’s laws. Laws which condemn some citizens to a lesser status under whatever reasoning are thus invalid under the 14th Amendment.

We have always maintained that our society’s liberalism, to the extent it exists, has no inherent conflict with God’s wishes for man. I do apologize to anyone I thus offend. Do you not think that those American citizens who are for whatever reasons denied their basic rights do not find laws such as Proposition 8 very offensive? We should consider ALL Americans’ right to equality under the law, not just those who believe the way we do. ~ Paul Evans

468X60

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

Mitt Romney wins the Nevada caucus by a wide margin

Logos57: a Caring Community
February 5, 2012

 

Mitt Romney wins the Nevada caucus by a wide margin

Mitt Romney wins the Nevada caucus by a wide margin, The Raw Story, February 4, 2012, by Megan Carpentier, copied verbatim: Logos57: A Caring Community is pleased to partner with The Raw Story to bring you cutting edge news, Image via Gage Skidmore on Flickr, Creative Commons licensed:

Former governor Mitt Romney (R-MA) scored his most decisive win to date in the Nevada Republican caucus tonight, winning the race by more than 15 percent and leaving former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA) and Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) to battle for second place again with former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA) again a distant fourth.

Creative Commons photograph of Mitt Romney on the campaign trail in Nevada by Gage Skidmore

But despite Paul’s expectation that the caucus format would benefit his campaign, Paul looked to place a significant distance behind Gingrich.

Romney took the stage just before 10:40 ET, introduced again by his wife, Ann, to thank supporters and slam Obama, reminding voters that Obama encouraged people to avoid coming to Nevada for conventions and meetings. Romney then took aim at Friday’s encouraging unemployment statistics, suggesting that the “real” unemployment rate was closer to 15 percent, a nod to the underemployment rate, which is down from 17.2 percent in January 2010.

In what is now a frequent refrain, Romney told his audience, “This president began his presidency by apologizing for America, now he should apologize to America” adding that the president should stop making excuses for the ongoing economic crisis. “Our vision for the future could not be more different from his,” Romney said, promising to cut government, reduce the government’s share of the total economy and balance the federal budget without raising taxes. In another statement common to his speeches, Romney said that Obama “demonizes and denigrates” entrepreneurs that his Administration would promote. And, of course, he promised to repeal “Obamacare” and rescind the recent Obama Administration ruling that forces employer insurance to provide coverage for birth control, which has been under fire from religious employers and religious groups — a point Romney made in his Tuesday night speech after the Florida primary. He then asked people to remember that their ancestors came to American “for the pursuit of happiness, not the pursuit of hand-outs,” and asked them to vote for him in November, making this one of his shortest speeches to date.

Gingrich took his small, press conference stage at the Venetian alone at 11:17 ET, promising the assembled reporters to go to Republican National Convention in Tampa in August as a candidate for President to honor his donors. He then slammed Romney for his comments earlier this week about the poor, saying that he wanted to “turn the social safety net into a trampoline.” He then followed it by saying that he thought indexing the minimum wage to inflation was a terrible idea which would “kill jobs and stop access for young people.” Following that, he called Romney a “Massachusetts moderate” that didn’t represent the views of the GOP.

He then said, “Tonight he will probably do reasonably well, this is a heaving Mormon state,” ignoring the fact that the race had already been called for Romney and indicating that he didn’t yet know whether he or Paul had taken second place. He said he expected to be “at parity” with Romney after the Texas primary on April 4, almost a month after Super Tuesday.

In more odd answers, Gingrich called Romney a “Soros-backed” candidate and dismissed reports that his largest backer, Sheldon Adelson — whose money reportedly paid for the anti-Romney documentary that solidified his win in South Carolina — would eventually back Romney after Gingrich backed out. Adelson, Romney said, was solely interested in a nuclear Iran and its existential threat to Israel and Adelson’s statements about Romney as unimportant.

“I’m not going to defend the outcome in a state where I was outspent 5-to-1,” Gingrich told another reporter when he was asked whether it was possible that voters just weren’t “buying what you’re selling.” Gingrich stated that “I don’t think the American people will support a campaign that suppresses turn-out,” he said, and stated that he expected to be atop Gallup polls again by April. But despite saying that he didn’t like negative campaigning and felt he did better while the campaign was positive, Gingrich refused to “unilaterally disarm” and stop his negative campaigning against Romney. Instead, he promised to bring “new tactics” to the next debate with Romney to counter what Gingrich termed his blatant lies.

[This post was updated after results came in.]

468X60

Megan Carpentier is the executive editor of Raw Story. She previously served as an associate editor at Talking Points Memo; the editor of news and politics at Air America; an editor at Jezebel.com; and an associate editor at Wonkette. Her published works include pieces for the Washington Post, the Washington Independent, Ms Magazine, RH Reality Check, the Women’s Media Center, On the Issues, the New York Press, Bitch and Women’s eNews.

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

Paying For Cancer Treatment for Children in America With a Car Wash, Bake Sale and Fish Fry

Logos57: a Caring Community

 

Paying For Cancer Treatment for Children
in America With a Car Wash, Bake Sale and Fish Fry

Paying For Cancer Treatment for Children in America With a Car Wash, Bake Sale and Fish Fry, Common Dreams.org, February 3, 2012, by Wendell Potter, quoted verbatim:

“It shouldn’t be this way,” read the subject line of an email I received Friday morning from a conservative friend and fellow Southerner. “People shouldn’t have to beg for money to pay for medical care.”

At first, I thought he was referring to my column last week in which I wrote about the fundraising effort to cover the bills, totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars, that the husband of Canadian skier Sarah Burke is now facing. Burke died on January 19, nine days after sustaining severe head injuries in a skiing accident in Park City, Utah. I noted that had the accident occurred in Burke’s native Canada, which has a system of universal coverage, the fundraiser would not have been necessary.

beautiful inspiring image of an empty wheelchair at the bottom of a toplit flight of stairs

But my friend was not writing about Sarah Burke. He wanted to alert me to another fundraiser, this one on Alabama’s Gulf Coast, to help pay for the mounting medical expenses for a beautiful 13-year-old girl fighting for her life at USA Children’s & Women’s Hospital in Mobile, Ala.

In late November, Caroline Richmond was rushed to the hospital after collapsing on the way home from school. Doctors quickly determined she’d had a stroke and required immediate surgery. The bad news just kept coming. The stroke had been caused by leukemia.

In the weeks following brain surgery, Caroline had to undergo chemotherapy. She later became so ill that she was put on a ventilator and had to be fed through tubes. Although she is still listed in critical condition and faces a bone marrow transplant, Caroline has made progress. She was taken off the ventilator and tubes last week, and is now eating solid food for the first time since the stroke.

As it turns out, Caroline is one of more than 50 million men, women and children who do not have health insurance in the United States, which is why her family is in the same predicament as Sarah Burke’s. Caroline’s father, Dallas, is self-employed and, like millions of other Americans who do not work for a company that offers health benefits, has not been able to find affordable coverage for his family.

A friend of the Richmonds, Robin Smith, told me Dallas is one of the hardest working people she’s ever met. She said he owns a coin-operated laundry and has “two or three” other jobs to make ends meet. “He works round the clock,” she said. “You never see him when he’s not working.”

Knowing that Dallas and his wife, Christy, are worried not only about their daughter but also about the real possibility they might be forced into bankruptcy and lose their home because of the medical bills, Smith has joined other friends of the family to raise money. Caroline’s classmates and teachers have put “Cups for Caroline” in all the homerooms at Fairhope Middle School, where Caroline is an eighth-grader. They’ve also held car washes.

Last night they were scheduled to host a bake sale and fish fry at the American Legion Post in Fairhope. It was that event, also posted on a Facebook support page, that my friend brought to my attention. Until then, I had never heard of Caroline Richmond. I suspect you hadn’t heard of her either. I am writing not only to spread the word, but also to ask that you think for a moment about walking in the Richmond family’s shoes.

It is important to understand that almost all of us who do have health coverage through the workplace are just a layoff or plant closing away from joining the Richmonds among the uninsured. Those of us who are self-employed like Dallas Richmond or who work for small businesses that can no longer pay for coverage are increasingly unlikely to find decent coverage that we can afford.

Please Share Logos57: a Caring Community
with Friends and Contacts

Hundreds of thousands of families file for bankruptcy and lose their homes every year nationwide because of medical debt. Many of those people actually have what they thought was adequate insurance, but find that they still have to pay far more out of their own pockets to cover thousands of dollars in bills than their budgets will allow.

My column on Sarah Burke provoked many comments, some from people who essentially wrote, “too bad, so sad.” In their opinion, Burke shouldn’t have been taking risks on the ski slopes in Utah in the first place. She should have bought coverage that would have protected her in the U.S.

Maybe so. But I wonder what those people, all of whom condemned “Obamacare,” will say about Caroline Richmond. When the reform law is fully implemented in a couple of years — assuming it goes forward — the Richmonds should be able to find coverage at an affordable price. That’s what reform was all about. To make sure that American families don’t have to lose their homes when someone gets sick and to make sure that insurance firms can no longer engage in practices that have swelled the ranks of the uninsured and underinsured.

Caroline’s story is not unique. Tragedies like her’s occur so often, in fact, that they rarely make the news anymore. But it is precisely because they are an everyday occurrence that health care reform was so urgently needed. We have been led to believe by opponents of reform that our health care system is the best in the world. The reality, of course, is that, while we do indeed have some of the world’s best doctors and hospitals, the system in which they operate has become increasingly dysfunctional and unnecessarily expensive. This is why the reform law, despite its flaws, must go forward.

To learn more about Caroline Richmond and how to make a donation, visit the Facebook page established by her family’s friends.

Wendell Potter is former Vice President of corporate communications at CIGNA, one of the United States’ largest health insurance companies. In June 2009, he testified against the HMO industry in the U.S. Senate as a whistleblower. He is now the Senior Fellow on Health Care for the Center for Media and Democracy in Madison, Wisconsin.

Also See When Medicare Isn’t Medicare, The Huffington Post, December 26, 2011, by Wendell Potter.

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

Newt Gingrich: Down in Florida and On the Way Out

Logos57: A Caring Community

 

Newt Gingrich: Down in Florida
and On the Way Out


If (or When) Gingrich is Eliminated
From this race, it won’t be for lack of funding

Logos57: A Caring Community, January 31, 2012, news on the Florida primary compiled and with commentary by Paul Evans:

NEW! Election Results: FL Primary Results: Mitt Romney Scores Huge Florida Win, But Primary Looks Far From Finished, The Huffington Post, January 31, 2011, by Jon Ward:

Romney’s overwhelming win here Tuesday night was a big moment for the former Massachusetts governor that fully restored him to frontrunner status, and dealt a major blow to former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.

Romney won convincingly, with 47.5 percent to Gingrich’s 31.2 percent, with 51 percent of the vote counted. Former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.) and Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) trailed behind, with 13.1 and 6.9 percent, respectively.

NEW! See Bolstered by Latino Vote, Romney Poised to Regain Momentum With Florida Victory, ABC News on Yahoo News, January 31, 2012, by Matthew Jaffe.

NEW! See Mitt Romney leads exit polls in Florida, KSDK, January 30, 2011, by NBC:

(NBC) – Mitt Romney’s sounding like he’s already won Florida and the GOP presidential nomination. A half million Floridians have voted early, and Romney leads two-to-one in exit polls.

>
Commentary by Paul Evans: In the Florida primary, in my opinion, the contest will end most of the opportunity for Gingrich to get the nomination. There is plenty of news around the web that is pointing that way. We’ll start off with the NPR and The Huffington Post and then move along to Mother Jones and then Politico. (Everything you need to know from four sources!) Even if we left it at that, it appears likely that Newt’s chances are fading. The more I read about this guy, the more I can’t understand exactly how he got to be a serious candidate for the Republican nomination. So put on your thinking caps and hold on: it’s not hard to find articles from the last day or so which underline my contention:

For starters, see Logos57: A Caring Community’s own article Accused of ‘Grandiosity,’ Gingrich steps back and …proposes a moon base (Updated). This contains news coverage on the Florida election from yesterday and the day before. Pay special attention to our excerpt from Obama Vs. Gingrich? More Reasons GOP Fears The Matchup, NPR, January 30, 2012, by Liz Halloran. This article offers compelling evidence about the general election, specifically, match-ups of either Romney or Gingrich vs. Obama. Romney is in an electoral college dead heat with Obama, while Gingrich probably would get “clobbered:”

Rothenberg’s latest presidential race calculations show that Gingrich would get clobbered by Obama in the tally of all-important state Electoral College votes, 328-180, with only 30 votes seen as tossups. Those estimates are unchanged since Rothenberg’s similar analysis a month ago.

There are a total of 538 electoral votes; 270 are needed to secure the presidency.

Paul Evans: And, it turns out, the whole moon colony proposal of Gingrich isn’t the only news item which really gives you pause. You have to ask yourself, “Should this man really get the Republican nomination, or wouldn’t he (and the Republican Party) be a lot better off with Newt quietly professing these weird ideas of his in some well funded think tank somewhere?” Here is what we mean:

See Newt’s New-Age Love Gurus: This article reports on some really strong aspects of Gingrich’s past which social conservatives would really be appalled by, if they knews the facts. The article’s introductions states that “Gingrich’s intellectual mentors are former Marxist organizers who envisioned a future full of serial marriages and open relationships.” Amazing. Of course, Gingrich is on his third wife now, with some proven …indiscretions, shall we say.


If (or When) Newt’s Campaign “Goes Down,” It Won’t Be for Lack of Funding

Remember when Gingrich’s billionaire friend pumped $5 million into his campaign as the election in South Carolina entered its final week? Well, here we gio again. This will be truly last minute funding, but at a level of $10 million. You can buy quite a bit of TV airtime with $10 million, if South Carolina is any example:

See ‘Joe Kennedy helped his son,’ Gingrich funder says, Catholic Online, January 27, 2012, by Catholic Online (News Consortium):

Billionaire casino mogul Sheldon Adelson who is bankrolling Newt Gingrich’s super PAC to the tune of $10 million, says he isn’t trying to “buy” a presidency. Adelson says he’s just following in the footsteps of another powerful business tycoon, Joseph Kennedy, father of President John F. Kennedy.

The 78-year-old Adelson has a personal fortune estimated at $21 billion, according to Rogich, “plays to win” and “puts his money where his mouth is.”

Adelson and his Israeli-born wife Miriam have pumped $10 million in the last three weeks into the Winning Our Future Super PAC. The cash has provided crucial cash infusion that helped revive Gingrich’s candidacy, bankrolling attack ads against Mitt Romney in South Carolina and now Florida.

Paul Evans: OK, 1.) How do socially conservative Republicans feel about Gingrich getting his funding via a billionaire casino owner and 2.) as a Democrat and a liberal, I find the comparison between Joe Kennedy’s funding JFK’s campaign and this billionaire casino type offensive, don’t you?

Watch a video on Gingrich’s unethical behavior when he was Speaker of the House, here. This is a devastating attack ad that Romney is saturating Florida with currently.

Tell Your Friends and Contacts
About Logos57: a Caring Community

Here’s a side note Here’s an article you may want to pay attention to, especially if you are a Latino. See Gingrich and Romney Want to Say Adios to Bilingual Ballots, Mother Jones, January 30, 2012, by Adam Serwer. So, both these guys including the more socially reasonable Romney want to disenfranchise maybe a million or so Latinos? Liberals have been trying to tell the Hispanic community that this is the basic way all Republicans feel about voters rights. Some time ago the Tea Party types were actually proposing that voting should be a privilege that only those Americans who own property should have. It’s simple. The more you cut poor and underprivileged citizens out of the voting picture, the better the Republicans do in elections everywhere. Florida Pay Attention?

Also See The Newt I Know, Politico, January 27, 2012, by Joe Scarborough:

Yeah, yeah. I know. Newt Gingrich had a lousy week and will probably lose the Florida primary on Tuesday. But for those tempted to once again predict the speedy collapse of his campaign, consider yourselves forewarned. I’ve known this guy long enough to realize that the only three species destined to survive a nuclear holocaust will be cockroaches, Cher and Newton Leroy Gingrich.

Important: See Final PPP poll: Romney 39, Gingrich 31 in Florida, Politico, January 30, 2012, by Burns and Haberman.

Finally, See The Daisy Commercial of 2012, Huffington Post, January 30, 2012, by Adam Hanft:

As Romney’s lead in Florida solidifies, and an unfocused Gingrich rages in all directions — he’s his own attack dog — I want to come right out and say it. Romney’s Brokaw commercial is one of the most devastatingly effective negative spots I’ve seen in years. I believe it will go down with the LBJ “Daisy” spot in the annals of fatal, thunderbolt blows.

By contrast (to LBJ’s commercial), the Brokaw spot’s strength – it’s called, in deadpan fashion, “History Lesson — springs from its unconstructed simplicity. It opens on a television screen with a super that reads “NBC Nightly News, January 21st, 1997.”

Brokaw intones the following, in a voice that if not dripping with irony, is certainly maximally saturated:

“Newt Gingrich, who came to power, after all, preaching a higher standard in American politics, a man who brought down another Speaker on ethics accusations, tonight he has on his own record, the judgment of his peers Democrats and Republicans alike, by an overwhelming vote they found him guilty of ethics violations, they charged him a very large financial penalty, and several of them raised serious questions about his future effectiveness.”

That’s it. It doesn’t parse perfectly, but it wounds deeply. Every word Brokaw utters is deadly for Gingrich; the devastating indictment hurtles from the past into the mental decision box that has been in such Floridian turmoil for the last two weeks.

Paul Evans: Well, that’s a sampling of some of the “dirt” on Gingrich, in fact just from four websites, with commentary — NPR, Huffington Post, Mother Jones and Politico. I’m sure you can find lots of live reporting on the election results later today. We’ll try to provide a link one here, later today.

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

Our Internet: Stop SOPA and PIPA Now

Logos57: A Caring Community
January 21, 2012

 

Our Internet
Stop SOPA and PIPA Now

Logos57: A Caring Community, January 21, 2012, complilation by Paul Evans:

  • End Piracy, Not Liberty, Google, with petition, ongoing:

    Two bills before Congress, known as the Protect IP Act (PIPA) in the Senate and the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) in the House, would censor the Web and impose harmful regulations on American business. Millions of Internet users and entrepreneurs already oppose SOPA and PIPA.

    The Senate will begin voting on January 24th. Please let them know how you feel. Sign this petition urging Congress to vote NO on PIPA and SOPA before it is too late.

  • End American Censorship, Write Congress Now!, another petition.
  • How SOPA affects you, FAQ, CNET, January 18, 2012, by Declan McCullagh.
  • PIPA, SOPA put on hold in wake of protests, CBS News, January 20, 2011, by Stephanie Condon. (latest news)

Please also visit http://stopthewall.us

Our Internet
(YouTube video, 1:53)

Romney leads Paul in Iowa poll, Santorum surges

Logos57: A Caring Community
January 1, 2012

 

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

Romney leads Paul
in Iowa poll, Santorum surges

Romney leads Paul in Iowa poll, Santorum surges, Reuters, January 1, 2012, by John Whitesides and Steve Holland:

(Reuters) – Republican Mitt Romney narrowly leads rival Ron Paul in Iowa three days before the state kicks off the party’s presidential nominating race, according to a Des Moines Register poll released on Saturday.

The closely watched poll, which has a strong track record in Iowa races, showed Rick Santorum surging past Newt Gingrich into third place in a fluid race where 41 percent of likely caucus-goers said they could still change their minds.

The newspaper’s poll, conducted Tuesday through Friday, showed Romney with 24 percent support, Paul with 22 percent, Santorum with 15 percent and Gingrich 12 percent. In fifth place was Rick Perry with 11 percent while Michele Bachmann was sixth with 7 percent.

Read the full article here.

See Also With 48 hours left, Romney close to Iowa breakthrough, Reuters on Yahoo News, January 1, 2012, by John Whitesides, excerpt quoted verbatim:

Romney, who spent millions in Iowa in 2008 only to lose, has not campaigned hard here until recent days.

He picked up the endorsement on Sunday of Iowa’s Quad-City Times newspaper, which praised his business background as a former head of a private equity firm and said he had the best chance of beating Obama.

*****

We’re Counting on YOU! Please share Logos57: A Caring Community with friends! In order for us to keep bringing you the latest in liberal news, politics, social and economic justice and articles with an emphasis on caring, we really need you to SHARE this website with your friends and contacts. Can you help us today?

POVERTY ACTION ALERT
Folks We Are in Real Need

EMERGENCY APPEAL: From Paul Evans: We need your donations, ASAP. I myself and two other friends live six miles outside of Wooster, Ohio, out in the country. For almost the last six months, we have not had a car. Neither can we afford to heat our home, and we are delinquent on our property taxes. Finally we have saved up $600 and have found a car we can purchase for that amount. Believe me, this alone is a huge relief for us. However, because of the need for that payment, we may have to discontinue our phone/internet for a month or more, unless we get help from you. If you enjoy Logos57: A Caring Community, please send a money order to Paul Evans, 5396 Overton Road, Wooster, OH 44691. Help keep free journalism alive and help my family have gas for my car and continued phone internet service, so I can keep bringing you the kind of news you like. Thanks for considering us.

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.

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

Logos57: A Caring Community
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.

Click the pretty lady
to Visit Paul’s Playlist for
Great Rock & Pop Music!
*230 Hot Tracks!*

a pretty brunette draped only in an American flag serves as a link to Paul's Playlist of great streaming electronic rock and pop music

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:

Click the Magic Dollar Sign
to Visit Our Rock &
Pop Playlist – 230 Songs
#1 Rated by Google

A magic dollar sign serves as a link to Paul's Playlist – Listen to hours of streaming rock, pop and electronic music

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.

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

Evans Community of Caring
December 30, 2011

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

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.

*****

We’re Counting on YOU! Please share Evans Liberal Politics with friends! In order for us to keep bringing you the latest in liberal news and politics, we really need you to SHARE Evans Liberal Politics with your friends and contacts. Can you help us today?

POVERTY ACTION ALERT
Folks We Are in Real Need

EMERGENCY APPEAL: From Paul Evans: We need your donations, ASAP. I myself and two other friends live six miles outside of Wooster, Ohio, out in the country. For almost the last six months, we have not had a car. Neither can we afford to heat our home, and we are delinquent on our property taxes. Finally we have saved up $600 and have found a car we can purchase for that amount. Believe me, this alone is a huge relief for us. However, because of the need for that payment, we may have to discontinue our phone/internet for a month or more, unless we get help from you. If you enjoy Evans Caring Community, please send a money order to Paul Evans, 5396 Overton Road, Wooster, OH 44691. Help keep free journalism alive and help my family have gas for my car and continued phone internet service, so I can keep bringing you the kind of news you like. Thanks for considering us.

Have a Listen to Our Playlists of Classic Rock Only Music, the Liberal Christian Rock, or Pure Electronic Music, or just have a look at the master playlist of 230 Rock, Pop & Electronic Hits. Get your music fix while you browse the news.