America's idealism began to fade during the Reagan administration after being severely damaged during the Nixon years. Reagan secretly traded weapons for hostages in Iran, while giving chemical weapons to Iraq, also without any authority except his own and done in complete secrecy.
America's idealism was replaced with American duplicity. Exceptional America became an illusion in the 1980s . The CIA under Reagan created Al Qaeda, funding and training them to fight Russia in Afghanistan. Putin remembers remembers this, so his hatred of the US is deep. He will pursue an agenda that hurts the
West as long as he is in a position to do so.
America's idealism became naivete when GWBush and Dick Cheney lied America into a war of imperialism based on known lies and doctored foreign intelligence reports.
Under Reagan America went from the world’s biggest creditor nation to the world’s biggest debtor nation. Tax cuts were implemented and the deficit deliberately allowed to balloon so that downsizing our government would be required to balance the budget. (Once taxes are cut, it is very difficult to reestablish prior tax rates.)
America fell from first place in educated population to 17th, upward mobility virtually ended and the wealth divide between the haves and the rest of us became the largest in the world.
America or a great part of it ceased to care about the least among its population. Decades of policy revision since Reagan had the effect of making the very rich much more wealthy at the expense of the poor and middle class. Psychological warfare against the poor and middle class succeeded in isolating them. A parade of right wing propaganda on social issues was manufactured to distract and divide the uneducated poor.
Because public education is largely funded through property taxes, educational resources for the poor diminished while the far better resourced and funded schools in wealthy areas insured that the divide between the privileged and the poor continued to grow. Not satisfied with this oppression, the privileged are now deliberately undermining public education, planning to replace it with a system of corporate private schools, offering “vouchers” to the poor. Vouchers will then be cut over time to reduce the resources available to the poor.
In the same way, “vouchers’ are being promoted as a replacement for social security and medicare, again giving the privileged a tool to further steal from the poor and middle class over time.
Globalization of commerce at the urging of multinational corporations has enabled them to move skilled and unskilled work from countries with unions and a strong middle class to counties with large populations of poor and desperate people. Recessions are created in wealthy countries, forcing wage and benefit cuts and creating a pool of poor and desperate people in the advanced nations.
These things did not just "happen." All of them have been policy goals of the Right Wing for decades.
Sunday, April 6, 2014
I'm tired of paying for welfare queens
I'm tired of paying the salary of Supreme Court Justices who have a vested interest in the success of corporations. I'm tired of paying for the health care of Walmart and other big box and fast food workers because they won't pay their employees a living wage or provide insurance. I'm tired of paying the oil industry $22 million a day. I am tired of highly profitable companies getting tax breaks and abatements, loopholes, and overseas tax shelters. And I am Really tired of hearing all our financial problems being blamed on people who are struggling to make it through one more day.
Saturday, January 18, 2014
West Virginia
When babies died many years ago, and perhaps today, despite the best
efforts of the parents, doctors often attributed it to "failure to
thrive." Sometimes our aging parents die the same way, refusing their
meds and believing highly trained healthcare providers don't know what's
best. Watching my home state of West Virginia from afar, I get the
eerie feeling that political entities can do the same thing. Sane people
can be so outnumbered by the impaired that death from "failure to
thrive" is always imminent.
Monday, January 13, 2014
Maryland
I love my adopted state of Maryland. It is tolerant, progressive, and has many natural and geographic advantages. And it has the Chesapeake Bay, the largest estuary in the world and a real treasure. It has many beautiful rural areas, yet is a very densely populated state. It’s population is larger than Oregon, Colorado, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Kentucky, Alabama, South Carolina, Iowa, Arkansas, Kansas, Nebraska and others. It also has a larger population than Denmark, Finland, Slovakia, Norway, Lebanon, Ireland, New Zealand, Uruguay, Mongolia, and many others. When people see it on a map it looks like a small state. It has a big heart, and it is an economic powerhouse. Just wanted to get this out there.
Sunday, October 13, 2013
The Importance of Stability
If
one truly believes in the benefits of capitalism, then above all else
the government needs to be mindful of providing a stable environment for
business and individual initiative to thrive. The GOP knows this, and
that is why it has been on a destabilization campaign ever since the
black democrat was elected President. It is a right wing conspiracy so
vast and so obvious that no one, especially not those in the media,
makes note of it.
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Irony
Do Rubio, Jindal, Ryan or any of the wet behind the ears conservatives see the irony? All said that their moms or grandmoms depend on Social Scurity and Medicare. At least two of these politicians depended on these programs as a child or as a student. All swear they would do nothing to harm these programs (and then suggests voucherizing Medicare so the government won't have to worry about future cost increases).
But look at the history, boys. Conservatives opposed all of these programs tooth and nail. The New Deal, the New Frontier, the Great Society - they hated them all and have spent the last 70 years trying to dismantle them. So here's the irony - these politicians or someone in their families - depends or depended on these programs to survive with dignity, to go to school, or to eat. These politicians love and support these programs (they say). So excuse me, why are you a conservative, why have you aligned yourself with the party that voted against these programs and has spent the last 70 years trying to undermine them?
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Guns
Dear Senators Cardin and Mikulski, and Representative Sarbanes:
I am enough of a realist to understand that guns will never be banned in this country. But gun ownership should come with powerful responsibilities.
It's time for gun owners and the NRA to cooperate with the rest of us and take steps to hold gun owners accountable, to properly screen and train gun owners, and to pay for the damage their gun ownership costs society. Our country incurs billions of dollars in damage, death and destruction each year due to guns. We need to hold the gun owners responsible for those costs. And it's well past time to make sure that only responsible people own guns.
The idea that anyone should be able to go out and get a gun and then use it without proper training is insane. Everyone who wants to own a gun should be required to take classes not only on its use, but also on what it can do to the human body, the decision making process for using a weapon, and police instruction on deadly force protocol.
Prospective gun owners, or current owners, should also be required to submit a clearance screening session signed by a licensed psychologist.
Gun owners should also be required to have a liability insurance policy to cover its misuse, either by the legal owner or by someone who steals or borrows it. They should be held accountable for everything that gun does under its registered ownership. In the current instance of the Newtown Tragedy, The gun-collecting mother should have had a liability policy that would cover the losses incurred by the school district, costs to local police jurisdictions, and the costs, including funerals, these parents are experiencing, plus at least a million dollars for each victim's family for pain and suffering.
It's time to end the talk about doing something. Just do something. And don't worry about whether it's constitutional. Let the Supreme Court decide that issue later.
Jake Spencer
I am enough of a realist to understand that guns will never be banned in this country. But gun ownership should come with powerful responsibilities.
It's time for gun owners and the NRA to cooperate with the rest of us and take steps to hold gun owners accountable, to properly screen and train gun owners, and to pay for the damage their gun ownership costs society. Our country incurs billions of dollars in damage, death and destruction each year due to guns. We need to hold the gun owners responsible for those costs. And it's well past time to make sure that only responsible people own guns.
The idea that anyone should be able to go out and get a gun and then use it without proper training is insane. Everyone who wants to own a gun should be required to take classes not only on its use, but also on what it can do to the human body, the decision making process for using a weapon, and police instruction on deadly force protocol.
Prospective gun owners, or current owners, should also be required to submit a clearance screening session signed by a licensed psychologist.
Gun owners should also be required to have a liability insurance policy to cover its misuse, either by the legal owner or by someone who steals or borrows it. They should be held accountable for everything that gun does under its registered ownership. In the current instance of the Newtown Tragedy, The gun-collecting mother should have had a liability policy that would cover the losses incurred by the school district, costs to local police jurisdictions, and the costs, including funerals, these parents are experiencing, plus at least a million dollars for each victim's family for pain and suffering.
It's time to end the talk about doing something. Just do something. And don't worry about whether it's constitutional. Let the Supreme Court decide that issue later.
Jake Spencer
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