Republican Clown Shows Endangering American Families
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This is what the GOP is using to wreck Michigan
Most normal people look at the Republican presidential primary lineup and recoil in horror-- or just shrug it off as a freak show or circus act.
With Gingrich in the race, Republican voters will now be faced with a terrible, Sophie’s Choice-choice: they can either go the safe/uncontroversial route and pick a Tim Pawlenty or a human advertorial like Mitt Romney, or else they can gamble on a candidate with the “charisma” and “wow factor” to match up with Barack Obama.
The only problem with the latter strategy is that that the leading “charisma” candidate is Gingrich, a relentless mirror-gazer and attention-seeker with a wandering pee-pee and a talent for pseudo-intellectualism. Gingrich, hilariously, is the right’s idea of a “thinker,” which is to say he’s a pompous mispronouncer and Thesaurus-raider who lards up same-old/same-old right-wing rhetoric with quotations from obscure academic texts and inane historical references, so that friendly pundits can later describe the resultant utterances as “fresh new ideas.”
But Republican voters don't see it that way. Aside from the sizable contingent of Republicans just angry at the world and unhappy about everything, Republicans take their candidates seriously and don't understand why everyone else is scoffing, laughing... or vomiting.
How do I know Republican voters are happy with their candidates? They keep voting for them. They even vote for them when-- which is always-- these people advance policies and agendas that are direct threats to their own well-being. In the big Democratic victory in NY-26 last night, Republican voters still went overwhelmingly for the cookie cutter kill-Medicare Jane Corwin. It was Democrats and independents that defeated her-- and only in a 47-43% tally. Leave multimillionaires and billionaires aside for a moment, because, well, they're actually well-served, at least in a short-term horizon, by the Republican agenda of greed and selfishness. But what about the middle class voters whose education system is being dismantled or whose social safety net is in shreds? Or what about people, for example, who live along the Mississippi River?
Or the folks who were just slammed by a catastrophic mega-tornado in Missouri? Republican House Leader Eric Cantor's immediate response to the scores of deaths and the destruction in Joplin was to announce that he would take advantage of the crisis of these people by holding federal aid hostage to more deranged right-wing ideological demands. His response, akin to former House Speaker Denny Hastert's declaration that the U.S. should let New Orleans disappear after Katrina, is downright un-American. I wonder if Congressman Billy Long, the right-wing slob who represents Jasper County, Missouri, would agree. He's no friend of FEMA or of federal assistance to emergency victims... like his own constituents in Joplin.
The vast majority of congressmembers from districts touching the Mississippi are Republicans. Their constituents are in big trouble. And big predictable trouble. But how are their Republican elected officials responding? With hackneyed ideology and prayers, but not with federal aid. Steve Pearce, Spencer Baucus and Randy Neugebauer, corporate shills representing backwaters in New Mexico, Alabama and Texas, sent around a petition that everyone pray for the victims. Is that what these three clowns and their colleagues were elected to do? The three of them voted for this year's continuing resolution, which included significant cuts to funding for the federal response to weather, climate and natural disasters-- like the tornados that ravaged Alabama, the fires that have destroyed so many people's lives in Texas and now the disaster along the Mississippi.
This is Law-of-the-Jungle Republicanism. It's what they believe in; it's what the Ryan budget that all but four of them voted for enshrines. It's what Scott Walker is doing to Wisconsin, what Rick Snyder is doing to Michigan, what Rick Scott is doing to Florida, what Jon Kasich is doing to Ohio. And it's dangerous to the well-being of this country. Hopefully Americans are waking up, and what happened when similar fascist parties in Europe pulled the same strategies in Europe in the '20s and '30s won't happen here.
In a stunningly heartless move, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) put strings on emergency relief for the victims of the killer Joplin tornado, saying that other government services would have to be cut to offset aid spending. Yesterday afternoon, the House Appropriations committee passed an amendment by Rep. Robert Aderholt (R-AL) to add $1 billion in funding for the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) disaster relief fund, offset by funding reductions from the Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing Loan Program at the Department of Energy. Instead of cutting oil subsidies to pay for the costs of our nation’s increasing climate disasters, the GOP is actually working to increase our dependence on fossil fuels. On MSNBC’s Ed Show, Rep. Russ Carnahan (D-MO) called the decision “just plain wrong” ... When you talk about cutting clean energy programs versus cutting subsidies for big oil, let’s have that debate here in Washington. But not on the backs of the people of Joplin."
The vast majority of congressmembers from districts touching the Mississippi are Republicans. Their constituents are in big trouble. And big predictable trouble. But how are their Republican elected officials responding? With hackneyed ideology and prayers, but not with federal aid. Steve Pearce, Spencer Baucus and Randy Neugebauer, corporate shills representing backwaters in New Mexico, Alabama and Texas, sent around a petition that everyone pray for the victims. Is that what these three clowns and their colleagues were elected to do? The three of them voted for this year's continuing resolution, which included significant cuts to funding for the federal response to weather, climate and natural disasters-- like the tornados that ravaged Alabama, the fires that have destroyed so many people's lives in Texas and now the disaster along the Mississippi.
For example, funding for the Federal Emergency Management Agency's state and local programs was slashed $783.3 million below FY 2010 levels. The FEMA Pre-Disaster Mitigation Grant Program lost $35 million. The part of FEMA's budget for emergency food and shelter was cut $100 million, and Assistance to Firefighter Grants lost $510 million.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration lost $454.3 million in the House's continuing resolution. In March, the agency warned that insufficient funds budgeted for its next generation of polar orbiting satellites could potentially weaken the accuracy of its weather forecasting, especially pertaining to severe events such as blizzards and hurricanes.
The National Weather Service, which is part of NOAA, lost $126 million from FY 2010 levels in the House bill.
"This is the congressional equivalent of having a mortgage lender take your house and then tell all his friends how bad he feels for you," said a Democratic operative who used to work in Congress. "The fact that these guys have no sense of irony or shame is just revolting."
This is Law-of-the-Jungle Republicanism. It's what they believe in; it's what the Ryan budget that all but four of them voted for enshrines. It's what Scott Walker is doing to Wisconsin, what Rick Snyder is doing to Michigan, what Rick Scott is doing to Florida, what Jon Kasich is doing to Ohio. And it's dangerous to the well-being of this country. Hopefully Americans are waking up, and what happened when similar fascist parties in Europe pulled the same strategies in Europe in the '20s and '30s won't happen here.
Remember the House vote on Ryan's plan? Only 4 GOP members voted against Ryan's plan. Now the GOP wants to pretend that vote didn't happen as it isn't testing well in the polls. Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) backed away slightly from the House-approved budget proposal drafted by Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) that would turn Medicare into a voucher program over ten years.
"I'm for it," Boehner told ABC's Topline. "It's our idea. Right? It's Paul's idea. Other people have other ideas. I'm not wedded to one single idea, but I think it's '" we have a plan."
The GOP has no respect for the intelligence of their red state voters. That they could just try to slip this by the proles who vote for them exemplifies their contempt for their constituents.
The GOP has historically given their top 1% cronies huge tax cuts. Without revenue what happens to the federal government? It runs into the red. Reagan dreamed of "starving the beast" and this reverie has always remained with GOP politicians. Everyone knew that the deficits would increase enormously if the nation was at war and the war wasn't paid for by increases in taxes. It took a boob like W to do this not only once, but twice and also jack up the debt with Homeland Security expenses and a new prescription drug benefit for Medicare recipients.
Reagan's dream became the bottom 99%'s nightmare.
...The Democrats have reality on their side. At town hall meetings US citizens are clearly stating they want the US the social-welfare program benefits that they had spent their life contributing to.
It was a deal the citizens had scrimped and sacrificed for. They expect the Republicans to hold up their end of the deal.
Labels: 2012 presidential race, Cantor, FEMA, Joplin, Mississippi River
2 Comments:
Yet another great post. This should be on the front page of every national newspaper.
The Huffington bullshit establishment post doesn't even list this blog. DownWithTyranny is the best written and most insightful political writing on the inter net coupled with great musical posts on the weekend. You guys are greatly appreciated. Compared to you guys Arianna Huffington and her minions are complete morons.
Maybe not complete but I hope you know what I mean. I will understand if you don't comment.
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