Pat Thurston's Radio Weblog :
Updated: 1/2/06; 8:11:30 AM.

 

Subscribe to "Pat Thurston's Radio Weblog" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.

 
 

Thursday, December 15, 2005

NOT BAD ...

WHAT DO YOU THINK?

Larry Beinhart: A Manifesto.

As I blog along I get to hear critiques from the Right. One of the standard plaints is that the Democrats - and the liberals - don't have a platform. We don't have ideas. We don't have programs.

They're right. John Kerry made only one thing clear in the 2004 election campaign: that there was nothing he, or the party, was clear about. I get emails from him still. I begin to read them, just in case he's finally hired a writer who can write clear, unvacillating prose. Alas, he has not. Senator Clinton continues to give straddling a bad name. No other leader has yet come forth. Howard Dean is not afraid to take a discernable position, but the DNC has yet to produce a clear set of program notes for their party.

Which leaves it for regular people to do. Perhaps that's how it should be. Trickle up politics.

Here's my shot at it.

Some Basic Principles

I was riding in a taxi in Washington, DC yesterday. The cabs in DC are friendly jalopies and the drivers are all from faraway places. This one was from Somalia. His accent was quite thick. I asked him how he liked it here. He said, "You have to eat and you need law and order," and he went on, "If you have a warlord on every corner and they are going to shoot you, you have to leave," making it clear why he was here instead of Somalia.

That's a pretty good place to start.

Safety.

That means National Security. We don't want angry foreigners flying planes into the World Trade Center.

That means law and order. We don't want home grown wackos blowing up federal buildings. We want our homes to be safe, our streets to be safe, our schools to be safe.

Work.

Everybody should be able to get some kind of job. Anybody who works deserves a living wage. And appropriate benefits.

Those who can't work âo[base "] because they're children or too old or ill or disabled or because there are no jobs available âo[base "] still need to eat. And live in tolerable conditions. We need to continue to make sure that happens.

Those who have worked and have earned social security, health care and pensions, deserve to get what they have earned. We need to protect that.


Business.

The Democratic Party is the party of business.

Here's a really bizarre statistic for you. The Dow Jones average today is almost exactly where it was the day George Bush came into office. If you take inflation into account that means over the course of five years it's gone down about 8%. From the time Bill Clinton came into office and the time he left, the Dow went up 320%.

The Republican Party is good for Enron types. It's good for people who want short term windfall profits âo[base "] oil, pharmaceuticals and big government contractors like Halliburton. It's good for people who don't work but inherit money and live off of dividends and capital gains while they sip daquiris in Palm Beach. But it's not good for business.

Government.

Government is necessary. It's good for a lot of things. Indeed it does many things better than business can: defend the country, wage war, reinforce the levees when the hurricanes are coming, rebuild countries, provide infrastructure and education, save business from its own excesses and much, much more.

We believe in doing those things well. The Republicans believe in only doing them some way that someone profits from them. Which is why they do them so badly.

Religion.

We believe in religion. Faith. Spirituality.

This country was founded in large part by people who wanted freedom to worship their own way. We know from them âo[base "] and from current events - that when religion and government mix, the first thing that happens is that someone else's right to worship is oppressed.

The best thing that government can do for religion is stay out of it.

A Platform


1. The War on Terror:

Osama bin Laden has been at large for longer than it took us to defeat Hitler and Hirohito put together. That's a disgrace. Let's do what's necessary to get him and his gang and put them on trial. Preferably in New York.

As we have learned in Iraq, just killing people and throwing people in prisons, often the wrong people, does not stop terrorists. It increases them.


There are no terrorists who are trying to create a world that's a better place for terrorists.


There are a variety of different groups who employ terror. It's time to figure out who they are and why they're fighting. Then we can develop a variety of strategies to change the conditions that cause them to kill, subvert them if that will work, arrest and try them, and if it is necessary to go to war to stop them, to do it in a way that works.

2. Simple Good Government.

We will appoint qualified people. The kind of people who will reinforce the levees when the hurricanes are coming. The kind of people who will make sure our troops have enough armor when they go to war. The kind of people who will stop Enron when they're artificially stopping the production of electricity in order to jack up the price.

3. Save Social Security.

Fortunately, it won't take much.

Here's one way. Right now, people and their employers both stop paying in after the first $90,000 in earnings. So someone who makes $10,000,000 a year makes no contributions on $9,910,000 of their income. If we eliminate the cap social security is saved. Billionaires will weep, but how many Lamborghinis can anyone drive at once?

4. Balance the Budget.

When conservatives were conservatives they always wanted to balance the budget. Now that they're in office they want to loot the future by running up debts.

Anyone who has ever paid credit card interest knows that the higher your interest payments are the less you can actually buy. That's true of government too. If we owe less, we pay less interest and we get more goods and services for our tax dollars. Only liberals understand this.

5. Invest in Infrastructure.

That's the better way to stimulate the economy.

Every business operates on invisible subsidies: roads, railways, airports, security, communications, an educated work force, civil and criminal justice systems, breathable air, potable water, sensible regulations, objective information, regulated banking, uniform accounting standards, trustworthy stock, bond and commodity markets.

Investment in infrastructure has a multiplier effect. If you build a road the workers and the builders go spend their money. That employs more people. Who spend their money. The businesses who use the road get their goods to market quicker and cheaper. Each time the money goes around, taxes are collected.

Investment in infrastructure stays in America. Invest in giving a tax break to a billionaire and he's as likely to stick his money in company that hides its money offshore as one that uses it here.

6. Create a real energy policy.

Invading Iraq is not a sound energy policy. All the oil in Alaska's Artic National Wildlife Refuge will supply the US for less than a year and a half. That's not much help.

It's time for real investment in alternative energy and conservation.

7. Save General Motors.

General Motors can't compete with foreign automakers because of health care costs.

Americans spend more than twice what other industrialized countries spend, per capita, and get a lot less for it.

We're #1 in spending, #37 in overall health care performance.

Only 40% of Americans like their health care system. Everything we thought we would dislike about any form of national health, we got with HMOs and insurance companies. It's time to try something new.

8. Save Medicare.

Unlike Social Security, Medicare really is in trouble. Cynical people even think that the last Medicare bill was designed to enrich the pharmaceutical companies and bankrupt the system, all with just one bill.

A national health system would save Medicare. Along with General Motors and many other companies and the health benefits of millions of workers and retirees.

9. Build America.

It's time to rethink unlimited free trade and globalization.

Do we want a country of millionaire lawyers and entertainers and everyone else works at Wal-Mart and Burger King? Or do we want a country full of good jobs where people make a good living creating things we need and can afford to invest in their retirement and their children?

10. Education.

Every dollar we spend making sure kids can read is ten dollars we won't spend ten years later on prisons.

Every dollar we spend making sure kids can read and write, do math and science, is of benefit to American business and American society as a whole.

Sports, art and music should be available to every student in grade school and high school.

A college education should be available and affordable to anyone who will work at it.

America actually spends quite a lot on education as compared to other countries, but, as with health care, we get less for it. We have to figure out why. And try a thousand experiments, if need be, to do better.

11. The Environment.

I want to breath clean air. I want to drink pure water. I bet you do too.

I want to preserve the wild places and as many species as possible. I bet you do too.

12. End George Bush's War.

Americans don't cut and run.

But when we have been misled and conned into a war that was never actually authorized, we know how to take responsibility for what went wrong, change our own government and then try to make things right.

Let's do the heroic and responsible thing. Get out. Bring the world in. Maybe through the UN. Maybe with a Central Asian coalition. Let's actually rebuild the country. Especially the things we destroyed.

[The Huffington Post | Full Blog Feed]
11:52:45 AM    comment []

A new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll is said to show that Bush and the GOP are facing a political insurgency among elderly voters, who "play an outsize role in midterm contests" and are described by one GOP pollster as "a pretty cranked up bunch." [Cursor.org]
11:45:19 AM    comment []

Although a charity run by lobbyist Jack Abramoff reported to the IRS that it gave away $300,000 in 2002 to a Jewish nonprofit, "a surprised rabbi" told the Austin America-Statesman that "we've never received a $300,000 gift, not in our 28 years." [Cursor.org]
11:44:26 AM    comment []

Caught on Tape: Bush Admits WMD Were Irrelevant.

On day that the United States invaded Iraq, President Bush said that we were doing so “reluctantly” but that “our purpose was clear” — to get rid of Saddam’s “weapons of mass murder.” (Note: Bush did not say “purposes.” According to Bush, there was only one purpose.)

Yesterday on Brit Hume, he said he would have invaded even if he knew there were no weapons of mass destruction. Would have been nice if he’d mentioned this earlier.

We’ve got the video evidence:

(Quick Time)

Full Transcript:

12/14/05:

BUSH: I said I made the right decision. Knowing what I know today, I would have still made that decision.

HUME: So, if you had had this — if the weapons had been out of the equation because the intelligence did not conclude that he had them, it was still the right call?

BUSH: Absolutely.

3/19/03:

Our nation enters this conflict reluctantly — yet, our purpose is sure. The people of the United States and our friends and allies will not live at the mercy of an outlaw regime that threatens the peace with weapons of mass murder.

[Think Progress]
10:40:14 AM    comment []

SCORE ONE FOR THE GOOD GUYS!!

A Victory Against Bigotry. Liberal bloggers and equality groups lobbied Ford not to cave to pressure from anti-gay forces—and they won. [TomPaine.com]
10:31:23 AM    comment []


Joel Makower: The Sustainability of 'Alternative Gifts'.

'Tis the season for giving -- and, for some, avoiding conspicuous consumption.

There's a way you can accomplish both.

I'm always pleased and humbled this time of year to receive the Alternative Gifts International catalog, which is filled with opportunities to give low-cost, life-enhancing gifts to those in need -- the very basis of "sustainability."

In a world sated with gizmos, gadgets, and geegaws, AGI offers the opportunity to give simply, elegantly, and effectively. It works with reputable nonprofit agencies that aid established projects around the world. Its annual gift catalog is an education in itself. Each of the gift opportunities included features background information about the problem and how even a small contribution can make a big difference. Categories include child survival, development, disaster relief, education, hunger relief, peace/justice, medical assistance, livestock, shelter, water, and women in development.

The AGI catalog is an education by itself.

For example, one AGI gift in this year's catalog is the Medicine Box, which "provides basic medical products to treat the common ailments of approximately 1,000 adults and children for two to three months in a typical third world hospital or clinic." The value of the box is leveraged by donated medical products from pharmaceutical and supply companies, bringing the actual value of the box to more than $2000. The cost: $44 for enough medicine for 100 people; $440 will supply medicine for an entire village.

Many of the gifts support NGOs, such as Solar Cookers international, which teaches Kenyans how to build and use solar cookers for cooking food and pasteurizing water, saving precious firewood. SCI trains dozens of women to solar cook and to become solar cooker demonstrators and salespersons in village marketplaces, earning income as Africa's newest solar entrepreneurs. $15 pays for one solar cooker; $55 trains and equips one woman entrepreneur.

Many of the gifts are environmental. For just $6 you can help The Nature Conservancy protect an acre of coral reef off the Jamaican coast. The group is partnering with Pedro Bank fishers to protect their livelihoods. A first step is building a sanitation system to safeguard the health of 900 residents and nearby coral reefs. Twenty bucks helps the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund monitor and protect the gorillas and their habitat every day with the surveillance of anti poaching patrols. For $28 pays for seeds to help the American Friends Service Committee assist Haitians in the building of tree nurseries and the mass planting of the "marvelous" mango tree.

AGI screens recipients to choose those with notable records of cost-effective projects. It chooses projects that encourage development and empower poor people to help themselves, so results are long-term. It seeks matching funds, which leverages donations.

This time of year -- in fact, all year long -- there are so many worthy recipients like AGI. But AGI's catalog is a stark reminder that as we prepare our annual giving lists, the gifts we choose -- and the impact they have on both the social and natural environment -- can extend well into the future.

[The Huffington Post | Full Blog Feed]
7:23:14 AM    comment []

© Copyright 2006 Patricia Thurston.



Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website.
 


December 2005
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Nov   Jan