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October 27, 2005
In the amazing statements department of my mind, there is a
special place for Representative John Boehner of Ohio. He’s
the chairman of the Education and the Workforce Committee in
that august body, the House of Representatives.
The name of the committee sounds like something
we ought to be aware of, something to keep on the front-burner
of political action as American jobs fly out the national window
and re-education becomes a primary issue. Not on your life. Particularly,
not on John’s watch as chairman.
He’s doing his part to deconstruct anything that might
help the less-wealthy, so the most-wealthy can take a pass on
present, future and forever-more tax obligations. In his own
small way, that means Boehner has come up with $18 billion over
five years that can be slashed and burned in both pension protection
and student loan programs.
“Listen, we’re broke. Let’s face it,” the
defender of fiscal conservatism (after five years of uncontrolled
deficit-spending) said yesterday. Over the past five years the
guys who run the administration as well as both houses of the
congress haven’t faced
- Funding an expensive war
- Stripping delivery costs of an
out-of control Medicare and Medicaid
- Funding elemental corporate
research and development
- Capping runaway costs of higher education
- The ludicrous and
distasteful tax giveaways to the rich and super-rich
- Wasteful
and ineffective boondoggling on supposed national security
What we do have to face, in Boehner’s strangely compartmentalized
mind, is the fact that we are now broke . . . nationally
in the poorhouse . . . and he and his buddies have broke us.
Bill Thomas, a California contribution to the House,
is chairman of the Ways and Means committee and is trying his
best to find ways to be mean in this race to gut what's left
of programs for those who live on Wal-Mart wages. He proposes
to cut back payments to foster-care families and add policies
that will cut child-support payments to single mothers who already
struggle to provide for their kids.
Hey, it's a tough world out there and President Bush only noticed
you poor people for a New York minute. Time to move on. This
is a country that moves on.
The last administration, the one that began with a ‘C’ that
no one dares mention anymore, left town with egg on its face
over sexual impropriety, having narrowly escaped impeachment.
But they also left behind them
- Money in the bank
- The prioritized beginnings of long-term
repayment of the national debt
- A sense of concern and help
for those who were truly below poverty levels
- A balanced budget,
with a surplus
No one in that faraway administration that began with a ‘C’ ever
had to stand before the American people and admit that its
political party had absolutely pissed-away the fortunes of the
nation.
Down the tubes to the extent that we find ourselves broke, helpless
and, for many people, hopeless. Out of control to the point
where they're unwilling to stop runaway wars, runaway lies, runaway
deficits, runaway civic failures and runaway ethical (non-sexual
for the moment) lapses.
But they do stand in front of the American people, these neocons
from California and Ohio, to say none of this is in any way the
fault of the administration that begins with a ‘B.’
Oh,
and by the way, these guys are going to ask for your vote next
year.
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