According to Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clark, we can’t afford sufficient law enforcement to respond to 911 calls, so we need to arm ourselves.
Why I’m supporting Dennis McBride. To be brief, my support for Dennis McBride comes down to three things: character, competence and experience. I’ve known Dennis for many years and I understand that personally and professionally he has worked to support progressive values; his work at the EEOC, for example, has demonstrated a commitment to fairness […]
Abraham Lincoln wisely pointed out that you can’t fool all the people all the time, which explains the impending demise of the conservative revolution.
The conservative program of activating white voters out of fear of non-whites, patriarchists out of fear of abortion, and I-don’t-know-what out of fear of gays is at last showing signs of terminal disintegration in our national elections.
Having lost its electoral advantages, the GOP is now desperately seeking to maintain its political advantages with measures at the state level that will utterly ruin the party for a generation. Republicans are attempting to distort elections through voter restrictions, gerrymandering and even a program to game the electoral vote. As people come to see how fundamentally un-democratic (small D) these measures are, voters will develop an abiding distrust of the party that has promoted them.
Ironically, the Republican attempt to reapportion the electoral vote could lead to greater democracy, by making people aware of both the troublesome nature of the electoral college and an elegant way to render it obsolete.
Anyone who wants to make the electoral vote process more democratic (again, small D) should look no further than the National Popular Vote movement, whose aim is to ensure that presidential elections can only be won by candidates who win the votes of most Americans. (You can get details at nationalpopularvote.com.)
If state Republican legislators are serious about democracy, they will join this movement, which will ensure that Wisconsin’s electoral votes go the person who wins the votes of the majority of all Americans, not to the person who wins in gerrymandered districts.
Conservatives have not been able to convince Americans of their failed ideas. If they attempt to retain political power by rigging elections, they will reap the whirlwind.
Don’t take it from me. Take it from the most famous Republican of them all.
When I was born in 1954, a Republican President was embarking on the most ambitious peacetime infrastructure in American history, the Interstate Highway System. The top marginal tax rate was 91%.
When I was 12 years old, Voting Rights Act finally ensured that African Americans enjoyed the franchise they’d been denied for hundreds of years. CEOs were paid 24 times what their workers were paid
By the time I graduated from grade school, Medicare guaranteed a minimum level of affordable health care for the elderly. Before my 12th birthday, Americans walked on the Moon.
When I graduated from the University of Wisconsin – Madison my tuition accounted for 20% of the cost of my education. Public funds made up most of the difference.
But then something happened. I tend to think of it as Reaganism, but it has since metastasized into something even more grotesque.
Since the 1980s
Baby-boomers have enjoyed better pay, more equal distribution of wealth, well-funded public education, ever-improving infrastructure, a more progressive tax system, and better health care than the generations before them.
Following generations are losing all these things, in large part because their elders are have been fighting for lower taxes.
Seems to me we’ve climbed a ladder to prosperity and are now pulling it up behind ourselves. Following generations be damned!
It’s shameful, really.
So now the right wing is trying to gin up the charge that Obama wants to destroy jobs with the sequestration agreed upon by all parties during the debt ceiling debate of 2011.
Leaving aside the question of whether this is just whining by people who don’t want to take their medicine, it seems fair to ask why the defense jobs — essentially public works jobs, since they’re paid for with public dollars — are more valuable than the public sectors jobs that have been lost by budget cuts at the state and federal level (and local, by virtue of the loss of shared revenue suffered by municipalities).
I would argue that, salaries being equal, they are of equal value economically, though of course politically they are not.
So, the GOP gets to cut jobs to save public dollars, but now they are trying to wriggle out of an agreement by blaming Obama for losing jobs.
And by the way, we’ve been told that government spending doesn’t create jobs, so why should government cuts cost jobs?
Re: Voter ID, we’re going to disenfranchise thousands of people to prevent voter fraud which numbers at best a few tens out of millions of ballots cast?
Those concerned about voter fraud ought to spend their energy on making sure that voting machines are above suspicion.
It seems our open season on human beings is just getting started. A shooting of a robber in Milwaukee, the killing of an unarmed  young man in Florida and  the killing of another unarmed man in West Bend are appalling and disturbing.
They are also the consequences of an unholy alliance between the NRA and ALEC.
It’s bad enough that the messengers of the GOP have constantly provoked fear and hatred among Americans. Now they are putting guns into the hands of those they’ve disturbed.
None of these shootings were in defense of human life; they were in defense of property at best, and at worst the tragic consequences of overblown, unrealistic fears.
There is a profound immorality at work here. The makers and promoters of handguns — whose true purpose is to allow humans to kill their fellows  — should be called to task for the lust for money and power that is motivating them.
We are approaching a point of no return: Either we increase taxes, or we abandon the New Deal (i.e., Social Security) and the Great Society (i.e., Medicare/Medicaid).
Make no mistake, the deficits are essentially the product of the relentless drive to reduce taxes. Every tax cut beginning with Reagan led to enormous deficits. The difference now is Tea Party intransigence (or irresponsibility) on raising taxes.
And what have we gotten from lower taxes (principally for the very wealthy)? Lousy roads and schools, stagnant wages for most Americans, and a few people getting insanely wealthy.
We would do well to recall the destitution that typically accompanied old age before Social Security. We’d do well also to recognize that, with all its faults, Medicare is the best-run, most cost-effective health insurance enterprise in the United States.
The problems of most people in this country stem not from high taxes, but low wages, not from big government, but big business.
Eventually, even the Tea Party folks (well, not all of them) will probably figure this out. The question is whether it will be too late by then.
So some Tea Party candidates got elected to Congress. Good for them. I could pretend I respect their views, but why bother? I’ll only concede their right to hold those views.
What I won’t concede is that they have such a perfect vision of the truth that they get to destroy everyone else’s economy.
The Tea Party is welcome to their irrational devotion to tax breaks for the richest Americans. But common sense and the America way of government demands that they recognize and respect the views of the majority of Americans who realize that enough is enough already.
In other words, compromise. The freshmen hardliners need to understand that their view is not the only view, and is in fact a minority view. (That is, if you’re counting voters; if you’re counting dollars I suppose you get a different result.)
Tax breaks for the wealthiest simply have not benefited most Americans. Polls show that 60% of Americans recognize this. But rather than accepting a return to historically normal rates of taxation on the wealthiest Americans, the Tea Party is willing to bring economic ruination on America and the world.
It’s a bitter disappointment to me that President Obama is not hammering on this point every hour of every day.
What are the leading causes of the deficit?
1) Bush’s wars
2) Bush’s tax cuts for the wealthy
3) the economic meltdown.
So what are the solutions?
1) Eliminate tax cuts for the wealthy
2) Stimulate the economy
3) Get out of Afghanistan and Iraq ASAP.
Job done.
This, of course, isn’t happening. Discuss.
I usually abhor psychologizing by amateurs like myself but it hit me just now that there’s a kind of timidity in Walker’s constitutional* refusal to negotiate.
I think he’s afraid he’s not smart enough to handle himself in a serious policy discussion.
I think he’s a political idiot savant, but when comes to policy, he’s quickly out of his depth, and at some level he knows it.
So he just takes a position and sticks to it, even if he has to resort to lies — perhaps even to himself — to justify it.
* Not in the sense of rules of governance, but in the way his personality is constituted.
Why do we have unions? Because before unions, workers were exploited. When we lose unions, workers will be exploited again.
Why has government grown? Partly because Americans recognized that the standard market economy doesn’t do a good job of providing for people at the margins of society, in particular people who have left the economy because of age or injury.
Government also serves as a counter-balance to the enormous corporations that otherwise would have more control over society than democracy can tolerate.
So when the extreme right wing of the GOP wants to eliminate unions and government, ask yourself whether this is a step forward or a step backward.