Mar 222010
 

Tom122007 In 1965, I was a Junior in High School.  Four days after I turned 17, the House passed the Voting Rights Act.  Two months later, The Senate passed it’s version.  Three months after that the conference report was approved by both parties, and President Lyndon Johnson signed it into law on August 6.  Despite my tender years, I sensed that I was a witness to and a participant in history, because I had already travelled to the south to protest for civil rights.  I have had that sense only twice since then.  The first was the historic election of a minority President.  The second was the passage of Health Care Reform yesterday.  Not since 1965 has Congress passed such significant legislation.  My friends, we are witnessing historic events, and we are part of them, so here are some of my observations on the day.

teabaggerguns Early in the day, much of the attention was focused on Republicans and their Teabagger storm troopers.  GOP politicians and pundits kept repeating the same tired lies, claiming that it is socialism, a government takeover of health care, too expensive, contains death panels, etc. One of the most ridiculous claims was that Democrats allowed no input from the GOP, when time and time again, Obama reached across the aisle and tried to draw them into the process.  The bill included over 150 amendments offered by Republicans.  The final bill looks more like Nixon’s proposal that Obama’s original proposal, and it’s problems stem mostly from the inclusion of GOP requests.  Meanwhile the Teabaggers continued their protest, egged on by Republican Representatives, who left the House chamber to whip-up their minions from the balcony.  The Teabagger storm troopers threatened violence.  The yellow sign in the graphic reads, “If Brown can’t stop it, Browning can.”

Bart ‘coat hanger’ Stupak finally caved in and agreed to vote for the bill in return for the promise of an executive order that guarantees nothing more than enforcement of the Hyde Amendment provisions that were already in the bill, and for some time in the spotlight.  He got to do a colloquy on the House floor.  At one point during his speech, someone in the chamber yelled, “baby killer”.  Now, if you haven’t guessed, Stupak is so low on my list that I would happily support any Democrat challenging him in his upcoming run to become Michigan’s Governor.  But even he did not deserve that.  Republicans have tried to say that it may have come from the gallery, but one Republican Representative admitted that it came from where the Texas delegation sits.  I have no doubt that the GOP knows who breached decorum, but won’t give him up.  If I had to guess, I’d say it’s in character for Louie Gohmert (R-TX), but I have no evidence to support it.

In the House debate, which seemed endless, I heard nothing new from either side, and finally, the Senate bill passed 219 – 212 and the reconciliation bill, 220-211.  Not one single Republican voted for either.  Obama plans to sign it tomorrow.  When I know which Democrats voted No on the bill, I shall post it.

Here is a timeline for the bill:

HCReformPass1 Here are the effective dates of major provisions of the health care overhaul legislation approved Sunday:

WITHIN A YEAR

– Would provide a $250 rebate this year to Medicare prescription drug beneficiaries whose initial benefits run out.

90 days after enactment:

– Would provide immediate access to high-risk pools for people with no insurance because of pre-existing conditions.

Six months after enactment:

Would bar insurers from denying people coverage when they get sick.

Would bar insurers from denying coverage to children with pre-existing conditions.

Would bar insurers from imposing lifetime caps on coverage.

Would require insurers to allow people to stay on their parents’ policies until they turn 26.

2011

Would require individual and small group market plans to spend 80 percent of premium dollars on medical services. Large group plans would have to spend at least 85 percent.

2013

– Would increase the Medicare payroll tax and expand it to dividend, interest and other unearned income for singles earning more than $200,000 and joint filers making more than $250,000.

2014

Would provide subsidies for families earning up to 400 percent of poverty level, currently about $88,000 a year, to purchase health insurance.

– Would require most employers to provide coverage or face penalties.

– Would require most people to obtain coverage or face penalties.

2018

– Would impose a 40 percent excise tax on high-end insurance policies… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <McClatchy DC>

Bear in mind that this applies to the Senate bill.  The reconciliation bill has several improvements, but before I include them, I’m waiting for the reconciliation bill to clear the Cesspit Senate.  On that note, MoveOn is sponsoring an online petition for the Senate to keep their promise.  Even if you opposed this plan, I hope you will now support it, because choice has changed.  The Senate bill will become law, as is, the moment Obama signs it.  The choice is now only on whether or not the reconciliation fixes will be included.  To sign the MoveOn petition, click here.

I just heard a GOP pundit say that Obama is a fool, because he has spent all his political capital on getting this passed.  That is another GOP lie.  Obama would have lost his political capital, only if the measure had failed.  The passage of this historic measure is an achievement that took 100 years of failures before its final success.  This success can only increase Obama’s political capital.  The more time that passes, the more that people realize that all the GOP lies were exactly that, the more people see that this will benefit them, the more Obama’s political capital will increase.  That does not mean we are done.  This is only a step toward universal, single-payer health care.

In closing, I heartily congratulate President Barack Obama, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, all the Representatives who worked to deliver reform, and all of us who made our own contributions to changing future history.  Together, we made it happen.

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Mar 222010
 

This is a big issue, but one that needs to be tackled ASAP.

Immigration With many eyes focused on the health care debate seven blocks away at the U.S. Capitol, an estimated 200,000 people rallied for immigration reform on the National Mall. They came from California and Florida and the neighborhoods around Florida Avenue in Washington, DC. Like the “mega-marches” that exploded on the American political scene in the spring of 2006 – and remain the largest series of demonstrations in American history – the message at this massive rally was clear and loud: fix our broken immigration system, stop the deportations that are splitting up families, and allow immigrants to come to the U.S. legally and to earn legal status if they are already here illegally.

The President, who by all reports, was feverishly working the phones with Democratic House Members on health care, delivered a video address to affirm his commitment to passing immigration reform and added the magic words “this year” that the crowd and organizers were hoping to hear.

The strongest and most enthusiastically received remarks came from Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ), the only Latino in the Senate, and Rep. Luis V. Gutierrez (D-IL), the point person for the Congressional Hispanic Caucus on immigration reform and the most visible leader on the issue in the Congress, but dozens of Democratic House lawmakers — and one Republican, Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart of Florida – made their way to the stage… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Alternet>

I support the demonstrators aims.  While I agree with critics that illegals should not be here illegally, they wouldn’t be here were it not for the willingness of US corporations to exploit their labor.  It is those corporations, along with most of the GOP, who want exploitation to continue, that are most strongly opposed to immigration reform.  We need to give these people a path to citizenship.  I would like to see an immediate halt to deportation of those who have not committed crimes while here.

I find it particularly disturbing that this rally received far less media coverage that the tiny gathering of obscene Teabaggers.

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Mar 222010
 

Yesterday I caught up on comments after catching up on sleep.  I also followed the doings of HCR closely.  Today is going to be extraordinarily busy after a slow start.  I might not be able to post articles tomorrow or they may be much later than usual.  Please don’t worry.  I’m fine, and I’ll fill you in ASAP.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today’s handsome puzzle took me 3:28.  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Short Take:

From Raw Story: President Nicolas Sarkozy’s party took a severe drubbing from French voters Sunday in nationwide regional elections that were his last big national test before he seeks re-election in 2012.

As polling stations closed, initial estimates gave Socialist-led opposition electoral alliances some 54 percent of the vote, Sarkozy’s right-wing UMP 36 percent and the far-right National Front just under nine percent.

To the uninformed, which I readily admit I am, this looks good.  But in France, the right does not personify evil the way our GOP does.

Cartoon:

 

OGIM!

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GOP Values Hit New Low

 Posted by at 5:24 am  Politics
Mar 212010
 

I hope you have a barf bag handy.  If not, get one.

republicanreich A swarm of health care protesters, many holding Tea Party signs, heckled members of Congress with racial epithets and abusive language as the House votes on health care reform.

Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) was called a "faggot," causing the surrounding crowd to erupt in laughter. A staffer for Rep. James Clyburn (D-S.C.) said a protester spat on Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.). Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), a leader of the civil rights movement, was called a "ni**er."

Although Frank shrugged off the incident, Clyburn was shocked and told reporters that he hadn’t experienced such treatment since leading protests in South Carolina in the 1960s.

"It was absolutely shocking to me," Clyburn told the Huffington Post. "Last Monday, this past Monday, I stayed home to meet on the campus of Claflin University where fifty years ago as of last Monday… I led the first demonstrations in South Carolina, the sit ins… And quite frankly I heard some things today I have not heard since that day. I heard people saying things that I have not heard since March 15, 1960 when I was marching to try and get off the back of the bus."… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Raw Story>

The GOP has sown the wind by appealing to the lowest instincts of their rabid base: hatred, racism, homophobia, etc.  I can only hope that the GOP are the ones to inherit the whirlwind, not their intended victims.  Behavior reminiscent of the ‘Brown Shirts’ in 1930s Germany is not tolerable in 2010s America.

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Blog Notes – 3/21/2010

 Posted by at 5:23 am  Blog News
Mar 212010
 

Tom070108-2 I’m making a couple changes, and here they are.

First, having the ability to get stats at server level has shown me that Statcounter misses literally hundreds of visits each month, so I am setting out visit count back to zero, effective 2/28/2010, and we’ll count afresh for the new location.  However, the tools I have do make it difficult to associate an individual visitor with a visit number, because it’s listed by IP address.  Therefore, I will be retiring the old award for thousands of visitors and institute a new award for every 500th comment.  If that comment is mine, the award with a link in the sidebar will go to the person who posts the next comment after mine.

I installed the AddThis plugin yesterday to make it easier for you to share Politics Plus articles at your favorite social networking sites.  Each article now has a ‘share’ link clicking it brings a few common choices.  Clicking ‘more’ gives several dozen choices, including many that I’ve never heard of, so I trust your favorites are there.  I hope you will support this blog bu using it frequently.

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No Deem and Pass on HCR

 Posted by at 5:23 am  Politics
Mar 212010
 

They should have decided this in the beginning.

us-house-chamber With Democrats increasingly confident they have enough support, the House of Representatives planned for an historic vote Sunday that would enact the most dramatic changes in the nation’s health care system in decades.

As a sign of that confidence — and to quiet concerns among Democrats as well as Republicans — House leaders Saturday abandoned a plan to approve the Senate’s health care legislation without a direct vote.

President Barack Obama held a last-minute rally with the House’s 253 Democrats. He urged them to vote for the legislation because "good policy makes good politics." But he also said he recognized that voting for the bill in the face of often rowdy protests was a difficult step.

Behind closed doors, House leaders worked to round up the last undecided votes they need to reach the 216 needed for passage.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., was confident about Sunday’s prospects, saying flatly, “We will pass the bill.”

The mood at the Capitol was unusually calm, but not without last-minute drama.

With Tea Party demonstrators rallying outside to protest the legislation, the House Rules Committee dropped a controversial plan that would have "deemed" Senate-approved health care legislation passed as part of a resolution setting rules of debate. The maneuver had been seen as a way to allow Democrats to avoid voting on the bill, but Democrats were uneasy about the prospect. Rep. William Lacy Clay, D-Mo., said it looked like a "back door deal."… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <McClatchy DC>

Deem and pass was never anything more than a silly maneuver to appease a few cowardly Blue Dogs.  Good riddance!

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Mar 212010
 

Yesterday I caught up on comments and visited the entire blogroll.  Last night, two neighbors got into a four hour screaming contest outside my window, leaving me with virtually no sleep, so please forgive me that my own commentary on today’s articles will be greatly abbreviated and that there are no Short Takes today.

Jig Zone Puzzle:

Today’s took me 4:03.  To do it, click here.  How did you do?

Cartoon:

Have a great day!

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Hannity Rips Off Veterans!

 Posted by at 4:48 am  Politics
Mar 202010
 

One of the foremost parrots of the GOP Reichsministry of Propaganda, Faux Noise, Hannity has displayed his solidarity with standard GOP support for our troops.

hannity-bunny-ranch We have long had our suspicions about how much money from Sean Hannity’s highly-touted Freedom Concerts actually go to scholarships given out by Freedom Alliance, the charity run by Hannity’s pal, convicted liar Oliver North. Now, it appears as though our worst suspicions have been confirmed.

We saw red flags in 2006 and 2007 – especially in 2007, when we found that no portion of the ticket price was deemed tax deductible, and that only $4 of the ticket price for a ticket in San Diego that year went to the overall charity Freedom Alliance (not necessarily its scholarship fund).

Now conservative Debbie Schlussel has put out damning blog post about the paltry sums that actually went to vets and scholarships. We hardly think of Schlussel as a reputable source and she has a long-standing grudge against Hannity. But with a little help from my sister, the former accountant, we concluded that Schlussel’s basic conclusions about the Freedom Alliance are correct.

Only 7% and 12% in 2007 and 2008, respectively, (links to Freedom Alliance’s IRS forms that have the numbers can be found in Schlussel’s post), of Freedom Alliance’s revenues went to "grants and allocations," which, presumably, means vets and scholarships. That means that out of Freedom Alliance’s $12,459,317 total revenue in 2007, it gave $895,347 in total. In 2008, Freedom Alliance received $8,781,431 and it paid out $1.060,275.

For comparison purposes, United Negro College Fund gave out 56% and 45% in 2007 and 2008, respectively, of their total revenue. That means that UNCF received in 2007 $197,435,560 and gave out $111,260,696 and in 2008, its revenue was $240,455,525 and it gave out $108,354,765… [emphasis added]

Inserted from <Newshounds>

It has long been SOP for the GOP to be long on pseudo-patriotic claims, while using out troops as cannon fodder to further their own agenda and provide profit for corporate cronies.  Whenever it came to providing our troops with the equipment they need, insisting they get R&R time at home, providing them the health care we owe them, giving them education benefits, raising their pay, etc., Democrats have to accomplish those goals over GOP objections.  We may disagree with the wars, and I do, but when someone puts their life on the line for this nation, we owe them.  The GOP evidently does not agree.

So we should not be surprised that Hannity and North lie to donors and rip off our vets.  But that still leaves one question.  What happened to all those millions of dollars?  Perhaps Sean and Ollie spent them at the GOP Family Values Retreat, aka The Bunny Ranch.

Off topic:  Catch the video in today’s Open Thread.  It’s a hoot!

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