RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment
Politics
FOCUS | Sequester Drags American Economy Down Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=7122"><span class="small">Elizabeth Warren, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Wednesday, 11 September 2013 13:00

Warren writes: "As our economy slowly recovers from high unemployment and the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, middle class families are struggling to keep their heads above water."

Senator Elizabeth Warren. (photo: Steve Pope/Getty Images)
Senator Elizabeth Warren. (photo: Steve Pope/Getty Images)


Sequester Drags American Economy Down

By Elizabeth Warren, Reader Supported News

11 September 13

 

arlier this year, automatic, across-the board spending cuts went into effect across the country.

As our economy slowly recovers from high unemployment and the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, middle class families are struggling to keep their heads above water.

For these families, the effect of these cuts is like being asked to swim with rocks tied around their ankles. People are working as hard as they can, but they just keep getting dragged down.

These cuts, known as the sequester, are dragging down middle class families and is dragging down our economy.

During my visits to cities and towns across Massachusetts, I've heard from families, small business owners and community development organizations - from the Berkshires to the Cape. They tell me what it is like to try to stay afloat with the sequester weighing them down.

More than a thousand employees at Westover Air Reserve Base and Barnes Air National Guard Base in Western Massachusetts are now facing furloughs - which really just means pay cuts. And federal workers across our state stand to lose as much as 30 percent of their salaries from the sequester.

Every one of those losses means already tight family budgets will be hit hard. And every one of those losses means those families have less money to spend in their local stores.

In Massachusetts, we've worked hard and we're starting to recover from the Great Recession, but the sequester just keeps dragging us down.

Hard working families in Massachusetts - and all around this country - have been feeling squeezed, chipped, and hacked at, for too long. And Washington's response - the sequester, makes it even worse.

This is a system that increasingly seems rigged to work for the big guys, but just isn't working for ordinary Americans. These are policies that slash investments in our families and our future. These are policies that protect tax loopholes for the wealthiest individuals and the biggest corporations at the cost of our middle class and no real effort at creating jobs.

I am proud to stand with a President who is out there saying it straight: you can't grow the economy from the top down. It only grows when we have a strong middle class that provides opportunities for growth for all of our kids - rich or poor.

Small businesses, working families, and our whole country do better when we make investments in the future - in education, infrastructure, and innovation - not when we hack away at those investments through nonsense policies like the sequester.

Investing in the future. That's what creates jobs; that's what grows the economy; that's what gives all our kids a chance.

Congress knows what it needs to do. We need to fix our education system, to make it better and more affordable - not cut support, slash after school programs, attack Head Start, and lay off teachers.

We need to increase our investments in clean energy and medical research. Massachusetts is a leader in clean energy technology, energy efficiency, and medical innovation.

We've seen firsthand how these kinds of investments pay off - creating jobs, boosting our economy, and in the long term, reducing energy and medical costs for all of us.

We need to bring together community colleges, businesses, and government to make sure we have highly trained workers that can succeed at the high-tech manufacturing that's going on in this country, at places like Crane & Co. and General Dynamics.

I've seen the possibilities this can have first hand - in places like Springfield, where some high tech manufacturing companies are ready to partner with schools and businesses to get good workers.

I am in Washington to fight for our families and to give them a chance to build a real future. Without the sequester we could rebuild faster, better, and bigger.

There is work to be done. There are roads and bridges in need of repair. There are children to educate. There are medical breakthroughs to discover. And the energy is there to do the work if only Washington will harness it.

The people of Massachusetts are ready. The people of the United States are ready. We just need Congress to get ready too.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
Bill de Blasio's Full-Spectrum Victory Print
Wednesday, 11 September 2013 08:55

Smith writes: "Now de Blasio is redefining what it means to assemble a diverse coalition. In a city where tribal politics have ruled for generations, de Blasio appears to have grabbed at least one-third of every major ethnic group's votes; he may win more female votes than the female candidate and as many black votes as the black candidate."

The de Blasio family is as diverse as the coalition he assembled for his Mayoral campaign. (photo: de Blasio campaign)
The de Blasio family is as diverse as the coalition he assembled for his Mayoral campaign. (photo: de Blasio campaign)


Bill de Blasio's Full-Spectrum Victory

By Chris Smith, New York Magazine

11 September 13

 

ill de Blasio was riding to yet another appearance when he got a phone call telling him a new poll would show he had suddenly, for the first time, jumped into the lead in the Democratic primary. De Blasio's reaction? To check that the call wasn't a prank.

Exactly four weeks later, de Blasio is the party's likely nominee and the favorite to succeed Michael Bloomberg as mayor. It's been a dizzying month, and de Blasio capped it today with a remarkably thorough victory - regardless of whether the final Board of Elections tally, which looks like it won't arrive until next week, shows him a tick above 40 percent or a tick below. What's striking isn't simply that he beat five opponents, most prominently Christine Quinn and Bill Thompson, but how de Blasio won, and where his votes came from.

His first job in City Hall was as a low-level aide to Mayor David Dinkins, who made the term "gorgeous mosaic" briefly fashionable. Now de Blasio is redefining what it means to assemble a diverse coalition. In a city where tribal politics have ruled for generations, de Blasio appears to have grabbed at least one-third of every major ethnic group's votes; he may win more female votes than the female candidate and as many black votes as the black candidate. The transplant from Cambridge, Massachusetts appears to be winning more Brooklyn votes than a native son, Thompson - and Brooklyn, further cementing its stature as the city's new center of gravity, could produce a greater turnout than Manhattan. It looks like he will beat Quinn in her own council district. The ad featuring his son scored because it was charming - but it was politically powerful because de Blasio didn't target it at any particular audience, aiming in tone for it to be broadcast, in the literal sense. According to a top de Blasio aide, it was the biggest single ad buy of the primary - about thirty percent larger than the second-place spot, a Quinn commercial.

That the de Blasio family is a telegenically diverse coalition all by itself certainly helped. But the candidate was able to successfully appeal across traditional lines in large part because he developed a clear message based more in economic guilt and worry than in identity politics. When I talked with de Blasio about his campaign plans way back in October 2011, he hadn't yet hit on his "tale of two cities" slogan - he was using the clumsier phrase "income disparity" - but he had already focused on what he believed would be the defining issues. "There's a tremendous sense of economic insecurity," he told me. "You feel it particularly intensely in the outer boroughs, you feel it in families that consider themselves solidly middle class but are worried -they're worried about the consistency or the durability of their job, they're worried about whether they can pay for their kids' educations. And then I think of course every election is to some extent a referendum on the previous officeholder. [By 2013] there will be incredible Bloomberg fatigue."

De Blasio analyzed this as a "change" election; Quinn, the frontrunner most of the way, saw an electorate basically happy with the city's direction. Thompson was somewhere in the middle, which is where he seems to be finishing, overtaking Quinn for second place and hoping for a chance at a runoff. Tonight, de Blasio's reading of the city's mood was proven decisively correct - well, at least his reading of the mood of the 300,000 or so voters who pulled his lever. They've made de Blasio the first non-Jewish white candidate to win the Democratic primary in 44 years - since Mario Procaccino, in 1969, for you political trivia buffs. Procaccino went on to lose the general election to the incumbent, John Lindsay, a former Republican. Whether he wins the primary outright or enters a runoff against Thompson as the heavy favorite, De Blasio seems headed for a general election matchup with Joe Lhota, an actual Republican, in what should be an intriguing contrast of ideologies. Ever the tactician, de Blasio has already started talking up his practical governmental experience, to counter what will likely be a main Lhota attack. But while it's true that New Yorkers want to be confident they're electing someone competent, de Blasio's big primary win shows that after twelve years of Bloomberg, a changing city seems to want something more than a manager.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
Cornel West and the Fight to Save the Black Prophetic Tradition Print
Tuesday, 10 September 2013 14:30

Hedges writes: "There is an insidious and largely unseen effort by the White House to silence the handful of voices that remain true to the black prophetic tradition."

Black Intellectual Cornel West. (photo: AP)
Black Intellectual Cornel West. (photo: AP)


Cornel West and the Fight to Save the Black Prophetic Tradition

By Chris Hedges, Truthdig

10 September 13

 

here is an insidious and largely unseen effort by the White House to silence the handful of voices that remain true to the black prophetic tradition. This tradition, which stretches back to Sojourner Truth and Frederick Douglass, has consistently named and damned the cruelty of imperialism and white supremacy. It has done so with a clarity and moral force that have eluded most other critics of American capitalism. President Barack Obama first displayed his fear of this tradition when he betrayed his pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, abetting the brutal character assassination of one of the church's most prophetic voices. And he has sustained this assault, largely through black surrogates such as the Rev. Al Sharpton, Tom Joyner and Steve Harvey, in vicious attacks on Cornel West.

"Jeremiah Wright was the canary in the mine," West said when we met a few days ago in Princeton, N.J. "The black prophetic tradition has been emptied out. Its leaders have either been murdered or incarcerated. ... A lot of political prisoners who represent the black prophetic tradition [are] in jail. They have been in there for decades. Or we have leaders who have completely sold out. They have been co-opted. And these are the three major developments. With sold-out leaders you get a pacified followership or people who are scared."

"The black prophetic tradition has been the leaven in the American democratic loaf," West said. "What has kept American democracy from going fascist or authoritarian or autocratic has been the legacy of Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, Sojourner Truth, Martin King, Fannie Lou Hamer. This is not because black people have a monopoly on truth, goodness or beauty. It is because the black freedom movement puts pressure on the American empire in the name of integrity, decency, honesty and virtue."

Continue Reading: Cornel West and the Fight to Save the Black Prophetic Tradition

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS | US "Credibility" at Work Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=20877"><span class="small">William Boardman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Tuesday, 10 September 2013 13:00

Boardman writes: "'American credibility' is an oxymoron and the political vaudeville that played out publicly early this week is a pretty accurate reflection of an administration doing handstands and backflips to distract the audience from the glaring contradictions of its Syria policy."

If they only meant what they said? (photo: Alex Wong/Getty)
If they only meant what they said? (photo: Alex Wong/Getty)


US "Credibility" at Work

By William Boardman, Reader Supported News

10 September 13

 

hat would it look like if a government really knew what it was doing?

Lacking a comprehensive, coherent account of rational beings acting in rational ways to work toward peaceful and reliable solutions to difficult questions, we offer here a fragmentary highlight reel of one day in the life of an American government spinning in all directions toward no known goal in Syria.

But first a note about the context of the current public debate about Syria: We're getting conned by the White House on intelligence assessments. Again. As reported by Gareth Porter for IPS on September 9:

Contrary to the general impression in Congress and the news media, the Syria chemical warfare intelligence summary released by the Barack Obama administration Aug. 30 did not represent an intelligence community assessment....

The evidence indicates that Director of National Intelligence James Clapper culled intelligence analyses from various agencies and by the White House itself, but that the White House itself had the final say in the contents of the document.

In other words, the political document one might expect from the Director of National Intelligence was replaced by an even more politicized document created in the White House to justify acts of war. This suggests that the phrase "American credibility" is an oxymoron and the political vaudeville that played out publicly early this week is a pretty accurate reflection of an administration doing handstands and backflips to distract the audience from the glaring contradictions of its Syria policy.

Kerry: when I say something it's likely I mean something else

Monday madness began early for Americans on September 9, when Secretary of State John Kerry gave a news conference in London while most of his fellow citizens were still asleep, literally. At that news conference, Kerry set off a tizzy by saying this about Syrian President Bashar al-Assad:

Sure, he could turn over every single bit of his chemical weapons to the international community in the next week – turn it over, all of it without delay and allow the full and total accounting, but he isn't about to do it and it can't be done.

Reporters promptly spun this as the U.S. giving Syria a one-week deadline. Reports mostly ignored the possibility that Kerry's assertion ("it can't be done") could mean that it's logistically impossible, or that the U.S. will attack anyway, or anything else.

Also Monday morning, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov called a news conference in Moscow to announce that Russia was urging Syria to put its chemical weapons under international control in order to head off an act of war by the United States.

Syrian foreign minister Walid al-Moualem, in Moscow for talks, said: "The Syrian Arab Republic welcomes the Russian initiative, motivated by the Syrian leadership's concern for the lives of our citizens and the security of our country, and motivated by our confidence in the wisdom of the Russian leadership, which is attempting to prevent American aggression."

The Russian and Syrian foreign ministers also call for U.N. inspections now.

Late Monday morning at 11:47 a.m., Agence France-Presse (AFP) tweeted: "BREAKING Syrian foreign minister welcomes Russia's Syria chemical handover initiative" (Reuters had tweeted similarly six minutes earlier).

The other side is welcoming our offer, that's good news, right? Wrong.

Before there could be any official acceptance of the proposal by Syria, the State Department was contradicting the secretary's proposed solution. An official Foggy Bottom email-of-clarification argued that Kerry was denying his "proposal" was actually a serious proposal at all:

Secretary Kerry was making a rhetorical argument about the impossibility and unlikelihood of Assad turning over chemical weapons he has denied he used. His point was that this brutal dictator with a history of playing fast and loose with the facts cannot be trusted to turn over chemical weapons, otherwise he would have done so long ago.

At more or less the same time in Geneva, the U.N.'s high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, was telling the United Nations Human Rights Council:

The use of chemical weapons has long been identified as one of the gravest crimes that can be committed, yet their use in Syria seems now to be in little doubt, even if all the circumstances and responsibilities remain to be clarified.... This appalling situation cries out for international action, yet a military response or the continued supply of arms risk igniting a regional conflagration, possibly resulting in many more deaths and even more widespread misery. [emphasis added]

Syria has a research nuclear reactor in Damascus and the government has asked the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to assess the likely consequences if the Americans bomb the reactor. The Russians are pressing the IAEA to make the assessment. According to Reuters, an anonymous U.S. official said that "requests for comprehensive risk analyses of hypothetical scenarios are beyond the IAEA's statutory authority".

Arizona senator John McCain takes offense at Kerry's news conference promise that any strike on Syria would be "unbelievably small." McCain tweets: "Kerry says #Syria strike would be 'unbelievably small' – that is unbelievably unhelpful"

White House national security advisor tries to head off possible settlement

Early Monday afternoon in Washington, the president's national security advisor, Susan Rice, gave a scheduled speech at the New America Foundation, which was founded in 1999 as a non-profit, public policy institute whose stated mission is to "invest in new thinkers and new ideas to address the next generation of challenges facing the United States."

Without matching previous national security advisor Condoleezza Rice's fear-mongering on Iraq ("We don't want the smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud"), Susan Rice came close, taking a hard line in favor of attacking Syria and saying that:

  • Syrians attacking Syrians with chemical weapons is a "serious threat to our national security" and such attacks could "threaten our soldiers in the region and even potentially our citizens at home."

  • "We cannot allow terrorists bent on destruction, or a nuclear North Korea, or an aspiring nuclear Iran, to believe for one minute that we are shying away from our determination to back up our longstanding warnings.... Failing to respond to this brazen attack could indicate the United States is not prepared to use the full range of tools necessary to keep our nation secure."

  • "Leaders in Tehran must know the United States means what we say. If we do not respond when Iran's close ally, Syria, uses weapons of mass destruction, what message does that send to Iran?"

  • "Opening a door to their use anywhere threatens the United States and our personnel everywhere."

Rice apparently did not talk about the United States helping Iraq to gas Iranian soldiers and civilians during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s. She did scoff at any further attempts at a diplomatic solution.

State Department says we made no proposal, but we'll see if they accept it

At an afternoon news conference at the State Department, spokeswoman Marie Harf responded skeptically to questions about putting Syrian chemical weapons under international control, calling it a hypothetical idea that she couldn't comment on. She reiterated the government's position that Kerry was not making a proposal – that his morning comments were only "rhetorical and hypothetical."

Harf also said: "We're going to look at what's on the table ... We don't want this to be another stalling exercise, and we have serious skepticism about the Assad regime [willingness] to get rid of their chemical weapons…. All we've heard today are statements from Russians and Syrians who've lied for the last two years."

Despite suspicion about the international control proposal, Harf did say: "We'll take a hard look at it ... but what we're focused on ... is working with Congress to get this [attack on Syria] authorized."

At a White House briefing, Deputy National Security Advisor Tony Blinked said, without referring to the Iran-Iraq War: "If we don't act, the international norm against the use of chemical weapons will be weakened." But he also said, "We want to look hard at what the Russians have proposed."

At a mid-afternoon forum on illegal wildlife trafficking, former secretary of state Hillary Clinton said she had just talked to President Obama about the Russian proposal on Syrian arms. She said the international community should make a "strong response" to events in Syria: "This is about protecting the Syrian people ... and our friends in the regions ... If the regime immediately surrendered its stockpiles to international control ... that would be an important step. But this cannot be another excuse for delay or obstruction."

Toward the end of the day, Dan Roberts, bureau chief of the Guardian, tweets: "febrile mood down in White House press room as Obama tapes six interviews for tonight while US position shifting by the minute toward a deal."

In one of those interviews, the president said he would "absolutely" not attack Syria if the chemical weapons were secured. He told ABC News: "My objective here has always been to deal with a very specific problem. If we can do that without a military strike, that is overwhelmingly my preference."

By the end of the day, the signs indicated that there was no growing support in Congress for an attack on Syria, and that public opinion remained overwhelmingly opposed to risking another war. But a determined government faction still wants to bomb somebody.

The weekend had highlights, too, including a CBS News interview with Assad

All this activity on Monday followed the weekend news that Senator McCain, the would-be Republican president from Arizona, had suggested that Obama should be impeached – if he went too far and put "boots on the ground" in Syria.

Someone might ask McCain whether his proposed impeachment-for-a-boots-job should take effect in the event of any deployment of American troops as part of an international force to guard Syrian chemical weapons.

Also over the weekend, in a CBS News interview broadcast on Monday, Bashar al-Assad warned of retaliation for any U.S. attack, but did not make any specific threats, saying only: "It is difficult for anyone to tell you what is going to happen. It's an area where everything is on the brink of explosion. You have to expect everything."

On Sunday, the Syrian state news agency reported that al-Queda-affiliated rebels had captured Maaloula, a Christian village 25 miles northeast of Damascus where the 3,000 residents mostly still speak ancient Aramaic. Some 1,500 Syrian rebels forced the Syrian Army to withdraw to the outskirts of the town.

Meanwhile in Yemen over the weekend, American drone strikes killed eleven people, all of whom may not have been innocent civilians.

And in Syria on Monday, another 49 people were killed, 25 of them in Damascus.



William M. Boardman has over 40 years experience in theatre, radio, TV, print journalism, and non-fiction, including 20 years in the Vermont judiciary. He has received honors from Writers Guild of America, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Vermont Life magazine, and an Emmy Award nomination from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS | Obama Remembers He's Not George W. Bush Print
Tuesday, 10 September 2013 12:08

Scheer writes: "A strong response to the use of those weapons is in order, but instead of more violence that would inevitably kill innocent people, why not give peace a chance?"

Can Obama finally stop acting like George W. Bush? (photo: Getty Images)
Can Obama finally stop acting like George W. Bush? (photo: Getty Images)


Obama Remembers He's Not George W. Bush

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig

10 September 13

 

t may come to naught - calls for peace so rarely still the drums of war - but there was a moment Monday when the odds for sanity seemed to finally stand a chance of prevailing. It came when President Obama acknowledged the Russian proposal for Syria to avert war by agreeing to destroy its chemical weapons stock as "a potentially positive development." It was quintessentially an un-Bush moment when suddenly this presidential "decider" seemed possessed of a brain capable of reversing his disastrous course.

It helped that a majority of the public, and even many of its representatives in Congress, had expressed strong opposition to entering into a civil war without a plausibly positive outcome. According to The New York Times/CBS News poll conducted over the weekend, "nearly 9 in 10 Americans are concerned that United States military action in Syria will become a long and costly mission" and would lead to "a more widespread war in the Middle East." Imperial hubris has been soundly rejected by a properly chastened war-weary public, and nation building, particularly in that part of the world, is now most often treated as an expectation that is indelibly cursed.

The bipartisan rejection of the inevitability of a military response has been stunning in its geographical reach, and as Peggy Noonan, a leading Republican intellectual as well as a former top speechwriter for Ronald Reagan, observed in her Wall Street Journal column Saturday: "The American people do not support military action… . Widespread public opposition is in itself reason not to go forward." Although underscoring the need to "rebuke those who used the weapons, condemn their use, and shun the users … a military strike is not the way, and not the way for America," she wrote.

Continue Reading: Obama Remembers He's Not George W. Bush

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
<< Start < Prev 3051 3052 3053 3054 3055 3056 3057 3058 3059 3060 Next > End >>

Page 3059 of 3432

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN