Saturday, December 29, 2007

Another Lesson Not Learned

Pervez Musharraf, president of Pakistan, is a dictator. As Wikipedia says: "He came to power in 1999 by effecting a military coup d'état and has suspended the constitution of Pakistan twice." He may have removed his uniform, but he's still calling the shots, and last I checked he wasn't elected in any fair and open sort of way.

Nonetheless, the US has decided to call him an ally. Reluctantly, perhaps, but since he serves our short-term interests, he's called an ally just the same. Where have I seen this before? Oh yeah, Iraq. Surely, things will work out better this time, though.

Or not.

The assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto has pitched Pakistan into a political freefall and raised fears that increasingly bitter divisions in the society are turning the country into another Iraq.

Shocked citizens blame the deepening turmoil on President Pervez Musharraf and his U.S.-backed crackdown on Islamic extremists. Overwhelmingly poor and more concerned with survival than anti-Western terrorism, most crave stability above all, and many believe things will only get better if Musharraf resigns.

"The government of Musharraf has created an Afghanistan and Iraq-like situation in our country," said Zaheer Ahmad, 47, who works at a private clinic in Multan. "I don't know who killed Benazir Bhutto. But I do know that it is the result of Musharraf's wrong and bad policies." [emphasis added]


So if Pakistan dissolves into chaos and Musharraf is "forced" to resume his military dictatorship and suspend the constitution again, will the US once again become the object of scorn for a new generation of extremists?

The real question is whether our government will ever stop backing dictators. It's deplorable behavior for a country that claims its mission is to "spread democracy."

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

The Governator Proves He Really Is A Republican

This just in:

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Assembly leader Fabian Nunez are touting their plan to reform health care in California


Reform healthcare. That's what they're saying. The governor and the Democrats in the state Senate. Reform, as in "make better" or "fix." While it is somewhat discouraging to see that the Democrats in California are using that term, what's really irritating is that the media has picked it up as well. The governor's plan is not reform. It will do nothing to fix the healthcare crisis.

The governor's plan has a couple flaws.

1) It does nothing to address the real problem with healthcare, which is that it costs too damn much. Arnold's plan is simply to use taxpayer money to help people pay for overpriced private insurance, partially "with fees on hospitals." How is that supposed to reduce costs?

2) It forces people to buy private insurance. Pumping more money into the broken system is not going to fix it. That would be like trying to fix the problem of lobbyist influence in DC by forcing everyone to hire a lobbyist, and then using tax dollars to "subsidize" the expense.

Basically, Arnold's plan is to funnel more money from the middle class into the pockets of the already wealthy CEOs of the bloated inefficient insurance industry. If there were any doubts that he's really a Republican, this should help to crush them. What's most surprising is that the Democrats are going along with him. Providing insurance for everyone is a laudable goal, but Arnold's plan is the wrong way to go about it.

Meanwhile, the California Nurses Association is urging senators to reject the Assembly bill in favor of a government-run, single-payer health care system.


When will people realize that's the only way to fix this problem?

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Bush Chooses Big Business Over Kids' Health

When President Bush vetoed the SCHIP bill on Wednesday, he didn't do it because he's hostile toward poor children. I'm sure Bush has nothing against poor kids, so long as they pull themselves up by their bootstraps and make it on their own, like he did. He didn't even do it becuase he simply doesn't care about poor kids. He did it because he had to. Bush had to stand up for the one thing that he truly believes in: Undying loyalty to big business.

Bush vetoed the expansion of the SCHIP program because he is afraid of it. Or rather, his corporate backers and the goons that run the RNC are afraid of it. SCHIP is the Republican party's greatest nightmare for one simple reason. It works. The program provides health insurance to poor people, mostly kids, at a rate far lower than any private insurance company can (or is willing to.) A look at the numbers tells the story that causes Bush to wake up screaming in the late evening.

Currently, the SCHIP program spends $5.04 Billion per year to provide healthcare to 6 million poor people, mostly children of people who make too much money to qualify for Medicaid, but too little to afford private insurance. That means that the program spends $840 per year per person. That's $70 per month.

Wait, let me repeat that. SCHIP, a government healthcare program, provides insurance at the cost of $70 per month per person. That's less than I (a single person) pay for my employer-subsidized insurance.

Under the expanded SCHIP plan, the government would spend roughly $12.04 Billion per year to provide insurance for about 10 million people. Again, mostly children. That works out to $1,204 per person per year, or $100.33 per month.

George Bush said that he vetoed this bill because "it moves our country's health care system in the wrong direction." And he's right. This bill provides healthcare to poor children in a manner that is far more cost-effective than private insurance. As proof of his fealty to the industry, Bush's proposal, as presented in his State Of The Union Address last February was to give tax deductions to people who already have insurance. His plan has no cost benefit over SCHIP. As he said, "For Americans who now purchase health insurance on their own, this proposal would mean a substantial tax savings -- $4,500 for a family of four making $60,000 a year." That works out to $375 per month ($26 less than SCHIP). That $375 isn't providing the family with healthcare, though. It's helping them to pay for private insurance. (Only someone who has never had to buy insurance ever in his life would believe that $375 per month is going to cut it in the private insurance world.)

Ultimately, Bush's plan is simply to push more tax dollars into the pockets of the Insurance industry. (Or as he calls them, "his base.") In his veto statement, Bush said, "our Nation's goal should be to move children who have no health insurance to private coverage." At the same time, according to Marilyn Clement, "His proposed $15,000 income tax deduction for middle-class families would jeopardize both Medicare and Social Security..." And that's a never-ending goal of the Republican party.

So what is Bush really doing by vetoing the SCHIP expansion bill? He's trying to keep America from noticing that SCHIP is a federal insurance system that provides healthcare more cost-effectively than private insurance companies can. After all, that's not the sort of thing you want to become public knowledge when there's an election right around the corner.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Romney's Message To Atheists: Go To Hell

"Freedom requires religion just as religion requires freedom. ... Freedom and religion endure together, or perish alone."

So there you have it. According to Mitt Romney, if you do not believe in the God of the Bible, then you are leading the US on a path to destruction. I'm not sure which is more annoying: Romney's pandering to the evangelicals in a last-ditch effort to win in Iowa, or his utter ignorance of the religious beliefs of our nation's founders.

We should acknowledge the Creator as did the Founders – in ceremony and word. He should remain on our currency, in our pledge, in the teaching of our history, and during the holiday season, nativity scenes and menorahs should be welcome in our public places.


Putting the words "In God We Trust" on our money had nothing to do with the Founders. According to the US Treasury, "The motto IN GOD WE TRUST was placed on United States coins largely because of the increased religious sentiment existing during the Civil War." And, "IN GOD WE TRUST first appeared on the 1864 two-cent coin."

As for the pledge, religioustolerance.org says, "In 1954, during the McCarthy era and communism scare, Congress passed a bill, which was signed into law, to add the words 'under God.'" I'm going to go out on a limb and say that the Founders had nothing to do with that, either.

Of course, Romney's view of religion is predictably Christ-centric. He said, "I believe that every faith I have encountered draws its adherents closer to God." So either he hasn't encountered that many faiths, or he feels that all religions have the same god.

It seems to me that Romney's view on religion is rather single-minded. Tolerance of religion means tolerance of his religion. Freedom to worship means freedom to worship the god of the Bible. Our rights come from his god. Our laws come from his god. Our nation exists only because of his god. If you're a person of faith, you're obviously worshiping his god. If you're not a person of faith, then you're what's wrong with this country.

So, Romney's message to all Atheists: Go to hell. America doesn't need you.

(All quotes from Romney's speech were grabbed from WCVB in Boston.)

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Credit Where Credit Is Due

I am not a friend to the Democratic party. I feel that they have abandoned many (or most) of the principles that democrats are supposed to stand for --standing up for our liberties being the most important. I felt that the Senate Democrats made a huge mistake when they made Harry Reid the majority leader. Dick Durbin, from Illinois, would have been a much better choice.

Nevertheless, I have to give Harry Reid (and the Democrats) some credit with regard to the National Intelligence Estimate on Iran that was released on Monday. There has been much talk about the information held in that estimate, and predictably, the Bush administration is spinning it to support their desire to march toward war. What seems to be glossed over in most accounts I've seen, is that this NIE, which I think everyone can agree reveals intelligence that is of vital importance, would not have been generated if not for the Democrats requesting it.

From Reid's statement (from the Senate Democrats' web site):

Democratic Committee leaders and I requested this assessment early last year so that the Administration could not rush this Congress and the country to another war based on flawed intelligence.


This underscores the importance of the Democrats taking back control of the Senate in the last election. If the Republicans had still been in the majority, there's no way they would have allowed the Democrats to request this NIE, and we'd all be counting down the days until Bush's World War III.

So to Harry Reid and the Senate Democrats, I have to say that despite how much I despise your lack of integrity and your inability to stand up to the Bush administration (until recently), you've done good. I think that all Americans (and indeed the entire world) should be thankful that you were able to inject at least one tiny glimmer of sanity into the madness of Bush's foreign policy.