"What does not change / is the will to change"
--Charles Olson, "The Kingfishers"

Friday, December 31, 2010

Typical Christie

Nothing is ever Chris Christie's fault. The failures of local and state plow crews? Blame the mayors, not the single-minded focus on slashing budgets. Being in Florida? I would have been doing the same thing here as I was doing there. But you weren't here. We were.

I should point out that, before this past year of budget cuts, South Brunswick road crews were second to none and always -- and I mean always -- out-performed the state and county when the white stuff fell. But with fewer public works employees, too many streets were left with too much snow as late as Tuesday.

I could blame the mayor and council. I could blame the public works staff. But that would be wrong-headed, given their past responses to bad weather. I blame the governor, even if he refuses to take any blame for anything.
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Plowed under politicians

I don't think I could have said this any better.
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Thursday, December 30, 2010

Get ready for some Cake (and I don't mean pastry)



The release of a new Cake album always is good news.
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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Political World: Tool kit is a Band-Aid

Here's my take on the governor's tool-kit plan -- in a column on eastwindsor.patch.com (it should make the rounds of the other sites in Central Jersey soon)>
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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Statistics v. reality, a tale of an economy in decline

Two points worth mentioning about this Bob Herbert column (three if you include this one: Right on, Bob!):

The people who report on the state of the economy, as he says, rarely consider the impact of restructuring on actual workers:
There is a fundamental disconnect between economic indicators pointing in a positive direction and the experience of millions of American families fighting desperately to fend off destitution. Some three out of every four Americans have been personally touched by the recession — either they’ve lost a job or a relative or close friend has. And the outlook, despite the spin being put on the latest data, is not promising.
And the restructuring has dimmed the prospects for any kind of real or sustained rebound:
The fact that so many Americans are out of work, or working at jobs that don’t pay well, undermines the prospects for a robust recovery. Jobless people don’t buy a lot of flat-screen TVs. What we’re really seeing is an erosion of standards of living for an enormous portion of the population, including a substantial segment of the once solid middle class.
Of course, that is not on the agenda in Washington, where an insane turn toward austerity has taken hold. The upshot of this is likely to be more pain, and an accelerating descent into a third-world economy for the United States.

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The consequences of cuts

New Jerseyans need to be reminded -- as this story does -- that budget cuts have consequences. It's not just about an individual tax bill, but about snow plowing and services for the disabled and police officers and teachers. We have a choice.
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Monday, December 27, 2010

Sunny approach to power

Slowly, we're starting to see property owners with large acreage add solar generators, as the Lawrenceville School and Dow Jones are doing. It is a positive trend, though one that has moved far too slowly to address the real dangers of climate change. This is where a real government incentive could work, and create new jobs to boot.
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Snow bound


The snow has piled up outside -- so much so, in fact, that the dogs are having great difficulty navigating their way around the yard.

My brother, who lives less than a half mile away, was trapped here last night, creating an impromptu sleepover (my brother's three kids, my sister's three, six adults, two dogs) and a lot of activity in the morning. Mark finally made it out of the driveway and home to take care of his dog (and get my nephew's DS charger) and my brother-in-law is outside with the snow shovel as I sit at this computer getting ready to launch another Patch site (lawrenceville.patch.com).

I can see through the window the wind blowing snow from the roof and I'm hoping the weathermen are right about the rest of the week -- sun and rising temperatures. I don't know why I haven't fled south to avoid this stuff.

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Thursday, December 23, 2010

Tell me again who's at fault for the pension mess



The state treasurer announced today that the state pension shortfall is at an all-time high.

As reported by The Star-Ledger, the shortfall grew by more than $8 billion over the last fiscal year to about $53.9 billion -- an astronmical number that dwarfs the state's annual budget. All told, the state pension system, the story says, "is 62 percent funded."

The report offered the Christie administration an opportunity to continue its push for pension reform, which State Treasurer Andrew Sidamon-Eristoff said include "rolling back a 9 percent increase in pensions given by the Legislature in 2001, and upping workers’ contributions to 8.5 percent across the board," according to the paper.
“Unchecked, the cost of this impossible burden will fall not just on the taxpayers of today, but on future generations of New Jerseyans,” he said.
That governor, he plays hard ball. He also is proving to be an ideological hack who seems unconcerned with the facts of the pension crisis. Remember, the governor followed in the footsteps of nearly every predecessor going back to the early days of the Whitman administration by failing to pay into the pension system. The $3.1 billion pension payment he didn't make accounts for nearly 40 percent of the growth in the unfunded obligation.

And the governor, as Chris Hayes pointed out the other night on Countdown, seems prepared to default on the state's obligations to its workers -- cops and firefighters, teachers and roadworkers, secretaries and others -- rather than a) asking taxpayers for more money or b) getting in the bondholders' faces.

As Dean Baker, an economist with the left-leaning Center for Economic Policy and Research, point out, the pensions are contractual obligations, a promise made to the people who work for the various levels of government in the state. Threatening default -- or at least alluding to it -- is irresponsible and morally questionable. It is blackmail, plain and simple, and just more evidence that this supposedly no-nonsense governor is really just a bully.

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Doggie Diaries: The story of Rosie and Sophie
Of dogs, Doty and description


Mark Doty's book on description -- The Art of Description -- is such a good read even my dogs liked it, or I think they liked it. They certainly enjoyed ripping through the pages.
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Tuesday, December 21, 2010

The reform governor needs to be reformed

Logic 101:

If reforming government requires full disclosure and accountability and the governor is connected to a private fundraising group that solicit donations from people seeking favors/jobs/rule changes from the state, then the governor cannot be a reformer.

Just saying.
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Prisoners of politics

President Barack Obama continues to show how little he values civil liberties. Elected on a promise to close the Guantanamo prison and end the Bush approach to terror suspects, Obama has instead opted to embrace Bush-era policies

According to a report by Pro Publica, the online investigative group, Obama plans to sign an executive order that
establishes indefinite detention as a long-term Obama administration policy and makes clear that the White House alone will manage a review process for those it chooses to hold without charge or trial.

The executive order offers better protections than currently exist, but continues the questionable detention practice and sets precedent for maintaining an array of executive maneuvers that sidestep civil liberties protections.
Jameel Jaffer, a national security lawyer at the American Civil Liberties Association, agreed that "more review is better." But he said that an executive order would only "normalize and institutionalize indefinite detention and other policies," that were set in place by the Bush administration.

I don't remember electing Obama so that he could be an extension of the Bush presidency.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Giving states the veto is a bad idea

I would dismiss this as a joke, but given the looniness we've seen grow on the issue of federal power it obviously is not a joke.

The this, in this case, is an amendment that would grant state legislatures the power to repeal federal law -- two-thirds of all state legislatures would need to vote for repeal. It has the backing of folks in 12 states (the story says legislatures, including New Jersey, when it needs to be made clear that full legislatures are not on board in most cases) and some in Congress -- which leaves me wondering if anyone is thinking clearly out there.

The amendment is being pushed as a way to trim federal sails and force national lawmakers to consider the impact of their actions on the states, which sounds logical in theory but would create chaos in practice and do little more than further empower small states and, more ominously, make progressive reform impossible.

As with the filibuster, the threat of a repeal vote might be enough to stall action -- consider what might have happened to civil rights legislation had this been in effect in the mid-1960s. The reality is that the federal government has no choice but to step in sometimes -- to address questions of race, class, gender, sexual orientation, to impose regulatory rules that can act as a baseline and so on.

Giving a veto to the states will create a downward pull on all of these issues, because there will be no incentive for states with the weakest environmental regulations, those with out workplace safety laws, without a minimum wage, etc., to improve, no minimum standards to meet, etc. States with effective laws will have little choice but to gut their own regulatory apparatus to keep business from fleeing to the states of least resistance.

This craziness, of course, is brought to you by the same people who believe that democracy would be enhanced by taking the right to vote for U.S. Senators away from the people and handing it to the very state legislatures that have proven inept and corrupt. (Does anyone really think that the people we send to Trenton would do a better job picking Senators than the voters? Does anyone think that the people in Trenton will be thinking of us and not of themselves?)

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Sunday, December 19, 2010

Quote of the day, from The Limits of Power

A quotation from Andrew Bacevich's The Limits of Power:
Great powers wage "small wars" not to defend themselves but to assert control over foreign populations. Denominating an operation "Iraqi Freedom" or "Enduring Freedom" does not alter that reality. Historically, that is, "small wars" are imperial wars. The wars in which the United States currently finds itself engaged are no exception.
(Bacevich, The Limits of Power, p. 141)
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Saturday, December 18, 2010

Civil rights for gays and lesbians!

Don't Ask, Don't Tell is history and gays and lesbians can serve in the military -- not a great choice, but one that confers on them the full rights of citizenship. Well, all but one right -- it's time to move forward and legalize same-sex marriage.
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Political World: Dog park purchase made sense

The latest South Brunswick version of my Political World column can be found here.
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Hey Point Pleasant: Meet the U.S. Constitution

It's shocking that it's taken this long for the courts to intervene in this silliness, and perhaps more shocking that people in government don't seen anything wrong with prayers at a public meeting. My suggestion: Read the First Amendment.
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A civil rights Christmas present for LGBTs

The Senate is now on the precipice of history. By a 63-33 vote, the Senate has ended debate on repealing Don't Ask, Don't Tell, sending it to a Senate vote and the likely passage of a repeal.

When that happens, and when it is signed by President Obama into law, lesbians and gays will no longer be forced to serve their country from the closet. They will have full citizenship rights.

That's really what this has been about.
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Friday, December 17, 2010

A love-hate relationship

This poll, from Eagleton, is interesting because it seems to mirror what we know about the way people feel about Congress: They hate Congress but tend to like their congressman; they hate the state, but like their little part of it.

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Thursday, December 16, 2010

Civil rights for gays and lesbians -- time permitting

If we get around to it.

That's essentially the way the Senate is treating a major civil rights issue -- full citizenship for gay Americans.

There now appears to be enough support in the U.S. Senate to repeal "Don't Ask, Don't Tell," the Clinton-era compromise on gays serving in the military that forced gays and lesbians to lie under oath or risk being drummed out of the service. The law, which was viewed as a necessary middle ground at the time by some was just another legal impediment to full citizenship for the LGBT community because it meant that gays and lesbians were restricted from serving unless they kept their true identities hidden. Openly gay men and women were not allowed to serve with an institution that has traditionally been one of the definitions of citizenship.

So, now that the House has passed its repeal, it is up to the Senate, which will try to fit it in. How magnanimous.
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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Knicks green with envy

The headline on today's NY Post Web site is a bit of a stretch -- "Rivalry Renewed" -- but I can't blame the headline writer. Tonight offers the most meaningful Celtic-Knicks game in nearly two decades, even if it is too early to start calling it a rivalry.

The Knicks are playing their best ball in years, thanks to the best player they have had in uniform since Patrick Ewing (Amar'e Stoudamire) and Ray Felton's imitation of Walt Frazier.

But the 16-9 Knicks can make a statement tonight, demonstrating that they belong in the discussion of legitimate playoff teams.

The Celtics remain the conference's elite team, despite Miami's spending splurge and the continued growth of Orlando bigman Dwight Howard. The team is riding a big winning streak of its own, so someone is going to see a streak end.

Let's hope it's the team in the green.
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Lautenberg votes for workers

The president's tax compromise was approved in the U.S. Senate earlier today -- not a surprise, really, but still a terrible policy decision on the part of all involved.

Should the House of Representatives follow suit, as it is expected to do, then we will continue to funnel money to the rich when what we should be doing is creating jobs for everyone else. And it going to have longterm budgetary and political consequences.

Sen. Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey deserves kudos for his no-vote, as do 12 other Democrats, five Republicans and Bernie Sanders.
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At least he's being honest

Democrats want an apology from Alex DeCroce. The North Jersey assembly member -- the Assembly Republican leader -- said something that might seem impolitic, but probably sums up his and his party's inhumane philosophy:
"I'm one of the few people here ... who feel that benefits are too good for these people," said DeCroce of Morris County. "Why go to work? If you can go for 26 weeks collecting $550 a week, and you get an extension for another 26, that's close to $27,000 a year or $30,000 a year, and a lot of people figure, 'Why go to work?'"
The response from the Democrats has been to ask for an apology -- a disingenuous request and one that misses the point. DeCroce has no reason to apologize, not if it's what he truly believes.

Make no mistake, though, I am not endorsing his comments. On the contrary, I find them repulsive and insensitive. Rather, seek an apology, however, the Democrats should make the case that DeCroce is just saying what he believes and then make it clear that what he believes is repulsive, that his dismissive view of the unemployed makes him an unfit protector of the public good. Let DeCroce defend his comments on the public stage, especially with the entire state Legislature on the coming year's ballot. 
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The mythology of the middle

There is an unfortunate sense of deja vu to the political discussion in Washington and on the cable shows that follow Washington these days. Thanks to an electoral rout that returned right-wing Republicans to the majority in the House of Representatives, the conventional wisdom folks have been talking up an Obama move-to-the-center.

The president, the argument goes, must forsake his lefty ideals and pivot toward more mainstream centrism. And the appearance last week of Bill Clinton at a presidential press conference only made the narrative seem that much more in vogue.

A piece in Sunday's Week In Review in The New York Times -- "If Bill Clinton Were President" -- sought to understand the phenomenon, thought it failed to get very far below the surface because it accepted the traditional narrative of the Clinton presidency and made some assumptions about the Obama presidency that just don't match with the facts.

Consider paragraph two:
Equally riveting and astonishing, Mr. Clinton’s blast-from-the-past performance in the White House briefing room on Friday afternoon reinforced the impression of political déjà vu, the sense that once again a Democratic president humbled by midterm elections was pivoting to the center at the expense of his own supporters.
The story does go on to acknowledge that Clinton was anything but a raging lefty, but the argument that for Democrats to be successful they must move to the center remained intact, despite the important realities represented by these two different, yet similar Democratic presidents.

Let's take Clinton first, so that we are clear about what the expectations were for Clinton coming in. First, Clinton made several important moves during his 1992 campaign that made it clear that he occupied not the center, but the right wing of his own party: He called for an end to "welfare as we know it," made a point of executing a mentally retarded inmate to demonstrate his pro-death penalty bonafides, made several veiled and overt rhetorical attacks on leaders of the African American community (and a minor hip-hop performer) to distance himself from the race issue, made it clear that he endorsed the prevailing free trade wisdom (with some ineffectual caveats) and generally ran against his party's past as much as he did against the sitting Republican president.

It was an ugly showing, but it was effective. Bill Clinton was no progressive -- and the policies he pursued during his first two years further reinforced this. Aside from his push for universal healthcare -- which resulted in the monstrous, bureaucratic and unworkable "Hillarycare" proposal, one that endorsed HMOs and would have left the worst features of the system in place -- he did little to endear himself to the left.

But, then, that has never stopped right-wing Republicans from demonizing Democrats as crazed longhair liberals.

When the GOP took over Congress, Clinton didn't pivot as much as he accelerated his rightward push, his legacy ultimately being his dismantling of welfare and the banking/finance regulatory apparatus, the endorsement of bubble economics and a dysfunctional Washington political class.

Barack Obama, while no lefty either, was seen as a more traditional liberal, primarily because of his early history as a community organizer and some of the positions he had taken early in his career. Obama, like Clinton, showed a tendency to move right early in his career, to use his vast rhetorical skills to belittle his erstwhile political allies (read his over-praised Audacity of Hope, which fetishes bipartisanship at the expense of philosophy or ideology) and accept whatever compromise ended up on the table.

The signals were there during the campaign -- his vote on telecom immunity, his moves to Hillary Clinton's right on healthcare, etc. -- and they have been born out during the first two years of his presidency. His healthcare triumph -- his most notable liberal achievement -- is really just a massive giveaway to the healthcare industry and was built not on sound progressive ideals but on the GOP's alternative to Hillarycare. At every turn, he has allowed progressive priorities to be watered down (financial reregulation, his too-weak-by-half stimulus) or abandoned them altogether (state secrets, Guantanamo, torture). And, now, the tax cut plan.

This is not necessarily meant as a criticism of the Obama administration -- or not only a criticism -- but of the mainstream media's propensity for simple shorthand: Democrat does not equal progressive or even liberal and Republican does not necessarily equal conservative. The simple shorthand buys into the mythology of a functioning left-right battle between two parties that allegedly cover all legitimate ranges of opinion in the country and is incredibly effective at marginalizing nontraditional voices and skewing debate to the right.

If Barack Obama, a corporate-backed and supporting Democrat who has endorsed the national security state and the death penalty, has shown an unwillingness to challenge the primacy of money and who seems more willing to thumb his nose at the more liberal wing of his own party than the absolute wack jobs in the other -- if he is a lefty, then what does that make Bernie Sanders or the members of the House Progressive Caucus?

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Wednesday, December 08, 2010

Books of the year

I've been a bit preoccupied with other reading this year -- staying up to date with my MFA reading, for instance, and some religious books (Paul Tillich, 2009's The Evolution of God by Robert Wright) and some other 2009 books (Michael Sandel's Justice and Peter Maass' Crude World), but there have been a few stunning books worth nothing from this past year that I'd recommend. (Read this post from Huffington Post for other interesting suggestion.)

Seamus Heaney, Human Chain: The Nobel laureate's best and most accessible book in years focuses on the connections we have to each other, both physically and spiritually. Absolutely brilliant.

Chris Hedges, Death of the Liberal Class: Hedges writes with an arch, polemical, cutting style that will put off some liberals. But the fact remains that his analysis comes closest to explaining the utter failure of the Obama administration.

Mark Doty, The Art of Description: A lovely, focused exploration of the use of image in poetry.

Rita Dove, Sonata Mullatica: The former poet laureate's lovely musical collection of poems (OK, this actually came out in 2009, but I wanted to make sure it was on the list).
    Send me your suggestions.
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Tuesday, December 07, 2010

So much for a Democratic presidency, the sequel



There is a tenet in political circles, especially among Democrats: If you want to look serious, bash your base.

Bill Clinton did it through out his two presidential campaigns and presidential terms, and now President Barack Obama is following suit. In a press conference today that The New York Times described as "defiant," the president took the expected swipe at his Republican foes -- but then, in response to a question from Chuck Todd, turned his attention to the left flank of his own party, saying that liberal complaints that he had again abandoned his base and the party's principles "reminds me of the debate that we had during health care."
This is the public option debate all over again. So I pass a signature piece of legislation where we finally get health care for all Americans, something that Democrats had been fighting for for a hundred years, but because there was a provision in there that they didn’t get that would have affected maybe a couple of million people, even though we got health insurance for 30 million people and the potential for lower premiums for 100 million people, that somehow that was a sign of weakness and compromise.


Now, if that’s the standard by which we are measuring success or core principles, then let’s face it, we will never get anything done. People will have the satisfaction of having a purist position and no victories for the American people. And we will be able to feel good about ourselves and sanctimonious about how pure our intentions are and how tough we are, and in the meantime, the American people are still seeing themselves not able to get health insurance because of preexisting conditions or not being able to pay their bills because their unemployment insurance ran out.

That can’t be the measure of how we think about our public service. That can’t be the measure of what it means to be a Democrat. This is a big, diverse country. Not everybody agrees with us. I know that shocks people. The New York Times editorial page does not permeate across all of America. Neither does The Wall Street Journal editorial page. Most Americans, they’re just trying to figure out how to go about their lives and how can we make sure that our elected officials are looking out for us. And that means because it’s a big, diverse country and people have a lot of complicated positions, it means that in order to get stuff done, we’re going to compromise. This is why FDR, when he started Social Security, it only affected widows and orphans. You did not qualify. And yet now it is something that really helps a lot of people. When Medicare was started, it was a small program. It grew.

Under the criteria that you just set out, each of those were betrayals of some abstract ideal. This country was founded on compromise. I couldn’t go through the front door at this country’s founding. And if we were really thinking about ideal positions, we wouldn’t have a union.
It is an eloquent -- if badly flawed -- argument that conflates the progressive and truly groundbreaking legislation pushed through by Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson with a series of capitulations by the current president that have resulted in incremental change, at best.

The healthcare law, despite his protestations, is a huge give-a-way to the insurance companies that contains some small positive improvements. And these tax cuts -- well, the president should have stood firm and allowed the entire Bush tax-cut package to expire.

I understand he views this tradeoff as warranted -- but he himself said that the package would not aid the economy and, more dangerously, he is creating a rhetorical club the Republicans can use against him and the Democrats two years down the road when this debate crops up again.



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Grassroots: War without end

Alas, Afghanistan is a quagmire. Read my Grassroots column.
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Political World: Fix the safety net

Today's installment of Political World on South Brunswick Patch focuses on the social safety net and the need to help our neighbors.
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So much for a Democratic presidency

Washington is broken. More specifically, the Obama administration is broken -- terminally.

For those on the left who are still holding out hope that President Barack Obama harbors some hidden progressive streak, the news that he has agreed to give the Republicans what they wanted on tax cuts for the rich should end that illusion.

The deal, according to The New York Times, will allow the extension of all of the Bush tax cuts -- including those for income above $250,000 for couples and $200,000 for individuals -- and create an exemption to the federal estate tax of "$5 million per person and a maximum rate of 35 percent."

The overall cost of the package is pegged at $900 billion over two years, "to be financed entirely by adding to the national debt, at a time when both parties are professing a desire to begin addressing long-term fiscal imbalances."

True, the package also includes a payroll tax holiday -- a 2 percentage point cut for a year, which would save workers paying the maximum -- $6,621.60 on $106,800 in income -- $2,136. That's not chump change, but $40 a week is not exactly going to make or break the average family.

But that's not all -- imagine this being read in the voice of a late-night TV shill -- if Democrats buy in now, they'll win the following:
The deal would also continue a college-tuition tax credit for some families, expand the earned-income tax credit and allow businesses to write off the cost of certain equipment purchases. The top rate of 15 percent on capital gains and dividends would remain in place for two years, and the alternative minimum tax would be adjusted so that as many as 21 million households would not be hit by it.

In addition, the agreement provides for a 13-month extension of jobless aid for the long-term unemployed. Benefits have already started to run out for some people, and as many as seven million people would potentially lose assistance within the next year, officials said.
So, workers get 13 months of jobless help and some small trinkets in exchange for the massive give-a-way to the people who need it least.

And this is with a Democrat in the White House.

  • Send me an e-mail.
  • Read poetry at The Subterranean.
  • Certainties and Uncertainties a chapbook by Hank Kalet, will be published in November by Finishing Line Press. It can be ordered here.
  • Suburban Pastoral, a chapbook by Hank Kalet, available here.

Thursday, December 02, 2010

Political World: The human cost of Congressional debates

My new column on South Brunswick Patch -- Political World -- talks briefly about unemployment benefits, or the soon-to-be lack thereof.
  • Send me an e-mail.
  • Read poetry at The Subterranean.
  • Certainties and Uncertainties a chapbook by Hank Kalet, will be published in November by Finishing Line Press. It can be ordered here.
  • Suburban Pastoral, a chapbook by Hank Kalet, available here.

Wednesday, December 01, 2010

Negotiating against themselves

Fact (as David Sirota points out): The Bush tax cuts will expire at the end of the year if Congress does nothing.

Fact: The tax cuts cost the U.S. Treasury about $370 billion a year total, with the portion of the tax cuts for those making more than $250,000 a year costing $70 billion a year.

The impact of the cuts is nothing to sneeze at, but mostly for those at the upper ends of the income ladder. For nearly 80 percent of workers, the impact will be relatively small (only a couple of cents on the dollar), especially when compared with the brutal service cuts and tax hikes that will be needed down the road to pay for this unnecessary giveaway. For the rich, well, they make out like bandits.

And yet, the Democrats and the White House insist on finding things to give to the Republicans without getting anything in return. Ridiculous.

  • Send me an e-mail.
  • Read poetry at The Subterranean.
  • Certainties and Uncertainties a chapbook by Hank Kalet, will be published in November by Finishing Line Press. It can be ordered here.
  • Suburban Pastoral, a chapbook by Hank Kalet, available here.

Here comes South Brunswick Patch: Countdown to launch

OK, folks, only a few furlongs left in this race, and South Brunswick Patch is pushing to the finish line. Our launch is planned for about 5 p.m. or so. I invite everyone to check us out, get involved and make Patch yours.
  • Send me an e-mail.
  • Read poetry at The Subterranean.
  • Certainties and Uncertainties a chapbook by Hank Kalet, will be published in November by Finishing Line Press. It can be ordered here.
  • Suburban Pastoral, a chapbook by Hank Kalet, available here.