Right Democrat also has this, by Leo Gerard, from the Campaign for America's Future:
Protestors disrupted a convention of mortgage financers in San Francisco this week, storming the stage as former Bush advisor Karl Rove spoke, heckling bankers with bullhorns and badgering a panel with demands for a foreclosure moratorium.
Fear and frustration compelled ordinary citizens to harangue the green-visor set at their normally staid annual meeting. Middle-class Americans are losing their jobs and their homes and their hope while watching Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson spend their tax dollars to bail out the infinitely wealthy on Wall Street, whose reprehensible risk-taking caused the country’s financial crisis. The middle class wants its piece of the American pie.
Congress is trying to dish it out in the form of a second stimulus package that would extend unemployment insurance and food stamps and create jobs through programs such as highway construction projects.
Republican candidates John McCain and Sarah Palin oppose it. They’re running around the country with caricatures of Joe the Plumber and Joe Six-pack, pretending to represent the best interests of the working class and small business owners. It’s all false rhetoric and no real action. McCain and Palin object to intervention for anyone other than the wealthy, for whom they plan to enshrine tax cuts; for overfed CEOs, for whom they believe the $700 billion bailout was justified; and for themselves, for whom they believe the Republican National Committee appropriately opened its purse to purchase haute couture wardrobes, hair stylists and makeup artists.
McCain wants to brand a socialist “S” on candidate Barack Obama, although both voted for the bailout plan under which the U.S. government is nationalizing banks.
However, Obama believes not in socialism but in everyone serving as their brothers’ keepers. He described “the American promise” this way in his acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention:
“It's a promise that says each of us has the freedom to make of our own lives what we will, but that we also have obligations to treat each other with dignity and respect.
It's a promise that says the market should reward drive and innovation and generate growth, but that businesses should live up to their responsibilities to create American jobs, to look out for American workers, and play by the rules of the road.
Ours is a promise that says government cannot solve all our problems, but what it should do is that which we cannot do for ourselves: protect us from harm and provide every child a decent education; keep our water clean and our toys safe; invest in new schools, and new roads, and science, and technology.
Our government should work for us, not against us. It should help us, not hurt us. It should ensure opportunity not just for those with the most money and influence, but for every American who's willing to work.
That's the promise of America, the idea that we are responsible for ourselves, but that we also rise or fall as one nation, the fundamental belief that I am my brother's keeper, I am my sister's keeper.
That's the promise we need to keep. That's the change we need right now.”
That philosophy has great appeal with unemployment at a five-year high of 6.1 percent; with the poverty rate rising to 12.5 percent in what is supposed to be the richest country in the world; with 47 million without health insurance; with 1 million homes lost to foreclosure in the past two years and another 1.5 million in the process, and with the chronically ill across American skipping medications because they can’t afford them, as The New York Times reported this week.
While you’re scrimping and saving and shopping at Costco to prevent foreclosure of your home, just remember what Palin told CNN reporter Drew Griffin about providing a stimulus package to help the middle class: “But now that we’re hearing that the Democrats want an additional stimulus package or bailout package for what, hundreds of billions of dollars more, this is not a time to use the economic crisis as an excuse for reckless spending and for greater, bigger government and to move the private sector to the back burner and let government be assumed to be the be-all, end-all solution to the economic challenges that we have.”
So, for Palin, great big government is okay to bail out Wall Street fat cats, but not to help the middle class. Palin’s knee-jerk Republican “let-the-private-sector-solve-it” attitude shocks the consciousness after the indiscretion of the private sector just landed this country in financial crisis. We’re not inclined to trust them, frankly, Ms. Palin.
McCain said the same, backing the bailout for the reckless on Wall Street, and damning attempts by Democrats to help those on Main Street – of course, all the while dragging up the image of Joe the Plumber and contending he’s the guy’s advocate.
The ticket clearly lacks both introspection and economic expertise. McCain said it himself last year – that he was no authority on the economy. By contrast, a person with some degree of economic proficiency, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, last week endorsed additional fiscal stimulus, saying it was appropriate now because the economy is likely to be weak for several quarters. In addition, economic expert and Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman said last week that additional government spending now for a stimulus package is appropriate, particularly for infrastructure improvement, which would provide real value and create jobs.
Though McCain and Palin clearly don’t understand, it’s time for everyday Americans to share in the American pie. At a rally in Florida this week, Obama talked about how the policies of the Bush administration have shrunk the pie and permitted the wealthy to grab the few remaining crumbs. He told he crowd he has no desire to reapportion the pie, as McCain keeps accusing him wanting to — as a socialist, you know. Also, Obama objects to the McCain-Palin policy of continuing to feed the rich all of the crumbs, which is particularly evident in the GOP tax plan.
Obama told the group his goal is to expand the pie to ensure that all Americans get a piece. The crowd responded with a spontaneous chant of, “We want pie!”
That’s what is going on in America. That’s why protestors accosted mortgage bankers at their California convention. The middle class won’t stand for the rich wolfing down all of the pie anymore.
"Should The top management of the Public listed company be responsible for the company performance"
ReplyDeleteYes.
"Are you a Partisan?"
Well, my father had a hand in the downfall of Mussolini. Although, since he had blond hair and blue eyes, those whom he was liberating kept mistaking him for one of those from whom they were being liberated.
"Obama told the group his goal is to expand the pie to ensure that all Americans get a piece."
ReplyDeleteThats unusual - a politician who says he personally will ensure faster economic growth. The only thing is that upping taxes & spending it on welfare will, quite obviously, do the opposite & if he is not completly illiterate he muct know it.