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Will the choices we make November 6th be based on reality or fantasy

Reality  meet  Fantasy

 

Well at long last we’ve arrived at the final week before the Presidential elections and the outcome looks like its going to be a close one.  Most people have made their minds up and supposedly there are still a few holdouts that haven’t been able to determine where the candidates stand on issues they feel are important to them.  Really?  Did they just return to Earth last week or have they been ignoring all political commentary and the debates for better TV fare like Real House Wives or Pawn Stars?

The economy is still the biggest issue for most people and many are basing their choices on how well they think Obama has handled the mess he inherited from the Bush White House.  Thanks initially to Bush’s Secretary of Treasure, Henry Paulson, Wall Street is prospering while many on Main Street have yet to get past this recession.  Yes, I know.  Obama has carried out the second part of this bailout but he didn’t completely abandon Main Street either.

Many voters will be unduly influenced by the distortions and lies they hear from the right about taxes being too high (they’re lower for 98% of us than they’ve been in fifty years) and debunked notions about Obama’s birthright and political philosophy.  Despite bringing many Wall Street types in to fill cabinet and administrative posts and continuing the Bush-era use of torture, keeping Guantanamo open and accelerating the use of drones in Pakistan, Obama is portrayed by the right as a radical who wants to impose sharia law.    Beyond all of this I have heard comments from people I love very much that Obama is weak because he “bows to foreign rulers”.  George W. can walk hand in hand with King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia but if Obama extends a cultural courtesy to the man one time, as he did at the 2009 G-20 summit in London, he is somehow demeaning the stature of the American presidency?

Adding fuel to the doubts of some about Obama’s legitimacy to be president is a film recently released with the hope of exploiting this absurdity.  The movie, “2016: Obama’s America” written and directed by Dinesh D’Souza, is what one critic calls a “shaggy, piecemeal right-wing screed” and a “crude and sloppy … piece of campaign-season partisan hackwork”.   Part of the film deals with D’Souza’s attempts to exploit the fear of those duped by the nut-case, Orly Taitz, who claimed she had proof of Obama’s birthright as a Kenyan only to find out it was a forged, amateurish document.

But D’Souza’s scheme is much grander than Taitz as he tries to make the outlandish link between Obama’s “socialist” father and some anti-colonial notion that he inspired his son to spread around the world, I suppose that in the event he would someday became the leader of the free world.  After all, what father doesn’t think his son can be President of the U.S.   So what if the father in this case was an African national who gave his son an endearing American name like Barack Hussein Obama.  Some just dream deeper than others.  Others critics of this film have equally debunked the premises of D’Sousa’s.

Not wanting to be outdone and insuring that his ego doesn’t suffer, Donald Trump is back in the news again challenging Obama’s academic creds.  “The Donald” is a bit of a joke to even most conservatives so I won’t waste a lot of space on this here, but will encourage you to read Jean Calomeni’s Snoring Dog blog piece about this moronic move by the reality TV host.

Obama slams Trump on Tonight Show

I fear that well-intentioned people have been led astray by these huckster’s and to the likely detriment of our democracy in the future.  I have a young friend who posted the following on his Facebook page:

“I don’t care for Obama or Romney but Obama had his turn and didn’t do that good. So Romney it’s your turn buddy! Please do better then(sic) what we had to deal with the last 4 years!”

I just want to shake the young man and tell him that this isn’t a crap shoot.   This is like thinking your luck at a casino will change if there’s a different card dealer.  Learning all you can about poker is more apt to benefit a player than picking someone the casino selects.

Like so many others who have listened more to the angry and unfounded claims of political pundits rather than using legitimate fact checkers and reading a variety of sources that haven’t had their credibility tainted, my young friend is fixing to make a choice that has long-term consequences.  If in fact Romney gets elected and carries out his campaign strategy and promises, this young man’s grandmother’s prescription drug costs will rise once Obamacare is shut down and the “donut hole” comes back.

His own parents’ medical costs will be negatively impacted when they reach the eligible age for Medicare in about ten years if this safety net program becomes the voucher program Paul Ryan wants it to be.  He and his children will suffer the ugly consequences of climate change that are so connected to the increase of CO2 from fossil fuels having failed to implement policies that would convert to cleaner, renewable energy sources sooner.  We’ll all be getting a demonstration of this as Hurricane Sandy makes it way along the East Coast.  It will start to come inland today and meet another massive storm, becoming what weather forecasters are calling a “frankenstorm”.  This monster storm that will impact anywhere between 50-60 million people has possible climate change links from global warming.

The climate change link may be more than just more precipitation. A 2010 study found“Global warming is the main cause of a significant intensification in the North Atlantic Subtropical High.”  Climate Central’s Andrew Freedman explains a possible influence:

Recent studies have shown that blocking patterns have appeared with greater frequency and intensity in recent years….

While it is not unusual to have a high pressure area near Greenland, its intensity is striking for this time of year. As Jason Samenow of the Capital Weather Gang wrote on Wednesday, the North Atlantic Oscillation, which helps measure this blocking flow, “is forecast to bethree standard deviations from the average — meaning this is an exceptional situation.”

I don’t want to disrespect anyone’s decision on why they are voting for the candidate of their choice but I would find greater respect for those who do so for more concrete reasons based on careful study and conviction of beliefs.  In E.A. Bucchianeri’s novel, Brushstrokes of Gadfly, his fiery, idealistic heroine Katherine makes this observation:

“…they say if you don’t vote, you get the government you deserve, and if you do, you never get the results you expected.” 

As important as voting is in a democracy, it is informed voting that will garner better results and ongoing participation in the political process that ensures any likelihood that you’ll get the government you expected.

There will never be an ideal candidate that meets each person’s criteria and values and the 30-second ads during the campaign are not aimed at informing you about what you need to know.  Democracy is a group effort and one that extends beyond the voting booths.  Voting for or against someone because you don’t think he is American enough, or christian enough or hasn’t provided a silver bullet to make everything better is unfair to those of us who have studied the candidates and make choices based on the realties of this world as we best see them.

” … if describing what you want to see happen without providing any specific policies to get us there constitutes a “plan,” I can easily come up with a one-point plan that trumps Mr. Romney any day. Here it is: Every American will have a good job with good wages. Also, a blissfully happy marriage. And a pony.”   Pulitzer prize-winning Economist Paul Krugman

To emerge out of one’s emotional cocoon and make a long-term decision that comes from plutocratic influences and narrow ideological views is a fear that the framers had immediately following the days this country joined the world as its first democratic-republic.  To make a farce of it is to shame us all with those people around the world today who so desperately want to experience what it is like living under anything other than an iron fisted ruler.

RELATED ARTICLE:

Six Facts About Mitt Romney’s Plan


My comments below were documented about 6 hours before last night’s 2nd Presidential debate took place and have not been altered as a result of anything either candidate conveyed during the debate.

I have issues with Barack Obama.  Many of us on the Left do.  But in the heat of a tight campaign race I am not going to attack my choice for President and thus help someone who I feel will do greater harm to our economy and the future of our planet.  I wish there was this pure ideal of a candidate out there that many people thinks exists, but there isn’t and we all need to get past that.

We have a two-party system that doesn’t always give us the candidates we want but it does allow our participation and it falls on more than simply voting for whoever wins the ticket to create a government that was the envy of the world when it was inaugurated back in 1789.  I realize the Roberts court with its Citizens United decision has made it more difficult by allowing larger amounts of money into politics to influence voters.  For at least the last 150 years, the plutocracy in this country, with the aid of the courts in some cases, have diminished the original concept of a government for and by the people of this land.  But the system does still work if we put more than a faint effort behind it.  So until it doesn’t, I’ll do all that I can to prevent people like Mitt Romney from making choices that can hurt me and almost every other American.

Mitt Romney will double down on the Reagan/Bush policies of trickle down economics and kill what gains we have made since January 2009.  His uncertainty about whether or not the climate science is sufficient is a joke in light of the abundant data available to him and presented by a significant consensus of climate scientists.  The guy makes a rash call on what took place the night the Libyan embassy was attacked before the intelligence is even conveyed to the commander-in-chief, yet somehow he doesn’t have the capability to assess the legitimacy of man-made global warming?  Only a fool would subscribe to such a weak notion and I do not want to waste my vote on a fool.

There’s a certain amount of noise being made by those who have bought in too easily the imagery that has been created by the religious right, the Tea Party, FOX News commentators, Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Ann Coulter and right-wing blogs like Breitbart and The Drudge Report who want to portray the president as un-American, a Muslim jihadist sympathizer, a socialist/communist/fascist, and yes, even a racist.  They’ve regurgitated this nonsense so long that they have bought into it so completely, now accepting it as unquestionable and can’t understand why anyone would consider voting for the man.

 

Here then, not laid out necessarily in any hierarchical fashion, are the reasons I will vote for Barack Obama instead of the Republican option.

1. He has a broader constituency he considers when making public policy compared to Romney’s narrower concerns for the wealthiest 1%.  He doesn’t belittle and give up on people he feels certain won’t vote for him.

2. He gets it about  “man-made global warming” and though he hasn’t moved fast enough to act on what he knows, he will not be the immovable object Mitt Romney will be on this.

3. He understands that reducing taxes and cutting public sector jobs deprives the U.S. treasury of revenue for paying down our national debt and that free market principles alone will not create the job growth we need at this time.  

4. He is more willing to promote clean, renewable energy as a part of an energy and jobs policy to become oil independent rather than Romney, who wants to open up more dangerous exploration for oil in offshore deepwater and under arctic ice.

5. He has shown that he is serious about reducing health care costs in this country where the Republicans have NEVER made any serious effort at this.  Who wants to vote for a candidate like Romney who supports repealing the one piece of health care legislation that has at least made a dent in one of the highest expenses consumers have to deal with today?

6. He has a better feel for what poverty is really like, growing up around it and at times having lived on its threshold, making something of himself despite the absence of traditional parents.  Many growing up under these conditions and feeling alienated as a mixed-race child might have given into drug addiction and a life of crime.  Instead, the man has fulfilled the American dream and created a stable family life that serves as a role model for others.

7. He supports the free-enterprise system but also understands that it is subject to human weaknesses, requiring sufficient government oversight to protect those who would suffer abuses from greedy corporate interests.

8. He shares my view that values tradition yet understands that the Constitution is a living document and subject to the interpretations of the ever changing social dynamics as opposed to the rigid concept of “original intent” that claims to know what the framers over 200 hundred years ago thought would be best for the general welfare of this nation today.

9. He’s more willing to sustain a lot of what belongs to the public commons rather than turning it all over to the for-profit private sector.

10. He’s shown greater concern and support for public education while Romney and the GOP work with wealthy special interests to privatize education.

11. He fulfilled the spirit of compromise more than the GOP who refused to work for the common good and allowed itself to be hi-jacked by a radical element that voted NO on everything that didn’t meet their strict and narrow criteria.

12. I feel safer that he is less likely to send our military troops into harms way and doesn’t alienate other cultures and nations with an obnoxious level of American exceptionalism.

13. He doesn’t show the disdain and indifference for science that too many in the GOP do.

14. He thinks women should make equal pay for equal work.

15. He thinks the American worker deserves a minimum wage

16. He too thinks it is dishonest and selfish for people of great wealth to hide their fair share of taxes in off-shore and overseas accounts while voting against a livable wage for the rest of us.

17. His tax rate is more comparable to mine than Romney’s 13% and has shown ample evidence of this in releasing years of tax records to Romney’s one and half.

18. He hasn’t threatened to restrict civil rights in the form of banning gays in the military,  creating a constitutional amendment opposing same-sex marriage and insisting women‘s bodies be invaded to support extremist pro-life views.

19. He supports a two-state solution for Israel and the Palestinians where Romney sees “no hope” for this.

20. With four of the nine members of the Supreme Court over 70 years old, the next occupant of the White House could have the opportunity to appoint one or more new justices.   Don’t want Romney adding more Scalias and Thomas’.  Think what would happen to Roe v. Wade

As I mentioned earlier, there’s a lot of money out there in politics and this invariably opens the door for corruption and influence peddling.  When you look at both campaigns however one thing sticks out with the Romney campaign – they’re getting much more larger individual donations.  In August, the average donation was $58 for the Obama camp.  Ninety-eight percent of donations were $250 or less.  Romney’s campaign has not been that forthcoming on what their average donation is but it is clearly higher than Obama’s . What little I did find on Romney’s was in this AP report where representatives said “about 94 percent of its donations came from people who gave $250 or less.”

You get a better idea how much more each donor is giving when you look at state and local coffers.  In San Antonio the average contribution to the Democrat’s campaign was $135 while Romney was pulling in an average of $681 per donation and  in New Jersey Obama’s average was $149, compared with an average of $802 for Romney.  Opensecrets.org also shows Romney’s top contributors are outpacing Obama’s.   Even more glaring is how many billionaires have lined up in the Romney camp.

What also repulses me about electing a Republican as President or even for dog catcher is their brazen attempts to eliminate qualified voters by pushing voter ID laws.  Voter fraud is a fear mongering tactic used by those on the right and most of them know that the threat of in-person voter fraud is wildly exaggerated.

So I am voting for Barack Obama even though my vote won’t carry much weight in Texas where the GOP is sure to walk away with all the electoral college votes.  There are caveats to my reasons and imperfections that can be pointed out.  But they are insufficient to make me think that Romney would be the better choice.  Should Obama be successful in gaining a second term then I will spend as much energy challenging his decisions I object to, like continuing the practice of torture, privacy right violations and his deadly use of drones.  Issues that few Republicans would find fault with.

As president I understand that he may feel the need to continue such practices, seeing the world from a vantage point the common man or woman can’t.  But if we have learned anything from the Bush White House’s reason for taking us to war in Iraq, it is that we shouldn’t hesitate to challenge the Executive branch’s claims that rationalize calls to war or human rights violations.  Actions to defend any national security interests should be based on the highest legal & moral standards, not the influences of wealthy, powerful self-interests.


“This is my trickle down. Get your own ... if you can”.

How long can reasonable people suffer the preposterous assumption of Mitt Romney and other GOP Presidential hopefuls for the remaining time leading up to the November elections that “free enterprise” is under assault from the Obama administration and the Occupy Wall Street movement?  I have long believed that there is no hypocrisy that is too great for some politicians to engage in and this charge by Romney and other Republicans is the most current example of this.

The Occupy Wall Street movement and a few ethical economists are primarily responsible for pointing out the problems that exist in our culture where the disparity in income is excessive between a small segment of society and most everyone else.  This disparity is as severe as it ever has been and is made worse by jobless rates that remain very high.  There are those in the wealthy class that Romney comes from who have tried to accuse anyone who doesn’t disparage the Occupy movement as anti-capitalist hacks.

Gingrich referred to Occupiers as dead beats who simply “need to get a job after they take a bath.”  Interesting though now, Gingrich, and Rick Perry, seem to be borrowing the narrative from the OWS movement.  GOP rivals are charging Romney “of being a fat-cat venture capitalist during his days running the private equity firm Bain Capital, laying off workers as he restructured companies and filled his own pockets”  according to a report from AP’s Tom Raum.   The irony and hypocrisy is so thick you can cut it with a knife.

The Republican straw man attack about Obama attacking free-enterprise is purely a facade that has evolved from an equally absurd notion that Obama is an Islamic socialist - an oxymoron if ever there was one.  The smear campaign in place against the President revolves purely around the strategy of GOP operatives whose objective since Obama entered the Oval office in January 2009 was aptly summed up in Senator Mitch McConnell words affirming that The single most important thing we [Republicans] want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president.”

The Occupy movement, not Obama, is the primary source that has popularized the failures of the free-market that allowed unregulated financial markets to engage in lending practices that went sour and slowly unravelled into the worst economic recession since the Great one back in 1929.  This quickly put some of the wealthy one-percenters on the defensive and retaliate with the lame exclamation that there was a “class war” being waged and that Obama was behind this.

But free enterprise per se isn’t under attack by the Occupiers or Obama.  What is under attack is the faceless inhumanity of some very wealthy people and their institutions that exploited their positions of wealth and power to gain more themselves while millions of working low and middle income families lost their jobs and health care coverage along with their homes and savings set aside for their children’s college tuition and their own retirement.

This is where Romney is feeling the heat and thus making the charges that “the Obama people [are coming] after free enterprise”.  Romney’s role in Bain Capital, a company founded in 1984 by partners Mitt Romney, T. Coleman Andrews III, and Eric Kriss has spurred charges of greed.  Though there has been very little transparency about how things came together at Bain, it is clear that Romney succeeded in making lots of money for himself and his investors.  But this has come at a high price for many people who lost their jobs and eventually their livelihoods as companies were bought, sold an consolidated to get the best bang for the investor’s buck.

Send for Mitt Romney’s new book, “How to Make Millions from Dispossessing Families of Their Homes and Income”.

The claim too that while at Bain, Romney created 100,000 jobs has been significantly debunked.   As a result, Romney is a caricature of that which best represents the face of greed in this “class warfare” that one-percenters are trying to demonize.  It becomes understandable then, in light of this, why he would want to portray Obama and anyone else who challenges his record at Bain as people who “would come after free enterprise”; a typical red herring move to shift the onus away from himself and towards something that is connected to something Americans view as admirable.

The free-enterprise system consists of millions of small businesses that have suffered tremendously at the failure of the markets that came crashing down in 2008 when it was discovered that lenders were creating toxic mortgages with people who had little collateral and in some cases, little to no income.  Then the problem was amplified when these predatory lenders bundled these toxic assets and sold them to unsuspecting investors while also buying what are called credit default swaps, gimmick policies devised to insure that the bundlers would make millions when these loans went bad.  Gordon Gecko would be so proud.

These small, free-enterprise companies have watched their businesses slowly loose profits and for some, close up shop completely.  I work part-time for one of these small businesses; a food catering service.  It’s essentially a “mom and pop” operation that struggles each week to make payroll.  Some days we don’t work at all when demand for their product just doesn’t materialize.

This struggle is not the result of competition alone or the fact that their product isn’t good.  They make some of the best desserts and meats I have ever tasted.  They take great pride in how they present themselves and their food.  They play by the rules and to my knowledge they always have.  But what’s hurting them now is not a President or government that over regulates them.  It is a weak economy that has killed demand for their services.  A weak economy that resulted from people like Romney who took as much as they could from as many as they could without any regard to how this would impact the overall economy.

So the next time you hear one of these wealthy elitist or their wannabe supporters in government lash out at people who simply want a level playing field and are inquiring why the wealth of this nation has shifted so dramatically to a very small percentage of people, take a closer look at them and see if you can’t detect a spot of hypocrisy and self-serving smugness; doing what they need to do to ensure their advantages remain while the middle class in this country continue to take a beating.

Romney’s is the language of a man who has never wanted for anything, never worried about where his next paycheck would come from, never worried about going bankrupt if he got sick.

It is the language of an entitled empowerment utterly alien to the experience of most Americans.   SOURCE 

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Will Romney Lie His Way to the White House? 



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