Showing posts with label robin vos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label robin vos. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

The tearing of our fragile social fabric

Hi again - I know, it's been a while. I'm trying to figure out what to do with this blog, but so many outrageous things are going on, it's hard not to vent here. If you get something out of these posts, maybe you could share the link with friends and invite them to visit, and then we'll see.  For now, I will try to post a couple times a week.

What inspired me to break the silence was today's JS headline: "Bus system may cut routes, fares." If you have read it, then you have a sense of the breadth of the cuts coming for public transportation around here. Walker's 10% cut in state support for transit translates into a $6.8 million loss for the Milwaukee County Transit System - per year!

The guy hated county government when he was our woeful executive, and he hates public services for the non-wealthy, as proven in his budget repair bill and his biennium budget. He also seems to hate anything that gets people out of their individual cars to save on energy, environmentally unfriendly and costly road-building, air pollution, and congestion.

But of course the worst thing is that buses are the main way the not-so-wealthy folks get around - like to jobs or schools. But if you are in the company of the Ayn Rand crowd (like Paul Ryan who makes his staff read her vacuous baloney), the descendents of John Birchers (the Koch brothers certainly come to mind), and the corporate bosses who donate to your campaigns and put mediocre thinkers and ideologues into public office, I guess services for those poor dumb masses is just not your priority.

Really, friends, it feels that bad. I can't write that in a serious journal, but I can write it here - because in my heart of hearts, that is what I think is really going on.

My heart sank reading of the mob attack in the Riverwest neighborhood the night of the fireworks (Flynn's comments being distinctly unhelpful). It is so easy to blame the thugs who sent several people to hospitals to get stitches, but if we don't understand what creates that kind of behavior, especially the disdain in which the attackers appeared to hold those they were attacking, if we don't address what is really tearing our social fabric apart, what it means when people like Walker, the Fitzgeralds, and people like Vos or Darling inflict - with an arrogant attitude, mind you - more suffering and marginalization, more hardship, on populations already reeling from stresses both historic and new (esp. since the 2008 criminally caused financial meltdown), then we can look forward to more signs that that social fabric is indeed unraveling.

Poverty and racism cannot be overcome with more poverty and racism.  Really, it's true.

A lot of attention is focused right now on recalls, and that's a fine thing. But let's not leave for later the urgent need to address the attitudes and values that are at the root of these vast inequities, examining them within ourselves and our families, and overcoming them in all our social interactions, in our communities, churches, as a counter-witness to those who believe affluence and privilege, or the power of political offices, or - let's just say it out loud - their white skins, give them a right to enhance their privilege further at the expense of those they do not see as equals and for whom they feel no connection, no responsibility - as if their wealth and privilege is not a direct result of long and deeply-rooted attitudes and injustice.

It's just gotta be said out loud. These people are implementing policies that are going to bring out the worst in us. We have to counter with a commitment to the best in us, an overwhelming assertion of the best in us.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Breaking the furniture - and the emergence of the psychopaths

In their hasty effort to do as much damage as possible before the end of the fiscal year, Repubs are really throwing stuff around, wreaking havoc, breaking all the furniture just in case anyone thought there was any part of our political culture and the state's well-being beyond their reach.

Really, I go away for a couple of days and look what happens.

The damage is mounting. Among my favorites: in yet another giveaway of public funds and employment to the private sector, the Repubs intend to ORDER, ORDER, mind you, counties and local governments to outsource road-building projects if they cost more than $100,000.

Good job, roadbuilders that contributed to Walker's campaign. You already got rid of high-speed rail, now you get this. Pretty good payback!!

These Repubs deceptively argue that they want to shrink government and save taxpayer money, but outsourcing schemes almost never do that. They end up costing us more because you hand what is public work without profit to companies only in existence to make profit - and they will drive up costs whenever they can get away with it, whereas public agencies will try to drive down costs to stay within budgets.

Get the difference?

Yea, and then the Repubs also voted to make government less transparent, creating new barriers to get access to financial disclosure forms of public officials, info that might indicate, among other things, conflicts of interest. If you just put these two things together - the outsourcing and the barriers on access to info - you could almost get the feeling that, as these guys hand out contracts, tax credits and subsidies to the private sector, there are things about these transactions that they don't want you to know.

Repub Robin Vos says he fears that he could suffer a disadvantage in his popcorn business if competitors had access to financial info. His popcorn business.  That's what he said. I wish I was making that up.

The Repubs are also going to void a program that allowed early release of prisoners based on good behavior or for health reasons. Dems passed it in 2009, but this kind of thing rankles the tough-on-crime crowd.  They want punishment, man, no matter what it costs. From the newspaper article:
Republicans say higher spending on prisons is justified, saying a prison building boom in Wisconsin in the 1990s has helped lower crime rates since then. Democrats counter that states with lower incarceration rates saw similar drops in crime rates.
Repubs love being tough on crime, even when their toughness doesn't actually have an impact on crime. For this, there's always money in the budget. Always funds in the budget to pay out private contractors to build more prisons. They'd like the private sector to staff them, too.

How 'bout this one: giving a $150,000 exemption from state sales tax for snow-making and grooming equipment for ski slopes and trails. How many jobs does this create? And who in the world lobbied for this?

But then there's my all-time favorite. I mean, from more than one person in recent weeks, I heard the comment, "What's next, child labor?"

Ha ha!! that's funny.

So, here's the most important furniture of all, our kids. The Repubs want to end a protection that prohibits kids under age 18 from working more than 40 hours or 6 days per week. Stunning. We're trying to keep kids in school, trying to keep their attention on learning, right? How in the world can a high school kid learn working 40 hours a week, and now these guys want to eliminate even that limit?

Okay, you know, the list is long, and a lot of this policy stuff got thrown in after the debates, after the committee work, sneaking stuff in at the last minute. We have learned that this is how these guys operate, not good for the prospects of our democracy.

So, what about those psychopaths in my headline? I didn't come up with that, a psychotherapist did. A friend sent me this article that appeared on CommonDreams, The Rise of the Second-String Psychopaths, by David Schwartz.  So, you know, tell me if it reminds you of anyone.

So expectations are that things will really heat up in Madison over the coming days. Lots of folks are pretty upset at what's happening to our state and are ready to make their voices heard as our legislature, now in the hands of the these psyh..., I mean, rightist Repubs prepare to put all this and more into effect, and let the chips fall where they may.  I think Schwartz got it exactly right.

------------------ 
From David Schwartz:
It is no secret that the Koch brothers and others of the super-rich seem to have undertaken a final push to consolidate control through the conversion of a marginally democratic to an essentially fascist state; extreme right-wing, authoritarian, and demagogic. This kind of government is ideal for control of a populace by the moneyed elite. To carry this out requires the employment of many ‘kept’ politicians to excite and misdirect scared and angry – and ignorant – voters. Lest the citizenry realize who stole their money and storm their castles with torches, the rapacious elite need politicians who will carry out the work of re-directing anger at teachers, or labor unions, or the poor.
 And this: 
They seem to be unaffected by the feelings of others, including feelings of distress caused by their actions. Straying from a decent way of treating people, or violating ethical codes causes no anxiety, the anxiety which is what causes the rest of us to moderate our more greedy impulses. If most children feel anxiety when they are pilfering the forbidden cookie jar, psychopaths feel just fine. They can devour the cookies, shatter the jar as evidence and stuff it in the trash can. When accused, they can argue with apparent sincerity that the cookie jar has been missing for at least a week. There suffer no remorse, no guilt, no shame. They are free to do anything, no matter how harmful.
 Yup, they can storm through the house and break all the furniture, and they could not care less.