The cold day in hell has arrived.
If you had asked me a year ago if I would ever agree with
Congressman Paul Ryan about anything, you would have either received derisive
laughter or a challenge to a duel.
After all, this is a man who is praised by people who should
know better because he is willing to sacrifice Social Security and Medicare
“for the good of his country.”
But when he told an interviewer last September, “Class warfare ... may make for really good politics, but it makes
for rotten economics,” Paul Ryan stumbled onto the truth.
This election season has been marred by people who have
tried to stoke a feud between those who struggle to make ends meet and those
who worry if the elevator they installed for their cars is down for repairs.
Class warfare does make for rotten economics and it is time
to tell Paul Ryan and his colleagues, whether they classify themselves as
simply conservative or Tea Party, that we are sick of it.
It is class warfare when a bunch of white middle-aged men
with six and seven-figure incomes fight tooth and nail to keep people from
having affordable health care, making the same arguments that were made before
Medicare and Social Security were passed.
It is class warfare
when public school teachers are attacked for being the cause of education
problems in the United States while these same men do everything they can to
eliminate the programs designed to battle the poverty that is the biggest cause
of failures in our inner-city schools.
It is class warfare
when anti-union and anti-worker legislation is touted as vital to bringing jobs
to states when the whole idea is to get every state to pass these bills and
reduce the wages and benefits that these “job providers” offer.
It is class warfare when you lower taxes again and again for
these “job providers” who never seem to provide any jobs. With taxes so low, no
money is left to pay for essential services, which makes it necessary to launch
attacks against the middle class public servants whose jobs relied on that
money.
It is class warfare when you blame the educational system
for not providing job-ready workers (which was never the purpose of public
education in the first place), to cover up the shipment of those same jobs to
other countries to save a few dollars.
It is class warfare when you begin the systematic
elimination of campaign finance limits, the only thing that offered the
possibility of an even break in the electoral process to those who cannot
afford to wine and dine their politicians and offer them carpet bags full of
cold cash.
It is class warfare when the corporations are given
unlimited free speech, while one impediment after another is placed in the path
of unions or anyone else who represents workers.
It is class warfare when legislators continue to offer bills
designed to strip money from public schools and have it sent to private
institutions, while making no effort to make sure that those same private
institutions will open their doors to anyone, including those with physical,
emotional, and behavioral problems.
The most horrific part of the class warfare that the
American people have been subjected to the past few years is that the more
times we are told that class warfare (against the one percent) won’t work, the
more effectively it is working for that same one percent.
We automatically accept, almost without question, that
Medicare and Social Security, success stories by anyone’s definition, must be
altered, or perhaps dismantled, in order to save the programs.
We accept the statement that public schools are failing, when
the overwhelming majority of them are not and the inner-city schools that are
having problems are being hurt just as much by politicians’ disdain for dealing
with poverty and societal problems, as by poor teachers.
We accept the idea, and it is far more insidious than
anything else I have mentioned, that those who are poor, those who are
diseased, those whose religion or sexual preference is different from the
majority, those who have come to this country because of what the United States
represents, and I pray will continue to represent, are somehow the root of this
nation’s problems.
We have all been victims of class warfare. What has been
most shameful has been the way the word “conservative” has been destroyed by
these zealots. There is nothing conservative about systematically destroying
the ideals and values that have made this country great.
There is nothing conservative about an America with an
economic Jim Crow landscape.
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4 comments:
I think that if we continue to look to our government to solve ANY problem we have, we are in trouble. I am not a Liberal person at all. I would call myself very Conservative. I work in a small school district, my family struggles to make end meet, I have no health care. I am exactly the person politicians argue over....and sadly I have no confidence in any of them. We Americans are in a tough spot, and I do agree that class warfare won't solve it.
Bravo and well said. The very underpining of our country are being ripped out and melted and recast into clubs to beat us with.
I think it's reached the point in this country where we're pretty much fighting over the scraps (i.e., what's left of the America that once was). Like other mature economies elsewhere in the world, we've basically plateaued. With a population that continues to increase (illegal immigration is not entirely responsible for this) against the backdrop of a finite resource base, it can only mean one thing - on the whole our standard of living is going to take a hit. In an earlier time the so-called American dream was somewhat realistic, but anymore Madison Avenue and Hollywood will have a tough time selling me on the concept. To be sure, there are clear ideological differences between the two parties on health care and any number of other subjects, but at present America's biggest problems are structural and, dare I mention it, spiritual in nature. Rick Nichols
Well said Randy. Seems there are many areas that a lot of folks find fault with and they do a lot shouting negative thoughts. No matter the subject there are a lot of negative thoughts thrown around and you would think someone would sit down and say "Ok we got this and it is not quite what we want so lets see if we can't find the good parts and make them better." Randy you, John and others have helped identify and written about Joplin and the Spirit of Hope. Isn't possible that we stil have here in America some positive thinkers willing to put aside their differences and rebuild all those things we hold dear? I pray they are still out there somewhere.
Hal Weller
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