Showing posts with label pawlenty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pawlenty. Show all posts

Saturday, June 04, 2011

Our Economy and it's Impact on 2012


Aside from a fun post answering 30 questions about myself, my absence amidst the pages of ethecofem has gone on now for just over 4 months.  Ever since this time there's been a great groundswell of opine, led by the impassioned musings of the incomparable Bema, including of all ethecofem's contributors sans me.  So, it's about damn time I wrote something around here...

Much like my recently lethargic attitude towards the written word, much the same can be said to describe our country's current economic situation.  It's really been a drag recently.  In fact, a year ago it forced me to take up a temp job, effectively pushing me harder than ever to seek out a real job that I hope will afford me the often overlooked benefits of paid time off and vacation.  With my attention directed towards the job hunt it has made it all the more difficult to focus on my writing.

The chief motivator for me to write, most often, is when I read or hear something that just totally pisses me off.  Such was the case on Thursday when Mitt Romney belatedly announced his candidacy for the presidency.  What really perturbed me, as it should anyone who's been paying attention the past 2 years, is when some conservative, prep-school reared stuffed shirt from New England (who should technically know better) bows to the radical elements in his party to gain their favor (see John McCain 2008 - the model for going against your own morals to win The Nomination) by making false accusations.

There is a long list of crap this man spewed on Thursday, but there were two that specifically stood out for me.  The first: "When [Obama] took office the economy was in recession. He made it worse."  And the second: "I will cap federal spending at 20% or less of the GDP and finally, finally balance the budget."

Well, when it comes to calling a man out for his lies, the Associated Press was on the ball in debunking Romney's fraudulence right off the bat... the problem is that none of those he's seeking to impress or convince will ever read this analysis, preferring instead to wallow in the spin.  But wait, Fox News actually printed AP's column amidst their own pages.  Should one see this as a "Fair and Balanced" approach or assume that it's pretty clear that Romney still isn't radical enough for their brand of conservatism?  I'll default to the latter every time.  Even though Romney has made multiple appearances on Fox since his announcement, they still prefer, as most the media has, to focus on Palin stealing his thunder in New Hampshire this week - a woman who not only isn't officially running yet, but still on the Fox News payroll.  So it's clear that not only is the conservative right not buying the crap he's trying to shill specifically to the FNC set, no one else is gonna buy it either.

Here's an excerpt of the AP's clear debunking of Romney's first claim and his chief falsehood that the president has made our economy worse:

The gross domestic product, the prime measure of economic strength, shrank by a severe 6.8 percent annual rate before Obama became president. The declines eased after he took office and economic growth, however modest, resumed. The recession officially ended six months into his presidency. Unemployment, however, has worsened under Obama, going from 7.8 percent in January 2009 to 9.1 percent last month. It hit 10.1 percent in October 2009.  
A case can be made for and against the idea that Obama's policies made the economy worse than it needed to be and that the recession lasted longer than it might have under another president. Such arguments are at the core of political debate. But Obama did not, as Romney alleged, make the economy worse than it was when he took office. 

In fact, the President came right back this morning and emphasized the progress that has been made in the manufacturing sector, chiefly the auto industry, furthering the notion that government intervention not only works (wherein the taxpayers got their money back), but that in temporary instances governments are able to add a unique perspective that supposedly self-reliant companies can actually benefit from during financial calamities.  Governments can help (see Thing #12) more than the free-marketeers are willing to admit.  Here's what President Obama had to say this morning:




Romney's second assertion that he would cap federal spending at 20% of GDP and finally (finally!) balance the budget is almost more absurd than the previous assertion, making him almost look nescient in comparison to Paul Ryan and his broken budgetary blunder.  Moderate conservative blogger Andrew Sullivan of The Dish sums this assertion up thusly:

I presume Romney intends a balanced budget within his maximum term of office. That is a staggering goal, give the structural forces propelling the debt. It's way more draconian than the Ryan plan, which won't deliver a balanced budget for more than a decade. So what would he cut? Given his pledge to abolish all the cost-controls in the ACA, how does he propose to reform Medicare? How much would he cut from defense? Which taxes would he raise? By not even suggesting a single specific to reach a truly radical goal, the pledge is basically meaningless.
So what does this all mean for those conservatives who've set their gaze upon 2012?  From what I can tell, thus far, it pretty much means that they're all fucked.  I'll explain.  And by the way, it's WAAAAYY too way early to tell what they hell is going on with 2012 polling, but currently it looks like this, via Gallup May 26th 2011:



What this polling tells me is that while it's too early to consider anyone an outright front-runner, it does speak to some potentially crazy permutations.  Let's say that someone more conservative like Herman Cain or more likely Sarah Palin or Michelle Bachmann (if they ever enter the race as expected) actually wins an early GOP primary in say South Carolina, New Hampshire or Iowa (all very possibly states for them to win).  This should actually help Romney, the slowly ascending Pawlenty or even the already anointed dark horse Jon Huntsman.  The GOP's more moderate candidates would actually stand to benefit from an early uber-conservative win(s) because the historically moderate and monied GOP base will freak out and run into the arms of it's more moderate candidates.  

At the same time, said moderate candidates will overreact, kowtowing to those leaning toward the extreme fringes, thus subverting future attempts to recapture the middle when the primary season has concluded.  My point here is that even if a fringe candidate is nominated, they're screwed because independents will either shift to Obama or a non-factor like Paul.  For a moderate to win, they'll have to subvert their own self-interested moderate disposition to earn it, becoming temporarily radical enough to get the nomination, thus alienating themselves from moderate voters in the general election (again, see John McCain's folly).

In the end, especially amidst today's information seeking populace, even Fox News is exposing liars like Romney and will eventually become critical of even their former employees like Palin and Newt.  While a lot of bullshit can be slung in the interim, our elections focus most, as they should, on "what have you done or what experience do you have to prove your assertions?" Simultaneously, history has proven that incumbent candidates, especially those with both economic and militaristic successes, have a much greater chance at reclaiming the presidency.

Unless our economy takes a huge tumble between now and November 2012, something I don't see happening, the presidency will be nearly impossible for the GOP to capture. Unless they can prove to the American people that they possess actual means by which to improve the state of our country (something that may not even be in question 15 months from now), not more false assertions and broken promises, I see no reason to believe any of the bloviations we'll be subjected to for the next 18 months.  What a long, strange, lying trip it will be... 

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

SO MANY THINGS

I've truthfully been almost deliberately avoiding forming an opinion about Libya simply because I feel like my attention to current events and national politics is completely maxed out, and I just don't feel like I have the mental capacity to analyze all of the information out there, given the energy I already spend paying attention to labor movements in the Midwest, local politics, and the general ideological struggle between big business and citizens, among other things.  Oh yeah, and food, and health. But I do feel a bit reassured by the information that Obama has given here:



Also, I've been keenly aware of how few substantive posts I've been writing here lately, and I attribute this to the same problem.  It's weird, really, how stressed out I feel lately, considering the fact that my only obligations at the moment are making sure I participate in a few online discussions for a whopping two unbelievably easy online classes, and the knowledge that I start a new (and completely different than I've ever done) extremely part-time job in a week.  But even the job thing only happened as of a couple weeks ago, so, yeah.  Since quitting my shitty bank job in November, I've managed to stress myself out to the extent of minor panic attacks by merely reading news on the internet and listening to the radio, to the extent that it feels like a full-time job to even keep up with reading my Google Reader.  It's... well, I don't know.  Silly?  Annoying?  A pointless waste of time and energy?  A white whine?  Or, perhaps more optimistically, a catalyst for becoming more involved in... anything?

Mostly, I am trying desperately to fight against the whole stuck-in-the-suburbs, cold-ass Minnesota lethargy that sets in every year, that I'd been able to at least partially able to avoid when I lived in the city.  It's a lot different here, and I didn't think it would make such a difference when I moved last summer... until winter happened.  It's really difficult to live like I'm most happy living in a place where public transportation is practically non-existent, grocery stores stock for a 97% white population and as a result don't even carry Tapatio or basmati rice (it is Michelle Bachmann's district, where most of the grocery stores are; perhaps Mexican hot sauce and Indian rice are considered unpatriotic?), and the only restaurants to choose from are Applebee's and TGI Friday's.  And I can't even express how desperately I miss gridded, numbered, alphabetized streets.

That's not to say that I've had a completely bad time living here so far.  There are countless benefits to living with my immediate family, including serious financial benefits.  Rent is extraordinarily cheap, and while my husband and I still have an annoying number of monthly static expenses, the break on rent (even factoring in the price of gas, now that we have to drive absolutely everywhere we want to go, even if it's only half  a mile away) is a huge bonus when it comes to pretty much everything else.  Being students, Jesse and I were able to afford to register for Netroots Nation, which is happening in Minneapolis this June.  I was also only able to comfortably make spontaneous plans to take a road trip to attend the rally in Madison a few weeks ago because of my current living situation.

So, really, like anything, there are serious pros and cons to my current living situation.  But, man, I miss Minneapolis.  I miss being able to walk or bike anywhere I wanted to go.  I miss the walkable and bussable farmer's markets.  I miss having a wide variety of items in the local grocery store-- at the big regional chains, even.  I miss having a bar nearby that wasn't one of those sports bars where dozens of 20-something douchey turds with backwards baseball caps and large and unnecessary trucks feed bleached-blonde girls Jag shots all night to a soundtrack of Nickelback.  Not to mention that whole "social life" thing that the kids keep talking about, that ceases to exist when work schedules and a lack of desire for DWIs are factored into weekend plans. 

So, pardon my lack of posting.  I hope you watch all of the videos I manage to link to in lieu of real substance, though, because they're good.  I promise to get back to regular, substantive posting soon.  Here are some more videos:

Al Franken consistently makes up for Minnesota's 6th District's terrible choice of Bachmann.


Donald Trump (who plans to run for President in 2012, remember) is a completely ridiculous person, as expected:


About language-- specifically, how ensuring that English is the only language in which we will discuss important technological, educational, and other pressing issues, is potentially harmful in numerable ways.  I'm really bad at summarizing everything from videos to articles to anything else you can imagine.  Just watch it; you'll be happy you did.


One great thing about going to my first training at my new job (I'm a phone canvasser.  This means I call members of my organization and ask them to donate money for current legislative efforts we're focused on) is that when I went into the phone room, one of the first things I saw was a Wellstone yard sign.  These are still in people's yards around the more progressive neighborhoods of Minneapolis.  Minnesota will never forget Paul Wellstone.  His followers were, and are, some of the most dedicated and devoted progressives around.  The murder death of Paul Wellstone is still, to this day, felt and discussed all the time around progressive circles.

About Paul Wellstone, I can't claim a long support or anything toward him.  When he was killed, I was just 18, and only starting to get involved in local politics.  All I knew of Wellstone was what my mom had said of him, disparagingly: "he's such a 'bleeding-heart'!"  I didn't know what that meant at the time, but was alternatively beginning to embrace my seemingly intrinsic support for anyone willing to actually have a bleeding heart, especially out loud, like Wellstone did.  I worked in a photo lab with a very ardent Wellstone supporter at the time, and based on her frequent discussions about him and my own research, I had decided that I was going to vote for him, without question.  His death a few weeks later shocked me.

That was also the election year (the first one I was legally allowed to vote in!) that Pawlenty was running for governor, for the first time.  I remember thinking I might vote for him, and that I really liked his claim that he was from a working class St. Paul family.  I believed him.  I also based the majority of my political opinions on network television commercials.  That year, I ultimately ended up voting for Ken Pentel, the Green party candidate, rather than either of the two main party candidates, based on a lot of Dave Matthews Band listening and weed-infused Daily Show viewings that made me believe that voting for a third party was beneficial (I still do believe this; I just want us to be practical about it).  

Fuck Pawlenty, though, seriously:


If I could just be juvenile for a moment: BARF.