Navigation
More About This Website

Obama’s winning plan

Obama’s winning plan

E.J. Dionne Jr. MAY 2

Republicans no longer ahead on foreign policy.

 


"Injustice anywhere is injustice everywhere"

Letter from Birmingham Jail, April 16, 1963

Martin Luther King, Jr.


The GOP - Not One of US.


"It's the economy stupid!"

     Gee the DOW is at 13,000.  Happy Days are here again on the Street - the greatest global Ponzi scheme ever. 

     Business in the USA is sitting on $2 trillion dollars refusing to invest their own funds in expanding and hiring workers.  When one adds to this the reserves that banks, equity firms and hedge funds have - the picture is clear - "capitalism in the USA is on strike."  The engine of our economy - the spirit of entrepreneurship is not in evidence today.  So much for business being dynamic and risk taking.  They hire K- Street lobbyists and their ilk at the state level because they are averse to risk taking - pleading for tax breaks, tax credits and endless loopholes.  The "business of business" in America today is not about job creation, it's about wealth hoarding and redistribution from the middle class to the top 10%.  So for those who claim government doesn't create jobs, my response is that business doesn't either until given "corporate welfare" by government.  The fact is that the private and public sector are highly integrated, something the anti-tax, anti-government Tea Party types don't understand.  Job creation requires public/private collaboration.

We need a government for the 99% not the top 1%. 


RAD'S

WEBSITE PICKS: 


 

  • Tony Dondero Patch.com

Shoreline.patch.com

  • A Middle East View      

Rami G. Khouri

  • RealClearPolitics:

Realclearpolitics

  • Jim Hightower:   

Jimhightower.com

  • Robert Reich:

Robert Reich

  • Thomas Friedman: 

Friedman Column

  • Nicholas Kristof: 

Kristof Column


Oregon's Motto: 

She flies with her own wings! 



     Oregon's February Session. 

     I was not very optimistic about the February session being a success story.  I was wrong.  Governor "NO" became Governor "YES" in the final day of the session!  Governor Kitzhaber succeeded in getting his major agenda items passed - health care reform and education reform.  The legislature also succeeded in closing the budget hole of $300 million.  And to my surprise, they passed home foreclosure legislation.  Amazing grace how sweet it it.      

     I opined that - "One can only hope that the adults will prevail in Salem come February." 

     Well the adults did prevail in the Guv's office and in the legislature.  But what was not done was crafting a long term solution to Oregon's unbalanced, one dimensional tax system.  So in a sense what was passed was easy because most of it came without a revenue impact.  In 2013 the heavy lifting will begin - funding all these reforms.  As we know - the devil is in the details.  In 2013 nobody will be able to kick the can... 

    But this his was a very successful session although at times it teetered on the brink of going over a cliff.  However, I still think the education reform bill dealing with K-12 and universities is too top down and will ultimately prove to be a Potemkin village.  I think early childhood education has a better chance of success but libraries must be part of the solution.  The health care reforms put Oregon in a positive place to connect to Obamacare. 

     So the Guv and legislative leadership defied the odds and made things work under the Dome.  Good for them...  Now we head into the fall campaign which will determine the composition of the 2013 legislature.  In a presidential election year, this should be good news for the Dems.  They have a real chance to take back control of the House and keep control of the Senate and with it the responsibility to deal with the "tough" questions! 

     As they say "be careful what you wish for." 

 



A footnote on replacing David Wu. 

    The Suzanne Bonamici only spent $1 million...  not $2...  But her and DNC negative ads soured the whole election for me.  I hope she becomes more than just a place holder.  Given the pabulum she offered up - I'm not terribly optimistic.  She needs to work on her "inner Elizabeth Furse/Les AuCoin" impersonation. 


Hard Times in Oregon: 

Hardtimes

The Oregon story - the rich get richer, the poor and middle class lose ground.  Check this front page Oregonian article out. 

Oregon wage gap widens

Homelessness in Oregon - a call to action

Chuck Currie The crisis of homelessness


      Are we in a race to the top or diving to the bottom?  It's ironic that Oregon lost out in its bid for "race to the top" funding.  We were 7th from the bottom!  In a strange way being #34 out of 41 states who applied was a victory of sorts. 

    Oregon's loss illustrates the failure of leadership under Susan Castillo, Oregon's Superintendent of Public Instruction as, like her predecessors, she builds an educational bridge to nowhere called high stakes testing. 

  To confuse matters more the Oregonian's editorial board pontificates that this was a lost opportunity to get federal funding for innovation.  How firing principals and teachers equals innovation is a mystery to me. 

    The way to reform schools is to reduce class sizes, to encourage teacher collaboration and to support their continued education.  High stakes testing and performance based assessment of teachers are NOT the answer!  

    If you want students to succeed you first have to resolve the issues they confront before they come to school.  Children who face poverty, hunger, homelessness, health care issues and family instability require wrap around services for them and their families, 24/7. 

    Every child needs a safe home of their own and parents who know how to be good parents. 

    There is only one way to address this impending crisis.  Schools must have a stable source of funding.  Until that happens - we will limp from crisis to crisis. 

    Minus such action Oregon's already shaky social safety net will be shredded.  Charity starts at home not in the streets of Kabul or Baghdad.  These never ending wars drain our coffers on the home front!

     Check out a recent Steve Duin column and a review of Diane Ravitch's book critiquing NCLB and the Obama plan in Slate.com  

    From PDX to DC school reform is the rage but it's bogus!   

Steve_Duin Schools_get_the_blame

School Reform/slate.com

 

 

   Garrison Keillor - "...The Founding Fathers intended the Senate to be a fount of wisdom... but when you consider Saxby Chambliss... Jim DeMint, James Inhofe, who look as if they've been banged on the head too many times and... moon-faced Mitch McConnell, your faith in democracy is challenged severely. Any legislative body in which 41 senators from rural states that together represent 10 percent of the population can filibuster you to death is going to be flat-footed, on the verge of paralysis, no matter what. Any time 10 percent of the people can stop 90 percent, it's like driving a bus with a brake pedal for each passenger. That's why Congress has a public approval rating of [18] percent...." 

    


    

    Why does the richest nation in the world have the moral blight of homeless people?

Invisible People

http://www.npr.org


ahomeoftheirown.com/  

    Connecting the dots between homelessness, hunger & health care disparities in Oregon and Washington County: 

Homelessness:  

•    The faces of the homeless are families with children, single men and women, vets, and many who are impaired. It is estimated that in Washington County up to 56% of homelessness occurs to families.

Hunger:

•    Hunger is highest among single mother households (10%) and poor families (15%) as well as renters, unemployed workers and minority households. 

Heath Care Disparities: 

•    Adults in Oregon without insurance represent 22.3% of the state’s population compared to 19.7% of the nation.  In Washington County approximately 

   

    

 

RAD Lines

What they are saying...   

Inequality and GOP ignorance

Barack "How far we've come" 

Ben Unger for Oregon House District 29

 My candidate Katie Riley lost the primary but Ben, a fellow Dem, will help erode the GOP margin in the 30/30 House in Salem.  He's a young energetic candidate who will give incumbert Katie Eyer a run for her money.  Pun intended! 


School Reform - hope or hoax? 

"No school or school district or state anywhere in the nation had ever proved the theory correct. Nowhere was there a real-life demonstration in which a district had identified a top quintile of teachers, assigned low-performing students to their classes, and improved the test-scores of low-performing students so dramatically in three, four or five years that the black-white test score gap closed."

Diane Ravitch on NCLB 


OBAMA


Heath Care Reform at Work

Click link above for info

       For those who want to repeal Obama health care reform because it's "socialistic" explain away these 'facts' about the status quo which the medical industrial complex claims is the best system in the world? 

     50% of all bankruptcies in the USA are related to health care costs and 75% involve people who have health insurance.  Administrative costs make up 31% of all health care spending in the USA compared to 16.7% in Canada. 

     Of all Americans getting annual check ups only 60% get what they need.  When's the last time your family doctor checked your eyes, ears, skin et al. 

     Doctors aren't really examining patients thoroughly because the insurance based system forces them to have a high patient turnover each day.  This assembly line medical system is based on speed not quality care. 

     The 2007 Commonwealth Fund ranking of affluent countries health care systems found that the US system ranked "last" or next-to-last in quality, access, efficiency and healthy lives. 

     We spend double on health care per person and as percentage of GDP compared to Australia, Canada, Germany, New Zealand or the United Kingdom (the latter only has genuine"socialized" medicine). 

     PS:  The US is becoming a "banana republic" with increasing income inequality.  When giving those earning $250K tax cuts is a major political battle - plutocracy is our name! 

 http://www.nytimes/nicholasdkristof


 

Professor Kingfield, from the Paper Chase

   "I'm not a teacher: only a fellow traveler of whom you asked the way. I pointed ahead – ahead of myself as well as you."

- George Bernard Shaw

  

 

BLOGS:

From the Left Wing:

Paul Krugman

krugmanonline.com

Democracy Now
democracynow.org

The Daily Kos

dailykos.com

Blue Oregon

blueoregon.com


"Children are made readers on the laps of their parents." 

Emilie Buchwald 

 


    "Although we may never know with complete certainty the identity of the winner of this year’s Presidential election, the identity of the loser is perfectly clear. It is the Nation’s confidence in the judge as an impartial guardian of the rule of law."  

Justice John Paul Stevens in Bush v. Gore, 2001  


    The state of our union - check out the map, it's a reality check for those who can't figure out why people are so ticked off... 

americanobserver


    Here's Garrison Keillor's latest political rap on the rightwingnuts:   

GarrisonKeillor


 

"Great is the guilt of an unnecessary war"

John Adams

2nd President of the USA


"Loyalty to country always.  Loyalty to government when it deserves it." 

Mark Twain  


“Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” 

George Santayana 

 

"The love of one's country is a natural thing.  But why should love stop at the border?" 

Pablo Casals

 

Deja Vu? 

   

    

The Obama Doctrine:  

    It's clear that President Obama has a different view of foreign policy than his predecessors.  In the past American intervention has been based on territorial acquisition, aka our annexation of Texas and much of the Southwest from Mexico; perennial interference in the internal affairs of Latin America from Cuba to Chile in the interests of narrow economic interests - United Fruit or as a part of the old Cold War mentality; stopping the march of communism in Asia and Africa in places like Vietnam or the Congo.

     Now the Obama narrative is very different.  He is disengaging us slowly but surely from Iraq and Afghanistan wars/occupations based on the new cold war - the war on terrorism begun under Bush II.  Our policy toward the Arab Spring especially in support of the rebels in Libya has been framed in the context of protecting civilian populations from something akin to genocide. 

     Using special forces ops or drones in other global "fire fights" is risky business.  What's the option?  

     Obama is not reinventing the wheel.  In the dark days of the Cold War, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles gave rhetorical support to the freedom movement in Hungary in the 1950s only to see the Eisenhower administration sit by watching it crushed by Soviet tanks.  The same happened in Czechoslovakia. 

     This administration puts its money where its mouth is.  My Canadian Connection feels this is "mission creep" while I argue it is an attempt to learn from the Rwandan genocide.

      Either way the risk of getting into another interventionist quagmire is there. 

     But what is the moral response to the politics of genocide?  A foreign policy based on "human rights" is a better benchmark than one based on economic imperialism and/or geo-political gamesmanship.  But it carries risks too.  But we live in a "global" village and can't stick our heads in the sand as neo-isolationists.   

      For a deeper analysis of past quagmires check out these links from Hayden & Friedman:

Hayden

Friedman

 

"Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; mere anarchy is loosed upon the world, the blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everwhere the ceremony of innocence is drowned; the best lack all conviction, while the worst are full of passionate intensity."

William Butler Yeats 


 

"You see things; and you say, 'Why?'

But I dream things that never were; and I say, "Why not?" 

George Bernard Shaw,

"Back to Methuselah" (1921)


"...the most common and durable source of factions has been the various and unequal distribution of property. Those who hold and those who are without property have ever formed distinct interests in society...  The regulation of these various and interfering interests forms the principal task of modern legislation, and involves the spirit of party and faction in the necessary and ordinary operations of the government..." 

James Madison, Federalist Papers #10


"Why … should we have government? Why not each individual take to himself the whole fruit of his labor, without having any of it taxed away?”  

The legitimate object of government, is to do for the people whatever they need to have done, but which they can not do, at all, or can not do, so well, for themselves – in their separate and individual capacities … There are many such things … roads, bridges and the like; providing for the helpless young and afflicted; common schools … the criminal and civil [justice] departments."

Abraham Lincoln


Taxes are the price we pay for a civilized society

Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

 

"Parliament is not a congress of ambassadors from different and hostile interests, which interests each must maintain, as an agent and advocate, against other agents and advocates, but Parliament is a deliberative assembly of one nation, with one interest, that of the whole..."

Edmund Burke 

 

“It is a maxim among these lawyers that whatever hath been done before may legally be done again, and therefore they take special care to record all the decisions formerly made against common justice and the general reason of mankind.  These, under the name of precedents, they produce as authorities, to justify the most iniquitous opinions.” 

Jonathan Swift

 

" Every satirist who drew breath has flung pots of ink at this parade of tooting lummoxes and here it is come round again, marching down Main Street, rallying to the cause of William McKinley, hail, hail, the gang’s all here, ta-ra-ra-boom-de-ay."

Garrison Keillor

  

"History records that the money changers have used every form of abuse, intrigue, deceit, and violent means possible to maintain their control over governments." 

James Madison


"Philosophers have only interpreted the world in different ways. The point is, however, to change it."

Karl Marx 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 


 

 

  

 


  

 

« LESSONS FROM AFGHANISTAN | Main | A REALITY FIX »
Thursday
Aug192010

A HOME OF THEIR OWN

The end of the American Dream?

    The implosion of Wall Street and the Great Recession has hurt us all.  But the most vulnerable among us have lost their piece of the American Dream - home ownership.  Others never had that chance because their jobs don't pay enough for them to buy a home but just barely enough to rent. 

    With unemployment still at 9.5% (and going up today given lost jobs from the government sector) - more and more Americans are "at risk" of being homeless - somewhere around 18 million at least.  In Oregon 16,000 families are homeless.  So the crisis is not an abstraction. 

    Below is a link to one part of the problem, the diminished role of the federal government in building affordable housing, a decline that began in the Reagan years.  It's now gotten worse with fewer and fewer Section 8 vouchers even in the Obama era.  So much for a Democrat being in the Oval Office. 

    Funding for low-income housing has been falling for years. And nationwide, many public housing units have been torn down. The wait for housing vouchers in some cities can now last a decade, just as the recession has left more Americans struggling to pay the rent.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129233128

 All politics is "local"

    Here's the scene in Washington County Oregon - the hub of Oregon's "Silcon Forest" economy and the 25th largest agri-business county in the nation. 

     The face of poverty in Washington County includes families with children, victims of domestic abuse, victims of bank foreclosure, the newly unemployed, elderly living on Social Security, those with disabilities, school aged children couch surfing or on the streets, our farm worker community and veterans from Vietnam to the current conflicts in the Middle East. 

The promise we need to reclaim: 

   1. Hardworking people should be able to afford housing and still have enough money for groceries and other basic necessities.
   2. Children deserve an opportunity to succeed in school and life, which is tied to having a stable home.
   3. Housing gives people an opportunity to build better lives. To succeed you need a place to call home.
   4. It’s only fair that everyone has a safe, decent place to live. Seniors, people with disabilities and single parents ought to have housing they can afford.

The problem:

    When residents of Washington County are paying more than 30% of their monthly income on housing, most often rental housing, then they have less income to cover other basic monthly expenses on –

  • Health Care,

  • Food,

  • Clothing,

  • Transportation 

    Since the early 1990s study after study of Washington County has indicated that the richest county in Oregon, the center of economic growth has an affordable housing crisis:

•    Over 5600 families are on the Housing Authority’s waiting list for affordable rental housing;
•    They will wait 4-5 years to get assistance for which their current income makes them eligible;

    For those in greatest need, the homeless, the challenges we face are even more severe.  On any given night we have @ 1400 homeless in Oregon's richest county! 

  • Our county 5 homeless shelters can only care for a tiny share of those needing assistance; 

  • Since the onset of the Great Recession the crisis of homelessness has gotten worse;

    It’s documented that over 1300 students in the Beaverton schools are homeless.  Smaller numbers of students in Hillsboro, Forest Grove, Cornelius and Tigard also face homelessness – the lack of a permanent residence.   

What can we do:

    In 2008 the Washington County Board of Commissioners voted to support a county Ten Year Plan to End Homelessness.  We are now headed into the 3rd year of that plan.    However, the funding for that 10 Year Plan has always faced a funding gap of around $35 million dollars.  Most of the funds supporting the plan come through federal government pass through dollars via HUD and more recently the Obama administration economic stimulus funds.  However, the politics of Washington DC makes the long term continuation of those monies problematic.

We in Washington County need to step up to meeting this challenge: 

    We can lead the charge locally by creating public/private partnerships to fund affordable housing, combining state, federal and private money to meet this challenge. 

    We also need to look into alternatives of local funding such as diverting a portion of Washington County’s RETT to affordable housing construction. 

    Washington County goes to the voters every 4 years to support public safety and libraries and periodically road construction.  Why can’t we do the same for affordable housing for low income and homeless residents?  When we invest in such projects we are investing in people living and working here and we are creating local jobs. 

    Finally, if we embrace smart growth we can support the building of sustainable affordable housing by1) using infill land within the current UGB, by 2) adopting inclusionary zoning to locate housing near to existing commercial and employment centers, by 3) working with our business community to lower regulatory barriers for affordable housing and to 4) encourage our larger business partners (Intel, Tek and Nike et al) in the county to collaborate with local officials in the development of "workforce housing" near employment centers which will take the stress and strain off our local transportation corridors.  

The hope and the promise: 

    None of these goals is achievable overnight.  This is a long term vision. 

    It will require people of good faith working with our county commissioners to lobby at the state and federal level to bring back Washington County taxpayer dollars to our county to address this and other challenges we face.  As Oregon’s economic and revenue center, it is only fair we get our fair share to combine with local resources.

    It will also require public/private partnerships between local government, business and housing providers. 

    The goal should be to make Washington County a better place to live and to enable ALL people in this county to “have a home of their own.”     

     


Reader Comments (1)

Alright! I will see what I can do. The bro in law has gone home, but maybe we can do something long distance.
August 19, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterEric the Duck.

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.