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Functional California:

  • Jul. 3rd, 2009 at 2:25 PM
small_head_1103

I have my own suspicions, but the Californians who have opinions who regularly read my journal can read this posting in the Mahablog (which I regularly read) and see if they agree about the breakdown of the political process in the Golden State.

Here also is a quick breakdown of who is paid in IOUs and who is paid in cash.

Daschled:

  • Feb. 4th, 2009 at 6:08 PM
small_head_1103

The South Dakotans in my family are big Tom Daschle fans; I’ve never warmed to him, personally. Maybe it’s because I’m not the ”organization-Democrat” sort. Twice in my life I’ve been personally involved with such people, and I’ve found that I’m more the independent hell-raiser sort. Yes, I understand the intricacies of politics; I didn’t get that political science degree for nuttin’. But as a personal note, I’m Mr. Good Government, and I’m always nervous at best about such machines and organizations as a conglomeration of people who are willing to let things go too easily and concentrate on the maybe easily possible rather than the way things ought to be.

 

I thought when Daschle was nominated that yeah, he might be able to maneuver things around for a health bill, but I wasn’t convinced – and I remembered that since he left his Senate seat, he’d been (along with his missus) three feet deep in the heart of big lobbyist stuff. I didn’t think that would play well in a clean-house Obama administration. And it turned out that I was right.

 

Along with that, I also knew that Daschle had recognized Obama’s star qualities early, and a lot of Daschle’s people went to work for Obama when he came into the Senate and since. Daschle was probably the main go-to-for-advice person that Obama went to on health issues, and he probably also saw Daschle’s ability as a necessary thing, and focused on that.

 

The problem is, with all of the crapola that the Bushies pulled, and the crapola that the Wall Street people pulled on bonuses, junkets and goodies for themselves, there was no way Obama could get past hanky-pank with the rules on taxes and whatnot. He had one free shot at getting past tax problems, and it went to Tim Geithner. Daschle’s problems sounded larger and far more plushy (costs of the car and driver from the tycoons), and I’m glad for everyone’s sake that Daschle saw the NYT editorial that his time was up, and that his nomination was a dead issue.

 

In the long run, it’s probable that the worst damage is that Obama won’t have a old pol on his team for the health plan push. I don’t think it’s going to really mess up Obama more than that.

 

The reality is that many people get cute with their taxes, because they don’t have the press and tax experts poring over their returns. But the cutes of the Big Bidness People are getting on a lot of people’s nerves because The Little Guys Are Losing Their Jobs or Sweating It Bigtime, and the rich bozos are having a blast with taxpayer dollars. As Barney Frank told the fat cats:

 

“People really hate you, and they’re starting to hate us because we’re hanging out with you. And you have to help us deal with that.”

 

Robert Reich put it well:

 

Typical Americans are hurting very badly right now. They resent people who appear to be living high off a system dominated by insiders with the right connections. They’ve become increasingly suspicious of the conflicts of interest, cozy relationships, and payoffs that seem to pervade not only official Washington but our biggest banks and corporations. In short, many Americans who have worked hard, saved as much as they can, bought a home, obeyed the law, and paid every cent of taxes that were due are beginning to feel like chumps. Their jobs are disappearing, their savings are disappearing, their homes are worth far less than they thought they were, their tax bills are as high as ever if not higher — but people at the top seem to be living far different lives in a different universe. They’re the executives and traders on Wall Street have lived like kings for years off a bubble of their own making while ripping off small investors, the financial louts who are now taking hundreds of billions of taxpayer bailout money while awarding themselves huge bonuses and throwing lavish parties, the corporate CEOs who are earning seven figures while laying off thousands of workers, the billionaire hedge-fund and private-equity managers who are paying a marginal tax rate of 15 percent on what they say are capital gains while people who earn a fraction of that are paying a higher rate, and, not the least, the Washington insiders who have served on the Hill or in an administration and then gone on to pocket millions as lobbyists for the same companies they once regulated or subsidized. To the American who’s outside the power centers — the places of entitlement and I’ll-scratch-your-back-while-you-scratch-mine deal making — the entire system seems rotten.

 

That’s something the fat cats have a real problem wrapping their heads around. Me, I think Claire McCaskill’s rant about executive pay reductions is going to be something that may get into law a whole lot faster than it might have six months ago, when it should have been part of the rules on the original bailout. But back then, the Powers That Be couldn’t countenance such a thing – it was socialism, I’ll have you know.

 

There are some who say that nobody expected the Master Of The Universe on Wall Street to be so dumb; well, ladies and gents, being stupid with money allegedly for their own benefit is what got them and us into this situation. Didn’t surprise me that they were willing to go right on being stupid as long as they could get away with it.   Or that the Same Old Same Old in Washington would continue on unabated by calls for change and reform.

 

If you notice, the Republicans who are against the Stimulus are the ones who don’t actually have to run a government. The ones who do, such as State Governors, are going for it, because they’re stony broke. California’s Republican Governor is issuing State IOUs rather than paying people because they ran out of money.  Those won’t pay people’s bills, nossir.

 

In Illinois, the new Governor (not the mental and moral midget who is running around like a ADHD chihuahua on crack to the media) is trying to get a grip on what to do about the state budget, and one state senator is querying as to why the state allows companies that pick up sales taxes from the people who shop there are keeping such large proportions of the sales taxes for their own use – at least in such large amounts. As in the state not getting $126 million it could use elsewhere.

Travelling:

  • Nov. 19th, 2008 at 10:50 PM
small_head_1103

This works for either me or Meredith.  There’s some question as to whether Susan has been in Mexico; if she was, it was to take two steps over the border in Tijuana or something.

This is Mere’s states.  California from when we brought her home, Massachusetts from a trip to the Boston Worldcon, and the rest are family visits of one sort or another.  Consider that she has a sister in Alabama and Susan has major family in South Dakota, plus side trips, and you can dig this.

This is me.  Aside of California, all the rest were covered with my family before I was 20, and mostly when I was small.  California got hit at the San Francisco Worldcon in the mid 1990s, and three more times in mid-2000.  Alaska got picked up in 1971.

And this is Meredith’s ‘places she wants to go’ list.



small_head_1103

“I have close family members and friends who are a member of the gay and lesbian community. Those folks include my daughter Lisa, as well as members of my personal staff.

“I want for them the same thing that we all want for our loved ones—for each of them to find a mate whom they love deeply and who loves them back; someone with whom they can grow old together and share life’s experiences.

“And I want their relationships to be protected equally under the law. In the end, I couldn’t look any of them in the face and tell them that their relationship—their very lives—were any less meaningful than the marriage I share with my wife Rana.

Wow, I could have had a gay marriage!

  • Oct. 30th, 2008 at 10:10 AM
small_head_1103

Copy this sentence into your livejournal if you’re in a heterosexual marriage, and you don’t want it “protected” by people who think that gay marriage hurts it somehow.

If you’re concerned that gay marriage sets a bad example for the rest of us, I’m more concerned about abusive relationships, ugly divorces, people who neglect, abandon, or abuse their kids and spouses, people who go through partners like kleenex, people who feel so little self-worth that they have to take whatever they can get in the way of relationships, dirtbags who father endless children without regret or support, and so on.  If you feel otherwise, I can’t agree.

I will point out for what it’s worth that an absurdly high percentage of my exes turned out to be bisexual after the fact.    Well, not while we were together, in any event.  But I don’t think that they decided to look at another woman and say ‘wow, I could have had a V-8′ or some such thing.   I think that people are what they are, and that I’d rather that they’re honest with themselves and the world as to how they’re wired in regard to sexual preference than live their lives uncomfortably in a closet.  And I don’t think that people ‘convert’ over to gay sexual preference by seeing a gay couple holding hands.  I think it’s wired into them when they’re born, one way or the other.   I’m wired into being Mr. Straight.

I will also mention for what it’s worth that my best friend is gay, and that he and his SO have been in a serious relationship for a heck of a lot longer than I’ve been married.   His SO is my daughter’s godfather, and that was a very deliberate choice.  I’m a very dedicated Christian, but I don’t accept that Christians have to reject gay people.

I respect people who feel otherwise, but Hier steh’ ich, ich kann nicht anders.


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