In Kate Michelman’s Words, Little More Than Perfunctory Debate

I’ve been sitting with my feelings, I’ve been stewing about Alito sitting on the Supreme Court, I’ve been trying mightily to come to a less than fiery condemnation of the Senate and how women were so viciously and immorally let down by every single senator, Republicans and Democrats.

We’ve been concentrating on the cloture vote, so many on the blogs worked hard to convince 41 senators it was the right thing to do, to dig down deep within themselves, to tap into their consciences and vote no on cloture. There has been a lot of disagreement on who let us down and who didn’t. There have been clarion calls for unity, there have been pleas to not surrender, to not give up, to fight the good fight.  What there hasn’t been is a willingness to admit and give respect to those of us who feel we are not anti-American or traitors to this party or cowards or idiots if we believe it is just as worthy, just as noble, just as courageous to fight for our lives, the lives we have known and gotten attached to.  

 
Give us a chance, give us your ear, give us credit to see beyond what happened yesterday and the day before.  Call the senators names if you must, but stop beating up on those of us who believe it takes enormous courage, it takes the truest of convictions, it takes becoming the change we want to see, perhaps not in our lifetime, but in the lifetimes of those who will follow us.  It takes giving up the security, shattered as it may be, to question what lies ahead, it takes being willing to say, this is it, this is enough, we must find another way.

Even though Barack Obama’s timing was horrendous, what he had to say about the cloture vote was correct.  The time to launch the campaign against Alito was not our responsibility, it is not our job to inform the American people, it doesn’t lie on our shoulders to ask the right questions, to be prepared for the hearings, to pay as much attention to the upcoming fight as our senators did selecting Christmas presents.  

We deserved more, we deserve better, we were not only forgotten, a gift was taken from us, the gift of life, the gift that comes when we know, without a shadow of a doubt, that those who lead us will do everything in their power not to put our lives in danger.  That gift was taken back in the past 91 days because our leaders had other things to do, more important things than women’s lives.  It doesn’t get much simpler than that, the gift of life every woman should have was stripped from our grasp.  

That is why we are searching our souls today for what to do next.  It isn’t cut and dried for many of us.  We love our country as much as anyone else does on this site, we are proud to be Americans even though we don’t agree with many of you here, we are not surrendering to those that would do us harm, we are not quitting, we are not giving up, we are not going to stop fighting.  

Kate Michelman made the following statement today on what this all means to the women and girls in this country.  She says it far more forcefully and eloquently than I can.  

A perfunctory debate    

As an American, I am sorely disappointed by the lack of commitment to women and fundamental rights by the United State Senate. It is particularly appalling that supposedly pro-choice Senators would stand aside in parliamentary silence and allow this right — and probably many others — to be whisked away with little more than perfunctory debate.

As a Pennsylvanian, I am particularly appalled that local and national Democrats would hand our Senate nomination to someone who openly supports giving Roe an Alito-induced death. Those whose political successes have depended on the ballots and contributions of pro-choice voters but now facilitate the career of someone who would repeal those rights deserve special enmity.

A generation ago, women who suffered the indignities and terror of illegal abortion came forward with a commitment to be “silent no more.” In light of today’s vote, those of us who walk in their footsteps should make a similar commitment. With Roe poised to fall, there is no reason to yield any more to arguments about “the lesser of evils.” Evil has been visited upon us, and we should resolve to do whatever it takes to redress the grievances we feel.

This is why it’s so difficult to just keep keeping on, to go along to get along, our senators stood aside in parliamentary silence as women’s lives hung in the balance.  

As an American, I am sorely disappointed by the lack of commitment to women and fundamental rights by the United State Senate.

As an American, I am sorely disappointed also.  I’m incensed by all the talking and postulating about being commited to women lives, to preserving our most fundamental right, the right to have dominion over our bodies when it turns out it was all just a bunch of hot air.  

I’m sick and tired of the rallying calls for women to do what women do best, fundraise, walk precincts, phonebank, and give those tidy little coffee chats in our living rooms while we are told, once again, that our rights will someday be important enough not just to protect but to even talk about on the local and/or national stage.  

With Roe poised to fall, there is no reason to yield any more to arguments about “the lesser of evils.” Evil has been visited upon us, and we should resolve to do whatever it takes to redress the grievances we feel.

Amen, Kate, amen.  

 

MY SOTU Tonite

My Speech to the Universe
Tomorrow I go in for a CT angiogram on my failing kidneys to see if I am a candidate for vascular surgery (This is like bypass surgery on the heart.) I am as stressed as Bush probably is tonight, although for extremely different reasons.
I am concerned if my Medicare will allow the surgery; I am worried about the cost of the many new meds I am sure I will have to take (I did not sign up for Medicare D because none of the plans carried all my meds and I saw its falacy.)
I am concerned about life after death issues. I need to update my living will.
I need to find out if the surgery will hurt me more than my scleroderma (scleroderma makes surgery very iffy due to hardened organs, shrunken restrictive blood vessels etc.) than letting the kidneys fail on there own, especially since my nephrologist told me they have been inefficient/failing since 1997 (None of my other doctors mentioned this fact because at that time they were more concerned about abnormal liver tests which took a year to go back to normal due to a new medicine I was put on’s side effect.)
We are the wealthiest nation in the world, (well actually 57% of all the wealth is held by 1% of the population.) We have the best medical equipment, professionals and medicine (if one can afford them); And we have a bunch of lunatics pulling the strings on almost every aspects of our lives.
I’ve instructed my husband and daughter that if I go brain dead or get dementia etc., or in too much pain to pull the plug or arrange for meds I can take to end my life. I don’t want to be a burden and now I have to add if it gets too expensive to be on dialysis, have in-home care etc., I’ll find a way to opt out earlier.
I shouldn’t have to think this way, but I am sure there are thousands, if not millions, who are having to think this way now also, thanks to the lies, and corporate/pharmecutical theft by the compassionate conservative asshole president and his kind. There is more to life (and death) than this f**king president’s sotu stupid speech tonite.
I am not looking for sympathy. I just want to bring a dose of reality on to the table for all to see and consider. Because we all will eventually, if not already, have to deal with these issues. And if things don’t get better it could actually get worse than this.
I intend to approach tomorrow and whatever else is ahead of me with my political dukes ready. I will not go out with a whimper…I hope.
We need a universal health care system in America. I think I’ve missed that boat, but I hope most of you fight for that for yourselves and your families.

Poltical Wushu: Exhibit A — The Alito Filibluster

Wushu is Mandarin for “arts of war.” Today in China there exists a standardized school of Wushu based on many of its historical martial arts disciplines. You can occasionally catch exhibitions on ESPN. It looks very impressive. Practitioners are capable of dizzying acrobatic feats. They wield traditional weapons. They chop at the air and each other in tightly controlled movements that look more like an exotic dance than a fight. Wushu exhibitions are visually stunning. But today’s Wushu has been emptied of its meaning. Lost are its deeper traditions and martial application. To serious martial artists, “wushu” is shorthand for spectacle without utility. The shiny weapons we see in exhibitions are hollow, light, and dull. Today the Shaolin monks, for instance, whose fighting styles are the stuff of legend, have been reduced to a cheap sideshow.

Wushu was neutered by the Maoist regime. The term was adopted by Chairman Mao and morphed from a fighting art into a physical fitness regimen. It became a tool of a statist regime intent on destroying all vestiges of traditional spirituality, culture, and independence.

Wushu is what came to mind as the Senate hearings for Samuel Alito unfolded.
For all their long-winded speeches and affected gravitas, Democratic Senators were never really fighting to stop him. If they’d really wanted to block his confirmation, they could have. They would have taken their case to the people and built some momentum for a real show-down on the Senate floor. Polls show that roughly a third of the populace was undecided on Alito. That’s what we call a “teachable moment.” Conventional wisdom says that the committee hearings were a dud, with opposing democrats unable to lay a glove on the staid, confident Alito. But if Senate Democrats couldn’t find a decent hook on which to hang Alito, how did the New York Times editorial board find so many?

Senate Dems would have you believe that this was an unwinnable fight. It was only unwinnnable because they were not fighting. They were exhibiting a kind of “sport politics” that Democratic Party insiders have come to excel in. They pander to C-Span cameras with a lot of sighing, grimacing, and verbal gymnastics, but when they cast their votes, they do so based on some vague perception of poltical safety.

The only real fight we saw in the face of this quiet killer came from the netroots, who shamed Kerry into backing up his rhetoric with action, and swamped the phone banks of waffling senators like Clinton, Feinstein, and Obama. But in the end, the last minute filibuster was a lot of filibluster. A little over half over of Senate Dems made a half-hearted attempt to stop our steady slide into one-party rule. What we saw yesterday was akin to an over-the-hill boxer taking a dive so he could still collect some mob money.

Establishment Democrats have long since ceased to be an opposition party. They are tools of a statist regime giving us all a good show, but stripped of any real power to stop a political juggernaut years in the making; one that would make kings of presidents and reduce Congress to a sad spectacle.

Crossposted at The Blogging Curmudgeon.

Ideas for the Disenchanted : 198 Methods of Nonviolent Action

198 Methods of Nonviolent Action.

Practitioners of nonviolent struggle have an entire arsenal of “nonviolent weapons” at their disposal. Listed below are 198 of them, classified into three broad categories: nonviolent protest and persuasion, noncooperation (social, economic, and political), and nonviolent intervention. A description and historical examples of each can be found in volume two of The Politics of Nonviolent Action by Gene Sharp.

——————————————————————————–

The Methods of Nonviolent Protest and Persuasion
Formal Statements

  1. Public Speeches
  2. Letters of opposition or support
  3. Declarations by organizations and institutions
  4. Signed public statements
  5. Declarations of indictment and intention
  6. Group or mass petitions

Communications with a Wider Audience

  1. Slogans, caricatures, and symbols
  2. Banners, posters, and displayed communications
  3. Leaflets, pamphlets, and books
  4. Newspapers and journals
  5. Records, radio, and television
  6. Skywriting and earthwriting

Group Representations

  1. Deputations
  2. Mock awards
  3. Group lobbying
  4. Picketing
  5. Mock elections

Symbolic Public Acts

  1. Displays of flags and symbolic colors
  2. Wearing of symbols
  3. Prayer and worship
  4. Delivering symbolic objects
  5. Protest disrobings
  6. Destruction of own property
  7. Symbolic lights
  8. Displays of portraits
  9. Paint as protest
  10. New signs and names
  11. Symbolic sounds
  12. Symbolic reclamations
  13. Rude gestures

Pressures on Individuals

  1. “Haunting” officials
  2. Taunting officials
  3. Fraternization
  4. Vigils

Drama and Music

  1. Humorous skits and pranks
  2. Performances of plays and music
  3. Singing

Processions

  1. Marches
  2. Parades
  3. Religious processions
  4. Pilgrimages
  5. Motorcades

Honoring the Dead

  1. Political mourning
  2. Mock funerals
  3. Demonstrative funerals
  4. Homage at burial places

Public Assemblies

  1. Assemblies of protest or support
  2. Protest meetings
  3. Camouflaged meetings of protest
  4. Teach-ins

Withdrawal and Renunciation

  1. Walk-outs
  2. Silence
  3. Renouncing honors
  4. Turning one’s back

The Methods of Social Noncooperation
Ostracism of Persons

  1. Social boycott
  2. Selective social boycott
  3. Lysistratic nonaction
  4. Excommunication
  5. Interdict

Noncooperation with Social Events, Customs, and Institutions

  1. Suspension of social and sports activities
  2. Boycott of social affairs
  3. Student strike
  4. Social disobedience
  5. Withdrawal from social institutions

Withdrawal from the Social System

  1. Stay-at-home
  2. Total personal noncooperation
  3. “Flight” of workers
  4. Sanctuary
  5. Collective disappearance
  6. Protest emigration (hijrat)

The Methods of Economic Noncooperation: Economic Boycotts
Actions by Consumers

  1. Consumers’ boycott
  2. Nonconsumption of boycotted goods
  3. Policy of austerity
  4. Rent withholding
  5. Refusal to rent
  6. National consumers’ boycott
  7. International consumers’ boycott

Action by Workers and Producers

  1. Workmen’s boycott
  2. Producers’ boycott

Action by Middlemen
80. Suppliers’ and handlers’ boycott

Action by Owners and Management

  1. Traders’ boycott
  2. Refusal to let or sell property
  3. Lockout
  4. Refusal of industrial assistance
  5. Merchants’ “general strike”

Action by Holders of Financial Resources

  1. Withdrawal of bank deposits
  2. Refusal to pay fees, dues, and assessments
  3. Refusal to pay debts or interest
  4. Severance of funds and credit
  5. Revenue refusal
  6. Refusal of a government’s money

Action by Governments

  1. Domestic embargo
  2. Blacklisting of traders
  3. International sellers’ embargo
  4. International buyers’ embargo
  5. International trade embargo

The Methods of Economic Noncooperation: The Strike
Symbolic Strikes

  1. Protest strike
  2. Quickie walkout (lightning strike)

Agricultural Strikes

  1. Peasant strike
  2. Farm Workers’ strike

Strikes by Special Groups

  1. Refusal of impressed labor
  2. Prisoners’ strike
  3. Craft strike
  4. Professional strike

Ordinary Industrial Strikes

  1. Establishment strike
  2. Industry strike
  3. Sympathetic strike

Restricted Strikes

  1. Detailed strike
  2. Bumper strike
  3. Slowdown strike
  4. Working-to-rule strike
  5. Reporting “sick” (sick-in)
  6. Strike by resignation
  7. Limited strike
  8. Selective strike

Multi-Industry Strikes

  1. Generalized strike
  2. General strike

Combination of Strikes and Economic Closures

  1. Hartal
  2. Economic shutdown

The Methods of Political Noncooperation
Rejection of Authority

  1. Withholding or withdrawal of allegiance
  2. Refusal of public support
  3. Literature and speeches advocating resistance

Citizens’ Noncooperation with Government

  1. Boycott of legislative bodies
  2. Boycott of elections
  3. Boycott of government employment and positions
  4. Boycott of government departments, agencies, and other bodies
  5. Withdrawal from government educational institutions
  6. Boycott of government-supported organizations
  7. Refusal of assistance to enforcement agents
  8. Removal of own signs and placemarks
  9. Refusal to accept appointed officials
  10. Refusal to dissolve existing institutions

Citizens’ Alternatives to Obedience

  1. Reluctant and slow compliance
  2. Nonobedience in absence of direct supervision
  3. Popular nonobedience
  4. Disguised disobedience
  5. Refusal of an assemblage or meeting to disperse
  6. Sitdown
  7. Noncooperation with conscription and deportation
  8. Hiding, escape, and false identities
  9. Civil disobedience of “illegitimate” laws

Action by Government Personnel

  1. Selective refusal of assistance by government aides
  2. Blocking of lines of command and information
  3. Stalling and obstruction
  4. General administrative noncooperation
  5. Judicial noncooperation
  6. Deliberate inefficiency and selective noncooperation by

enforcement agents
148. Mutiny

Domestic Governmental Action

  1. Quasi-legal evasions and delays
  2. Noncooperation by constituent governmental units

International Governmental Action

  1. Changes in diplomatic and other representations
  2. Delay and cancellation of diplomatic events
  3. Withholding of diplomatic recognition
  4. Severance of diplomatic relations
  5. Withdrawal from international organizations
  6. Refusal of membership in international bodies
  7. Expulsion from international organizations

The Methods of Nonviolent Intervention
Psychological Intervention

  1. Self-exposure to the elements
  2. The fast

a) Fast of moral pressure
b) Hunger strike
c) Satyagrahic fast

  1. Reverse trial
  2. Nonviolent harassment

Physical Intervention

  1. Sit-in
  2. Stand-in
  3. Ride-in
  4. Wade-in
  5. Mill-in
  6. Pray-in
  7. Nonviolent raids
  8. Nonviolent air raids
  9. Nonviolent invasion
  10. Nonviolent interjection
  11. Nonviolent obstruction
  12. Nonviolent occupation

Social Intervention

  1. Establishing new social patterns
  2. Overloading of facilities
  3. Stall-in
  4. Speak-in
  5. Guerrilla theater
  6. Alternative social institutions
  7. Alternative communication system

Economic Intervention

  1. Reverse strike
  2. Stay-in strike
  3. Nonviolent land seizure
  4. Defiance of blockades
  5. Politically motivated counterfeiting
  6. Preclusive purchasing
  7. Seizure of assets
  8. Dumping
  9. Selective patronage
  10. Alternative markets
  11. Alternative transportation systems
  12. Alternative economic institutions

Political Intervention

  1. Overloading of administrative systems
  2. Disclosing identities of secret agents
  3. Seeking imprisonment
  4. Civil disobedience of “neutral” laws
  5. Work-on without collaboration
  6. Dual sovereignty and parallel government

Source: Sharp, Gene. The Politics of Nonviolent Action (3 Vols.), Boston: Porter Sargent, 1973. Provided courtesy of the Albert Einstein Institution.

Congresswoman Mckinney’s home vandalized

Dare to tell the truth, get attacked.

On Saturday night, the movie American Blackout, which looks at the career of U.S.Representative Cynthia McKinney from Georgia and the historical suppression of black voters in the United States, won a Sundance Film Festival Special Jury Award for Documentary Films.

On Sunday Cynthia’s front yard had VCR tape all over it, in an obvious reference to the award she received at Sundance.

Cynthia McKinney’s Home Vandalized

Cynthia McKinney (D-GA) found her front yard “toilet papered” with VCR tape Sunday when she returned from promoting her new documentary ‘American Blackout’ at the Sundance Film Festival.. The crime was reported to local police.

Her film ‘American Blackout’ chronicles voting irregularities and supposed disenfranchisement of some African Americans from 2000-2004

Tipped by Susan Hu

This is absurd! The hate act perpetrated against Cynthia is a chilling reminder of a not so distant past where the few minorities who dared to raise their voice  had their walls plastered with hate messages.

We have to guard the back of every elected representative who dares to dive into voter disenfranchisement.

It serves US nothing if low income voters are blocked from voting by the dirty tricks of the right

“Indy” SOTUs

Update [2006-1-31 17:50:2 by susanhu]: The almost always dignified Other Lisa‘s on a roll today. She’s said FUCK twice already! In this e-mail, “Oh, fuck me.” … And she sends a link to “Bush to Say ‘America Addicted to Oil’.” — “ President Bush, pushing to take charge of the election-year agenda, said Tuesday that ‘America is addicted to oil’ and must break its dependence on foreign suppliers in unstable parts of the world.” (Susan holds head in hands, rocks back and forth in fetal position.)

Gore Vidal Delivers State of the Union: “Let the Powers That Be Know There is Something Called We the People of the U.S. and all Sovereignty Rests in Us.”

     — Listen/watch/read at Democracy Now! A snippet:

I had a piece on the internet some of you may have seen a few days ago (Update [2006-1-31 17:32:25 by susanhu]:: It’s “President Jonah“; thanks to Wilderness Wench for the link) , and there’s a story about Tiberius, who’s one of my favorite Roman emperors. He’s had a very bad press, because the wrong people perhaps have written history. But when he became emperor, the Senate of Rome sent him congratulations with the comment, “Any law that you want us to pass, we shall do so automatically.” And he sent a message back. He said, “This is outrageous! Suppose I go mad. Suppose I don’t know what I’m doing. Suppose I’m dead and somebody is pretending to be me. Never do that! Never accept something like preemptive war,” which luckily the Senate did not propose preemptive wars against places they didn’t like. But Mr. Bush has done that.

     
So this is a sort of Tiberius time without, basically, a good emperor, and he was a good emperor in the sense that he sent back this legislation, which was to confirm anything he wanted to have done automatically. And they sent it back to him again. And then he said, “How eager you are to be slaves,” and washed his hands of the Senate and went to live in Capri, a much wiser choice, just as we can send this kid back to Crawford, Texas, where he’ll be very, very happy cutting bushes of the leafy variety. […]

     
… let the powers that be know that back of them, there’s something called “We the people of the United States,” and all sovereignty rests in us, not in the board rooms of the Republicans. … Listen/watch/read all.


Wes Clark Delivers The Real State of the Union:
     — Read all at WesPAC: Securing America A snippet:


Enough is enough! Forward an email to the White House today — tell President Bush that the American people demand better leadership to get our nation back on track. …

     [O]ur nation is in trouble, veering from its heritage, and sliding into a dangerous future.

     [F]our years after 9/11, Osama Bin Laden remains on the loose in the vastness of western Pakistan, and Al Qaeda remains a potent force among millions of Muslims.

     [D]espite our tough talk, Iran is discarding its international obligations in the apparent pursuit of nuclear weaponry.

     North Korea, with a standing army of more than 1 million men, armed with chemical and biological weapons as well as long-range missiles, is defying US efforts to contain its threat of nuclear proliferation.

     [W]e are in danger of losing the very principles we are fighting for as revelations of torture and degrading treatment of those detained confound our long standing commitment to human rights.
     [R]ising global competitors like China are taking advantage of the security umbrella we have created to lock in their own access to the resources needed to fuel their stupendous growth.

     [T]he United States has stood silently while the historic opportunity of a democratic Russia is systematically crushed

     [A]t home more than 45 million Americans lack access to health insurance


     [B]oth our infrastructure and our system of public education lack essential modernization and reform … Read all


And Prof. Juan Cole weighs in with his “Top Ten things Bush won’t Tell you About the State of the Nation,” beginning with ” US economic growth during the last quarter was an anemic 1.1%, the worst in 3 years.”

What’s your SOTU?

Springtime for Dubya

You may be of the same mind as I am regarding tonight’s State of the Union speech.  It has a dead-skunk-in-the-road factor.  It’s going to be ugly to look at, but so, so hard to look away from.

As of January 31st in the Year of our Lord 2006, the mask has come off of the Bush presidency.  No more pretence about compassionate conservatism.  No more hokum about uniting-not-dividing.  This administration is about absolute power, Machiavellian power that exists for its own purpose and an end for which all means are justified.

The true state of our Union is a sad one.  America has become a theocratic military empire.  
As of this morning, with the confirmation of Sam Alito to the Supreme Court, we are a one party political system, and that party exists for the sole purpose of supporting the emperor.  If the legislature accidentally passes a law the emperor doesn’t like, the emperor can simply interpret it in a way that suits him, and the Supreme Court will affirm the emperor’s constitutional right to do that as a wartime commander in chief.  

The emperor will always be a wartime commander in chief because we are in a war against terrorism, and there will always be terrorism, so we will always be at war against it.  

War is the core tenet of all American foreign and domestic policy.  Like nineteenth century Prussia, we have become a country that exists to support its military force.  We spend as much on the Department of Defense as the military spending of the rest of the world combined.  That doesn’t even include what we spend on homeland security.  Our economy is dependent on a half trillion dollar a year dump into the military industrial complex.  Our civilian service secretaries, who control weapon systems acquisitions, are former senior executives of the country’s largest defense contractors and will ensure that we never kick our fiscal addiction to the machinery of war.  Our diplomacy, such as it is, merely exists to deliver official threats of military action.  

All federal social and health services are being outsourced to government sanctioned religious organizations.  It won’t be long before the faith based mob runs all secular charities out of business, and the day is coming when you’ll have to go through an ordained minister to get so much as a freaking flu shot.  

We’ll maintain some vestiges of representative government.  You’ll still get to vote, for example.  But if you don’t vote for whomever your minister tells you to vote for, you’ll burn in hell.  And your minister is going to tell you to vote for the folks who are pouring federal tax dollars into his collection plate, and those folks will all be personal friends of the emperor.  

Scoff all you like, but don’t say I didn’t tell you.

#

Commander Jeff Huber, U.S. Navy (Retired) writes from Virginia Beach, Virginia.  Read his daily commentaries at Pen and Sword.

Legislators Gone Wild

While we continue to debate recent events, the Deficit Reduction Act nears its passage. The potential results will be far-reaching.
Amongst these will be substantial cuts to the student loan program, farm subsidies and Medicaid funding.  (The Senate has already approved it.)  Medicaid, for the first time, will have associated premiums and copayments.  Millions will have increased health care costs and it is likely that many will go without, according to a new Congressional Budget Office report.

NYT Link

Over all, the bill is estimated to save $38.8 billion in the next five years and $99.3 billion from 2006 to 2015, with cuts in student loans, crop subsidies and many other programs, the budget office said. Medicaid and Medicare account for half of the savings, 27 percent and 23 percent over 10 years.

So here’s an equitable plan.  Funds are needed to keep up the Global War On Terror and they’re needed soon.  The deficit continues to grow ever larger.  Hmm, where can we steal, err, borrow some money?  Oh, how about from Medicaid recipients?!!!  They have no discernible voice in government, and even if they do complain who will listen?  And many of them are only kids anyway.

“In response to the new premiums, some beneficiaries would not apply for Medicaid, would leave the program or would become ineligible due to nonpayment,” the Congressional Budget Office said in its report, completed Friday night. “C.B.O. estimates that about 45,000 enrollees would lose coverage in fiscal year 2010 and that 65,000 would lose coverage in fiscal year 2015 because of the imposition of premiums. About 60 percent of those losing coverage would be children.

But let’s face it, if you had the lack of wisdom to choose poor parents, then you probably fucking deserve this anyway.  Oh, and how about this friendly little provision.

Under the bill, states could end Medicaid coverage for people who failed to pay premiums for 60 days or more. Doctors and hospitals could deny services to Medicaid beneficiaries who did not make the required co-payments.

See, the only potential problem is that Medicaid was intended to assist those most in need.  But that’s just ancient history, right?  

And if you fucking poor people still have the audacity to demand health insurance, King George II will have advice forthcoming. (Please bow down!)

In his State of the Union address on Tuesday, Mr. Bush plans to recommend a variety of steps to help people obtain health insurance and cope with rising health costs.

That ought to provide perhaps several milliseconds of “valuable” information.

Call your congress critter @ 888 355 3588 and register your continuing disgust.

A STFU Diary, With A Twist

This is not the diary I set out to write.  Somewhere about the middle, as I was invested in a detailed analysis of just how we could change the world, I realized that I am completely full of shit.

I’ve read over what everyone has been writing, in response to my ranting call for a third-party.  In response to the myriad announcements of changed registration from Democrat to Independent.  In response to the rallying cries from the loyal, to save the Democratic Party from iteslf.

As I was researching the platform for a new party, it was very clear to me, that BooMan’s analogy of the O.J. Simpson trial, at least at this time, is right.  The evidence is in.  And third-parties just don’t seem to work.  No matter how much people like me whine that they should.

I make this statement with the same fervor that I made yesterday’s rant that the Dems were DOA.  It just seems to be a fact of life to me, as I read more, spurred on by the comments from some of our most interesting minds here at the BooMan tribune.
I look at the mission statements that were linked for The Green Party, the Independent Progressive Politics Network and the Peace and Freedom Party Platform, and I see wonderful statements.  Sentiments I share.  And they have many things in common, these sentiments:  They were all crafted by someone far more skilled than I, and none of them have been implemented as policy, and none of these parties has had any significant success on a large scale in American politics.

There is no sense in me trying to re-invent the wheel.  If I want to be a Green, I can go get my card tomorrow.  I agree with most of their principles.  But  I inherently understand that to do so would likely condemn my future actions to relative obscurity.  Not unlike what my actions are now.

I don’t say this to discourage any of my better organized fellows.  I may well be following you.  But I just don’t see me leading a bus anywhere but over a cliff.  I’m just as likely to start the official Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster in downtown Lansing as I am to start a successful third party.

And so, I must tell myself to STFU.  I deserve that much.  No more diaries for a week.  Self punishment.

Open Thread

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