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~ covering government and politics in Missouri – since 2007

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Monthly Archives: July 2011

Let's hit Akin twice in one week

28 Thursday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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debt crisis, Medicaid and Social Security, Medicare, missouri, Todd Akin

Because this is a crucial week. With the debt crisis looming, let’s put more heat on His Nuttiness, Todd Akin. Jobs with Justice and Pro-Vote are asking us to show up at his St. Charles office on Friday:

We have been raising our voices to demand that Congress must not balance the federal budget at the expense of workers, our health and retirement security or our children.  But some members of Congress are just not getting the message.

This week is the 46th Anniversary of Medicare and Medicaid.  President Johnson signed the programs into law in Independence Missouri July 31, 1965.  Harry S. Truman signed up as the first Medicare beneficiary.

Congressman Todd Akin has repeatedly voted to end Medicare as we know it, first as part of the dangerous Ryan budget proposal, and then by endorsing cuts and caps and a so-called “balanced budget amendment” that would force deep cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security and other programs important to working families and to the middle class.

We need you to BE THERE, this FRIDAY July 29 @ noon  

At Congressman Akin’s St Charles district office

820 S. Main Street, Suite 206, St Charles 63301

A coffin cake and black balloons will be presented to Akins office. We will tell Congressman Akin:   “Don’t Make This The Last Anniversary of Medicare.”

We want revenue solutions, and Congress must protect  Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security.

Boehner's debt ceiling proposal: separating out the hardcore crazies from the garden variety

28 Thursday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Billy Long, debt ceiling crisis, economic terrorism, GOP, missouri, Todd Akin

If you’ve been following the latest in the debt ceiling hostage crisis, you know that House Speaker Boehner has offered up a bill that gives the GOP all that it wants, but insures that we get to dance this particular fandango again in six months, right before an election. Senator Harry Reid has prepared a competing plan that gives the the GOP all that it wants (except cuts in Social Security and Medicare), but won’t allow the issue to arise again until after the election, thereby insuring that when the Tea Party wants to cut Social Security and Medicare again during the next 18 months, they won’t be able to take the economy hostage, but will have to debate their proposals on their own merits.

The kicker is that currently at least 22 of Boehner’s own GOP House homies won’t support his proposal – it just isn’t destructive enough – and he can’t afford to lose more than 24 votes so it will be a close call. If you want to know who it is in the House that stands squarely in the non compos mentis corner, look no further than these 22 morons who are turning their backs on their own leader – and smack dab in their middle is Missouri’s Todd Akin (R-2). Not a big surprise really, but if “somebody” – or some state Democratic party – doesn’t make a big deal about such acts of economic terrorism when his Senate run swings into high gear, they deserve to lose badly.

The only other Missouri GOPer who has committed himself seems to be Billy Long (R-7), who, for the moment at least, is inclined to be a good little boy and go along with his House leadership and vote yes on the Boehner proposal.  It’ll be interesting to see how the remaining Missouri members of the take-us-over-the-edge party votes on Speaker Boehner’s bill when it comes up for a vote this afternoon.

Funny thing is that there’s all this sound and fury about a bill that’s DOA in the Senate. Kinda like the Tea Party itself – and by extension today’s GOP – long on putrid symbolism, short on substance when it comes to the hard work of governing for the good of all the people.

UPDATE.  Think Progress reports that 24 House members have come out against the Boehner plan – enough to do it in if nothing changes.  According to today’s St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Vicky Hartzler, who is not on the Think Progress list, is undecided. She’s certainly crazy enought to go no, but can she withstand the pressure Boehner is said to be exerting on his wayward – and poorly informed – charges – Daily Kos reports that a GOPer who attended Boehner’s pep rallies commented that one GOP freshman actually didn’t know what happened if the Senate rejected the bill. Kinda makes the Tea Party delusions a bit more comprehensible, doesn’t it?

All geopolitics is local

28 Thursday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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geopolitics, Kansas, Oklahoma, religion, Texas

Graffiti on a gas station pump in the Texas panhandle. This is ironic on so many levels, especially so

when there are producing oil wells in the same area as the gas station.

What’s the matter with Kansas?

On Interstate 35 just north of the Flint Hills.

Have you noticed that lately right wingnuts have been strangely silent about global warming?

The temperature in western Oklahoma.

And the consequences:

The landscape in western Oklahoma.

They do things really big in Texas.

On Interstate 40 near Groom, Texas.

How about a dose of good news?

27 Wednesday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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$50 million, Bloomberg Philanthropies, coal plants, missouri, Sierra Club

Were you one of those noticing–and fretting–in 2001 when Dick Cheney called the nation’s top air polluters into his holy of holies to secretly chart the nation’s energy policy? If so, you may not have noticed how thoroughly stymied the coal industry has been. It wanted a “coal rush” of 150 new coal plants. It had the blessing of a Republican administration and legislature, and it got … none. The Sierra Club has fought new plants by organizing communities to oppose them, stopping 153. And now Sierra Club is going on the offensive. Its Beyond Coal campaign aims to retire one third of the nation’s aging coal fleet by 2020.

Coal Power Plant

Sierra Club has received a $50 million grant from Bloomberg Philanthropies to spread the anti-coal message. According to a press release:

In the U.S., coal is the leading cause of greenhouse-gas emissions, and coal’s pollution contributes to four out of the five leading causes of mortality — heart disease, cancer, stroke, and respiratory illness. Coal emits almost half of all U.S. mercury pollution, which causes developmental problems in babies and young children, as well as being a major contributor to asthma attacks. Coal pollution causes $100 billion in health costs annually.

Coal. Isn’t. Cheap. Solar panels don’t cause asthma attacks or hasten global warming. Windmills don’t contribute to strokes. But the wind industry does employ more people than the coal industry.

John Hickey, who six months ago filled the Sierra Club’s vacant Chapter Director position in Missouri, doesn’t know how much of that fifty million will come to our state, but he does know that he’ll be getting an additional paid organizer in the fall. And he insists that Missouri should get a sizeable share to reflect our sizeable number of coal plants. The St. Louis area alone has four coal plants. Compare that to the state of Washington, which has one–and that one is slated to be demolished. Oregon too has only one coal plant–also slated to be demolished.

Missouri, says Hickey, gets 85% of its energy from coal, and here’s the bite: we’re buying it from Wyoming! So we are shipping our dollars to another state instead of creating jobs here. Importing coal is not as senseless as refusing to raise the debt ceiling, but it’s pretty damn stupid.

The Sierra Club will do all it can to change that picture, and if the past is any prelude, they’ll succeed.

Picture courtesy of Bruno and Ligia Rodrigues

Where are the sane Republicans?

27 Wednesday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Ann Wagner, Ed Martin, GOP, John Danforth, Kit Bond, missouri, Roy Blunt, tea party

In response to the GOP-led madness in Washington D.C., Steve Benen asks an interesting question:

… where are the “sane Republicans” willing to “stand up to this Hezbollah faction in their midst”? Where are Bob Dole and John Warner? Why can’t John Danforth and Colin Powell express their disapproval for what their party is doing? Maybe some of Reagan’s old guard, like Ken Duberstein, could speak up? […]

We’re not talking about GOP officials taking a hard line on some random piece of legislation, or nominating some radical for a key public office. We’re talking about congressional Republicans who’ve decided to play a game of chicken with the full faith and credit of the United States – something no American institution has ever done in more than two centuries – and who are fully prepared to trash the constitutional principle next week as part of a hostage strategy gone horribly awry?

Made me think about the silence of Missouri’s “respectable” GOP establishment in regard to the Tea Party debt ceiling shenanigans. (N.B. “Respectable” as I use it here means there is some sense that the person is at least minimally rational and occasionally sincere. Consequently the Tea Party representatives are excluded.)

Let’s start with Danforth since Benen called him out by name. If you will remember, this is the elder GOP statesman who felt impelled to hold his nose and endorse Tea Party trickster Ed Martin in the last congressional election – so I guess there’s  probably no point looking for integrity from this particular quarter.

Compared to wheeler-dealers like Martin, his opponent in the 2nd district congressional race, Ann Wagner, seems to have some slight sheen of respectability left. But notice how she has rushed to grovel before one of the main instigators of the madness, Grover Norquist?

Don’t even bother to bring up the recently retired Kit Bond.  Not only was he in high pander mode before he retired, most of his pronouncements were so sclerotic that it was hard to take them seriously even when one sensed he was trying to do the right thing. He actually proposed using the debt ceiling to secure budget cuts last April. Hope he likes the mess he’s helped to create.

Roy Blunt? The guy’s sane – and he’s on the record for raising the debt ceiling. He’s also on record for not raising it unless we get insane cuts at a time when the economy is at risk from just such a retraction of federal spending.  So far, when Roy walks a thin line, he’s far more apt to stumble down on the side of a Tea Party pander than common sense. The only hope Blunt offers is that he’s so in hock to his pet “job creators” that he’ll do their bidding in financial matters when push comes to shove.

Who else in Missouri can speak for the traditional GOP establishment? Anyone? What are the odds that any of them have more backbone than the quartet above? Surely there are some Missouri GOPers who put the welfare of the country above the welfare of the party, who will be willing to stand up to the brain-dead morons that the Tea Party sent to Washington?

*Fourth paragraph slightly edited for clarity.

Another elitist, out-of-touch republican who thinks it's peacetime

27 Wednesday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Peter the Tweeter

This time it’s Fred Barnes of the Weekly Standard:

Photobucket

Fred’s Twitter bio says he has four kids and eight grandkids. So I had to respond when I saw that nonsense:

Photobucket

For the record, I’m sure Missouri’s military families (you know, like mine) are thrilled that their Lt. Governor, who wants to be their Governor, can so easily, blythely, glibbly forget all about their sons, daughters, nieces, nephews, husbands and wives who are serving in the stead of those who don’t bother their beautiful minds thinking about the risks they face every day, in his headlong rush to retweet the dogmatic bile of Fred Barnes:

Photobucket

If you have a loved one who is serving, I implore you to remember how easily Peter Kinder forgot about them, and their service, and the fact that we are in two and a half wars when you vote for Governor next year.  

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): Crossroads GPS attack ad spam

27 Wednesday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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2012, Claire McCaskill, Crossroads GPS, Karl Rove, missouri, Senate, spam.astroturf

Unlimited money doesn’t necessarily equal substance and originality. Karl Rove’s right wingnut astroturf organization is spamming the Missouri airwaves with another ad attacking Senator Claire McCaskill (D):

The transcript:

First person: We’re paying double for gas.

Second person: More for groceries.

Third person: Our homes are worth less.

Fourth person: More people are out of work.

Fifth person: And it’s a lot harder to save for retirement.

Sixth person: But instead of fixing our economy…

Fourth person: …politicians like Claire McCaskill voted for billions in new taxes.

First person: …and racked up trillions in crushing debt.

Fifth person: Now President Obama wants to continue the reckless spending.

Third person: And he wants to raise taxes even higher.

Sixth person: That costs us more jobs.

Third person: Senator McCaskill…

Fourth person:…no more blank checks.

“…We’re paying double for gas…”

You might want to talk to the big oil corporations about that. You know, the ones with record profits and those lucrative tax breaks that the republican controlled House fights to preserve.

“…Our homes are worth less…”

Really. When did that happen? Oh, yeah, during the previous republican administration, under dubya.

“…More people are out of work…”

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D): and you shall know her by her political enemies, part 2 (July 8, 2011)

From the office of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D).

Gee, that chart shows a very different trajectory from the previous republican administration, don’t you think? Or are the republican hacks at Crossroads GPS insinuating that the stimulus wasn’t big enough? Just asking, but hardly probable.

“…And it’s a lot harder to save for retirement…”

Especially when the republicans finish destroying Social Security and Medicare.

“…and racked up trillions in crushing debt…”

….The Bush Tax Cuts Are The Primary Driver Of Federal Budget Deficits Over The Next Decade….

Uh, dubya’s administration did the racking. Big time. Where was Crossroads GPS when that was happening. Oh, right, Karl Rove was helping do that racking.

“…And he wants to raise taxes even higher…”

Yep, on those who have been getting a windfall for the last eleven years. It doesn’t look like anyone in this ad makes more than $250,000.00 a year does it?

CNN/ORC [pdf]

Interviews with 1,009 adult Americans conducted by telephone by ORC International on July 18-20, 2011. The margin of sampling error for results based on the total sample is plus or

minus 3 percentage points.

The sample includes 856 interviews among landline respondents and 153 interviews among cell phone respondents.

[….]

24. Now I’m going to read you some of the specific proposals for cutting government spending and increasing taxes that have been suggested as part of the discussions on the debt ceiling. For each one, please tell me whether you favor or oppose that proposal as a way to reduce the amount that the government owes.

[….]

Increasing the taxes paid by people who make more than 250 thousand dollars a year

Favor 73% Oppose26%

[emphasis added]

So much for convincing a majority that millionaires and billionaires have it tough.

Gee, they’re running the same ad in Montana:

And Ohio:

And Nebraska:

And Florida:

Fancy that. Heh, leave it to republicans, spam and astroturf.

Though, isn’t the diversity of America inspiring?

Your Vote Counts Kick Off Rally

26 Tuesday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Your Vote Counts is a broad coalition of groups who are concerned about protecting the will of the people and the integrity of the ballot initiative process.

Who: Your Vote Counts

What: Campaign Kick Off Rally

When: July 30, 2011 from 1:30 to 3:00 p.m. Where: The Regional Arts Commission

6128 Delmar Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63112

Be a part of this amazing effort! Please join us for the St. Louis Kickoff on Saturday July 30th at 1:30pm.

Please visit http://www.protectvoters.com for more information.

RSVP’s recommended.

The Your Vote Counts Act is a proposed citizen-backed initiative seeking to qualify for the November 2012 statewide ballot, in order to help protect the integrity of the ballot initiative process and provide greater protections for voter-approved initiatives. The constitutional measure would require a three-fourths vote in both the House and the Senate, or a vote of the people by referendum, in order for the legislature to repeal or amend any voter-approved initiative

Protest at Akin's office

26 Tuesday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Tags

debt ceiling impasse, missouri, protest, Todd Akin

Check out Channel Five in St. Louis this evening. The station actually covered people who went to Todd Akin’s office to protest his intransigence on the debt ceiling impasse. The photographer is Channel Five’s and the suit is Akin’s district director and communications director. The reporter got some interviews. Here’s hoping y’all gave ‘im hell, pointed out that this is an impending calamity that has no need to even exist.

Protesting Todd Akin's stand on debt ceiling

President Obama – address to the nation on the republican debt hostage crisis

26 Tuesday Jul 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Debt ceiling, Obama, republican debt hostage crisis, White House

President Obama addresses the nation. White House photo, Pete Souza, July 25, 2011.

Last night President Obama explained on national television that the republican controlled House leadership and their teabagger base never got out of junior high school:

The White House transcript:

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

For Immediate Release

July 25, 2011

Address by the President to the Nation

East Room

9:01 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Good evening.  Tonight, I want to talk about the debate we’ve been having in Washington over the national debt — a debate that directly affects the lives of all Americans.

For the last decade, we’ve spent more money than we take in.  In the year 2000, the government had a budget surplus.  But instead of using it to pay off our debt, the money was spent on trillions of dollars in new tax cuts, while two wars and an expensive prescription drug program were simply added to our nation’s credit card.

As a result, the deficit was on track to top $1 trillion the year I took office.  To make matters worse, the recession meant that there was less money coming in, and it required us to spend even more — on tax cuts for middle-class families to spur the economy; on unemployment insurance; on aid to states so we could prevent more teachers and firefighters and police officers from being laid off.  These emergency steps also added to the deficit.

Now, every family knows that a little credit card debt is manageable.  But if we stay on the current path, our growing debt could cost us jobs and do serious damage to the economy.  More of our tax dollars will go toward paying off the interest on our loans.  Businesses will be less likely to open up shop and hire workers in a country that can’t balance its books.  Interest rates could climb for everyone who borrows money — the homeowner with a mortgage, the student with a college loan, the corner store that wants to expand.  And we won’t have enough money to make job-creating investments in things like education and infrastructure, or pay for vital programs like Medicare and Medicaid.

Because neither party is blameless for the decisions that led to this problem, both parties have a responsibility to solve it.  And over the last several months, that’s what we’ve been trying to do.  I won’t bore you with the details of every plan or proposal, but basically, the debate has centered around two different approaches.

The first approach says, let’s live within our means by making serious, historic cuts in government spending.  Let’s cut domestic spending to the lowest level it’s been since Dwight Eisenhower was President.  Let’s cut defense spending at the Pentagon by hundreds of billions of dollars.  Let’s cut out waste and fraud in health care programs like Medicare — and at the same time, let’s make modest adjustments so that Medicare is still there for future generations.  Finally, let’s ask the wealthiest Americans and biggest corporations to give up some of their breaks in the tax code and special deductions.

This balanced approach asks everyone to give a little without requiring anyone to sacrifice too much.  It would reduce the deficit by around $4 trillion and put us on a path to pay down our debt.  And the cuts wouldn’t happen so abruptly that they’d be a drag on our economy, or prevent us from helping small businesses and middle-class families get back on their feet right now.

This approach is also bipartisan.  While many in my own party aren’t happy with the painful cuts it makes, enough will be willing to accept them if the burden is fairly shared.  While Republicans might like to see deeper cuts and no revenue at all, there are many in the Senate who have said, “Yes, I’m willing to put politics aside and consider this approach because I care about solving the problem.”  And to his credit, this is the kind of approach the Republican Speaker of the House, John Boehner, was working on with me over the last several weeks.

The only reason this balanced approach isn’t on its way to becoming law right now is because a significant number of Republicans in Congress are insisting on a different approach — a cuts-only approach — an approach that doesn’t ask the wealthiest Americans or biggest corporations to contribute anything at all.  And because nothing is asked of those at the top of the income scale, such an approach would close the deficit only with more severe cuts to programs we all care about — cuts that place a greater burden on working families.

So the debate right now isn’t about whether we need to make tough choices.  Democrats and Republicans agree on the amount of deficit reduction we need.  The debate is about how it should be done.  Most Americans, regardless of political party, don’t understand how we can ask a senior citizen to pay more for her Medicare before we ask a corporate jet owner or the oil companies to give up tax breaks that other companies don’t get.  How can we ask a student to pay more for college before we ask hedge fund managers to stop paying taxes at a lower rate than their secretaries?  How can we slash funding for education and clean energy before we ask people like me to give up tax breaks we don’t need and didn’t ask for?  

That’s not right.  It’s not fair.  We all want a government that lives within its means, but there are still things we need to pay for as a country — things like new roads and bridges; weather satellites and food inspection; services to veterans and medical research.

And keep in mind that under a balanced approach, the 98 percent of Americans who make under $250,000 would see no tax increases at all.  None.  In fact, I want to extend the payroll tax cut for working families.  What we’re talking about under a balanced approach is asking Americans whose incomes have gone up the most over the last decade — millionaires and billionaires — to share in the sacrifice everyone else has to make.  And I think these patriotic Americans are willing to pitch in.  In fact, over the last few decades, they’ve pitched in every time we passed a bipartisan deal to reduce the deficit.  The first time a deal was passed, a predecessor of mine made the case for a balanced approach by saying this:

“Would you rather reduce deficits and interest rates by raising revenue from those who are not now paying their fair share, or would you rather accept larger budget deficits, higher interest rates, and higher unemployment?  And I think I know your answer.”

Those words were spoken by Ronald Reagan.  But today, many Republicans in the House refuse to consider this kind of balanced approach — an approach that was pursued not only by President Reagan, but by the first President Bush, by President Clinton, by myself, and by many Democrats and Republicans in the United States Senate.  So we’re left with a stalemate.

Now, what makes today’s stalemate so dangerous is that it has been tied to something known as the debt ceiling — a term that most people outside of Washington have probably never heard of before.

Understand — raising the debt ceiling does not allow Congress to spend more money.  It simply gives our country the ability to pay the bills that
Congress has already racked up.  In the past, raising the debt ceiling was routine.  Since the 1950s, Congress has always passed it, and every President has signed it.  President Reagan did it 18 times.  George W. Bush did it seven times.  And we have to do it by next Tuesday, August 2nd, or else we won’t be able to pay all of our bills.  

Unfortunately, for the past several weeks, Republican House members have essentially said that the only way they’ll vote to prevent America’s first-ever default is if the rest of us agree to their deep, spending cuts-only approach.  

If that happens, and we default, we would not have enough money to pay all of our bills — bills that include monthly Social Security checks, veterans’ benefits, and the government contracts we’ve signed with thousands of businesses.

For the first time in history, our country’s AAA credit rating would be downgraded, leaving investors around the world to wonder whether the United States is still a good bet.  Interest rates would skyrocket on credit cards, on mortgages and on car loans, which amounts to a huge tax hike on the American people.  We would risk sparking a deep economic crisis — this one caused almost entirely by Washington.

So defaulting on our obligations is a reckless and irresponsible outcome to this debate.  And Republican leaders say that they agree we must avoid default.  But the new approach that Speaker Boehner unveiled today, which would temporarily extend the debt ceiling in exchange for spending cuts, would force us to once again face the threat of default just six months from now.  In other words, it doesn’t solve the problem.  

First of all, a six-month extension of the debt ceiling might not be enough to avoid a credit downgrade and the higher interest rates that all Americans would have to pay as a result.  We know what we have to do to reduce our deficits; there’s no point in putting the economy at risk by kicking the can further down the road.    

But there’s an even greater danger to this approach.  Based on what we’ve seen these past few weeks, we know what to expect six months from now.  The House of Representatives will once again refuse to prevent default unless the rest of us accept their cuts-only approach.  Again, they will refuse to ask the wealthiest Americans to give up their tax cuts or deductions.  Again, they will demand harsh cuts to programs like Medicare.  And once again, the economy will be held captive unless they get their way.

This is no way to run the greatest country on Earth.  It’s a dangerous game that we’ve never played before, and we can’t afford to play it now.  Not when the jobs and livelihoods of so many families are at stake.  We can’t allow the American people to become collateral damage to Washington’s political warfare.

Congress now has one week left to act, and there are still paths forward.  The Senate has introduced a plan to avoid default, which makes a down payment on deficit reduction and ensures that we don’t have to go through this again in six months.

I think that’s a much better approach, although serious deficit reduction would still require us to tackle the tough challenges of entitlement and tax reform.  Either way, I’ve told leaders of both parties that they must come up with a fair compromise in the next few days that can pass both houses of Congress — and a compromise that I can sign.  I’m confident we can reach this compromise.  Despite our disagreements, Republican leaders and I have found common ground before.  And I believe that enough members of both parties will ultimately put politics aside and help us make progress.

Now, I realize that a lot of the new members of Congress and I don’t see eye-to-eye on many issues.  But we were each elected by some of the same Americans for some of the same reasons.  Yes, many want government to start living within its means.  And many are fed up with a system in which the deck seems stacked against middle-class Americans in favor of the wealthiest few.  But do you know what people are fed up with most of all?

They’re fed up with a town where compromise has become a dirty word.  They work all day long, many of them scraping by, just to put food on the table.  And when these Americans come home at night, bone-tired, and turn on the news, all they see is the same partisan three-ring circus here in Washington.  They see leaders who can’t seem to come together and do what it takes to make life just a little bit better for ordinary Americans.  They’re offended by that.  And they should be.

The American people may have voted for divided government, but they didn’t vote for a dysfunctional government.  So I’m asking you all to make your voice heard.  If you want a balanced approach to reducing the deficit, let your member of Congress know.  If you believe we can solve this problem through compromise, send that message.

America, after all, has always been a grand experiment in compromise.  As a democracy made up of every race and religion, where every belief and point of view is welcomed, we have put to the test time and again the proposition at the heart of our founding:  that out of many, we are one.  We’ve engaged in fierce and passionate debates about the issues of the day, but from slavery to war, from civil liberties to questions of economic justice, we have tried to live by the words that Jefferson once wrote:  “Every man cannot have his way in all things — without this mutual disposition, we are disjointed individuals, but not a society.”

History is scattered with the stories of those who held fast to rigid ideologies and refused to listen to those who disagreed.  But those are not the Americans we remember.  We remember the Americans who put country above self, and set personal grievances aside for the greater good.  We remember the Americans who held this country together during its most difficult hours; who put aside pride and party to form a more perfect union.  

That’s who we remember.  That’s who we need to be right now.  The entire world is watching.  So let’s seize this moment to show why the United States of America is still the greatest nation on Earth — not just because we can still keep our word and meet our obligations, but because we can still come together as one nation.

Thank you, God bless you, and may God bless the United States of America.

END

9:16 P.M. EDT

“…The only reason this balanced approach isn’t on its way to becoming law right now is because a significant number of Republicans in Congress are insisting on a different approach — a cuts-only approach — an approach that doesn’t ask the wealthiest Americans or biggest corporations to contribute anything at all.  And because nothing is asked of those at the top of the income scale, such an approach would close the deficit only with more severe cuts to programs we all care about — cuts that place a greater burden on working families…” [emphasis added]

Cue the right wingnuts:

@RepHartzler Rep. Vicky Hartzler

The way to prevent the downgrading of our credit rating is to pass real cuts and structural reforms like Cut, Cap, Balance; NOT raise taxes! 10 hours ago

[emphasis added]

You’ve just got to wonder why:

…Rep. Vicky Hartzler, R-Mo., is worth between $4 and $15 million…

Predictable.

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