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Posts Tagged ‘Democrats’

The Stimulus Bill Debacle

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

It has become clear to me…that nothing is clear when it comes to the stimulus bill.  There are so many vectors to consider that I do not know how anyone – politician, economist, or average American – can make any sense of it.  The first point of confusion comes as we listen to this debate about whether or not government spending is the answer to a recession.  Senator Claire McCaskill (D-Missouri) was quoted as saying:

“Every economist agrees that the government spending in a recession is essential”

Obviously not, Senator – as a recent economists’ conference in Nevada indicated.  And certainly the Republicans do not agree, as they have been criticizing the bill as the height of pork-barrel spending.  But this brings me to the second point of confusion – how to separate a genuine ideological clash from political maneuvering.  In a previous post, I mentioned some of the qualms that Republican congress members had with the original House bill, many of which I thought were legitimate.  However, as I also noted in that post, the sum of their complaints amounted to a very small percentage of the projected total spending.  So it seemed to me, upon further consideration, that their complaints were more likely a political tactic to undermine the Democrats political advantage.  The Republicans set the tone for the debate, and left the Democrats – including President Obama – scrambling to defend their positions.

Ambivalence for Obama

Monday, November 10th, 2008

I’ve hesitated in posting a reaction to Obama’s victory to this point because I wasn’t – and I’m still not – sure how I feel about it. Of course I am glad that he won, because he was the candidate that I voted for, but I do not share in all of the hoopla and fanfare that has surrounded his victory. My father said that he is going to purchase a little American flag to put on his desk, because for the first time he feels like this is his country too. Given that I see my father as the main person from which I inherited my cynicism, his newfound nationalism strikes me as bizarre. And I don’t share it. I am as skeptical and cynical as ever, if not more so.

There are many reasons. First is that during the Bush administration, which has run roughshod over the rights of Americans and citizens of the world, there was really no sense of hope. People organized and spoke out, but in the end we still had to endure 8 years of awful, and all it may have done was ensure that Bush goes out with a dismal approval rating. Now with Obama, however, there is that inkling of hope, that possibility that the world could really change for the best. The bad thing about this, though, is that should the change we want fail to come, then it will be that much more painful because we dared to hope.