Right’s Framing Of Socialism Just Too Much BS

Never forget this:

If you hadn’t noticed the next election is already in full swing. As usual the lockstep Republican candidates are all singing from the same hymnal. That hymnal has various versions of the ever popular song among Republicans “Socialism is Bad, Bad, Bad.” Candidates from one end of America to another are already joining the chorus trying to scare the average Joe to vote for them.

Like many popular songs, those singing it may not understand what the subject of the song is or what their words mean. Here in Iowa we have Congress members Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Ashley Hinson and Chuck Grassley are already singing it as loud as they can. They have it in press releases, all their interviews and of course any mail or email that goes to a constituent and especially in fund raising letters.

One thing that every Republican steers clear of is defining just what “socialism” is or what programs exactly what programs they would go right after. The plan is to create a visual of system that links socialism to very old Russian or Chinese Communism under Stalin or Mao where everyone is poor and no goods are being produced. The objective is to scare the crap out of as many ill-informed voters as is possible.

The truth is that there is no relationship between Russian or Chinese dictatorial Communism and Socialism. They are about as closely related as Catholicism and Islam. But Iowa’s Republican congress critters spread disinformation in an effort to scare up votes for themselves and other republicans who play really loose with reality.

I would love to hear any of them define socialism. I would bet neither could come close. My understanding is that socialism is people getting together to provide a good or service to all that would be prohibitively expensive or difficult to obtain individually. In these cases people often come together through their government. Since the government is supposedly representative, all sides can have input.

We see smaller versions of this set up on smaller governmental units such as counties and cities who may form together to provide police, fire and ambulance service to an area. We may also have non-governmental units such as homeowners associations or volunteer groups which may form around a specific issue. In my town we have groups that raise scholarship money for those less well off so they can continue their education.

For the most part when we talk socialism we are talking within governmental units. Perhaps the biggest single socialistic group in the world is the US military which is set up to defend the country. I doubt our chortling congress critters want to end the military to stop socialism. As they paint their picture of the darkest sides of dictatorial communism and try to make you believe that is socialism, they leave a lot out.

The very first socialistic type program that most people cite is Social Security. SS is very popular and has been from the day FDR signed it into law – 86 years ago today. What Iowa’s congress critters won’t tell you – unless they think they are behind closed doors with only. Republicans – is that Social Security is at the very top of their chopping block.

Joni Ernst let us know that as her tongue wagged a little loose behind closed doors a couple of years ago.

Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst said at a recent town hall meeting in Emmet County that politicians should “sit down behind closed doors” as a way to avoid public scrutiny when discussing was to fix Social Security policy.

A video clip of Ernst this past Saturday at a school in Estherville shows the Republican senator responding to a question from the audience.

“How do we sustain Social Security for some of our younger workers?” asked Ernst. “We know that there is a point in time when we as Congress will have to address the situation, and I think it’s better done sooner rather than later, to make sure that we shored up that system.

When Republicans talk about “reforming” Social Security it is only a prelude to totally cutting the program. Of course Social Security is not the only program that Republicans would love to cut. In their top tier of “social safety net” programs to cut are Medicaid, Medicare, whatever food stamps are called today (SNAP?), unemployment insurance and so on. Any program that keeps people from starving to death in the cold. For a country that claims to be Christian, those programs should be right in line with Christian values.

So if you believe the Republican scare tactics on socialism, you need to understand that with their old bait and switch tactics, Iowa’s congress critters are telling you that socialism is evil, but when they fix it you, your parents, your children and aunts, uncles and cousins will lose those social safety net programs that they depend on to stay alive.

Guess what else is socialism? Those nice fat congressional paychecks Old Chuck Grassely has been getting as a senator: 

Here’s a new and weird mental image to add to the health care debate.  On C-SPAN Tuesday morning, in a discussion over whether the Senate health care reform bill amounted to socialism,  Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) acknowledged that he “lived off the public tit” as a congressman. 

After Grassley said he didn’t think the bill was tantamount to socialism, a viewer called into the program and argued that as a public official Grassley himself was, in some ways, living off the government.  Grassley admitted that he was.

GRASSLEY: For the first 16 years I made $3,000 every other year as a state legislator. Now do you expect me to live on $3,000 every other year? No I was a factory worker for 10 years and I was a farmer for that period of time and I farm with my son now. So if you’re trying to make a case that I’ve lived off the public tit all these years, I think you’re saying correctly in the years I’ve been in the Congress but not the years before I came to Congress.

Also don’t expect those farm payments to be considered socialism. Or the highways that are put in specifically for the new Walmart or other big box store. Governmental units underwrite public projects from highways to water to sewage to electric and now internet. Don’t expect Republicans to link those programs to their dystopian version of socialism.

And by the way, the most habitable countries in the world are democratic socialist countries which include the likes of Sweden and Norway and Canada. 

And one more thing – if we went to national health care like the above mentioned countries we could cover everybody for about half of what we pay now to cover 80% and do so poorly. 

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Kim Don’t Care

From poster Grins on democraticunderground.com:  (August 12) 

In 1969 Dave Garroway (Kidz – Google it!) was the host of this enormously popular show on NBC called “The Today Show. 

Fifteen years after the first of the nationwide tests for the polio vaccine that began in McLean, Va., Garroway had been tapped by the March of Dimes to MC a banquet to honor Jonas Salk. 

At the dinner, Garroway began his hosting duties with, “As I was leaving to come here tonight…,” and described his getting dressed to go to the testimonial dinner. His 11-year old son, Dave Jr., saw him getting dressed and asked his dad where he was going. 

Garroway Sr.: “To a dinner for Dr. Salk.” 

Garroway Jr.: “Who’s Dr. Salk?” 

Garroway Sr.. “He’s the man who found the vaccine for polio.” 

Garroway Jr. (puzzled): “What’s polio?”

And the room went silent. And Dr. Salk was reported to have been visibly moved.

Unfortunately it doesn’t look like we will have a repeat of this scenario anytime in the future thanks almost entirely to the Republican Party. In Iowa the blame lays largely on the head of the governor Kim Reynolds and the seemingly anonymous band of Republican legislators who walk lockstep with the radical right wing agenda of Donald Trump.

Right now, Iowans are gearing up to send their kids back to school. This is normally a time of hope and a time of angst in every household with children and in the houses of Grandma and Grandpa. After last year’s severely disrupted school year, this year is creating even more angst. But of course, this year has even more angst because those to whom we have entrusted the lives and good health of our youngsters instead seem to be driven by some strange allegiance to politics over common sense.

Back at the end of May our joke of a governor decided to sign into law a bill that would make mask mandates illegal for school districts to impose. Why anyone would do that is good fodder for speculation. You can certainly cross “for the good of the student” off the list immediately. There seems to be a much darker purpose behind her signing this bill.

My speculation is that Governor Reynolds signed the bill for purely political reasons. First she will be running for governor again. Since the Republican Party in the US and especially in Iowa is a subsidiary of the Trump Company. As Americans learned over four horrible years, crossing Trump’s wishes earns retribution. Trumpers believe there is somehow something wrong with wearing masks. Therefore a future candidate who wants a Trump endorsement better do what he wants or. they may earn loud scorn from Trump instead of praise and an endorsement.

As if that weren’t cowardly and craven enough – and this is my opinion only – I believe Reynolds has her sights set on the Vice-presidential office as a running mate for Donald Trump. If that is true then she certainly does not want to cross Trump. But she is hardly the only one who seems to be jockeying for that position.  Just here in the midwest we have Kristi Noem governor of the state with the worst Covid per capita numbers in South Dakota and Pete Ricketts, governor of Nebraska who thumbs his nose constantly at CDC guidelines.

If someone knows what logic was behind Reynolds bill signing I would be curious. The health of our children, especially that large swath under 12 that currently cannot be vaccinated, was probably nowhere in her thoughts. If they were she would not have removed one of the very essential tools kids will have to keep themselves safe. 

Instead of being a leader in the War against Covid, Kim Reynolds acts as if she were a colonel in the Covid army. So glad we did not have leaders like her in World War 2 or this would probably have been written in German.

If anything, Reynolds may have been a victim of disinformation and misinformation. She may have for some reason believed that children were somehow not going to spread the virus. If that is true, that is one more very good reason why she should be removed as Iowa’s governor as quickly as possible. She is a parent herself, so has no doubt gone through the wave of flu and colds that sweep through schools. She also must have at least one doctor on her staff who could have told her that infections spread in children in schools like wildfire.

I sincerely hope that somehow Iowa will be spared death of children from Covid this school year, but the state has made that difficult. Hopefully school boards will step in with some common sense and mandate masks, especially for the under 12. Republicans always say policy should be made closest to those affected. in this case that is the local school board.

Maybe one good thing could come from this – maybe our youngsters will learn about civil disobedience to authority that is way overstepping its boundaries. Maybe they will also learn that the good of the whole is more important than the good of the individual and there are ways to compromise.

And of course the other good thing that could come of this is that Iowans will realize what a truly horrible governor Reynolds has been and finally remove her.

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How Democrats Win The Rural Vote

JD Scholten Exec. Dir. Ruralvote.org

Listen up, everybody! JD knows what he’s talking about.

“As a party we rely too much on campaigns. We need infrastructure in place so we’re not reinventing the wheel every time.”  – J.D. Scholten

Check out this Majority 54 podcast The Rural Vote.

“For years, Democrats have been losing ground in rural America.

By 2040, it’s estimated that 70% of America’s population will be in just 15 states, meaning the Senate will be even more disproportionately representative of rural states.  J.D. Scholten, Executive Director of RuralVote.org, joins the podcast to discuss how Democrats can win over this crucial demographic. J.D.  discusses the messages — and messengers — needed to make Democratic inroads to rural America.”

Click on the image to listen to the podcast

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August Jobs Report Stronger Than Economists Predicted

Heather Cox Richardson is an American historian and professor of history at Boston College. She is author of the book How the South Won the Civil War: Oligarchy, Democracy, and the Continuing Fight for the Soul of America available on Amazon.  She cuts through the media chatter in her daily newsletter available on Substack.  She puts current events in historical perspective. I try to read her every day.  She provides a vehicle where it is possible to access the news while taking a vacation from the inaccurate headlines, sensationalizing, and sometimes fear-mongering from other media. You can follow her on Facebook where she has 1.4 million followers. She holds frequent Facebook lives where she takes questions. You can also subscribe to her newsletter, Letters From An American or check out this podcast, Who Really Won the Civil War.

Historians are fond of saying that the past doesn’t repeat itself; it rhymes. I’m a professor of American history. This is a chronicle of today’s political landscape, but because you can’t get a grip on today’s politics without an outline of America’s Constitution, and laws, and the economy, and social customs, this newsletter explores what it means, and what it has meant, to be an American. – HCR

In her August 11 newsletter HCR provides information about the August jobs report and other topics. Here is a sample.

“Last Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics in the Department of Labor released the jobs report for August 2021. It was stronger than economists had predicted, and even stronger than the administration had hoped.

In July, employers added 943,000 jobs, and unemployment fell to 5.4%. Average hourly wages increased, as well. They are 4% higher than they were a year ago.

“Harvard Professor Jason Furman, former chair of President Barack Obama’s Council of Economic Advisors, tweeted: “I have yet to find a blemish in this jobs report. I’ve never before seen such a wonderful set of economic data.” He noted the report showed “Job gains in most sectors… Big decline in unemployment rate, even bigger for Black & Hispanic/Latino… Reduction in long-term unemployment… Solid (nominal) wage gains.”

“Michael Gapen, chief U.S. economist at Barclays, told New York Times reporter Nelson D. Schwartz: “It’s an unambiguously positive report…. Labor market conditions are strong. Unemployment benefits, infection risks and child care constraints are not preventing robust hiring.”

“The jobs report is an important political marker because it appears to validate the Democrats’ approach to the economy, the system the president calls the “Biden Plan.” That plan started in January, as soon as Biden took office, using the federal government to combat the coronavirus pandemic as aggressively as the administration could and, at the same time, using federal support to restart the economy.

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IDP Chair And Iowa Democratic Leadership Live

ICYMI –

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Action Alert: Democracy Can’t Wait

Tuesday, Aug 10: Show up for a Democracy Can’t Wait rally
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It’s Time For Chuck To Go

I do not like the age argument against Grassley.  It’s not a crime to be old and sometimes it’s a plus.  It is time for a change but it’s because of Grassley’s terrible voting record, his abandonment of Iowa values, and his alignment with Trumpism.  This is a pretty good discussion beyond that.

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76 Years After The Atomic Bombings

B-61 Nuclear Bombs

World War II veterans were still living when our family moved back to Iowa in 1993. In each conversation with one of them, I asked about the Aug. 6, 1945 atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan and the Nagasaki bombing three days later. To a person, they felt the bombings were warranted, agreeing with President Harry Truman’s decision to drop them. As they aged and died a couple changed their minds.

We have come to accept what President Ronald Reagan and Secretary General Mikhail Gorbachev said in Geneva, Switzerland 36 years ago, “A nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought.”

Since then, the U.S. rushed to undo arms control measures. Under President George W. Bush we withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. Under President Trump, we withdrew from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (Iran Deal), the New START Treaty, and the Open Skies Treaty. Hard work of arms control, and compliance with Article VI of the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, seemed to have been abandoned.

On the 76th anniversary of the atomic bombings we are heartened by the June 16 meeting between U.S. President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin. The leaders released a joint statement, “Today, we reaffirm the principle that a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought.” They pledged to launch a bilateral Strategic Stability Dialogue to lay the groundwork for future arms control. We can only work toward the idea that this time it sticks.

~ First published in the Solon Economist on July 29, 2021.

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Cranes For Our Future

Paper Cranes

Friday was the 76th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan. Monday is the anniversary of Nagasaki. The world little realized the devastation caused by President Harry Truman’s decision to detonate those bombs.

In response to the anniversary, the Nuclear Threat Initiative organized a global project to make paper cranes and post them on social media with the hashtag #CranesForOurFuture. The idea is an affirmation of hope and a unified statement that a world without nuclear weapons is possible on what should be this weekend of peace.

I hope you will join us in this project.

For more information about how to participate, paper crane folding and social sharing instructions, including a video and printable template prepared by Hiroshima Prefecture, click on the link: https://www.CranesForOurFuture.org/Fold

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FCC Fines Sinclair Stations


This is great news. Sinclair Broadcasting hit with hefty, unprecedented fines.

https://www.nexttv.com/news/fcc-upholds-record-dollar10m-retrans-fine-against-sinclair-managed-stations

“ATVA applauds the FCC’s decision to fine stations associated with Sinclair nearly $9 million for violating the good faith negotiation rules,” said American Television Alliance Jessica Kendust. “The FCC found that these stations and their agent, Duane Lammers, engaged in conduct that merited the maximum penalty allowed by law. We are pleased that the FCC’s action sent such a strong signal that it will not tolerate broadcasters’ bad-faith conduct, especially when their behavior leads to needless TV blackouts that are harmful to American consumers.”

The FCC has officially imposed the maximum per-violation fine of $512,228 apiece for all but one of the stations it had identified in a September 2020 notice of apparent liability as violating the FCC’s requirement of good faith re-transmission consent negotiations.

The 18 stations had been the target of a complaint by AT&T and its DirecTV DBS service alleging they had unreasonably delayed those negotiations including failing to respond to AT&T proposals.

“We applaud the FCC’s action today imposing the statutory maximum penalty on broadcast stations who deliberately violated the Commission’s good faith negotiation rules, causing lengthy and unnecessary TV blackouts that harmed the public,” said an AT&T spokesperson. “These practices hold U.S. consumers hostage and we are hopeful that today’s ruling sends a strong message to broadcasters to knock off this anti-consumer behavior.”

The FCC back in September 2020 found in favor of AT&T and proposed the fines, totaling more than $10 million. It then denied an appeal by the eight station groups involved — Deerfield Media, GoCom Media, Howard Stirk Holdings, HSH, Mercury Broadcasting, MPS Media, KMTR Television, Second Generation of Iowa and Waitt Broadcasting.

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