Daily Archives: January 28, 2014


Another Major Medicaid Scandal for Rick Scott

The Daily Kos has the article Another Major Medicaid Scandal for Rick Scott.  The article puts together two quotes from an another article.  First is the quote:

Before Fernandez, an individual had never given a check of $1 million or more to a candidate-aligned committee.

The second quote from the article is:

Two companies partly owned by the finance chairman of Gov. Rick Scott’s re-election campaign [Miguel Fernandez] have won contracts worth potentially billions to serve Medicaid patients in regions across the state.

The trajectory for honest government in Florida goes downhill from there in The Daily Kos article.

Brings to mind what I have been reading in Former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates’ autobiography.  As he would sit before a Congressional committee and listen to the Representatives or Senators rail against the corruption and the inability to take action in Iraq and Afghanistan, Gates would wonder if they thought the US government of which they were a part were doing much better than Iraq and Afghanistan.

This example in Florida would be good to compare to the corruption of the warlords and governors of areas of Iraq and Afghanistan.


Michele Bachmann vs. Bernie Sanders Debate Goes Off the Rails

Admittedly the following YouTube video is painful to watch.  The question I have is what else could Bernie Sanders have done?


So far my two favorite choices for words to use coming from the comments I read are:

Crazy Bachmann Bullshit (patent pending).

and

Bernie should have just looked at her back and said “is there an off switch somewhere?”

The trouble with the Bachman side of the argument is that it is easy to flood the conversation with crazy ideas and double talk so that there is no chance to talk about good ideas. If Bernie spent all his time knocking down her crazy ideas, he’d have no time to talk about anything else. If he ignores her crazy ideas (and could find her off switch), then her insanity still hangs in the air like the odor of an angry skunk. Maybe when Bachman talked about what she learned as a tax lawyer Bernie could have turned to her and said,

“Either you know nothing about economics or you are pretending that you don’t or you would understand why what you said is utter nonsense. I would try to explain this to you, but you would just keep yammering away and it would be useless.”


I think it would be time better spent to have the conversation devolve into a discussion about why Bachman cannot listen and learn, then it would be to give any of her ideas the time that they were given.


I have just read the extremely well done analysis in The Daily Kos article Michele Bachman and Bernie Sanders spar on income inequality clash on CNN. The analysis is well worth reading. The conclusion matches my feeling about the debate.

Michele Bachmann continued to keep Bernie Sanders off message by interrupting him and with ample help from the moderator Wolf Blitzer. In this debate truth took a beating.

We have to learn how to defend the truth and protect it from such beatings.  We cannot expect any help from the moderators.


Pete Seeger, Songwriter and Champion of Folk Music, Dies at 94

I first heard the news when I saw The New York Times obituary Pete Seeger, Songwriter and Champion of Folk Music, Dies at 94 posted on Facebook.

Pete Seeger, the singer, folk-song collector and songwriter who spearheaded an American folk revival and spent a long career championing folk music as both a vital heritage and a catalyst for social change, died on Monday in Manhattan. He was 94.

Of course I was a great fan of Pete Seeger.  How could you not be?  I suppose if you were a John Birch Society member you might not.

I read a biography of Pete Seeger once.  The thing that struck me was that every turn in his life’s path, if he could find the hard way to travel, that was the path he chose.  He certainly could have made life easier for himself if he had wanted to.

Pete Seeger is a prime example of a person who refused to remain silent no matter what pressure the powers that be tried to use to silence him.  What he went through to speak his piece just reminds us of how few people like him that are left.  Did the HUAC and its descendants finally win?


What Would You Do If You Had Political Power? – Gar Alperovitz on Reality Asserts Itself (5/5)

The Real News Network has the final segment What Would You Do If You Had Political Power? – Gar Alperovitz on Reality Asserts Itself (5/5) of a series that I have been following on this blog.  See my previous posts Understanding the Imperialist System Changed My Life – Gar Alperovitz on Reality Asserts Itself (Parts 1 – 3 out of 5) and The Promise and Limitations of Worker Co-ops – Gar Alperovitz on Reality Asserts Itself (4/5).  To whet your appetite, I’ll choose some excerpts focusing on one of the ideas in this interview.

JAY: But the other sector that essentially was nationalized and again just handed back was the banking sector. And if you’re really going to change things, you’re going to have to do something with how finance, how loans take place. And what could be done at a city and state level there?

ALPEROVITZ: Again, we’re not–this is no longer rhetoric. The state of North Dakota has had a publicly owned bank for almost 100 years now, and it is public. It makes money for the state. Twenty states have legislation introduced to set up public banks. That can be done. You can set up a city-owned bank, or, minimally, you can take city tax deposits and put them in banks that will invest in the city. That’s also being done around the country.
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ALPEROVITZ: Credit unions, nonprofit banks.

Credit unions are key to this. Most people don’t realize this. A credit union is a co-op. It’s a one-person, one-vote bank. That’s all it is. If you put them all together in the United States, all of these one-person, one-vote banks, credit unions, have as much capital as any of the big New York banks–$1 trillion. It’s now being used for non–very boring–housing and auto loans, mainly, a little bit for business. They’re restricted. The banks have made sure to restrict them for business. But they can do housing, and they could be using their strength.

The beauty of this is that you can see some of these ideas in the thinking of the current Democratic candidates for the Governor of Massachusetts in 2014.  I think there is also promise in the recently elected mayor of Boston, Marty Walsh.

I should say, that if you are negative on the ideas presented here, you could come up with a long list of issues and things that could go wrong in carrying out the ideas described by Gar Alperovitz. Any thoughtful proponent of these ideas recognizes the existence of these issues.  All we say is that don’t use the existence of these issues to kill the idea.  Instead think of ways of solving these problems.  If you have the attitude of problem solving, I think you can find a way to guard against, overcome, and measure the occurrence of all these problems.  It’s not like there are no problems with the current system.

As I think Gar Alperovitz would agree, if it looks like there is a better way, then we ought to be able to start moving in that direction.  Of course we need to be ever wary of problems that come up so that we can deal with them as they occur.  It’s not like anybody claims to have all the answers.  As with going with any new direction, it is a learning experience.  We didn’t figure out all the answers to making the USA work in 1776.  We learned as the nation grew.

If you want to raise issues, do so in a spirit of “Let’s see if we can figure out how to solve this.”