Politics

Stupid is as stupid does

The following is an excerpt of an email from a loooooong time friend of mine who is a high school counselor in Texas:

Obama’s speech yesterday – our district gave each school the option to show it, if a school decided to show it they had to give the option for students to watch it or not. My school didn’t show it. Another local district required signed parental approval to watch it. How about the Arlington, TX school district that didn’t show the speech, yet is taking kids on a field trip to the Dallas Cowboys stadium to hear big Bush speak?

At the very time of the speech, I was talking to two 9th graders who don’t want to come to school, are refusing to and later, to one student who should have graduated two years ago and was here to get GED information. In the first two weeks of school, I have had about 6 students who are choosing not to come to school for various reasons. There are many more who come to school and do absolutely nothing. So… The hopeful and encouraging message The President of the United States has for students will do more harm than good? Won’t possibly encourage and motivate these kids? Pisses me off!  There was one parent on the news who said it’s his responsibility to raise his kid to be motivated, do well, etc., not the President’s. This is the same parent who would be up here blaming me if his kid doesn’t pass a class, is skipping, unmotivated, doesn’t graduate.

Just one woman’s perspective.

And now, here’s a fantastic video that will be my last comment-in-the-words-of-other-folks. For now, anyway:

I just really love this guy

My favorite Facebook status update from today:

Tim Wise thinks he understands the right-wing anger over the President’s education speech & the importance of hard work in school. See, they prefer the last President–the one who bragged at Yale commencement about being a lazy, mediocre C student, and told them how that was ok, because you could be mediocre and still become President. And they love Hannity and Limbaugh: both of whom found college too hard and quit…”

And on an unrelated but still related note, how far would you go for health insurance?

Dumbing it down

The Old Mill and The Cedar Creek

This is the Old Cedar Mill in Cedarburg, Wisconsin, the quaint and charming town where my husband grew up. At Christmas time, the lone fire department plays classic carols through externally mounted speakers and the notes drift through the air and mix with the scent of sugar from the local candy store, creating a tearful nostalgia even for people who have never been there. It is a storybook. It is a Norman Rockwell painting.

Wisconsin Sunset

Perhaps because of this, because it is so reminiscent of American lore, it is the place where John McCain and his running mate made their very first post-convention stop last September. On September 8, 2008 to be exact. For that occasion, Cedarburg High School shut down for the day. As in, closed it’s doors.

All the students and all the faculty and all the administrators were given time off to attend the rally. And the school band played in honor of the candidate. And this small town of roughly 11,000 people was billed more than $12,000 for additional police security. Imagine what $12,000 could do for a school…

Change Over

Last week, the principal of Cedarburg High School sent an email to all of his staffers, informing them that it would be up to their discretion as to whether they wanted to show the twenty minute speech by the President of the United States of America, slated for today.

And that is where we are in America: A school cancels classes for one day and a town spends money for the appearance of a presidential candidate. And the same school later makes it optional as to whether impressionable children should be exposed to a speech by their country’s elected President.

This is no idealized painting. This is the schizophrenic lobbing off of an ear.

We live in dark days.

Bill Moyers on Health Care

After we tucked the girl into bed last night, we watched Bill Maher interview one of my all time favorite people, Bill Moyers. If I were to have a dinner party and could invite any three people on the planet, he would be one of them. Moyers spoke about health care for all citizens as a moral issue, not a financial one, and didn’t miss a beat when Maher asked him for an appropriate metaphor to capture exactly where we are in this morass. I hope President Obama was watching, too.

Here’s a short clip of the compelling twenty minute interview.

While complete tools, they’re not the *sharpest* tools in the conservative shed. And on that note, happy Friday!

H/T Nick Stoffel, baby lover extraordinaire, KPBS producer and my friend. Yes, I’m name dropping because I’m just a star fucker at heart.

My dining room table is a numbskull, too

Pssssst! Dems! You won! Include end of life care and give me a seat on the death panel

In the midst of the increasingly toxic healthcare debate—if it can even be called a debate any more—I’ve spent quite a lot of time thinking about my own eventual demise. I’ve come to the conclusion that I am either going to A) suffer a massive stroke at an early-ish age, B) live to be old and lose my way to the grocery store or C) get hit by a bus on the way to work tomorrow, which would be utter injustice since it would make all this brow-furrowed contemplation a complete waste of time. While choice C isn’t statistically probable, options A and B come with odds worthy of doubling down.

It just so happens, my liver turns every single thing I ingest—pâté or iceberg lettuce, same diff—into cholesterol. An over-abundance of the glop is the genetic parting gift from my father, a sort of consolation prize to me: Sorry I couldn’t be there for ya kid, but here’s a little something to help you remember your y-chromosome donor. Available medications disintegrate my muscles, meaning I suffer from untreatable hypercholesterolemia. Yes, I’m the fit-looking lady in the Lipitor commercial who knocks over an entire row of surfboards after proudly planting her own in the sand.

And golly! Wouldn’t you know it, but a study published last week in the journal Dementia & Geriatrics Cognitive Disorders describes a link between elevated cholesterol levels in mid-life and the onset of Alzheimer’s in the sunset years. Having a close relative with the illness—like, say, a father for instance—further increases the risk.

Oh joy, I thought as I read about having as much as a 66-percent greater chance of developing Alzheimer’s in my 70s (assuming A or C do not take me out first). Not only will I be uninsurable should I leave my day job to strike out on the freelance circuit like I want to do, but there’s a good chance my kid will eventually spoon-feed me with one hand and wipe my butt with her other.

And to this I say: Bring on the death panels—or, at the very fucking least, guaranteed access to counseling as it pertains to end-of-life care.

I know death is not a cotton-candy-and-vanilla-ice-cream subject. It’s so unpalatable a topic that I’m convinced it’s why HBO’s Six Feet Under got so severely snubbed year after year during awards season.

Many Americans reject the finality of death so severely that they don’t want to think about it, let alone watch a show about it. Certainly, the terminally ill shouldn’t be allowed to discuss it with their doctors. So the ideologues—backed, let’s not forget, by the insurance and pharma industries—ginned up a lie so heinous and so effective that the Senate Finance Committee is now capitulating on the end-of-life provision, which will be excluded from the Senate version of the bill. Don’t you just love the way the majority—Helloooooh! Majority!!!—Democrats roll right over, spread their cheeks and offer their collective chocolate starfish in surrender?

“You shouldn’t have counseling at the end of life,” said Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, a man with unlimited access to this country’s best healthcare thanks to his job title. “You ought to have counseling 20 years before you’re going to die. You ought to plan these things out.” To begin to deconstruct everything wrong with these comments requires a whole ’nother column.

But Amy Sullivan of Time takes him to task. She goes for the jugular after pointing out that Grassley (and John Boehner, too) voted in favor of funding counseling for end-of-life issues in the 2003 Medicare prescription drug bill: “So either Republicans were for death panels in 2003 before turning against them now—or they’re lying about end-of-life counseling in order to frighten the bejeezus out of their fellow citizens and defeat health reform by any means necessary.”

Some of our more obtuse fellow citizens—whose siren call is the drum beat of AM radio and Kathie Lee Gifford albums—have extremely vulnerable bejeezuses, and the fundies play to this. Rather than have a reasonable discussion like adult humans, adult monsters like Glenn Beck hone in on the hysteria gene shared amongst their audience members. Using just the right combo of word-twist, stage prop and wild-eyed indignation, they easily convert their flock of sheeple into mobs of zombies and borderline terrorists, who bring their misplaced ire and loaded weapons into civil discourse. History, if any of them cared to look at it, would show that this combo does not bode well.

These folks are already behind the 8-ball when it comes to intellect. Take, for instance, blogger John Swift, who describes himself as “a reasonable conservative who likes to write about politics and culture. Since the media is biased I get all my news from Fox News, Rush Limbaugh and Jay Leno monologues.” I was happy to stumble across his blog on a Google search because it gave me a giggle, followed by a disturbing pause: He may be dim, but whip up a million Swifts and suddenly people are dropping loaded guns on the floor at town-hall meetings.

Faster than you can spot the irony in the panicked howls of Keep government out of my Medicare! coming from the blue-hair set, Democrats have tucked tail between their legs. This is swift-boating all over again, for fuck’s sake, not rocket science! I want my goddamned death panels! And I want them to decide Glenn Beck’s fate. And Charles Grassley’s. And John Boehner’s. And that vile woman from Alaska whom I refuse to name’s fate, too. Oh, and Dick Cheney’s. I’m officially volunteering to sit on that panel.

Of course, by the time all this health reform is sufficiently smothered, bludgeoned and water-boarded until it’s unrecognizable, I may have already succumbed to Death Option D, which I failed to mention before. When all is said and done, I may just die of outrage combined with extreme and stunning disappointment.

(As published today in San Diego CityBeat. Word to your mutha.)

Go Figure

I have something to say about citizens bringing guns to Presidential events.

Which is perhaps more inflammatory than the swimsuit worn by that…person…in my previous post. Or, perhaps not. You be The Decider.

And with this thought, happy weekend

“[S]omething is wrong when a black man can be arrested for disorderly conduct because he yelled at a cop on his own porch, but a mob of white, teabagging sheeple can disrupt town hall meetings with heckling, violence and threats, and THAT is considered protected free speech. Black professor = threat to the public. White mob = 1st Amendment heroes. People who think that’s perfectly fine = idiots.” -Tim Wise

Because I don’t feel like writing today

I’ve only just learned of the Mobs Gone Wild at various town hall meetings across the country. As I expected—and to my relief given my mindset—Bob Cesca already said what I haven’t.