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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: rich4eagle who wrote (2121)1/20/2002 10:30:10 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
B4 he moved into the White House W said
he heard the Chef was great. Obviously,
with their wealth, the Bushes have
never had too worry about hunger.



To: rich4eagle who wrote (2121)1/20/2002 10:38:19 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15516
 
[ W ]
BY Molly Ivins
January 15, 2002

"After six years as governor of Texas,
George W. Bush was infuriated by a federal
report ranking Texas No. 1 in hunger.
you'd think the governor would have heard
if there are pockets of hunger in Texas," he
said. Well, Texas had been No. 1 in hunger
since the feds started
keeping count in the 1960s -- it's
a permanent condition here, but the governor
had never seen it. "



........................................

There's something happening here

What it is ain't exactly clear ...

It's time we stop, children, what's that sound

Everybody look what's goin' down. -- Buffalo Springfield

AUSTIN, Texas -- In New York City last year, about 3,000 people died in the attack on the
World Trade Center. In New York City last year, 30,000 people came to the new federal limits
on welfare. Another 19,000 will lose assistance this year. New York has lost 95,000 jobs
since Sept. 11. It lost 75,000 jobs in the year before that. There are now 30,000 people in the
city shelters.

Now find the numbers for your town. In Austin, the only organization that provides help to
women with breast cancer and no health insurance has just cut its staff from 30 to six, with an
equal impact on the help that can be offered. Homelessness is up, shelter populations are up,
food distribution centers and soup kitchens are overwhelmed.

And all this is happening in a cruel synergy of inattention, indifference and the final fraying of
the social safety net. Charities are overwhelmed and suddenly vastly underfunded in large part
as a consequence of the complete focus on the victims of Sept. 11. The federal government,
largely under Republican control, is dealing with war, terrorism and recession. State
governments, with far less attention, are out of money, running into deficits and cutting
services across the board. Texas, with another year to go before the biannual budget battle, is
declaring it can no longer afford its small share of the federal CHIP, children's health insurance
program.

At the beginning of the 1990s, the states raised their taxes, and toward the end of the '90s,
they cut their taxes. But the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities reports, they didn't cut the
same taxes they had raised. "Increases in regressive taxes -- that is, taxes like the sales tax,
which bear most heavily on lower- and moderate-income families -- by and large were never
reversed. Instead, states cut taxes that bear most heavily on upper-income families," reported
Paul Krugman. "The end result was a redistribution of the tax burden away from the haves
toward the have-nots. A family earning, say, $30,000 per year pays considerably more in
states taxes than a family the same constant-dollar income did in 1990, while a family earning
$600,000 per year pays considerably less."


But attention is not being paid. The media, with their One Big Story obsession, just got off the
war in Afghanistan long enough to start reporting Enron. Networks still devote daily
remembrance to the traumas of Sept. 11, effectively obliterating other needs.

And there is something else happening as well. Thirty-eight percent of the tax cut of last April
went to benefit the wealthiest 1 percent of taxpayers. We are at a curious point in our political
debate where anyone who points that out is accused of "fomenting class warfare." Actually,
reporting that the wealthiest 1 percent got 38 percent of the benefits is not fomenting class
warfare -- passing a tax cuts that gives 38 percent to the wealthiest 1 percent is fomenting
class warfare. Likewise, proposing an "economic stimulus package" of which 92 percent of the
benefits are tax cuts for huge corporations is fomenting class warfare.

And this is a country that needs to be a little nervous about class warfare as economic pain
bites in. There have been some stories pointing out that this recession is an oddity in that,
unlike a normal recession, it is hitting all classes -- largely because of the dot.com bust.
Bright college graduates lose jobs and have to move back in with mom and dad. But that's not
the same as the working poor losing their jobs, is it?

Medicaid, the health insurance program for the poor, is in fiscal crisis. According to The New
York Times, overall Medicaid spending went up by 11 percent last year, just as the state face
huge deficits.

We live in a society in which the bad stuff flows downhill, and the people on the bottom are
drowning in it. This is not a story to which the corporate media pay attention. Bad
demographics doesn't attract advertisers -- not upbeat, no patriotism, too busy with Russell
Crowe's love life.

As anyone who is involved in raising money for a non-profit organization these days knows,
the flying bombs that hit on Sept. 11 also landed on every helping organization in America with
a huge impact. Budgets, staff, services, facilities -- all slashed. And at the top, those with the
power, those who make the decisions, are too far away to even see what is happening in the
streets, insulated by multiplying multiples of their incomes.

After six years as governor of Texas, George W. Bush was infuriated by a federal report
ranking Texas No. 1 in hunger. "You'd think the governor would have heard if there are pockets
of hunger in Texas," he said. Well, Texas had been No. 1 in hunger since the feds started
keeping count in the 1960s -- it's a permanent condition here, but the governor had never seen
it.

We better stop, hey, what's that sound

Everybody look what's going down.

To find out more about Molly Ivins and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and
cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2002 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Originally Published on Tuesday January 15, 2002


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