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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JohnM who wrote (7124)9/7/2003 11:45:44 PM
From: Rollcast...  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793790
 
Professor, you still believe you are in a position to issue assignments???

That, coupled with your nonstop condescension towards any writer, columnist, or poster who may disagree with a position the Professor takes...

Never mind.

I will post the file tomorrow (late morning)...

If it dents (a minute chance, for sure) that absolute granite wall of sophistry you worhsip before than it will be worth the effort.

Shouldn't an academic see objectivity as his duty, his highest calling??????



To: JohnM who wrote (7124)9/8/2003 1:44:56 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793790
 
The solution is simple, but impossible without a change is the legislature. You rescind the raises and benefits given in the last three years to Public employees.

Calif. Budget Fix Is Easier Said Than Done

By William Booth
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, September 8, 2003; Page A01

LOS ANGELES -- All the candidates agree: California's finances are a mess. Its checkbook doesn't balance and its credit card is maxed out. What's a new governor to do?

The major contenders to replace Gov. Gray Davis (D), if he is ousted next month, say they can solve the budget crisis. They make it sound easy. It's not. And the pain facing the Golden State is shared by states with budget shortfalls nationwide.

While the Oct. 7 recall election in California has been compared to "The Gong Show," populated with 135 candidates, the reality is that the state with the fifth-largest economy in the world faces serious and immediate challenges, and voters are telling pollsters they want answers.

A review of the challengers' proposals, as judged by seasoned budget-watchers, economists and Sacramento legislators, comes down to this: Either taxes must rise, dramatically for corporations and individuals, or deep cuts must be made in education, corrections, medical care and social services.

What cuts? Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger is mostly mum. In fact, of all the candidates, the front-running Hollywood actor has been most elusive when it comes to specifics. If elected, Schwarzenegger said, he will bring in an outside auditor to go through the books and then he'll decide. That is a stalling tactic, his critics charge. But some of his competitors have not been much more specific.

"Lock all the legislators in a room," says Republican Peter Ueberroth. Go after waste and fraud, says GOP state Sen. Tom McClintock, or privatize state services. Stop building prisons, says columnist Arianna Huffington, an independent.

The reality is that by the time taxes are collected, most of the California budget is already spent because of mandates imposed by federal law and the state's numerous ballot initiatives that require dedicated percentages of spending.

Half the budget goes to education, which all the candidates say they would not touch. Almost a third goes to medical and social welfare spending. Another large slice goes to corrections and prisons -- and the prisons are full because voters approved a three-strikes mandatory sentencing measure a few years ago.

"Sure, there's cuts. But a lot of it is chump change," said John Burton, the leading Democrat in the state Senate. "A lot of this stuff has already been tried or talked about. Some of it makes sense, okay? But a lot of it doesn't. Raise taxes? Sure, but you need a two-thirds majority in the legislature, and as everyone knows, we've tried that this year and failed. Cut services? Okay, tell me what you're going to cut. Fire and police? Roads? Textbooks?"

A spending limit? There is already one on the books, dating to the late 1970s, but it is toothless. A more stringent limit would require an amendment to the state constitution, which must be put before the voters. The earliest that could happen is March.

A revision of Proposition 13, which guarantees that property taxes cannot exceed 1 percent of assessed value? That also requires a vote by the citizens, and messing with it would face extreme resistance in a state as obsessed with real estate values as California.

"It's a cliche, but it's true. There's no silver bullet. Nothing that sounds painless works. All of the easy solutions have been tried," said Jean Ross, executive director of the California Budget Project. "That's not to say there aren't programs that can be cut. Sure. But on order of billions of dollars? That's billions with a capital B."

The electorate is angry. Although Davis has been bashed for his handling of the state's energy crisis and his relentless fundraising, it is the state's budget freefall -- with shortfalls now estimated at $8 billion to $12 billion -- that has raised the hackles of voters and plunged Davis to historic lows in approval ratings.

In Davis's first term in office, California was booming, flush with revenue from capital gains taxes fueled by the Internet and technology bubble. And the state did do a lot for its schools: It cut classroom sizes and hired more teachers.

This summer, it all came crashing down. The legislature cobbled together a budget that neither party liked; it reduced the budget shortfall from $38 billion to a deficit estimated at $8 billion to $12 billion for next year. How did they do it?

"We borrowed a lot of money," said Kim Rueben, a public finance economist with the Public Policy Institute of California. Specifically, the legislators took out billions of dollars in bonds; they postponed payments and salary raises; they froze cost-of-living increases; they took one-time federal allocations and spent them; and Davis triggered a tripling of the state car tax.

"The state has a problem, and the problem is long-term and structural," said John Ellwood, professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley. "The basic reason we're in trouble is not the economy. The problem is that we over-rely on income taxes, on capital gains and stock options. So when the bubble burst, we're in the hole."

California is much more reliant on income taxes than property taxes. In 2000, the states overall relied on income taxes for 24 percent of revenue. In California, that figure is 33 percent. Other states, on average, got 29 percent of their revenue from property taxes; California got 22 percent.

The state budget is almost $100 billion. "And as you can see, Californians are getting some $10 billion more in services than they're paying for. It's phony," Ellwood said.

How to balance the books? All the major candidates to replace Davis, including tax hawks such as McClintock and more liberal tax supporters such as Huffington and Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante (D), say they would repeal the car tax.

But that would create an additional $4 billion shortfall. Add that to the $8 billion to $12 billion already carried over, and the new governor would have to present a budget in early January that somehow would replace $12 billion to $16 billion.

"So they're going to have to find the cuts, and the cuts get real, and the cuts get harder to find, and what gets cut will cause pain," Rueben said. "That, of course, and taxes."

So what to tax? Cigarettes, Bustamante and several other candidates say. But economists say there is a limit to what that will bring in. They point to New York, where the high tax on nicotine has spurred a flourishing black market. Alcohol? Hard to do in a state famed for the vineyards of Napa and Sonoma.

Ueberroth, a former Major League Baseball commissioner, proposed a tax amnesty and initially said that billions could be raised if tax cheats were allowed to pay off their debt penalty-free. But the problem is that few scofflaws will pay their state taxes if they are still facing tax liabilities from their presumably much larger federal debts. And the Internal Revenue Service is not offering any help.

Bustamante, Huffington and the Green Party's Peter Camejo advocate raising income taxes for the wealthy -- and they have projected revenue of $3 billion or more.

There is, economists say, money to be made off the rich. California has a progressive income tax structure -- the wealthiest 5 percent pay almost 70 percent of the income taxes; the bottom 40 percent of working families pay less than 1 percent. But when the total tax burden is examined -- for income, property and sales taxes -- the rich actually fare well in California. The bottom 20 percent pays 11 percent; the top 1 percent pays 7 percent.

Bustamante, Huffington and Camejo want the rich to pay more; Camejo wants tax levels for the wealthy to rise to 14 percent of their income.

There are two main problems when it comes to taxing the rich, economists say. First, any tax increase must pass by a two-thirds vote of the legislature, which is dominated by Democrats but has enough Republicans to block it. And then there is what one economist called "the Nevada option."

Meaning: "There is nothing as mobile as rich people and their money," said James L. Brulte, the leading Republican in the state Senate. "You can get an increase in revenues but for how long? Take Tiger Woods. He grew up in California. He gets a $40 million contract from Nike and what does he do? He moves to Florida" -- like Nevada, a state without income taxes.

Another proposal is to increase taxes on corporations, by reassessing commercial property values (property is assessed in California only when it is sold) and by tightening corporate tax incentives.

There is money to be had, everyone agrees, in regularly assessing commercial property taxes. One leading GOP officeholder in Sacramento said this makes sense. It is politically tough, though. The defenders of Proposition 13 rally around any meddling with the property tax codes -- but a strong governor facing a budget crisis? It's doable. But Ueberroth and McClintock say anything that further hurts the business climate in California is "a job killer."

As for closing "loopholes," there is abuse in the system, as Huffington and Camejo have highlighted. "But the problem," said Ross of the California Budget Project, "is that one person's loophole is another person's incentive to create jobs and stimulate the economy."

And finally, there is Native American gambling. Larry Flynt, running for governor as "the porn peddler who cares," says there's gold in those slot machines. The California gambling tribes pay far less than their counterparts in Las Vegas and Atlantic City. But to get more money from the tribes, they have to renegotiate their contracts, and most believe the Native Americans are going to wait and see who is governor in October, a friend or a foe.

© 2003 The Washington Post Company



To: JohnM who wrote (7124)9/8/2003 2:42:16 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793790
 
ABC played "BBC" during the Iraqi Liberation, and their ratings tanked. Now this survey proves the bias.

The Reportage Report
Survey Assesses 'Tone' of Iraq Coverage

By Howard Kurtz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, September 8, 2003; Page C01

The conventional wisdom is that the media were aggressively skeptical during the war in Iraq, warning darkly of a possible quagmire even as U.S. forces rolled to victory. At other times, critics saw star-spangled networks rallying around the flag.

But a new study says the network coverage was -- if we can use this phrase without fear of being sued -- fair and balanced.

Fox News, widely viewed as an unabashed cheerleader for the Bush administration, was not the most positive network during those weeks of combat, according to the study. CBS's coverage of the so-called "Showdown With Saddam" was more positive than Fox's, while ABC, by a substantial margin, was the most negative on the war.

"If you're expecting to get the same tone of news no matter where you go, you're in for a surprise," says Robert Lichter, president of the Center for Media and Public Affairs, which conducted the study. "It's not a matter of what the reporters say; it's the sources they put on the air."

The group examined 1,131 stories on the ABC, CBS and NBC evening newscasts and Fox's "Special Report With Brit Hume" from March 19 to the fall of Tikrit on April 14. CNN and MSNBC were not included for budgetary reasons.

On average, on-air comments on the networks -- from anchors, reporters and those interviewed -- were half positive and half negative.

ABC's "World News Tonight" "was the most antiwar," the report says, with 34 percent of the on-air comments rated positive. "NBC Nightly News" was 53 percent positive, Fox's "Special Report" was 60 percent positive, and the "CBS Evening News" 74 percent positive.

Paul Slavin, executive producer of the ABC newscast, says: "I don't know how they characterize 'negative.' If we show antiwar demonstrations, is that negative? Is that neutral? . . . In some cases people were tremendously supportive of the administration but maybe questioning certain tactical decisions." Besides, he says, "ABC, possibly more than some of the others, foreshadowed some of the trouble we're finding in Iraq at this point."

"Special Report" aired the least combat footage and 47 percent fewer images of civilian casualties. Lichter recused himself from the research because he is a paid Fox commentator.

Brit Hume, Fox's Washington managing editor, says that "the war, up to the point of the collapse of Saddam's regime, was pretty successful. There were points where other media fell into the trap of reporting negative scenarios. That was a journalistic error, in my opinion."

CBS spokeswoman Sandy Genelius says that content studies "are always highly subjective. . . . We believe our coverage was fair and represents an accurate picture of the facts as well as a responsible cross section of public opinion."

Seventy percent of the evaluations of the military's performance were positive on the four programs, with Fox leading the pack. On "Special Report," columnist Michael Barone pronounced the war "the most amazing military success in human history." On CBS, Dan Rather said: "Facts on the ground indicate that overall, from a military standpoint, the invasion continues to go well."

Was the United States justified in invading Iraq? Eighty percent of those addressing the question on ABC were against the war, compared with 54 percent of those on NBC, 39 percent of those on Fox and 5 percent of those on CBS.

Decisions on which interviews to air were crucial. ABC showed an Iraqi man saying: "Saddam Hussein is better than George Bush. Saddam would never allow any of this looting." CBS quoted a Marine as saying the Iraqis were "killing their own people and trying to blame a lot of it on the U.S. and the British."

If someone gets around to analyzing the postwar reporting, there is little doubt, in light of mounting U.S. casualties, that the coverage would be highly negative.

Footnote: On Aug. 26, Hume reported that "U.S. soldiers have less of a chance of dying from all causes in Iraq than citizens have of being murdered in California, which is roughly the same geographical size." California has 6.6 murders a day, he said; U.S. troops have been incurring about 1.7 deaths a day. The problem: California has 34 million people, but there are 145,000 U.S. soldiers in Iraq. "Admittedly it was a crude comparison, but it was illustrative of something," Hume says.
High-Level Endorsements

In exclusive interviews carried by the Washington Times, George Washington says he is "deeply moved" to learn "the identity of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon" and that he is "the Messiah." Thomas Jefferson urges Americans to "follow the teachings of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon." Abraham Lincoln calls Moon "the True Parent of humanity," while John F. Kennedy says, "All of humankind and the U.N. . . . have to accept his leadership and guidance."

The forum for the 36 late presidents -- "from the vantage point of heaven" -- was a two-page ad last week taken out by Moon's Unification Church, whose members own the paper. This has caused some cringing at the Times, which usually limits itself to interviewing politicians who are alive.

Spokeswoman Melissa Hopkins says that as with any advertiser, "our general principle is allowing people to exercise their freedom of speech." Managing Editor Francis Coombs says he ignores the ads because "I'm responsible for news content."

The Rev. Phillip Schanker, a church spokesman, says he called "the advertising department, asked what their rates are, paid those rates like anybody else. We did not work any inside deal." He says the church -- which has claimed to have received messages from the likes of Jesus, Buddha, Karl Marx and Joseph Stalin -- hopes to place such ads in other newspapers.
The Blair Chronicles

Jayson Blair is coming to a television screen near you.

Hollywood filmmaker John Maas is finalizing a deal with Showtime for a TV movie about the disgraced New York Times reporter. Maas, who has bought the rights to a Newsweek profile by Seth Mnookin, says he hopes to get Blair's cooperation but will try to produce an accurate film even without it.

"For a story on a guy whose veracity has to be questioned, you have to be careful about your own," he says. "I don't want to do a 'Jayson Blair' on my own Jayson Blair story."

Maas says the tale doesn't have broad enough appeal to be a broadcast network movie, but is "a great human-interest story" about "why somebody in this position would do something like this."
Power Picture

Some White House reporters who accompanied George Bush to a military base in California are grumbling about having to wear press tags emblazoned with a picture of the president in a flight suit from his aircraft-carrier landing.

"The press advance office tries to include a small picture that reflects the theme of the event," says spokesman Scott McClellan. He says the "nice keepsake" shouldn't make any scribe feel like "a propagandist for the president."

© 2003 The Washington Post Company



To: JohnM who wrote (7124)9/8/2003 3:07:11 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793790
 
Good article by Ajami in "Foreign Policy"

foreignpolicy.com

The Falseness of Anti-Americanism
by Fouad Ajami

Pollsters report rising anti-Americanism worldwide. The United States, they imply, squandered global sympathy after the September 11 terrorist attacks through its arrogant unilateralism. In truth, there was never any sympathy to squander. Anti-Americanism was already entrenched in the world's psyche, a backlash against a nation that comes bearing modernism to those who want it but who also fear and despise it.

By Fouad Ajami

"America is everywhere," Italian novelist Ignazio Silone once observed. It is in Karachi and Paris, in Jakarta and Brussels. An idea of it, a fantasy of it, hovers over distant lands. And everywhere there is also an obligatory anti-Americanism, a cover and an apology for the spell the United States casts over distant peoples and places. In the burning grounds of the Muslim world and on its periphery, U.S. embassies and their fate in recent years bear witness to a duality of the United States as Satan and redeemer. The embassies targeted by the masters of terror and by the diehards are besieged by visa-seekers dreaming of the golden, seductive country. If only the crowd in Tehran offering itstired rhythmic chant "marg bar amrika" ("death to America") really meant it! It is of visas and green cards and houses with lawns and of the glamorous world of Los Angeles, far away from the mullahs and their cultural tyranny, that the crowd really dreams. The frenzy with which radical Islamists battle against deportation orders from U.S. soil? dreading the prospect of returning to Amman and Beirut and Cairo? reveals the lie of anti-Americanism that blows through Muslim lands.

The world rails against the United States, yet embraces its protection, its gossip, and its hipness. Tune into a talk show on the stridently anti-American satellite channel Al-Jazeera, and you'll behold a parody of American ways and techniques unfolding on the television screen. That reporter in the flak jacket, irreverent and cool against the Kabul or Baghdad background, borrows a form perfected in the country whose sins and follies that reporter has come to chronicle.

In Doha, Qatar, Sheik Yusuf al-Qaradawi, arguably Sunni Islam's most influential cleric, at Omar ibn al-Khattab Mosque, a short distance away from the headquarters of the U.S. Central Command, delivers a khutba, a Friday sermon. The date is June 13, 2003. The cleric's big theme of the day is the arrogance of the United States and the cruelty of the war it unleashed on Iraq. This cleric, Egyptian born, political to his fingertips, and in full mastery of his craft and of the sensibility of his followers, is particularly agitated in his sermon. Surgery and a period of recovery have kept him away from his pulpit for three months, during which time there has been a big war in the Arab world that toppled Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq with stunning speed and effectiveness. The United States was "acting like a god on earth," al-Qaradawi told the faithful. In Iraq, the United States had appointed itself judge and jury. The invading power may have used the language of liberation and enlightenment, but this invasion of Iraq was a 21st-century version of what had befallen Baghdad in the middle years of the 13th century, in 1258 to be exact, when Baghdad, the city of learning and culture, was sacked by the Mongols.

The preacher had his themes, but a great deal of the United States had gone into the preacher's art: Consider his Web site, Qaradawi.net, where the faithful can click and read his fatwas (religious edicts)? the Arabic interwoven with html text? about all matters of modern life, from living in non-Islamic lands to the permissibility of buying houses on mortgage to the follies of Arab rulers who have surrendered to U.S. power. Or what about his way with television? He is a star of the medium, and Al-Jazeera carried an immensely popular program of his. That art form owes a debt, no doubt, to the American "televangelists," as nothing in the sheik's traditional education at Al Azhar University in Cairo prepared him for this wired, portable religion. And then there are the preacher's children: One of his daughters had made her way to the University of Texas where she received a master's degree in biology, a son had earned a Ph.D. from the University of Central Florida in Orlando, and yet another son had embarked on that quintessential American degree, an MBA at the American University in Cairo. Al-Qaradawi embodies anti-Americanism as the flip side of Americanization.

A NEW ORTHODOXY
Of late, pollsters have come bearing news and numbers of anti-Americanism the world over. The reports are one dimensional and filled with panic. This past June, the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press published a survey of public opinion in 20 countries and the Palestinian territories that indicated a growing animus toward the United States. In the same month, the BBC came forth with a similar survey that included 10 countries and the United States. On the surface of it, anti-Americanism is a river overflowing its banks. In Indonesia, the United States is deemed more dangerous than al Qaeda. In Jordan, Russia, South Korea, and Brazil, the United States is thought to be more dangerous than Iran, the "rogue state" of the mullahs.

There is no need to go so far away from home only to count the cats in Zanzibar. These responses to the United States are neither surprising nor profound. The pollsters, and those who have been brandishing their findings, see in these results some verdict on the United States itself? and on the performance abroad of the Bush presidency? but the findings could be read as a crude, admittedly limited, measure of the foul temper in some unsettled places. The pollsters have flaunted spreadsheets to legitimize a popular legend: It is not Americans that people abroad hate, but the United States! Yet it was Americans who fell to terrorism on September 11, 2001, and it is of Americans and their deeds, and the kind of social and political order they maintain, that sordid tales are told in Karachi and Athens and Cairo and Paris. You can't profess kindness toward Americans while attributing the darkest of motives to their homeland.

The Pew pollsters ignored Greece, where hatred of the United States is now a defining feature of political life. The United States offended Greece by rescuing Bosnians and Kosovars. Then, the same Greeks who hailed the Serbian conquest of Srebrenica in 1995 and the mass slaughter of the Muslims there were quick to summon up outrage over the U.S. military campaign in Iraq. In one Greek public opinion survey, Americans were ranked among Albanians, Gypsies, and Turks as the most despised peoples.

Takis Michas, a courageous Greek writer with an eye for his country's temperament, traces this new anti-Americanism to the Orthodox Church itself. A narrative of virtuous and embattled solitude and alienation from Western Christendom has always been integral to the Greek psyche; a fusion of church and nation is natural to the Greek worldview. In the 1990s, the Yugoslav wars gave this sentiment a free run. The church sanctioned and fed the belief that the United States was Satan, bent on destroying the "True Faith," Michas explains, and shoring up Turkey and the Muslims in the Balkans. A neo-Orthodox ideology took hold, slicing through faith and simplifying history. Where the Balkan churches? be they the Bulgars or the Serbs? had been formed in rebellion against the hegemony of the Greek priesthood, the new history made a fetish of the fidelity of Greece to its Orthodox "brethren." Greek paramilitary units fought alongside Bosnian Serbs as part of the Drina Corps under the command of indicted war criminal Gen. Ratko Mladic. The Greek flag was hoisted over the ruins of Srebenica's Orthodox church when the doomed city fell. Serbian war crimes elicited no sense of outrage in Greece; quite to the contrary, sympathy for Serbia and the identification with its war aims and methods were limitless.

Beyond the Yugoslav wars, the neo-Orthodox worldview sanctified the ethnonationalism of Greece, spinning a narrative of Hellenic persecution at the hands of the United States as the standard-bearer of the West. Greece is part of NATO and of the European Union (EU), but an old schism? that of Eastern Orthodoxy's claim against the Latin world? has greater power and a deeper resonance. In the banal narrative of Greek anti-Americanism, this animosity emerges from U.S. support for the junta that reigned over the country from 1967 to 1974. This deeper fury enables the aggrieved to glide over the role the United States played in the defense and rehabilitation of Greece after World War II. Furthermore, it enables them to overlook the lifeline that migration offered to untold numbers of Greeks who are among the United States' most prosperous communities.

Greece loves the idea of its "Westernness"? a place and a culture where the West ends, and some other alien world (Islam) begins. But the political culture of religious nationalism has isolated Greece from the wider currents of Western liberalism. What little modern veneer is used to dress up Greece's anti-Americanism is a pretense. The malady here is, paradoxically, a Greek variant of what plays out in the world of Islam: a belligerent political culture sharpening faith as a political weapon, an abdication of political responsibility for one's own world, and a search for foreign "devils."

Lest they be trumped by their hated Greek rivals, the Turks now give voice to the same anti-Americanism. It is a peculiar sentiment among the Turks, given their pragmatism. They are not prone to the cluster of grievances that empower anti-Americanism in France or among the intelligentsia of the developing world. In the 1920s, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk gave Turkey a dream of modernity and self-help by pointing his country westward, distancing it from the Arab-Muslim lands to its south and east. But the secular, modernist dream in Turkey has fractured, and oddly, anti-Americanism blows through the cracks from the Arab lands and from Brussels and Berlin.

The fury of the Turkish protests against the United States in the months prior to the war in Iraq exhibited a pathology all its own. It was, at times, nature imitating art: The protesters in the streets burned American flags in the apparent hope that Europeans (real Europeans, that is) would finally take Turkey and the Turks into the fold. The U.S. presence had been benign in Turkish lands, and Americans had been Turkey's staunchest advocates for coveted membership in the EU. But suddenly this relationship that served Turkey so well was no longer good enough. As the "soft" Islamists (there is no such thing, we ought to understand by now) revolted against Pax Americana, the secularists averted their gaze and let stand this new anti-Americanism. The pollsters calling on the Turks found a people in distress, their economy on the ropes, and their polity in an unfamiliar world beyond the simple certainties of Kemalism, yet without new political tools and compass. No dosage of anti-Americanism, the Turks will soon realize, will take Turkey past the gatekeepers of Europe.

WE WERE ALL AMERICANS
The introduction of the Pew report sets the tone for the entire study. The war in Iraq, it argues,"has widened the rift between Americans and Western Europeans" and "further inflamed the Muslim world." The implications are clear: The United States was better off before Bush's "unilateralism." The United States, in its hubris, summoned up this anti-Americanism. Those are the political usages of this new survey.

But these sentiments have long prevailed in Jordan, Egypt, and France. During the 1990s, no one said good things about the United States in Egypt. It was then that the Islamist children of Egypt took to the road, to Hamburg and Kandahar, to hatch a horrific conspiracy against the United States. And it was in the 1990s, during the fabled stock market run, when the prophets of globalization preached the triumph of the U.S. economic model over the protected versions of the market in places such as France, when anti-Americanism became the uncontested ideology of French public life. Americans were barbarous, a threat to French cuisine and their beloved language. U.S. pension funds were acquiring their assets and Wall Street speculators were raiding their savings. The United States incarcerated far too many people and executed too many criminals. All these views thrived during a decade when Americans are now told they were loved and uncontested on foreign shores.

Much has been made of the sympathy that the French expressed for the United States immediately after the September 11 attacks, as embodied by the famous editorial of Le Monde's publisher Jean-Marie Colombani, "Nous Sommes Tous Américains" ("We are all Americans"). And much has been made of the speed with which the United States presumably squandered that sympathy in the months that followed. But even Colombani's column, written on so searing a day, was not the unalloyed message of sympathy suggested by the title. Even on that very day, Colombani wrote of the United States reaping the whirlwind of its "cynicism"; he recycled the hackneyed charge that Osama bin Laden had been created and nurtured by U.S. intelligence agencies.

Colombani quickly retracted what little sympathy he had expressed when, in December of 2001, he was back with an open letter to "our American friends" and soon thereafter with a short book, Tous Américains? le monde après le 11 septembre 2001 (All Americans? The World After September 11, 2001). By now the sympathy had drained, and the tone was one of belligerent judgment and disapproval. There was nothing to admire in Colombani's United States, which had run roughshod in the world and had been indifferent to the rule of law. Colombani described the U.S. republic as a fundamentalist Christian enterprise, its magistrates too deeply attached to the death penalty, its police cruel to its black population. A republic of this sort could not in good conscience undertake a campaign against Islamism. One can't, Colombani writes, battle the Taliban while trying to introduce prayers in one's own schools; one can't strive to reform Saudi Arabia while refusing to teach Darwinism in the schools of the Bible Belt; and one can't denounce the demands of the sharia (Islamic law) while refusing to outlaw the death penalty. Doubtless, he adds, the United States can't do battle with the Taliban before doing battle against the bigotry that ravages the depths of the United States itself. The United States had not squandered Colombani's sympathy; he never had that sympathy in the first place.

Colombani was hardly alone in the French intellectual class in his enmity toward the United States. On November 3, 2001, in Le Monde, the writer and pundit Jean Baudrillard permitted himself a thought of stunning cynicism. He saw the perpetrators of September 11 acting out his own dreams and the dreams of others like him. He gave those attacks a sort of universal warrant: "How we have dreamt of this event," he wrote, "how all the world without exception dreamt of this event, for no one can avoid dreaming of the destruction of a power that has become hegemonic . . . . It is they who acted, but we who wanted the deed." Casting caution and false sympathy aside, Baudrillard saw the terrible attacks on the United States as an "object of desire." The terrorists had been able to draw on a "deep complicity," knowing perfectly well that they were acting out the hidden yearnings of others oppressed by the United States' order and power. To him, morality of the U.S. variety is a sham, and the terrorism directed against it is a legitimate response to the inequities of "globalization."

In his country's intellectual landscape, Baudrillard was no loner. A struggle had raged throughout the 1990s, pitting U.S.-led globalization (with its low government expenditures, a "cheap" and merciless Wall Street-Treasury Department axis keen on greater discipline in the market, and relatively long working hours on the part of labor) against France's protectionist political economy. The primacy the United States assigned to liberty waged a pitched battle against the French commitment to equity.

To maintain France's sympathy, and that of Le Monde, the United States would have had to turn the other cheek to the murderers of al Qaeda, spare the Taliban, and engage the Muslim world in some high civilizational dialogue. But who needs high approval ratings in Marseille? Envy of U.S. power, and of the United States' universalism, is the ruling passion of French intellectual life. It is not "mostly Bush" that turned France against the United States. The former Socialist foreign minister, Hubert Védrine, was given to the same anti-Americanism that moves his successor, the bombastic and vain Dominique de Villepin. It was Védrine, it should be recalled, who in the late 1990s had dubbed the United States a "hyperpower." He had done so before the war on terrorism, before the war on Iraq. He had done it against the background of an international order more concerned with economics and markets than with military power. In contrast to his successor, Védrine at least had the honesty to acknowledge that there was nothing unusual about the way the United States wielded its power abroad, or about France's response to that primacy. France, too, he observed, might have been equally overbearing if it possessed the United States' weight and assets.

His successor gave France's resentment highly moral claims. Villepin appeared evasive, at one point, on whether he wished to see a U.S. or an Iraqi victory in the standoff between Saddam Hussein's regime and the United States. Anti-Americanism indulges France's fantasy of past greatness and splendor and gives France's unwanted Muslim children a claim on the political life of a country that knows not what to do with them.

THE BURDEN OF MODERNITY
To come bearing modernism to those who want it but who rail against it at the same time, to represent and embody so much of what the world yearns for and fears? that is the American burden. The United States lends itself to contradictory interpretations. To the Europeans, and to the French in particular, who are enamored of their laïcisme (secularism), the United States is unduly religious, almost embarrassingly so, its culture suffused with sacred symbolism. In the Islamic world, the burden is precisely the opposite: There, the United States scandalizes the devout, its message represents nothing short of an affront to the pious and a temptation to the gullible and the impressionable young. According to the June BBC survey, 78 percent of French polled identified the United States as a "religious" country, while only 10 percent of Jordanians endowed it with that label. Religious to the secularists, faithless to the devout? such is the way the United States is seen in foreign lands.

So many populations have the United States under their skin. Their rage is oddly derived from that very same attraction. Consider the Saudi realm, a place where anti-Americanism is fierce. The United States helped invent the modern Saudi world. The Arabian American Oil Company? for all practical purposes a state within a state? pulled the desert enclave out of its insularity, gave it skills, and ushered it into the 20th century. Deep inside the anti-Americanism of today's Saudi Arabia, an observer can easily discern the dependence of the Saudi elite on their U.S. connection. It is in the image of the United States' suburbs and urban sprawl that Saudi cities are designed. It is on the campuses of Harvard, Princeton, and Stanford that the ruling elite are formed and educated.

After September 11, 2001, the Saudi elite panicked that their ties to the United States might be shattered and that their world would be consigned to what they have at home. Fragments of the United States have been eagerly embraced by an influential segment of Saudi society. For many, the United States was what they encountered when they were free from home and family and age-old prohibitions. Today, an outing in Riyadh is less a journey to the desert than to the mall and to Starbucks.
An academic in Riyadh, in the midst of an anti-American tirade about all policies American, was keen to let me know that his young son, born in the United States, had suddenly declared he no longer wanted to patronize McDonald's because of the United States' support of Israel. The message was plaintive and unpersuasive; the resolve behind that "boycott" was sure to crack. A culture that casts so long a shadow is fated to be emulated and resented at the same time. The United States is destined to be in the politics? and imagination? of strangers even when the country (accurately) believes it is not implicated in the affairs of other lands.

In a hauntingly astute set of remarks made to the New Yorker in the days that followed the terrorism of September 11, the Egyptian playwright Ali Salem? a free spirit at odds with the intellectual class in his country and a maverick who journeyed to Israel and wrote of his time there and of his acceptance of that country? went to the heart of the anti-American phenomenon. He was thinking of his own country's reaction to the United States, no doubt, but what he says clearly goes beyond Egypt:

People say that Americans are arrogant, but it's not true. Americans enjoy life and they are proud of their lives, and they are boastful of their wonderful inventions that have made life so much easier and more convenient. It's very difficult to understand the machinery of hatred, because you wind up resorting to logic, but trying to understand this with logic is like measuring distance in kilograms?.These are people who are envious. To them, life is an unbearable burden. Modernism is the only way out. But modernism is frightening. It means we have to compete. It means we can't explain everything away with conspiracy theories. Bernard Shaw said it best, you know. In the preface to 'St. Joan,' he said Joan of Arc was burned not for any reason except that she was talented. Talent gives rise to jealousy in the hearts of the untalented.

This kind of envy cannot be attenuated. Jordanians, for instance, cannot be talked out of their anti-Americanism. In the BBC survey, 71 percent of Jordanians thought the United States was more dangerous to the world than al Qaeda. But Jordan has been the rare political and economic recipient of a U.S. free trade agreement, a privilege the United States shares only with a handful of nations. A new monarch, King Abdullah II, came to power, and the free trade agreement was an investment that Pax Americana made in his reign and in the moderation of his regime. But this bargain with the Hashemite dynasty has not swayed the intellectual class, nor has it made headway among the Jordanian masses. On Iraq and on matters Palestinian, for more than a generation now, Jordanians have not had a kind thing to say about the United States. In the scheme of Jordan's neighborhood, the realm is benign and forgiving, but the political life is restrictive and tight. When talking about the United States, Jordanians have often been talking to their rulers, expressing their dissatisfaction with the quality of the country's public life and economic performance. A pollster venturing to Jordan must understand the country's temper, hemmed in by poverty and overshadowed by more resourceful powers all around it: Iraq to the east, Israel to the west, and Syria and Saudi Arabia over the horizon. A sense of disinheritance has always hung over Jordan. The trinity of God, country, and king puts much of the political life of the land beyond scrutiny and discussion. The anti-Americanism emanates from, and merges with, this political condition.

With modernism come the Jews. They have been its bearers and beneficiaries, and they have paid dearly for it. They have been taxed with cosmopolitanism: The historian Isaac Deutscher had it right when he said that other people have roots, but the Jews have legs. Today the Jews have a singular role in U.S. public life and culture, and anti-Americanism is tethered to anti-Semitism. In the Islamic world, and in some European circles as well, U.S. power is seen as the handmaiden of Jewish influence. Witness, for instance, the London-based Arab media's obsession with the presumed ascendancy of the neoconservatives? such as former chairman of the Defense Policy Board Richard Perle and Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz? in the making of U.S. foreign policy. The neocons had been there for the rescue of the (Muslim) Bosnians and Kosovars, but the reactionaries in Muslim lands had not taken notice of that. Left to itself, the United States would be fair-minded, this Arab commentary maintains, and it would arrive at a balanced approach to the Arab-Islamic world. This narrative is nothing less than a modernized version of the worldview of that infamous forgery, The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion. But it is put forth by men and women who insist on their oneness with the modern world.

A century ago, in a short-story called "Youth," the great British author Joseph Conrad captured in his incomparable way the disturbance that is heard when a modern world pushes against older cultures and disturbs their peace. In the telling, Marlowe, Conrad's literary double and voice, speaks of the frenzy of coming upon and disturbing the East. "And then, before I could open my lips, the East spoke to me, but it was in a Western voice. A torrent of words was poured into the enigmatical, the fateful silence; outlandish, angry words mixed with words and even whole sentences of good English, less strange but even more surprising. The voice swore and cursed violently; it riddled the solemn peace of the bay by a volley of abuse. It began by calling me Pig . . . ."

Today, the United States carries the disturbance of the modern to older places? to the east and to the intermediate zones in Europe. There is energy in the United States, and there is force. And there is resistance and resentment? and emulation? in older places affixed on the delicate balancing act of a younger United States not yet content to make its peace with traditional pains and limitations and tyrannies. That sensitive French interpreter of his country, Dominique Moïsi, recently told of a simple countryman of his who was wistful when Saddam Hussein's statue fell on April 9 in Baghdad's Firdos Square. France opposed this war, but this Frenchman expressed a sense of diminishment that his country had sat out this stirring story of political liberation. A society like France with a revolutionary history should have had a hand in toppling the tyranny in Baghdad, but it didn't. Instead, a cable attached to a U.S. tank had pulled down the statue, to the delirium of the crowd. The new history being made was a distinctly American (and British) creation. It was soldiers from Burlington, Vermont, and Linden, New Jersey, and Bon Aqua, Tennessee? I single out those towns because they are the hometowns of three soldiers who were killed in the Iraq war? who raced through the desert making this new history and paying for it.

The United States need not worry about hearts and minds in foreign lands. If Germans wish to use anti-Americanism to absolve themselves and their parents of the great crimes of World War II, they will do it regardless of what the United States says and does. If Muslims truly believe that their long winter of decline is the fault of the United States, no campaign of public diplomacy shall deliver them from that incoherence. In the age of Pax Americana, it is written, fated, or maktoob (as the Arabs would say) that the plotters and preachers shall rail against the United States? in whole sentences of good American slang.

Fouad Ajami is the Majid Khadduri professor at Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies and a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report.



To: JohnM who wrote (7124)9/8/2003 3:18:57 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793790
 
I know this area, the kids, and the Parents. These Asian parents are tough. The review shows the extremes, but the kids are happy the parents were this way when they are 40.

Michael Dirda
'School of Dreams: Making the Grade at a Top American High School' by Edward Humes

By Michael Dirda

Sunday, September 7, 2003; Page BW15

SCHOOL OF DREAMS
Making the Grade at a Top American High School
By Edward Humes
Harcourt. 370 pp. $25

Nearly 80 percent of the students at Whitney High School, in Cerritos, Calif., are Asian- or Filipino-American. Twelve percent are white; the small remainder Hispanic- and African-American. People move to the Cerritos area so that their children can attend this school -- provided their sixth-graders can pass the entrance exams. And by move I don't mean from Los Angeles: They relocate from India, from Korea. Whitney is the top-rated public high school in California, arguably in the nation.

Its students are formidable. Take Cecilia, who regards herself as "really pretty stupid." At Whitney this doesn't mean a C- grade point average. As a guidance counselor reminds the senior, "You're a commended National Merit Scholar. A California Governor's Scholar. An AP Scholar. Your SAT scores are a combined 1450. You took three AP tests and got a perfect five on each. Your GPA is 3.8. You volunteer at a nursing home, you're in a Model United Nations, you were part of the design team that won the NASA Space Set award last year for Whitney. You write fantasy and science fiction. And you are in advanced art this year. Where do you get this drive?"

Cecilia answers by insisting she's nothing special. "I'm really pretty average. I actually have to study for my grades, unlike some of my friends, who seem to do all this effortlessly. I have to pull all nighters." Cecilia admits that she's "okay" at art. In reality, the young woman draws "incredible anime and pointillist pictures."

You would think parents would be proud of such a child. Yes and no. In fact, Cecilia's mother and father want her to go to Harvard, Stanford or U.C. Berkeley. When she spoke to them about becoming an artist, they threw her portfolio into the street, then made her wait half an hour while cars ran over an entire year's work before they allowed her to retrieve the drawings and paintings. Similarly, when one of her classmates, Angela, asked for a sewing machine to work on an art project, her parents subjected the sensitive girl to ridicule, then reminded her that they hadn't sacrificed so that she could become a "seamstress."

Humes reveals a stressed and often desperate world -- one where even the parents feel they will die if their kid isn't accepted by MIT or UCLA: Anyplace else doesn't even count. And that pressure starts early. Each Whitney class -- 7th to 12th grade -- accepts about 150 students, and people will do whatever it takes for their children to be invited to enroll in the elite school. One father told Bob Beall, the program's founding principal, "I'm very wealthy. I"ll be happy to make a large donation once my son is admitted. What amount would you like?" Another disappointed parent, a mother, took a different tack: " 'I'd do anything to get my daughter into Whitney,' she said, closing Beall's office door, leaning close to him, and staring meaningfully into his eyes. 'Anything.' "

Nearly everyone associated with Whitney is driven. Students have virtually no social lives, they sign up to retake their SATs immediately when they score less than 1500, they fuel their days and nights on Starbucks coffee. The only drug problem around Whitney is speed -- a drug that allows its user to work round the clock.

Why, though, should the rest of us care about these whiz kids, their grotesquely ambitious parents or this academy for overachievers? For three good reasons.

First, the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Edward Humes describes this high-school world brilliantly. Throughout, he moves back and forth among a dozen or so troubled, smart and surprisingly innocent young people, offering anecdotes, vignettes, even examples of their writing. One comes to know and like these kids. At the same time, he mixes in scenes with Whitney's savvy current principal, its hard-working guidance counselors and some of its superb faculty. In particular, he highlights the former actor Rod Ziolkowski, who teaches physics with games and challenges; the strict and traditional history intructor, Dave Bohannon, who disdains computers and announces that they'll have to pry the pencils and three by five cards from his cold, dead fingers; and the devoted Debra Agrums, who spends thousands of dollars of her own money on paints and drawing supplies while fighting for the arts in a school where Advanced Calculus rules. All three teachers are adored by their students.

Humes also builds the story of a year at Whitney (2001-2002) into a series of mini-dramas -- the impact of Sept. 11, the big physics project; the trauma of writing the personal essay for college (Humes works as a coach); prepping for the standardized tests; waiting for admissions results; the hilarious visit of Neil Bush, promoting a program called Ignite!

Second, Humes explains -- in a long flashback -- how Bob Beall, largely through force of will, transformed Whitney from a vocational high school into this intellectual powerhouse, and how Thomas Brock continues that tradition. He also explains the pressures Whitney is under -- the accusations of elitism and racism, of cherry-picking the best students from other schools, the problematic need to stay number one. Along the way, he provides a concise history of American education, traces the dubious impact of standardized testing, explains why and how gifted students sometimes cheat to stay on top, and offers some useful ideas -- drawn from his research as well as his observations -- on how to improve our current schools. He rightly disdains most government programs and reports, which he judges as little more than smoke and mirrors. Instead, on his last page Humes offers a simple prescription for curing many of our educational ills:

"The average American child spends 78 minutes a week reading, 102 minutes a week on homework and study, and 12 hours a week watching television. . . . If households simply reversed the status quo, reducing kids television watching to 78 minutes and boosting their reading to 12 hours a week, it would do more to improve academic achievement in America than a thousand high-stakes tests and a century of No Child Left Behind measures. With such a switch in priorities, nearly every school could be a Whitney High. But achieving such a sea change would take a consciousness-shifting campaign of almost unprecedented magnitude." To say the least. Still, he's absolutely right.

Third, and not least, School of Dreams reveals, repeatedly, just how clueless, how heartless, how sheerly awful parents can be. Christine's mother and father berate her mercilessly to become a doctor -- anything else and the thankless girl will simply break their hearts. Another student nearly kills himself on crystal meth, just so he can keep studying -- and his parents never have an inkling about what's going on. Every week irate fathers or mothers barge angrily into the main office to demand that their child's test grade be raised -- usually to an A, even if the poor kid's earned a C at best. Alas, only the childless will fail to recognize their own worst selves.

But our schools themselves can be equally horrible: For hasn't the whole system grown increasingly crass? We have forgotten that the essence of education lies in floundering about, in trying out various daydreams, in failing as much as in succeeding. When our schools should be promoting mental adventure and daring, they instead promulgate a culture of calculation, of playing it safe. Whitney seniors who might actually be interested in film or engineering will check horticulture as their prospective major because it is typically under-enrolled at California universities.

Who is to blame? As parents we insist at all costs that our children look good on their transcripts, while their schools, all too often, care mainly that overall test scores go up each year so that they in their turn look good. So why should we be shocked when one Whitney student, after finishing the AP French exam, immediately announces: "Now I'll never have to speak French again." Not a word about being able to read some of the world's greatest books or understand more fully the culture of France or even about sounding suave and European to impress girls. "I just took it to increase my chances of getting into a great college." That, too often, is what high school education has sunk to.

Sadly, those "great" colleges themselves only encourage the education charade. Near the end of School of Dreams , Whitney's guidance counselor asks an admissions officer at Yale why one of his best students failed to be admitted. The Yale man pulls out a thick application packet "and a multiple choice form filled out by the young man's counselor. He pointed to one question concerning the student's leadership ability. It had been checked 'good.' "

"That put him out of the running right there," the admisions officer said. 'You didn't mark 'excellent.' "

And so "a single multiple-choice question had led to rejection, simply because it suggested that an otherwise stellar student with soaring grades and high SATs still had some room to grow as a leader." Little wonder that students and parents grow berserk at the prospect of a few Bs, God forbid a C. The kiss of death.

Cautionary tales like these crop up repeatedly in School of Dreams , but not all of them are so depressing. In one of the book's funniest sections, Humes portrays a hapless Neil Bush desperately trying to promote a computer learning program based on the theory of multiple intelligences. Bush clearly presumes that all kids hate traditional classroooms, which he dubs "boring," and that his dumbed-down cartoony alternative is bound to be appealing. Not the tack to take with the half-dozen Whitney students who've come to hear his spiel:

"One after another they decry the notion they sense is lurking behind Bush's criticisms -- the idea that school should be made easier, more entertaining. The problem, as they see it, isn't that school is too boring or too hard, but that too many young people are unwilling to work and extend themselves to master difficult subjects. Too many kids -- and parents and teachers -- have low expectations, they say. They should be urged to reach higher, not settle for less, Kosha and the other Whitney students argue.

" 'But I truly believe there is a boundary to teaching kids core knowledge, critical skills,' Bush argues. His tone is almost pleading now, as he finds himself alone, pitted against six kids with near perfect SATs."

The poor flummoxed man doesn't have a chance, and the entire scene grows ever more hilarious, as the Whitney seniors leave Bush looking like a fool, "confounded by a school that succeeds and students who excel." As for Bush's program, which actually depicts the Seminole Wars as a football game dubbed "The Jacksons vs. the Seminoles"? It made me recall the words of H.L. Mencken, who observed that all too often the programs of study in our schools "sound like the fantastic inventions of comedians gone insane."

I read much of School of Dreams on Tuesday, August 26, "the first day back," as kids like to refer to the start of the fall term. Most books about education are notoriously dull; this one -- a masterly example of passionate yet even-handed reporting -- is as enthralling as Richard Hofstatder's classic Anti-Intellectualism in American Life. It deserves an A+, even without grade inflation. ?

Michael Dirda's email address is dirdam@washpost.com. His online discussion of books takes place on Thursday at 2 p.m. on washingtonpost.com.

© 2003 The Washington Post Company



To: JohnM who wrote (7124)9/8/2003 5:21:00 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793790
 
Jill Stewart busts the Calif Legislature on three bad laws. Sacramento has some good columnists!

The Worst Laws I Have Ever Seen
What You Should Have Been Watching Instead of that Boring Debate
(Sept 4, 2003)

~ By Jill Stewart

Wednesday's recall debate broke little new ground as meek journalists and inexperienced citizens lobbed softballs at Gov. Gray Davis and the candidates, failed to ask the toughest questions and let false statements go unchallenged.

The utter fallacy, repeated two or three times by Cruz Bustamante, that illegal immigrants pour $1,400 more into California's economy than they get back, for example, should have been stopped cold. Look closely at his wording, and you will see that each time Bustamante was asked about all the troubles surrounding "illegal immigrants," he altered his answer and spoke only of what we gain from "immigrants."

He well knows, or sure as hell ought to know by now, that an in-depth state audit showed only 19% of illegals bother to file taxes, and the best data on illegal immigrants, from the late 1990s National Science Foundation study, shows that each citizen-headed household in California pays out a net extra $1,178 to shore up 3 million mostly low-income illegal immigrants. Bustamante also knows that underground cash-for-work economy created by the 3 million illegal immigrants in California is one reason income taxes paid to California state coffers are so out of balance.

Shame, shame on our newest statehouse liar, Cruz Bustamante.

Now, is the $1,400 he cited a figure Bustamante got from some think tank study about how much money our legal immigrants pour into California? Faced with experienced tough journalists, Bustamante would never have gotten away with that kind of slimy word game during a debate.

But look at who was doing the questioning: small-market journalists from public radio, a small Bay Area paper and a Spanish-language paper, whose questions about abortion rights and other irrelevancies betrayed their left-leaning sympathies and their intellectual flaccidity in the face of phony Davis propaganda.

(Abortion rights in California have never been threatened, despite a number of conservative Republican governors during the past 25 years, and never will be. This is a media/Davis/NOW concoction that the media should slap down now and stop pandering to.)

Why was Cruz Bustamante silent during the gross overspending of the Davis years? Why did Davis ignore former chief economist Ted Gibson's data indicating the state's revenue had dried up? Is Arianna Huffington, the anti-tax loophole candidate who uses tax loopholes, merely gathering anecdotes for a book?

The questions we wanted to hear weren't asked. The debate merely distracted journalists while some of the worst legislation in years hurtled toward Davis' desk.

Let's review some of the worst stinker bills in Sacramento, shall we?

· Senate Bill 2 comes closer to socialism than anything I've seen heading for approval in 20 years. It would force California's hard-hit small and medium-sized businesses, with 20 or more employees, to pay 80 percent of employees' health coverage. Companies with more than 200 employees would be forced to pay that for the whole family. Even part-timers get this big perk.

SB 2 will spawn layoffs as small businesses pare down to get below the 20-employee cutoff. Bigger struggling companies will close.

It is widely known among insiders that key details of SB 2, by state Sen. John Burton, were ghost-written by the Service Employees International Union. I am told Davis recently chatted with the SEIU about this dog. Then, miraculously, the SEIU handed Davis a check for $250,000 a few days ago.

I doubt SEIU's bosses care if they wipe out thousands of jobs. The SEIU---and Davis---will merely blame President Bush. The goal here is to co-opt workers before the recall, then let the chips fall. They'll say: "We won free health care for you! We made history!" No kidding. Watch for businesses to stream out of state.

· Davis says he'll sign SB 18, giving the obscure Native American Heritage Commission the power to stop development on anyone's land in California if tribes feel construction interferes with a sacred site anywhere in the region.

Initially, this turkey included a five-mile zone around each sacred site, meaning construction could be challenged five miles down the freeway from a burial grounds or other site.

SB 18 was idiotic, and opposition by cities was intense. But Sacramento is Backwards World. So its authors (Burton again, and also ditzy San Diego Democrat state Sen. Denise Ducheny) changed the law. Now, tribes can challenge development even further removed from sacred sites. Now, there's no five-mile limit at all.

This bizarre bill also allows the public to be barred from the Heritage Commission's proceedings. Bowing to religious pressure, the location of the sacred sites will be secret. This means the media will sue very quickly.

is would never sign this blatantly unconstitutional bill but for one thing: rich tribes have already poured $2 million into Bustamante's campaign, and money-grubbing Davis wants some.

emember how Davis vowed to reform workers compensation because California's is the most expensive yet provides almost the worst benefits in the nation?

redicted the Dems would buckle to greedy trial lawyers, unions and others bleeding the system dry. Sadly, I was right.

Although you cannot find this fact in the shallow media coverage, the real reforms were quietly killed weeks ago. True reform, proposed in a package of highly detailed bills by the Republicans that copied the top workers comp programs in the nation, were all wiped out in a quiet Democratic massacre over the summer. The media ignored this.

A Democrat-dominated conference committee now claims that its heavily watered-down proposal will give major relief to California. It won't. Davis was too gutless to force through the two basic reforms that make all others mere fingers in the dike.

First, (although the media rarely explains this) California?s nutty rules allow the workers to essentially determine if they were injured on the job. Many doctors who make their living off workers comp are happy to oblige, proof or no proof. Only three states give workers so much say in this important matter---and naturally California clings more than any other state to this grossly abused and terribly subjective practice.

In 47 normal states, determining if a worker was injured on the job isn't largely up to the worker because that would be crazy! These states use "objective standards"---basically, an independent doctor who makes no money treating workers comp, and who utilizes American Medical Association guidelines.

But in California, we don't allow independent doctors to make the judgement. The unions view the rampant abuses as a form of paid time off---a perk for their workers. And here's the proof: years ago, special interest groups including the unions pressured the politicos to make it illegal to use the AMA guidelines.

Good Lord.

Second, when determining if a worker should get permanent disability payments---a huge slice of California's crisis---our Orwellian "no fault" laws encourage the parties to go fight it out for months in court (as the trial lawyer lobby insisted so it could get rich off the system). As a result, 50 percent of all California workers comp cases hit court. In Utah, where independent doctors determine permanent disability, 4 percent of cases hit court.

The end result is, truly injured workers get screwed and are forced into court for months, and everybody else from doctors who look the other way to lawyers who string cases along, sucks the system dry.

Reforms you'll hear touted this week by less-than-honest media spinners like Los Angeles state Sen. Richard Alarcon, such as capping some medical fees and chiropractor visits, won't end the crisis.

The reason highly irritated Costco CEO Jim Sinegal delivered 150,000 signatures from Costco workers demanding reform to the capitol this week is that businesses---and now even the workers---are sick of the lying and delaying out of Sacramento. Costco operates in 36 states in the U.S., but 70 percent of its workers compensation costs come from California. Think about that math. That's as good a measure of the level of corruption and wealth-creation inside California's workers compensation system as any I've heard.

The plain truth is, only by copying how the top-rated states use "objective standards" will we see major relief. Any politico who says otherwise is ignorant or lying. Despite the recall, what else is new?

jillstewart.net



To: JohnM who wrote (7124)9/8/2003 6:19:53 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793790
 
I couldn't sign off for the evening without posting this lead article from the "New York Times." Looks at the language in the opening paragraph.

"terrible toll of the long, hot, casualty ridden summer"

This is the "the Daily Schadenfreude," that Safire is writing about in his column today. And it is his paper leading the pack! I thought the title on Bob Kohn's new book, "Journalistic Fraud : How the "New York Times" Distorts the News and Why It Can No Longer Be Trusted," was over the top. This type of writing makes me think he may be right.


September 8, 2003
NEWS ANALYSIS
Grim News About Iraq
By DAVID E. SANGER - [The New York Times]

WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 - President Bush's task tonight was to convince the country that the terrible toll of the long, hot, casualty ridden summer in Iraq was a necessary price to pay in a broader struggle against terrorism, and to prepare the electorate for years of occupation, billions more in expense, and many bad days.

His sobering speech to the nation was not the one that the White House was envisioning for the president four months after he declared the end of the "active combat" phase of the war. Even in July, as Mr. Bush prepared for a month at his ranch, his aides were talking optimistically about a fall devoted to transforming Iraq quickly into a model democracy at the heart of the Middle East, and making its transition to a peaceful nation contagious throughout the region.

Now there is reason to wonder whether that vision was unrealistically optimistic ? at least on the time scale Mr. Bush and his aides once described ? or whether it was, as one of his former foreign policy advisers put it recently, "optimism blended with a touch of naïveté."

Every week events from Baghdad to Jerusalem seem to be spinning out of the control of a Bush team that, during the president's trip to the region in late May, seemed intent on demonstrating that it now had the power to transform the region.

Last month's bombing of the United Nations headquarters in Baghdad, and this weekend's resignation of the Palestinian prime minister, Mahmoud Abbas, on whom Mr. Bush had pinned so many of his hopes of a broader Middle East peace, only reinforced the sense that the president's post-Iraq strategy will need to be rewritten once again.

This evening, with his poll numbers dropping and his political problems mounting, Mr. Bush insisted there was no turning back. He described America's mission in the region as open-ended, and came up with his own echo of John F. Kennedy's famous inaugural phrase that the United States would "pay any price, bear any burden" to defend liberty.

Iraq, he intoned, is now "the central front" in the war on terrorism, and he vowed "We will do what is necessary, we will spend what is necessary to achieve this essential victory in the war on terror, to promote freedom, and to make our own nation more secure."

For the first time he named that price: $87 billion for the first full year of occupation and reconstruction, of continuing his battle in Iraq and Afghanistan and his search for Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein. It is a figure many experts believe may yet prove low.

In that sense, he has made the Middle East what Southeast Asia was to the nation of his youth: a place where dominoes could not be allowed to fall, where a vicious ideology could not be permitted to take hold and spread. His argument to the wider world tonight was that it had to put aside the bruising conflict with his administration over whether the invasion of Iraq was justified, and now had to join the fight to make the American experiment in Iraq work. The price of failure, he argued, would be too high for all.

His message to Americans ? whom he clearly wanted to remind of his leadership after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon two years ago this week ? was simple: "The dangers have not passed." Just as in the cold war, when presidents from Truman to Nixon argued that America was the target of Communists, Mr. Bush said, "We are fighting that enemy in Iraq and Afghanistan today, so that we do not meet him again on our own streets, in our own cities."

With that phrase, he fully merged the challenge of the occupation of Iraq with the terrorism of Al Qaeda, even though his own intelligence agencies found no link between Mr. Hussein and the conspirators of Sept. 11. Now, in a post-Iraq world, Mr. Bush is saying that link makes no difference ? the arrival of terrorists blowing up Americans in Baghdad and Tikrit in the postwar period have turned this into a single war.

"The Middle East will either become a place of progress and peace, or it will be an exporter of violence and terror that takes more lives in America and in other free nations," Mr. Bush insisted, in justifying the cost in blood and deficit-inducing spending. "The triumph of democracy and tolerance in Iraq, in Afghanistan and beyond would be a grave setback for international terrorism."

To some of Mr. Bush's admirers, like Eliot A. Cohen, a military expert at Johns Hopkins University, tonight's speech was "an overdue explaining of the case ? he has a sophisticated argument to make about changing Iraq and making it a decent place and a role model for the Mideast, but he doesn't make it often enough," or in enough detail. "I'm struck by the fact that the view of elites, Democrats and Republicans, is that this has to be made to work, and the argument is over how."

To his critics ? including most of the Democratic presidential aspirants, who believe that Mr. Bush's initial go-it-alone instincts have become his biggest political vulnerability ? the president is wrongly blending the war against terrorism with the effort to build a stable Iraq.

"I think it bears little to no resemblance to the war on terrorism," said James Steinberg, who served as President Clinton's deputy national security adviser and is now a scholar at the Brookings Institution. "There was a theory in this White House that if you were just tough, and knocked Saddam and those like him off, people would not mess with you anymore," he said tonight. "They would no longer regard you as weak.

"Now there is a risk that our muscularity, if not used in a smart way, could make us more vulnerable, not less."

Mr. Bush's aides dispute the notion that Iraq is now a more fertile breeding ground for terrorists than it was before Mr. Hussein was deposed, despite the arrival of what Mr. Bush described tonight as "foreign terrorists." In interviews in recent days they have played down the coordination of the Baathists, suspected Qaeda members and other fighters, and Mr. Bush said tonight "we cannot be certain to what extent these groups work together." But left unstated tonight was the critical question looming over the president as he goes before the United Nations this month, and the electorate next year: How quickly can he bring order out of the chaos?

He did not say tonight, and his Secretary of State, Colin L. Powell, appearing earlier in the day on the NBC News program "Meet the Press," did not sound as if even the passage of a United Nations resolution would bring much more force to quieting Iraq ? he guessed 10,000 to 15,000 more foreign troops, at best a 10 percent increase over the forces now on the ground.

Yet the occupation forces face an environment far more complex than than the occupations of Japan and Germany, the models of success Mr. Bush cited tonight. Both were cohesive nations long before their defeat; Iraq never has been. And while there was more to rebuild in Tokyo and Berlin in 1945 than in Baghdad in 2003, the occupied were not shooting at the occupiers. That is why Mr. Bush could not predict the end point of the conflict he was rallying the country around tonight, and that is the problem he must solve first.

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