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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: geode00 who wrote (152027)11/8/2008 4:58:47 PM
From: SiouxPal  Respond to of 361357
 
For the Left, This is Not the Time to Relax
by Theresa Alt and Marty Luster

Lest anyone misunderstand what we are about to say, let us make it perfectly clear that the election of Barack Obama and the strengthening of the Democratic majorities in Congress please us greatly. It will take all of the energy, strength, focus and determination demonstrated by President-elect Obama during the campaign and all of his enormous talent and capacity to inspire and encourage people of all stations in American life to begin to repair the horrendous damage done to our nation, our Constitution, our values, our reputation and our spirit by the eight years of sloth, cronyism, criminality and mendacity of the worst presidential administration in our national lifetime.

However happy we may be with election results and however great our relief at the end of our national nightmare, we, on the left, cannot for a moment relax in the comfort of this victory. We have much to do to bring this country out of our deep and serious economic plight, restore our liberties and achieve a high level of social justice that has been absent from our national agenda for decades. Our new president, a good, decent and patriotic man, will need vocal support when he acts to further progressive ideals. He will need firm reminders should he stray into political expediency. The Democratic Congress elected in 2006 was a grave disappointment to many of us. The new and (hopefully) better one just elected will need close watching.

We, whether we call ourselves progressives, liberals or socialists (or don't use any label at all), have both a duty and an opportunity to move our agenda forward. Now many Americans are, for the first time, questioning American capitalism as it has developed over the past 70 years (or more). Even more citizens challenge the propriety of our tax dollars being injected into the largest banks, insurance companies and Wall Street investment houses without any public control or meaningful ownership status. This money is not being used to provide credit or capital for new or struggling small business. Instead it is helping the largest financial institutions and big businesses to swallow up their competition and to establish a corporate oligarchy of those financial giants that will then be "too big to fail." Now is the time to ask our fellow Americans to think carefully about the type of nation we wish to be.

This is our opportunity to organize and fight for a national commitment to an economic justice agenda that establishes new priorities for our government and new hope for our people; an economic justice agenda that will:

No. 1 Rebuild equality of opportunity in the U.S. by restoring progressive taxation to fair and appropriate levels, and enacting massive cuts in wasteful defense spending;

No. 2 Ensure government resumes its appropriate roles by:

* Providing single-payer universal health insurance to guarantee health care based on need and not ability to pay and expanding public childcare, elder care, pension security, as well as primary, secondary and higher education;

* Regulating finance and investment (as the Glass-Steagall Act did), controlling interest rates, protecting elections, stopping pollution, improving workplace health and safety, guaranteeing non-discriminatory access to and use of the Internet, breaking up concentrated media ownership; and

* Investing in green jobs, clean and sustainable energy, clean water and air, public transportation, publicly financed election campaigns;

No. 3 Enact the Employee Free Choice Act - to restore the right of workers to organize unions and bargain collectively - as part of a broader effort to rebuild a labor movement able to achieve equity in the labor market and build broader social movements; and

No. 4 Implement a U.S. foreign and trade policy that promotes global institutions that advance labor, environmental and human rights, regulate transnational corporations and allow small farmers worldwide to earn a living in their own homelands.

More details are in "Toward an Economic Justice Agenda" by the Democratic Socialists of America, online at www.dsausa.org.

As stated in the agenda, "The corporate domination of U.S. politics and society has undermined ordinary people's living standards most egregiously over the past thirty years, most perniciously for those already beaten down. Only by democratizing the distribution of power in the United States can we restore the promise of the American Dream to those who have seen it taken away while extending that promise to those previously excluded from full membership in our society."

As the new administration prepares to begin to tackle these and other vital issues, please join with us to ensure that it hears clearly the voices of the progressive community.

Published on Saturday, November 8, 2008 by The Ithaca Journal (New York)



To: geode00 who wrote (152027)11/9/2008 8:39:34 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361357
 
China Unveils 4 Trillion Yuan Spending as World Faces Recession

By Li Yanping and Chia-Peck Wong

Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) -- China pledged a 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus plan to prop up growth in the fourth-largest economy as the world heads toward a recession.

The funds, equivalent to almost a fifth of China's gross domestic product last year, will be used by the end of 2010, the Beijing-based State Council said yesterday on its Web site. Following a weekend meeting in Sao Paulo, finance ministers from the Group of 20 nations, of which China is a member, issued a joint statement saying they are ready to act ``urgently'' to tackle the economic slump.

``If the Chinese use this as a diplomatic initiative, it could be an important step toward a more coordinated response,'' Simon Johnson, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund, said in Boston.

China is taking steps to bolster its economy, the biggest contributor to global expansion, less than a week before President Hu Jintao goes to Washington for talks with world leaders on ways to revive growth. U.S. President-elect Barack Obama vowed last week to push a package through Congress ``immediately after'' taking office in January if lawmakers and the Bush administration can't agree on one before then.

China accounted for 27 percent of global economic growth last year, more than any other nation, according to IMF estimates. Central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said Nov. 8 that boosting spending at home is the best way China can help avert a prolonged world recession.

`Intensifying' Crisis

Taiwan, which counts China as its largest trading partner, late yesterday cut interest rates for the fourth time in two months after exports dropped in October by the most in three years. The Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan have all lowered their benchmark rates in the last two weeks, as has the People's Bank of China.

``Over the past two months, the global financial crisis has been intensifying daily,'' the State Council said in yesterday's statement. ``In expanding investment, we must be fast and heavy- handed,'' it said, adding that the central bank will pursue a ``moderately loose'' monetary policy.

The stimulus package, of which 100 billion yuan is earmarked for this quarter, will go toward low-rent housing, infrastructure in rural areas, as well as roads, railways and airports, it said.

The government will allow tax deductions for purchases of fixed assets such as machinery to stimulate investment, a move that will reduce companies' costs by an estimated 120 billion yuan.

Grain Subsidies

In addition, grain purchase prices and subsidies for farmers will be raised, as will allowances for low-income urban households. The government also scrapped loan quotas to help boost lending to small businesses.

``We view this as a positive step,'' the U.S. Treasury's Undersecretary for International Affairs David McCormick told Bloomberg in televised interview in Sao Paulo ``This stimulus should help encourage domestic consumption'' in China, he said.

The stimulus plan should give a lift to China's shares, said Ben Simpfendorfer, an economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in Hong Kong. The CSI 300 Index has tumbled 69 percent this year, the biggest drop among stock benchmarks in the Asia-Pacific region.

``The package will be positive for the stock market, but again, we need to see results,'' Simpfendorfer said.

``China is well positioned during the recession to boost infrastructure, modernize aging industrial assets and also invest in raw materials production abroad, including energy,'' said Ariel Cohen, a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation in Washington.

May Boost Growth

The extra spending may boost the nation's economic growth by 2 percentage points next year, said Xing Ziqiang, an economist at China International Capital Corp. in Beijing. UBS AG and Credit Suisse AG, before yesterday's announcement, forecast GDP would rise no more than 7.5 percent next year, which would be the smallest increase in nearly two decades.

China is trying to stop an economic slowdown from deepening as exports wane, manufacturing cools and a property slump undermines domestic demand. The central bank has already cut interest rates three times in two months, reducing the one-year lending rate to 6.66 percent.

Manufacturing contracted by the most since at least 2004 in October and export orders dropped to their lowest, according to CLSA Asia Pacific Markets. Home sales have plunged in major cities including Beijing and the stockpile of unsold new vehicles was at a four-year high in September.

``The golden years have shuddered to a dramatic halt,'' said Stephen Green, head of China research at Standard Chartered Bank Plc in Shanghai.

To contact the reporters on this story: Li Yanping in Beijing at yli16@bloomberg.netChia-Peck Wong in Hong Kong at cpwong@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: November 9, 2008 12:33 EST