Monday, November 29, 2010

Capito's Corner

What a wonderful Thanksgiving blessing, to learn that Rep Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV2) is going to have a monthly corner on the website for Hampshire Review, in which she will be “sharing…how what is going on in Washington affects West Virginia.”   Her first posting to “The Capito Corner” was to wish us all a safe, warm, and happy Thanksgiving, enjoining us to give thanks for our blessings, for our ability to pursue our dreams and to work toward a better life.  Reading between the lines, we can be sure that she means to include in these best wishes those 800,000 persons who will lose their unemployment benefits at midnight tomorrow night, Tuesday Nov 30, because of her vote against extending unemployment benefits.   And we can be sure her Christmas blessings will go out to those 2 million who will be cut off at the end of December.
What do you suppose are the chances that the opposition could get a “corner” in which to respond to her corner, with their version of how West Virginia is affected by what is going on in Washington?

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Teaparty Duped

Has the avowedly grassroots group calling themselves The Teaparty allowed themselves to be duped, to be co-opted, by corporate interests using them for their own purposes.  How is that the teapartiers seem to be supporting stances that would be antithetical to their own perceived best interests, that is, presumably the interests of the common people of the United States.
How is it that they have been persuaded that government, not the corporations, is the problem?  Please remember that the real Boston Tea Party was not about taxes, per se, not against government, per se, but against corporations, in the form of the East India Tea Company which had persuaded Parliament to repeal taxes on tea exported to the colonies by themselves, but not on tea imported by small business entrepreneurs operating their own tea shops and whom they wanted deemed smugglers and pirates.   Of course this gave East India the advantage in the market and put the small shop owners out of business.  Hence, the dumping of East India’s tea in the harbor.
How is it that teapartiers are persuaded to show up at rallies with hate-filled signs spewing all manner of vitriol, all in the name of free speech?  How is it that they are persuaded that the way to show true patriotism is to storm townhall meetings and shout down the speakers and even other attendees who want to speak up?  So much for free speech for “the others.”  And who persuaded them that the reason the Founding Fathers passed the second amendment  was to encourage people to show up at public rallies, even with the president attending, with pistols strapped to their thighs and Uzis flung over their shoulders?
By the way, Ochlocracy is government by the masses; mob rule.  That is in my dictionary.
A suitable and succinct poster for a tea party rally would read:  Guns for Everyone/Abortions for No one/Closets for Gays/Deportations for Immigrants.
How can the teaparty really think that we should extend tax cuts for the rich and cut funding for infrastructure and institutions that serve the common good.   Think about it, we have been redistributing wealth, created by the working class, to the rich for decades, but it would be evil to redistribute that wealth back down to the people who generated it in the first place.    That would be “social justice” at its most evil.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

A person should be outside reveling in this lovely autumn day instead of inside creating a blog, but one does as the spirit, or one's blog mentor, moves one.

This is a new venture for me, though I have read other people's blogs, and have thought that this might be a good way for me to share (impose?) my thoughts on more people than just through emails and letters to the editor.  Recognizing, of course, that no one has to even open this blog unless they so choose.

From me, you can expect  my blogs to range from politics to dogs, from philosophy to gardens, from family to books.  As a retired teacher, I feel compelled to teach.  But I do hope that I do not possess such hubris as to expect all of my thoughts to go unquestioned.

I hope you, as well, are having as lovely an autumn day as I am,

Gramma Windy