The Free Press: Speaking Truth to Power Sat Aug 30 2008
Columns
Molly Ivins

Who's in the money now?
March 25, 2003

AUSTIN, Texas -- There was Donald Rumsfeld on Sunday morning repeatedly warning the Iraqis that prisoners of war are protected by the Geneva Convention and showing pictures of POWs is wrong. That would be the same Donald Rumsfeld who refused to classify the POWs at Gitmo in Cuba as POWs, instead calling them "detainees" and "military combatants."

The administration initially prepared to claim Al Qaeda fighters were not covered by the Geneva Convention, until the military pointed out that what goes around, comes around. We displayed pictures of our prisoners wearing black hoods, in chains and housed in outdoor, chain-link kennels.

If the Republican Guard surrenders, will right-wing radio talk jocks who have never been near a war refer to them as "hummus-eating surrender monkeys"?

Meanwhile, back at the ranch ... You need to keep an eye on the back pages of the newspapers and the brief recaps that follow, "And in other news today ..." There is stuff flying under the radar you would not believe.

For one thing, both the House and the Senate have passed George W. Bush's budget, including the second round of tax cuts -- $726 billion, 50 percent of it going to the richest 1 percent of the people in this country. In the Senate, Democrats managed to repeal $100 billion of the tax cut in order to pay for the current war, but Sen. Bill Frist, Republican majority leader, says he plans to go back and take even that out of the bill. Had it not been for war, this budget would have been the subject of a huge national debate.

This enormous tax cut will provide a break of $256 a year to the average working family. Almost half of all taxpayers will get less than $100. But someone making a million dollars a year will cut a cut of $92,000. This is iniquitous. It is wicked. It is damnably unfair.

This budget does three stupid and mean things simultaneously: It cuts taxes for the richest Americans during a national crisis, cuts domestic spending that people's lives depend on, and completely ignores the cost of both war and reconstruction. Under this budget, almost all discretionary domestic programs, as well as Medicare and Medicaid, are subject to cuts or restraints.

"Discretionary spending" is such a cold, meaningless term. There is so much pain behind it, you can hardly begin to imagine. Student loans, childcare, food stamps, school lunches, job training, veterans programs, and cash assistance for the elderly and disabled poor are all being cut. That means people's lives will be cut up. Mothers who have struggled to get off welfare, barely making it on minimum-wage jobs, will lose childcare and be pushed back onto the rolls -- with their eligibility to run out soon. Young people trying to acquire job skills will be pushed back onto the street.

This plan is supposed to stimulate jobs and growth. It doesn't. Analysis by the Economic Policy Institute shows paltry job growth this year, and the plan would actually increase job losses in the long run. Even by White House estimates, the plan would produce only 190,000 jobs this year for the more than 8 million people seeking work. Since March 2001, the economy has lost 2.5 million jobs.

The House "stimulus" bill offers $114 billion in corporate tax concessions, mostly in the form of 30 percent in extra "depreciation" write-offs in each of he next three years. According to Citizens for Tax Justice, the changes will wipe out more than a fifth of otherwise expected corporate income tax payments over the next three years. The bill provides $8 in corporate tax cuts for every dollar allocated to help unemployed workers.

Also under cover of war, the House passed a bankruptcy law that makes it harder for individual debtors to file for bankruptcy and easier for corporations to do so. The bill is full of ugly little details, including the House rejection of an amendment to give families owed child support a stronger claim on the assets of a delinquent former spouse than, say, Visa or MasterCard. Nope, corporations first, children last. It's compassionate conservatism.

In a vote that will come to haunt us all, the Senate killed a Democratic effort to remove tax cuts worth $1.2 trillion over 10 years and allocate the savings to Social Security.

Now here's a nifty little item: Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, on the first day of the war, ordered the service chiefs to provide examples in which President Bush could cite national security to exempt the military from environmental laws. The administration has already asked Congress to ease laws governing endangered species, marine mammals, and air and water quality in the name of military training. According to The Washington Post, Wolfowitz suggested the Pentagon reverse its "past constraint" against having the president invoke the national security exemptions written into some environmental laws. Interesting: National security includes more pollution?

Meanwhile, the Israel defense minister has announced he wants to push a security fence deeper into the West Bank, bringing another 40,000 Jewish settlers and around 3,000 Palestinians to the Israeli side. Can you say, "Land grab?"

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 2003 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008

Molly Ivins

"More issues in the business section"
  October 26, 2003

"Gully-washing, frog strangling..."
  October 22, 2003

"Stupefying"
  October 20, 2003

"Bush-hater strikes again "
  October 16, 2003

"Outrage and irony"
  October 8, 2003

"Why did we invade Iraq?"
  October 7, 2003

"Are you confused yet?"
  October 2, 2003

"Anyone but Bush"
  September 30, 2003

"George W. Bush's America"
  September 24, 2003

"A terrible president "
  September 23, 2003

"The Full Ostrich on Iraq"
  September 18, 2003

"These people don't want to govern, they want to rule"
  September 10, 2003

"Sigh."
  September 9, 2003

"I told you so again"
  September 4, 2003

"Arnold: Politics as showbiz"
  August 26, 2003

"Weathervanes for the wrong direction"
  August 21, 2003

"The All-American Blame Game!"
  August 19, 2003

"Hang in there, Texas Eleven"
  August 13, 2003

"National credulity fitness"
  August 11, 2003

"Utter degradation of political discourse"
  August 7, 2003

"One overwhelming impression: deception"
  August 5, 2003

"Iraq: The peace from hell"
  August 1, 2003

"It's not fair"
  July 31, 2003

"More intelligence"
  July 29, 2003

"The Other Great State"
  July 23, 2003

"Legal nonsense"
  July 21, 2003

"A stinging rebuke to the disgraceful level of journalism"
  July 14, 2003

"Recent Supreme Court action"
  June 30, 2003

"Global warming? Just edit it out!"
  June 26, 2003

"Medicare Prescription Drug Bill: 'This is soooo complicated'"
  June 24, 2003

"Iraqi gold rush"
  June 18, 2003

"'This perverse episode'"
  June 16, 2003

"Budget imbalance "
  June 12, 2003

"Psst, kids, there's money in the wind"
  June 10, 2003

"Like a bridge over troubled waters"
  June 5, 2003

"'Weapons of Mass Distortion'"
  June 2, 2003

"Media ownership"
  May 28, 2003

"The question remains: Why?"
  May 28, 2003

"The Texas Legislature"
  May 27, 2003

"Democrats With Cojones"
  May 15, 2003

"Straight from the pit of hell"
  May 14, 2003

"Bush is a liar"
  May 8, 2003

"Plastic flamingos"
  May 6, 2003

"Texas law"
  May 1, 2003

"What WMD 's?"
  April 29, 2003

"Another bad idea from the Republican Party"
  April 24, 2003

"Another big fight"
  April 8, 2003

"This is more than exciting"
  April 3, 2003

"Democracy is the big loser in this war"
  March 27, 2003

"Who's in the money now?"
  March 25, 2003

"War in springtime"
  March 20, 2003

"Bidding on societal change"
  March 18, 2003

"Bribery, blackmail and Bush"
  March 13, 2003

"Right and Wrong"
  March 11, 2003

"Taxes and Texas"
  March 5, 2003

"Spying on the UN and other US antics"
  March 4, 2003

"Axis of evil boomerang"
  February 27, 2003

"Bush has another plan"
  February 25, 2003

"Patriotic or Not?"
  February 20, 2003

"Don't boycott the French!"
  February 18, 2003

"What the hell is going on?"
  February 13, 2003

"Of tax evasion and denials"
  February 11, 2003

"Conservatives in Action"
  February 8, 2003

"Deficit at record high"
  February 5, 2003

"State of the Union"
  January 29, 2003

"Campaign donations and the State of the Union"
  January 28, 2003

"The Evil Q"
  January 23, 2003

"Health Care needs someone to care"
  January 20, 2003

"Appalling silence"
  January 16, 2003

"The Ledge"
  January 15, 2003

"Fine Print"
  January 14, 2003




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