Wednesday, March 31

Raw Milk Debate a Taste of What's to Come
By Mike Nichols, Pioneer Press

My plan today was to write about Wisconsin's vaunted heritage as the dairy paradise, maybe tell the tale of a guy near La Farge whom I interviewed recently whose mom actually used to take milk baths. And expound on the inherent Wisconsin right to guzzle raw milk until it comes out your nose, if that is the sort of discomfort you desire.

But first, I had to ask the question that everybody is asking of late for a slightly different reason. I asked it of Kathy Kramer, a nutritionist and office manager at the Weston A. Price Foundation in Washington, D.C., a place that vociferously supports drinking raw milk.

What if you get sick?

"That is rare," she told me, adding that people have been drinking raw milk in some states for a long time.

But what if you do?

"We just don't see that as an issue," she said.

Lots of people on both sides of the aisle in Madison don't either — yet. A broad array of Democrats and Republicans are poised to pass legislation letting us drink raw milk, just like our ancestors did.

Our ancestors, it is true, were a little goofy and also smeared goose grease and skunk oil all over themselves when they got sick. But hey, everyone should have a right to smell however — or drink whatever — they desire, so long as they do it willingly and aren't hurting anyone else, right?

This seems like a no-brainer. Or did. Until, for some reason, I had to ask what everyone in the nation's capital had been asking as they debated health care. What if somebody gets sick?

Unpasteurized milk has been linked to things like salmonella and E. coli infections, after all. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have found that illnesses linked to raw milk are 2.85 times greater in states that allow it than in places that don't, according to Steve Ingham, director of food safety in Wisconsin's Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection.

And while it's easy to argue that people ought to have a right to harm themselves, there is another argument as well.

"There is still a social cost or a health care system cost if something goes wrong," he said.

That is true. In fact, that is now truer than ever. In a system that requires everyone to be insured and requires many people to now pay a lot more for many other people to be insured, we are bound together in ways we previously were not. Our ancestors never paid for each other's skunk oil.

People want to feel big-hearted and generous. But people are practical, too, especially when it comes to their wallets. So you can see where we are headed now. Once the medical bills start coming and people realize how truly expensive it is going to be, there's going to be a lot less tolerance of anything that doesn't conform to mainstream views of what's healthy, or normal, or not-too-risky. Wisconsin might allow raw milk, but only until there's a big outbreak.

There have been lots of stories about the exorbitant costs of our new health care system, but there is one thing it likely will cost us that has not been discussed much: the ability to take a chance or a risk, of betting you know more than the experts, of maybe just enjoying something a little dangerous with lots of nicotine or trans fats in it.

Enjoy those while you can.

Many people are going to gain insurance in this country. But you have to strongly suspect we also are going to lose something we maybe didn't think of — something way beyond just dollars: the ability to taste something a little different.

Monday, March 29

Buying a vowel.

Pat Sajak wonders why Frank Rich is writing about "U", when it appears he really is looking for an "I" :

Frank Rich spent many years as the theater critic for the New York Times, where, at worst, his venom could cause a Broadway production or two to close down.

Now, however, Mr. Rich opines on political and social issues for the Times, and, while the results are usually mildly amusing (even if unintentionally so), his reach has grown a bit, so the damage he causes can travel beyond the footlights. I’m not sure why anyone turns to Rich for political analysis—heck, you might as well read the rantings of a TV game show host—but the Gray Lady continues to pay him for his weekly column, and, at the rate she’s bleeding money, that’s no small sacrifice.

Anyway, Mr. Rich has apparently been able to get to the bottom of the vocal opposition to the “healthcare reform” bill that was recently gently shepherded through Congress.

It turns out, according to his well-crafted analysis, that it’s not the bill that’s got people in an uproar; rather, what we’re facing is the death rattle of a dwindling cadre of white, racist, sexist, homophobic males terrified by the ascent of people of color, women and gays.

As the ever-tolerant Rich reasons: “The conjunction of a black President and a female speaker of the House — topped off by a wise Latina on the Supreme Court and a powerful gay congressional committee chairman — would sow fears of disenfranchisement among a dwindling and threatened minority in the country no matter what policies were in play.”

So that’s it. It’s just a bunch of scared, white males who would yelp about anything this gang came up with. As Rich makes clear, this is merely a replay of the opposition to the Voting Rights Act of 1964. You get it? If you express opposition to the bill, you’re a racist, sexist homophobe.
...
Welcome to post-racial America, where those who oppose a piece of legislation must defend themselves against the scurrilous charges of a man who seems much better suited to reviewing “Cats”. (He liked it, by the way.) This was a particularly shameful column, and the millions of Americans who oppose this legislation are owed an apology. Are they right? Are they wrong? Let’s discuss it. Let’s debate it. Let’s yell and scream if we want to. But would it be too much to ask that we approach the matter based on its merits and leave the psychobabble to Dr. Phil?

1806 .

In the year of our Lord, eighteen hundered and six...

Everybody loves an upset .

Randy Barnett:*

The smart money is always on the Supreme Court upholding an act of Congress. And the smart money is right until the day it is wrong — as when constitutional law professors confidently predicted the court would uphold the Gun Free School Zones Act in 1995 and the Violence Against Women Act in 2000.

The professoriate was shocked when both laws were held unconstitutional because they exceeded Congress’s power under the Commerce Clause.

The individual mandate goes far beyond these previous acts. Congress has never before mandated that a citizen enter into an economic transaction with a private company, so there can be no judicial precedent for such a law. Telling someone how they must do something is one thing; commanding that they must do something is entirely different.

Imagine if Congress ordered the majority of American households without a firearm to buy a handgun from a private company, and punished their failure to do so with an escalating monetary fine, which it labeled a “tax.” Would the supporters of the health insurance mandate feel the same about the constitutionality of such a measure?

If the health legislation’s supporters were really so confident in their Commerce Clause theory, they would not immediately change the subject to the Tax Power. Nor would Democrats have dressed up their mandate to look like a tax.

Yet, here too, the Supreme Court has never upheld a “tax” penalizing private citizens who refuse to enter into a contract with a private company. The Constitution distinguishes between taxes and what the Eighth Amendment calls “fines.” Had the Tax Power been broad enough to allow Congress to fine any individual action or failure to act, wouldn’t Congress have discovered this power years ago?

Now that it has, supporters are betting there won’t be five votes on the court to thwart a popular act of Congress. Another safe bet.

But what if the bill turns out to be supremely unpopular? What if one or both houses of Congress flip parties because of it? What if majorities in Congress favor repeal but are blocked by a Senate filibuster or a presidential veto? Still as confident about five votes?

But first things first. Does the text of the Constitution authorize this exercise of power? No, it doesn’t. Has the Court ever before upheld this claim of power? No, it hasn’t. Can the challengers get this mandate invalidated? Yes, they can.


*Have I mentioned Randy was raised in Cal City? T.F. North grad, I'm thinking. Cook County.

Calumet City, Illinois
Thornton Fractional North

Tuesday, March 23

Netanyahu bows to Boehner.


Sorry. Couldn't resist...

... One Tin Soldier Rides Away ...

Two Palestinian cousins, both 18, were killed Sunday by Israeli fire south of Nablus in the West Bank, bringing the Palestinian death toll in the area to four within 24 hours. Two others, 16 and 19, were shot during a confrontation with the military on Saturday. One died immediately and the other died of his wounds overnight.

The Israeli military said the cousins were killed after they tried to attack a soldier with a pitchfork and an ax, though relatives and neighbors of the dead youths disputed that.

The prime minister of the Palestinian Authority, Salam Fayyad, said in a statement that he “strongly condemned the Israeli military escalation” and that it “puts in jeopardy the Palestinian Authority’s achievements of security and stability.”

Nabil Abu Rudeineh, a spokesman for the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, said, “The Israeli escalation and the killing of Palestinians on a daily basis is the actual response of the Israeli government to the Palestinians, the Arabs and to American efforts.”

As is often the case in such shootings with few witnesses, the circumstances surrounding the death of the cousins on Sunday were in dispute. Relatives and neighbors who gathered in the village of Awarta at the home of one of the youths, Salah Muhammad Qawariq, insisted that the two were simply working their land when Jewish settlers from a nearby settlement came and shot them.

“There were no soldiers in the area,” one of the neighbors, Dalal Aziz, said in a telephone interview. Ms. Aziz did not see the shooting, but she said she had run to the scene soon afterward to try to help.

Also, sharp differences remained over the Saturday killings. The military maintains that the two were shot by rubber bullets as soldiers dispersed a violent protest involving dozens of villagers hurling rocks.

But the Israeli human rights group Btselem distributed photographs of the victims taken by its researcher, Salma al-Debi, in the emergency room of the Rafidia Hospital in Nablus showing wounds that appeared consistent with live ammunition.

The youth who died overnight, Ussayed Qadus, had a bullet lodged in his head, but in accordance with the family’s wishes, he was buried on Sunday without an autopsy.

The military said that both deaths were under investigation.

Signifying the change in tone between Jerusalem and Washington, Mr. Mitchell told the Israelis on Sunday that “the relationship between the United States and Israel is strong and enduring, that our commitment to Israel’s security is unshakeable and unbreakable.

“And that’s the way it’s going to remain,” he added.


...

ADDED:
An Israeli soldier was accidentally shot dead by fellow soldiers along the Gaza border on Monday in an operation aimed at stopping three Palestinians who were thought to be trying to infiltrate the border fence, an army spokesman said. The three, who were unarmed, were detained. The shooting occurred when a tank team that saw the men along the fence called for reinforcements. The new arrivals thought the soldiers were the infiltrators and shot them. The army has opened an investigation.


FUNNY, I though transparency and daylight were good things, so as not to be operating under the cover of shadow, secrecy and denials. Hmm?
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Monday that indirect talks between Israel and the Palestinians should be serious and substantive and that new Israeli settlements in East Jerusalem and the West Bank were jeopardizing progress.

"New construction in East Jerusalem or the West Bank undermines mutual trust and endangers the proximity talks that are the first step toward the full negotiations that both sides want and need," Clinton said in a speech to AIPAC, an influential pro-Israel lobby group.

"It exposes daylight between Israel and the United States that others in the region could hope to exploit. And it undermines America's unique ability to play a role -- an essential role, I might add -- in the peace process," she said.


INTERESTING TO NOTE:
Sunday:
WASHINGTON (JTA) -- AIPAC's president and a key donor to President Obama's campaign urged the White House to keep differences with Israel private.

"Allies should work out their differences privately," Lee Rosenberg said to a standing ovation in his inaugural speech as president of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

Speaking at AIPAC's annual policy conference in Washington, Rosenberg described the tensions between Israel and the United States as "very unfortunate" and made it clear he believed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had done his part in aplogizing for the announcement of construction plans for a Jewish neighborhood in in eastern Jerusalem during an Israel visit two weeks ago by U.S. Vice President Joe Biden.

"How friends disagree, how they react when missteps occur, that can determine the nature of the relationship," Rosenberg said.

He suggested that the Obama administration should focus its pressure on the Palestinians, to bring them back to peace talks.

"The reluctant partner in this peace process is not Israel's elected leader, Prime Minister Netanyahu. The recalcitrant partner are the Palestinians and their leader: President Mahmoud Abbas," he said.

Rosenberg, a Chicago-based venture capitalist, was a key-fundraiser for Obama's presidential bid.


TODAY: In other news today, the White House announced that because of the celebratory atmosphere over the healthcare bill, all meetings later today -- including that with Prime Minister Netanyahu -- would be private and off limits to press coverage. And so it goes, for another day...
The White House did everything possible to make sure Obama's appearances carried the day without competition. A planned announcement of the administration's new drug control policy by Vice President Joe Biden was called off, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs declined to hold his regular daily briefing for reporters, and all Obama's meetings were closed to coverage, including one with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The day was about more than celebration. It marked the launch of an aggressive sales job Obama will undertake to turn around public opinion on the legislation and help save Democrats — particularly those from conservative-leaning districts — who stand to suffer most in the fall elections from casting votes for the bill.

Monday, March 22

Kurtz condescends:

In the end, the subject may simply have been too dense for the media to fully digest. If you're a high-information person who routinely plows through 2,000-word newspaper articles, you had a reasonably good grasp of the arguments. For a busy electrician who plugs in and out of the news, the jousting and the jargon may have seemed bewildering.

Once the law takes effect -- its provisions stretched out over years -- perhaps journalists can help separate rhetoric from reality. That is, if we don't lose interest and move to the next hot controversy.

No, Mr. President. That's no "Change".

That's just offering up millions of healthy new consumers to the insurance and pharmaceutical companies, forcing us to buy products we don't use in order to subsidize the failing business plans of those in-trouble industries...

Thanks for taking away more of my individual choices though, to bail out your big bucks buddies.

In the meantime-- when you really could have pushed for changes that matter for people on the ground? -- here's what you're afraid to touch: the Change you're content to put off until another day...

A pair of Iraq war veterans who were dismissed, or soon will be, from the military under the Pentagon's "don't ask, don't tell" policy, were arrested by police officers today after chaining themselves to the front gate of the White House, as part of a protest of that policy.

The pair were identified as Lt. Dan Choi, and former Army Capt. James Pietrangelo, whose appeal of his dismissal was turned down by the Supreme Court last year.

The U.S. Park Police said that the two individuals will be charged with failure to obey a lawful order.

Some 150 protesters were also in front of the White House, chanting "Hey hey ho ho 'don't ask, don't tell' has got to go," which attracted about 30 Washington police officers who lined up in a show of force.

Alexander Nicholson, executive director of advocacy group Servicemembers United, said the White House can and should do more to push for repeal of "don't ask, don't tell."

"It is significant to know that there are a few more things they can do to make sure that we see full legislative repeal in 2010 instead of risking, waiting until after the midterms," Nicholson told ABC News at the White House protest.

It's not just about Congress, but also the commander in chief," said John Aravosis, a Washington, D.C.-based gay rights activist who writes AMERICAblog. "People think they're moving ahead [with repealing the ban]. It's not moving ahead at all. We may lose the house in November."


and...
Israel will not restrict construction in east Jerusalem, Israel's prime minister said Sunday hours before he left for Washington, despite a clear U.S. demand that building there must stop and a crisis in relations between the two longtime allies.

Benjamin Netanyahu's meeting with President Barack Obama Tuesday will be the first high-level meeting since the crisis erupted 10 days ago, when Israel embarrassed visiting Vice President Joe Biden by announcing a plan for construction in a Jewish neighborhood in east Jerusalem, which is claimed by the Palestinians.

"As far as we are concerned, building in Jerusalem is like building in Tel Aviv" and there would be no restrictions, Netanyahu told his Cabinet.


Don't let all that champagne celebrating go to your head now, Mr. President. The industry swells and non-profits might be used to all that prescription partying, but you were in the Change game on principle, right? Well as one of those individuals whose choices were sold out in the name of subsidizing the elective procedures of others in the private insurance pool, thanks for ... nothing.

But enjoy your artificial advantages, Mr. President, while you're the Big Cheese choosing up winners and losers and all. Something tells me though, you're paying more on principle than you've been led to believe.

But surely those newly energized industries will take good care of you and the party's political fortunes for years and years to come; you're covered now, so what's to worry?

PS. You betcha I'm bitter... but independent, not the clingy type.

Sunday, March 21

The next Scott Brown?

Dr. Dan Benishek for Congress...

The Ezra-Kleining of America.

It's as popular as the New Math, for good reason. Let the re-Kleining begin?

Equinox Sunday.

It all depends on how you define the terms...

That's all.

Saturday, March 20

Saturday.

It's better in the daylight, and this is one where you could write reams on the day's early promises, when it all lay stretched ahead unplanned and untouched, still. A Saturday in spring...

"... for a transitory enchanted moment man must have held his breath in the presence of this continent, compelled into an aesthetic contemplation he neither understood nor desired, face to face for the last time in history with something commensurate to his capacity for wonder."
~ The Great Gatsby

Friday, March 19

Friday!

The end to a working week, the weather here summertime-like in the low 60s mid afternoon to dusk, with a delightful naturally air-conditioned quality to the air, when you get close to the icy lakes and waters. Good for the skin.

Rain, or light snow, this weekend. You never know what March will bring.

Tuesday, March 16

A Call to Action.

Fwiw, I'm going to re-run the blog post I wrote early last October 9, after I learned our president had been awarded the Nobel Prize for his efforts to promote world peace with promises of hope and change:


I'm going to speculate that the international community is trying to bulk up the President's credentials prior to his engaging -- hopefully with bit of backbone -- in the Israel/Palestine negotiations that have dragged on much too long.

It's not our enemies, but our allies, that we most need to call to action now.

So George Mitchell's on that job, the Prez has the prize pocketed, and maybe it's time we realize he who the writes the checks has plenty of power to call some shots. (What's in your wallet?) You don't like our suggestions? Fine, no support of you. Feel free to go it alone, and face the consequences.

Here's a good editorial on that subject, and why it's essential to support our Palestinian peace partner now. If you can't score a victory or two with the Nobel in your pocket...

ADDED: I mean, c'mon, if the timing of this thing doesn't help America take a lead in negotiating in the one conflict where we (America) really have a good shot at influencing a solution soon, sans bullets and bodies, how can you expect the other enemy players to ever come to a rational agreement that neither side may like, but both can agree to live with.

(Maybe you don't have to go Christian and love your neighbor as yourself, but something tells me the Cherokee removal solution is as dead as old Andy Jackson... we ought to convince our Israeli friends of that sooner, rather than later, I'd think. It will be hard enough already to undo the damage the Sharon approach wrought, I think, since it's quite a trick to bring innocents back from the dead, and all peoples remember injustices committed against them. Maybe we could start there...)

Despite the many obstacles in his path, Mitchell began his latest round of talks Thursday reiterating Obama's dogged intent to bring the Israelis and Palestinians back to the negotiating table.

"President Obama ... and the U.S. government remain deeply and firmly committed toward achieving a comprehensive peace," he told reporters as he arrived for a meeting with Israeli President Shimon Peres.

Obama began his term in office with a Mideast peace push that included an unequivocal call for Israel to halt settlement activity in the West Bank — a call that was enthusiastically embraced by the Palestinians.

Though Netanyahu agreed in principle to the formation of a Palestinian state and said he would limit settlement construction for a limited time, he refused to agree to a full halt.

At a summit meeting last month in New York, Obama appeared to yield to the Israelis, which — along with Obama's growing domestic woes — made him appear weak to both sides.

No more weakness, please. It's morning in America, 21st century style...

posted by Mary at 6:56 AM

Yet more settlements planned in East Jerusalem

By ISABEL KERSHNER, NYT
Published: March 16, 2010

Israeli groups who oppose Israeli settlement activity and monitor new developments say there are thousands more Jewish housing units in the pipeline for East Jerusalem, at various stages of the bureaucratic planning process.

“This is totally out of control,” said Hagit Ofran of Peace Now, a leftist organization that tracks settlement building. “The Netanyahu government is trying to make Jerusalem indivisible so that it will not be possible to reach a solution based on two states for two peoples.”
...
The activist group, Peace Now, pointed to a notice on the Web site of the Israel Lands Authority inviting developers to bid on construction of new homes in the Jewish suburb of Neve Yaakov, in northeast Jerusalem.

The housing announcement, published on behalf of the Lands Authority and the Ministry of Housing and Construction, was posted as an “update” and was dated March 11, but it came to light only on Tuesday.

Israeli officials said that the building tender in question was actually a few months old, and that the successful bidders would be announced in April or May. Peace Now said there was no record that the building tender had been published before.
...
Ariel Rosenberg, a spokesman for the Israeli Housing and Construction Ministry, said the invitation for bids to build in Neve Yaakov dated back to 2009 and was “not something new.” He had no immediate explanation of why there was a new announcement on the Web site dated March 11.

Mitchell sits this one out.

JERUSALEM (AP) — A U.S. envoy's postponement of his Mideast trip appeared Tuesday to deepen one of the worst U.S.-Israeli feuds in memory — even as Israel's foreign minister signaled his government had no intention of curtailing the contentious construction at the heart of the row.
...
Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman told Israel Radio that demands to halt Israeli construction there "are unreasonable" and predicted the row with the U.S. would blow over, saying neither side had an interest in escalation.

But Washington notified Israel early Tuesday that envoy George Mitchell had put off his trip indefinitely. Mitchell had planned on coming to wrap up preparations for relaunching Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.


Roger Cohen, NYT:

Peace is a vital American interest for many reasons, including its inalienable commitment to Israel’s long-term security, but the most pressing is that the conflict is a jihadist recruitment tool that feeds the wars in which young Americans die.

This is not rocket science. Yet over the past decade the United States has been facilitating the costly settlements enterprise by pouring $28.9 billion into Israel. America’s strategic goal of Israeli and Palestinian states living side by side in security has been undermined by its own blank-check diplomacy.
...
The Israeli right, whether religious or secular, has no interest in a two-state peace. I had lunch the other day with Ron Nachman, the mayor of Ariel, one of the largest West Bank settlements. He told me breezily that there “can be no Palestinian state,” and that “Israel and Jordan should divide the land.” I liked his frankness. It clarifies things.

Funny. That's similar to what that David Frum fellow was mouthing on a recent Bloggingheads video with founder Robert Wright: Does Israel need Peace? Frum forsees the Palestinians living like our Puerto Ricans: a territory of Israel, citizens but with no voting rights.

Hmm. I've been to Puerto Rico. I know their people. (Aggressive drivers!) I don't think the Palestinians and the Puerto Ricans share the same mindset toward their benefactor countries, the same grievances. The Puerto Ricans choose to be independent, on their own land. Their children's military service rates -- whether out of the island, or out of New York and Florida -- I would guess exceed the rate of service in the overall U.S. population.

They might not wish to become a 51st state, but there's an American pride there. Fireworks on the fourth of July out in the countryside even. (I visited with Brenda*'s family one summer, years ago -- in Isabela, outside Aquadilla, on the beautiful northwestern coast.)

These pictures on the In Gaza blog, mimic the self-reliance of a rural people growing their own crops in a pastoral setting. Until Israeli soldiers apparently are directed to disrupt their holdings, bulldozing homes and uprooting trees.

As Oprah says: sunshine ... openness is good. I've a feeling for far too long only one side of the Palestinian-Israeli sufferings have been shown in America's mainstream media. Every time a rocket attack caused plaster damage that so much as scratched a settler's child -- we heard in the American media those violent Palestinians were at it again.

And the long shadow of the Holocaust has us grieving with the innocent grandmothers who somehow survived that atrocity, nevermind the sufferings today of the dead and injured elderly in Israeli Defense Force attacks on Palestinian homes and civilians. As soon as we put the anti-Semite card back into the deck where it belongs with the other cards, and understand it's wiser to critically evaluate the actions and future plans of all the players in the region, yes -- even our number one ally -- the sooner taxpayers can stop contributing billions toward an elusive peace that America simply cannot afford not to win.

If the extracted healthcare reform fight ends finally this week -- win, lose or draw -- I'm hoping President Obama and his team will turn their attention to what I've always believed should be a primary foreign policy goal: Defining Israel's borders, and helping her acheive a truer independence -- financially self supporting, at peace with her peer nations in the region. Of course, this means a major mindset change for the Israeli religious extremists who see their tribe, historically, as set apart from the rest of the nations. And it will require American political backbone, no doubt.

But sometimes, you gotta be a friend to have a friend. And sometimes, true friends gotta get tough with one another, to help keep the relationship alive ... long term.

*ROTC

---------------------------------
ADDED: The Chicago Tribune weighs in:
Count us with the White House on this one.

The Palestinians claim East Jerusalem as the eventual capital of a future state. They're balking at coming to the negotiating table as long as Israel keeps building there. The fate of Jerusalem is one of the stickiest issues in negotiations on a two-state peace agreement. Any building there is seen as more Israeli consolidation in an area that the Palestinians hope to control one day.

Netanyahu apologized and said he was blindsided by the timing of the housing announcement. But he's not backing down from the decision. The construction will continue, he said Monday.

"The combination of rebukes for Israel and conciliatory words for her enemies sends a very dangerous signal to the world," Rep. Paul Price, chairman of the Republican Study Committee, said in a statement Monday. House Minority Whip Eric Cantor said the administration was being "irresponsible."

Oh my.
...
So the grand vision of a brokered peace deal recedes. And the threat of a nuclear Iran advances. Israel's ambassador to the U.S., Michael Oren, reportedly described the current crisis as the worst in more than three decades. He's an accomplished historian so we'd heed his words.

Israel made a big mistake. Republicans compound that mistake by trying to take political advantage of frayed relations between the U.S. and Israel.

Nobody gains from an escalation of tensions.

ADDED: And another Cohen makes baby steps towards recognizing the roots of the problem in a place where Palestinain violence -- unknown before 1948 -- was born:
An Israeli can recognize the legitimacy of Palestinian aspiration and appreciate the depth of the calamity that befell the Palestinians in 1948. The Palestinian intellectual Constantine Zurayk coined the term "al-Nakba" (the disaster) for their 1948 debacle -- and there is no doubt it was.
...
Editorialists around the world were quite right to bash the government of Binyamin Netanyahu for its in-your-face rebuke to Biden -- even though, as the analyst Stephen P. Cohen explains, the decision by right-wing ministers was meant also as a rebuke to Netanyahu himself. These housing plans are more than just an irritant. They are a core issue. They proclaim the insistence of right-wing Israelis that all of Jerusalem will remain in Israeli hands on pragmatic grounds and because God wants it this way. For both reasons, a second opinion is in order but not, as it happens, sought.
...
Washington's response to the Israeli government's announcement of additional housing was both harsh and appropriate -- an "affront" and an "insult," David Axelrod, President Obama's senior adviser, called it. He might have added "unnecessary" and "counterproductive." The incessant march of West Bank settlements and housing has to stop if there is to be any chance of reaching the vaunted two-state solution.

I hate to see this whole sorry situation turn into a never-ending game of chicken... as in, "Which came first, the chicken or the egg?"

Monday, March 15

AIPAC takes it back.

Steve Clemons drafts a satirical press release from AIPAC:

The Netanyahu Government's recent statements and posture regarding major settlement expansion in East Jerusalem and the calloused disregard for the impact of these actions on Israel's relationship with the United States are a matter of serious concern.

AIPAC calls on Prime Minister Netanyahu to take immediate steps to defuse the tension with the U.S. government.

The United States is Israel's closest ally in the Middle East. The foundation of the U.S-Israel relationship is rooted in Israel's fundamental strategic interest, shared democratic values, and a long-time commitment to peace in the region.

Those strategic interests, which most Israelis acknowledge and share with the U.S., extend to every facet of Israeli life and its relationship with the United States.

Unfortunately, a relationship that has generally enjoyed vast bipartisan support in Congress and among the American people is now eroding because of the Israeli government's tendency to allow short term concerns and the incrementalism of its expansion in Occupied Territories to undermine its own long term security interests, its core relations with the US, and the security and safety of American men and women deployed today in the Middle East.

The Netanyahu government should make a conscious effort to immediately move away from actions that would further undermine any prospects for Israel-Palestine peace and a two state solution. While Israel complains about unilateral deadlines directed at the Jewish State, it is time for Israel to ante up on the peace process and demonstrate that it has the maturity to demonstrate that it will cooperate with and not undermine US basic, fundamental, and strategic interests.

The escalated rhetoric of recent days reminds how much substantive work needs to be done -- and how absent the Israeli government has been -- with regard to the urgent issue of Iran's rapid pursuit of nuclear weapons, and the pursuit of peace between Israel and all her Arab neighbors.

Israel's provocative decision and announcement that it will greatly expand East Jerusalem settlements -- followed by revelations of tens of thousands more in process but as yet unannounced -- undermine the chances of securing normalization with Arab neighbors and only add to Iran's growing strength and powers of persuasion in the region.

We strongly urge the Netanyahu government to work closely and privately with the Obama administration, in a manner befitting strategic allies, to address these issues between the two governments.

The strategic patience of the United States is being irresponsibly tested by Israel today, and it is time for all well meaning supporters of this relationship and of global stability and peace to encourage significantly more responsible behavior from the Israeli government in reigning in issues like settlement expansion that make a once seemingly unconditional relationship necessarily "conditional."

Remember, like the Irish-Americans and the Cuban-Americans and countless other ethnicities who came to this country, Jewish-Americans absolutely have the right to contribute their efforts and energies to sending money and support to the homeland.

That doesn't mean it's wise foreign policy to pretend the goals of both our countries are so intertwined as to be unrecognizable; that American taxpayers of all ethnicities need to continue bankrolling the efforts of one country to secure their homeland.

Take the Bay of Pigs and rachet tensions up times 100, and then you'll see what is at risk to Americans today...

Sunday, March 14

Too smart by half.

When we read of news like this, or consider the alleged poisoning of Yasser Arafat, you have to wonder: Do we really need allies that operate like this? When happens when the Golden Rule is applied to our own leaders?

When your child gets to be a teenager, and starts flexing his adult muscles, often that's the time to push him out of the nest. To spread his wings and learn to fly -- or flap as he may -- under his own powers.

This Biden building incident may turn out to be a blessing in disguise for both our countries. If there indeed is going to be another major world war, if we're choosing up sides in the region, it's good for Americans to understand where exactly they stand vis-a-vis our allegedly best friend in the area.

If you can't trust your friends, it's better to find out now before intertwining our futures and locking into a pattern that can only bring our own country down. There's no moral obligation for America to put Israel's interests now before our own.

We're better than that.

It's one thing to intervene in a Holocaust, it's another to continue enabling this strange idea that you can kill your way to peace, and pursue justice through immoral means. Who remembers that old Coven song?* Sing it with me now...

"Listen children to a story that was written long ago..."

Chutzpah is as chutzpah does.

If Israel were financially independent, then their comments about American meddling might make sense. But how many millions -- a billion? -- of American dollars flow to them annually out of the American taxpayer pockets?

Danny Danon, a Likud legislator and a deputy speaker of the Parliament who supports additional settlement construction, said that Mrs. Clinton’s “meddling in internal Israeli decisions regarding the development of our capital Jerusalem is uninvited and unhelpful.”

“In fact it is sheer chutzpah,” Mr. Danon said.

Professor Efraim Inbar, director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies at Bar Ilan University, said the “Americans decided to make a crisis” over the proposed construction in Ramat Shlomo, “probably in order to extract more concessions from Israel.”

But Professor Inbar also offered some criticism of Mr. Netanyahu, saying that he was disappointed with the prime minister’s apologies. “I expected him to say ‘Jerusalem is ours’ and he did not,” he said. “From my point of view he is trying to be too flexible.”

Fine, be independent and do as you like. Don't expect American troops to be rushed to the region and spill their blood when the stinkin' Israeli leaders don't have the will to understand they can't continue to build and appease their internal extremists. (who indeed are terrorists when they act violently and kill for the land G-d allegedly gave them...)

It will be interesting to see if Secretatary of State Clinton and the Obama administration capitulate on this point, or stand strong. It's not the timing at issue here; it's the underlying land grabs and refusal to bargain in good faith with one's allies that has riled the region and left many wondering if America will indeed be the weakest player involved.

Israel needs to be weaned off America's financial teat before undertaking further expansion plans. Or else their leaders should wise up to how many longstanding committed relationships seem to fail, when one party or the other refuses to make the necessary adjustments to move a relationship forward.

Because nothing lasts forever without honesty and hard work. You can practically bank on it.

ADDED: Who exactly is this David Frum, and what are the "Southern Irish"? Sounds pretty stupid to me, and his joke clearly fell flat.

Saturday, March 13

Remember the Red River Valley...

I moved to northwest Wisconsin in the summer of 1996. It was a harsh winter that year with above average snowfall. I was commuting into St. Paul, learning the skyway system, and adjusting to the heartier-than-Chicago winters; Ruth was teaching me the importance of eating well during cold times. Fattened me up, she did.*

That following spring, came hell and high water. We got Minnesota, not Wisconsin, television channels over there, and watched in horror the coverage of the Grand Forks, N.D. flooding and fires. The timing too was particularly bad: it was a waxing moon, with greater power to lift tides, effectively drawing the water up, in addition to the millions of gallons of meltwater pouring from the tributaries into the river systems.

The Red River flood waters crested at 54 feet (with 28 feet being the flood stage), and a fire broke out in the downtown business district:

The Red River, usually 100 feet wide, became a shallow lake 15 miles across, in places. Overall, the Red River Flood of 1997 was classified as a 100 year flood. Some cities along the river saw peak discharges with over 500 year recurrence levels.

The devastation did not stop there. A fire erupted downtown. It was caused by an electrical problem triggered by the floodwater, and destroyed much of the historic down-town area. Firefighters attempted to fend off the fire but conventional methods were out of the question. The streets surrounding the fire were flooded and there was no water pressure in the fire hydrants. Eventually, they were able to extinguish the fire by dropping fire retardant from an airplane, along with 120,000 gallons of water dropped from a helicopter in 60 massive dumps.

The estimated damages for the entire Red River flood totaled about $4 billion including all U.S. portions of the Red River. The Grand Forks/East Grand Forks area claimed $3.6 billion of that total.

No lives were lost immediately because of the floods, but perhaps the evacuations and distress helped contribute to early deaths, especially amongst the numerous elderly residents. It was the worst natural disaster I'd seen, pre-Katrina.


This time of year, I've learned, while you're glad for warmer days and rain instead of snow, everybody hopes for a gradual meltdown, so as not to distress the river systems. Because even when one town reinforces and builds up, all that water has to go somewhere and now the river towns downstream take on a greater risk.

We've had almost a week, maybe two now, above freezing, so it's pretty much 24-hours of melt, plus the additional rainwater pouring into the system. We haven't has as much snow as southern Wisconsin and the East Coast this year, but again, the rivers are running.

I'm heading outside to the park, to enjoy the day, maybe even get a campfire going to cook some venison weiners outside. But once the weekend is done, after we've set our clocks ahead and are thinking ahead to St. Patricks' midweek?

Don't think I'm nuts when I tell you I'm hoping for another quick cold spell. Just to slow things down and give Mother Nature a chance to catch up. Just remember the Red River Valley...

Pictures at the links.

---------------

*At 5'6", consistently 140 pounds now, compared to 125 when I moved up here 15 years ago. That's my healthy weight; don't let them convince you that everywhere, less is necessarily more.

Friday, March 12

Healthcare for all?

Stupak standing strong:

Stupak notes that his negotiations with House Democratic leaders in recent days have been revealing. “I really believe that the Democratic leadership is simply unwilling to change its stance,” he says. “Their position says that women, especially those without means available, should have their abortions covered.” The arguments they have made to him in recent deliberations, he adds, “are a pretty sad commentary on the state of the Democratic party.”

What are Democratic leaders saying?

“If you pass the Stupak amendment, more children will be born, and therefore it will cost us millions more. That’s one of the arguments I’ve been hearing,” Stupak says. “Money is their hang-up. Is this how we now value life in America? If money is the issue — come on, we can find room in the budget. This is life we’re talking about.”

If Obamacare passes, Stupak says, it could signal the end of any meaningful role for pro-life Democrats within their own party. “It would be very, very hard for someone who is a right-to-life Democrat to run for office,” he says. “I won’t leave the party. I’m more comfortable here and still believe in a role within it for the right-to-life cause, but this bill will make being a pro-life Democrat much more difficult. They don’t even want to debate this issue. We’ll probably have to wait until the Republicans take back the majority to fix this.”

And so it begins ... again.

Provoke passion, get desired response, play the victim card...

On Friday, Israeli police prevented young Palestinian men from praying at a holy site in Jerusalem, and Israel’s military imposed a general ban on travel by Palestinians from the West Bank into Israel. The security crackdown comes after recent clashes following Friday prayers in Jerusalem.

The Associated Press reported that police will only allow Palestinian women and Palestinian men over 50 years of age to pray on Friday at the Jerusalem holy site Jews (sic) known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as the Temple Mount.

The closings did not ensure calm though.

No kidding.

Read the whole thing? Because when the bloody response comes, we always seem to forget how these things got started...

Celebrate good times, c'mon!

One step forward, two steps back.

Brooks gets all milquetoasty on Obama again.

I don't think I could ever be a regular reader of his column*; it seems for every decent column he gets out, he backtracks or "covers his bases" so to speak, on the next three...

I'm afraid what skills Brooks sees as strengths in an American president, most thinking folk would consider fine in a lifelong community organizer (committed to a project for the long run), but lacking when the country is crying out for a strong leader:

The fact is, Obama is as he always has been, a center-left pragmatic reformer**. Every time he tries to articulate a grand philosophy — from his book “The Audacity of Hope” to his joint-session health care speech last September — he always describes a moderately activist government restrained by a sense of trade-offs. He always uses the same on-the-one-hand-on-the-other sentence structure. Government should address problems without interfering with the dynamism of the market.

Trouble is, what looks good promised on paper often just doesn't work out in reality, because of a plethora of overlooked contributing factors. And though some might be uncomfortable admitting it, that makes the failed promiser look weak.

Better to promise small, and deliver big. And be in it for the long haul, once the publicized short-term gains are gone.

I mean even Israel, beneficiary of our greenbacks and goodwill, is slapping America in the face again. Twice now, when we send diplomats and pols to help with the "peace process", it coincidentally leaks that their further sectarian expansion plans (financed in these tight times by whom?) are contrary to America's defined interests in the region.

Obama's (missing) leadership is making it seem America is being schooled in our role over there, all right: "Thank you sir! May I have another?"

Somehow, I'm sure Brooks will spin that as some ultimate master plan too. After taking time to analyze, summarize and articulate the positions on all sides, it somehow becomes wisest to move forward unilaterally, ramming through the preferred plan of one "side"; the exact opposite of the "building consensus" promises of the community organizer cum president.
-----------------

* That's the problem with these "professional" journalists I think.

On some level, they begin caring more about playing nice, so they can be likeable in the elite circles in which they run. They're closer to the power than to the people, and they can't risk losing access by speaking hard truths.

Or maybe, that kind of environment just seduces you: like the poppies in Oz or the lotus flowers Odysseus' men consumed, you just forget about working for the people back home -- eventually coming to learn most of what you know about the Real America (non-elite) out here from secondary sources.

Give me Mike Royko's kind of regular-Joe elbow rubbing and blunt assessments, rude as they may initially seem, any every day of the week...***

He wrote during troubled times, but before the "professionals" took over the news business, and truth be told? His work, that from the ground up perspective, was better. More conducive to truth finding, I think, because rarely does the truth tell itself -- typed up and delivered clean and double spaced -- at news conferences, professional dinner parties, or other elite gatherings where it might seem honored and fun to be.

** Um, promised reform sure, but what actual reform is Mr. Brooks speaking of? Giving out those prizes for potential before they're earned again...

*** Can you imagine an evaluation of the Obama administration, crisply researched and written in the style of Boss? Now Obama is no (J.) Daley, and his administration no Machine, but an honest assessment from the ground up -- particularly had it been written before the election -- might have given us a clearer daily picture of how the man operates in power.

And if it turns out -- in reality -- he is better a promiser than a deliverer, at least the public and voters would have known that going in...

So much for fanboy journalism.

Swim banquet tonight.

I love my kids. Had ten of them at the pool in the next town over, as they are starting up a team joined with Rice Lake. In my remarks, I described us as a one-room schoolhouse actually. 10 swimmers: 3 bronze, all brothers which the swim club was so excited to enroll, as it's hard to get boys swimming competitively at that age. Too many other sports options, I think. 5-year-old (now 6, since the season ended and I saw them last) Aaron greeted me with a spontaneous hug. Too sweet, and no, we weren't a hugging team. The twins, Andrew and Austin, were as rambunctious as usual, in a lively good-hearted way. The older sister, at 12, our only gold swimmer is going to play basketball only next year, instead of splitting between. And the middle one Warren, earned our Spirit of the Otter Award; 10 going on 40. Mature, persistent, disciplined. Always went the extra mile; in fact, stayed 15 minutes late one Monday practice just to prove to himself that he could swim a mile (1650 yards, with flippers) like some of the older RL kids did at a meet the Saturday earlier (no flippers though). Very serious, but I think he liked the little trophy (all of them got medals around their necks.)

The two silver sisters, who are growing up on a farm and whose mother swam where she came from, didn't come to the banquet tonight. It's about 15 miles from Barron, but I'm not sure how far out of town they are. The judge's daughter, (nope not Becky Thatcher), was there; our Most Improved swimmer who came the first week in a two-piece was not. If I'd had the quick sense, since there were no names on the trophy, I might have re-awarded it. Next year, maybe we can call the parents ahead to let them know if the child is getting the award.

Best of all really -- it was a potluck. I think potlucks can either be not to one's liking (if you prefer to stick to familiar dishes) or wonderful!, like 50 offerings of something home-cooked. Now they couldn't rent the Masonic Lodge this year as it was booked, so we met in the one of the Lutheran Church halls, and you know that just had to make the homemade food taste even better (in a Garrison Keillor sort of way...) Nothing fancy, simple dishes, but the warm cheesy-something casserole, and the dressing on one lady's apple, spinach salad? Out of this world. Lots and lots of desserts (lots of kids, remember), but my choice was the home-baked thick brownie, where the top is cracked a bit, but nevermind asthetics, that's how we homemade them when I was a kid.

To be short, if you ever get an opportunity to help teach/correct/encourage children with a skill you know, take it, I'd advise. Their energy, and fresh happy perspectives (I think Aaron hugged me right after he saw the dessert table actually, so simply joyful they can be and unselfish about sharing) really can be worth it.

Plus, a rainy yesterday morning, and pretty much dreary week (if you like the sun out all the time) has melted our parking lot clear of ice and snow. I went around picking up revealed trash one morning in the small parking lot; Mal taught me that at an apartment in Madison years ago. At first I was like, "Why me pick up some neighbor's litterings? Let the landlord do that." But then I came to see, for the quarter hour it takes, you get to look at a clean lot, for a time anyway, and I think people are less likely to litter when they see someone, a neighbor, stooping with a glove and plastic bag to pick things up. Depends on the character I guess; sometimes it helps, some people remain oblivious to their surroundings. We've got a lot of young kids/couples just-starting-out renters in the building over (the Nunn House), but I have high hopes for them. Most of what I picked up too, was under the now melted snow piles, so you never know if that stuff wasn't from neighbors but came in with the plows.

Tonight, it rained a little bit more. The river's are rising; the spring is a coming.

Thursday, March 11

Confidential...

To my friends at the PBPost: Thank you for taking action; this is how change begins, friends...

Wednesday, March 10

Whatever it takes...

The news business, circa 2010. So sad, it makes you laugh.

Hat tip: Volokh.

Last one today ... I promise.

Over at the esteemed WaPo, the Ezra laments his lack of invitation to an Insider Administration gathering:

"All the other bloggers got fancy invites to the fancy Treasury meet-and-greet yesterday. Not me. I'm pure and unsullied."

Commenters respond:

"All the other bloggers got fancy invites to the fancy Treasury meet-and-greet yesterday. Not me. I'm pure and unsullied"

Or ... they already know they've got you in the bag, so why waste any time/money trying to court your services?

Think of it like the Dem senators being courted with delicious back-room deals for their healthcare vote now. Pure and unsullied my foot: you know how this game is played.

Once they've got you, the need to provide meet n greets, exclusive tickets, or to tuck something under your arm to bring to the folks back home... less necessary.

Seems to meet, you got a Skype w/ Diane Sawyer, a spot on a hot cable comedy show, and your mug on a Newsweek page along with the WaPo gig. You value your career advancement, and you're being compensated accordingly.

You're a kid: nobody expects you to wise up, until the numbers are staring you in the face 5, 10 years after this thing passes --- if indeed they can come up with another to get the reluctant Dem congressfolk on board too. Then you can just play dumb:
"I had no idea that the CBO figures might not hold longterm. Absolutely gobsmacked that there's not enough coming in to afford all our resolute promises back in 2010. But how can we take this necessary entitlement program away now? It will cost millions of lives and the only solution is to ... GROW the program. Oh, and catch me this Sunday morning on the Paul Ryan talking heads show..."

We can see it kiddo, even if you're still pretending you can't. Next time, hold out a little longer and you'll get gifted even more for making yourself look such a tool pushing this bloated plan.

Posted by: Mary42 | March 9, 2010

I guess Mary42 prefers the crystal ball instead of argument based on facts and numbers. That generally happens when people have their head empty or rather full of stupid GOP talking points.
Posted by: umesh409 | March 9, 2010 7:53 PM

Nope, I'm independent.

I know how to add though, and I know that Ezra's missing out on the best part of the story here: what kind of backroom deals are going down to convince enough Dems to vote for a pork-laden piece of legislation that everybody honestly knows has been cooked to allow the CBO to come up with those "deficit reducing" numbers.

Just like plenty of us didn't fall for Obama's campaign promises, plenty of which -- if you're keeping your independent eyes and ears open -- are falling to the wayside as this administration begins to adopt some of the platforms and promises his opponents campaigned on.

"No Hillary. My healthcare plan won't be mandatory like yours. No John McCain. I won't be writing a blank check with taxpayer money to help everyone get insurance -- whether they want it or not -- that will be paid directly to the insurance companies."

Fooled ya again, he did! I think Ezra's already got his lines all rehearsed too , when the numbers crunched on this thing don't turn out to be the true ones in years to come.

"I was young. I honestly didn't know! It would have been a great, money saving plan, if only reality hadn't intruded with all those non-compliant numbers. I mean, who knew you can't promise the moon to all, while cutting their premiums and taxes, with no shortages of services and magically not running up the deficit. NOBODY saw that coming."

Except ... that's simply not true either. Kill the Bill while there's still time left not to bankrupt the economy! Do the right thing Dems, or you indeed will be voted out by the independents, fiscally conservative Dems, and Republicans who will be out in force voting this fall. Just Say No to the temptations of lucrative backroom deals. You'll be glad you did!

Especially the young pols. No need for all of you to commit career suicide over this. Look at the poll numbers, and don't buy that "people will find this more to their liking once they realize it's a done deal and there's nothing they can do about it except shut up and pay the ever spiralling healthcare costs which have not been reigned in at all with the reconciliated legislations."

Posted by: Mary42 | March 9, 2010 8:19 PM

And btw, it doesn't exactly take a crystal ball to see that somebody has clearly compromised his journalistic integrity in shilling this poorly constructed bill reconciliation plan.

Just a little brains, and some basic math skills. Oh, and a dash of common sense -- something those self-professed economists sat on long ago.
Posted by: Mary42 | March 9, 2010 8:22 PM

And here I thought I was snarky and righteously indignant. Mary42, hat's off to ya.
Posted by: bgmma50 | March 9, 2010 9:36 PM

Aww, how sweet. But like the Cocker song goes, "You can leave your hat on..."

Have a great Hump Day, all.

Tuesday, March 9

Speak for yourself, son.

"It's also the case that individuals don't care as much about their premiums as they normally would because their employers typically pay more than 70 percent of the cost, and employers don't care about the cost as much as they normally would because they just deduct it from worker wages. So no one, from insurers to employers to individuals, really feels the full cost of the system, and so no one is that interested in cutting costs.* And this is not something we're going to fix in health-care reform."

Who is Mr. Klein forgetting ... who, who? Oh yes. The deliberately uninsured individual who pays out of pocket for necessary, minimal medical treatments.

Sadly, just as those on business expense accounts do not blink at paying $89 for a low-end hotel room, medical consumers who choose to pay-as-you-go actually pay MORE than what is billed to an employer-insured individual, because of the group rates negotiated for standard procedures (like an office visit, needed to procure an antibiotic prescription every 5 years or so.)

Now give the kid credit; he's starting to wise up on how businesses -- even in the big bad insurance industry -- work in real life:

One of the oddities of the health-care reform debate is that we tend to despise insurers for two contradictory things. On the one hand, we hate them for saying no. No to procedures, no to people, no to reimbursements. On the other hand, we hate them for raising premiums and being expensive.

But saying no, of course, is what holds down costs. So when it comes to cost control, insurers are in a bit of a "damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don't" situation. And they've chosen "don't." Sharon Begley explains why:

Why do insurers pay for unnecessary care? Partly because they're battle-weary, having been successfully sued for refusing to cover, for instance, high-dose chemo plus bone-marrow transplants for breast cancer -- which turned out to be not just useless but, for thousands of patients, deadly.


Unfortunately, by the time he gets around to understanding what those already conditioned to "Consume and Pay for only what you can Afford Today" do, I fear it will be much to late to take the Entitlement Bones from the mouths of teething children.

You think it will be tough killing this bill now ... in 15 years, you try deciding between a physically healthy child growing in poverty, and an older worker who's put in all his life working for the union insurance and pension -- before that was eliminated to equal things out -- which one is going to see the doctor and be pre-approved for the basic medical treatment that day.

Let's not encourage the entitlement mentality that kills the "Pay as You Go" economy for everyone. Then, there will be incentives to work for the best opportunities you can position yourself and your family.

And most importantly, there will be an underlying social structure solidity in that we're not going to change the rules of the game and artificially entitle some growth populations, seemingly forever. You can't legislate "equality" where none truly exists, as our school districts are starting to see locally for the costs of treating healthy and mentally ill/learning disabled children as equals to be accomodated, despite the much higher pricetag in bringing one up to the norm. It's simply unaffordable to mandate such good intentions, and budget cuts become necessary in the real world to achieve artificial "equality".

Best still to allow states to work with their own poor and uninsured populations to meet their needs. Wisconsin isn't doing so bad with our own BadgerCare and BadgerCare further rollouts. The states whose industries are being subsidized via undocumented labor naturally will have those costs show up on their books somewhere in terms of education or healthcare needs. Maybe they could group together and tackle the problems of their citizen uninsureds, at the same time as addressing the costs of unseen/undocumented peoples.

Florida and North Dakota have different populations, and different health needs. The rural number one health problem is transportation and access; the urban coastal areas might need more vaccinations or ways of convincing people to come into clinics and treat. Same money needed; different ways of delivering.

But when nobody can afford a hotel room in your region on the need-based, market-determined rates without employer subsidies (even with cheaper undocumented labor) -- that's not a good thing because you're relying only on the true elites and those subsidized by others to fund your business.

That's not honest competition. That can lead to poor quality at over-inflated prices. The finanically healthiest will steer clear of paying for such situations and accomodations.

You really do have to control costs, and have some accurate measure of paying in for what you're taking out, before you can mandate anyone's behavior. Otherwise, just as mandatory prohibition drove the best drink underground, surely plenty of doctors (and nurses!) will follow the money and find the most lucrative positions for themselves. Where they still can use market-determined rates to calculate their worth, and surely will find no shortage of customers. (think Private schools, vs. their federally mandated brothers and sisters in past decades. You tell me: quality overall? Up or down? At least the system as it stands now still permits those who work and sacrifice and -- quite frankly -- want it bad enough to prioritize their own values and have a shot at least at getting there.)

You don't like paying for your co-workers' family health bills? Vote with your feet. Find another job. Get thee to a state of your liking; investigate what you need, what you can or can't afford. Timing counts! If you can't pay, just say "nay". And don't forget to set aside something for a rainy day. Because at the end of the day, you simply can't give more than you've got, and expect uncommitted others to pick up the tab for your promises. Let's break that habit today, for the sake of a healthy future, deal?

-------------

* And Fwiw? I generally don't pay for someone to prepare or bring me my daily bread either. Don't even stay at hotels much, choosing camping outdoors when that's an option. Nor do I choose to pay extra for cable tv. I know plenty who do though, and then can't afford to pay for their healthcare premiums. Things that make you go "hmmm..."

Tell me again where it ends that I'm paying for the wealthy elderly to hang on to their inheritance money for their kids, and now I'm paying for the sweet co-worker lady who has 6 kids with 3 fathers, only 1 of whom did she see the need to marry?

Pay as You Go, with an insurance option for those who find it financially beneficial, + Needs Tested Government-Run Social Programs that don't encourage program growth. You want to control costs and balance a budget -- there's an elementary place to start some Change and Hope going around.

Read 'em and weep.

Brooks:
For the past year, small business owners have been screaming that they can’t hire people because they don’t know what the rules will be on health care, finance or energy. Democrats hear them, but those concerns take a back seat to other priorities.

Small business owners have been screaming about the health care bill that forces them to offer coverage or pay a $2,000-per-employee fine but doesn’t substantially control rising costs. Democrats hear their concerns, but push ahead because getting a health care bill is more important.
...

They’re going through the motions. They’ve stuffed the legislation with gimmicks and dodges designed to get a good score from the Congressional Budget Office but don’t genuinely control runaway spending.
...

The primary cost-control mechanism and long-term revenue source for the program is the tax on high-cost plans. But Democrats aren’t willing to levy this tax for eight years. The fiscal sustainability of the whole bill rests on the naïve hope that a future Congress will have the guts to accept a trillion-dollar tax when the current Congress wouldn’t accept an increase of a few billion.

There is the 10-6 dodge. One of the reasons the bill appears deficit-neutral in the first decade is that it begins collecting revenue right away but doesn’t have to pay for most benefits until 2014. That’s 10 years of revenues to pay for 6 years of benefits, something unlikely to happen again unless the country agrees to go without health care for four years every decade.

There is the Social Security dodge. The bill uses $52 billion in higher Social Security taxes to pay for health care expansion. But if Social Security taxes pay for health care, what pays for Social Security?
...
The Democrats have not been completely irresponsible. It’s just that as the health fight has gone on, their passion for coverage has swamped their less visceral commitment to reducing debt. The result is a bill that is fundamentally imbalanced.

This past year, we’ve seen how hard it is to even pass legislation that expands benefits. To actually reduce benefits and raise taxes, we’re going to need legislators who wake up in the morning passionate about fiscal sanity. The ones we have now are just making things worse.

Klein:
{A}t some point, we have to bet that Congress will be able to stick to cost controls. Otherwise, we're bankrupt one way or the other, and we may as well give people health-care coverage as the country rides out its final years of solvency.
...
3) More evidence that health-care reform will become more popular if it passes.

4) I'll be on the Colbert Report tonight.

ADDED: And here's Herbert, rounding out the pack:

The Obama administration and Democrats in general are in trouble because they are not urgently and effectively addressing the issue that most Americans want them to: the frightening economic insecurity that has put a chokehold on millions of American families.

The economy shed 36,000 jobs last month, and that was trumpeted in the press as good news. Well, after your house has burned down I suppose it’s good news that the flames may finally be flickering out. But once you realize that it will take 11 million or more new jobs to get us back to where we were when the recession began, you begin to understand that we’re not really making any headway at all.

It’s also widely known by now that the official employment statistics drastically understate the problem. Once we take off the statistical rose-colored glasses, we’re left with the awful reality of millions upon millions of Americans who have lost — or are losing — their jobs, their homes, their small businesses, and their hopes for a brighter future.

Instead of focusing with unwavering intensity on this increasingly tragic situation, making it their top domestic priority, President Obama and the Democrats on Capitol Hill have spent astonishing amounts of time and energy, and most of their political capital, on an obsessive quest to pass a health care bill.

Health care reform is important. But what the public has wanted and still badly needs above all else from Mr. Obama and the Democrats are bold efforts to put people back to work. A major employment rebound is the only real way to alleviate the deep economic anxiety that has gripped so many Americans. Unaddressed, that anxiety inevitably evolves into dread and then anger.

But while the nation is desperate for jobs, jobs, jobs, the Democrats have spent most of the Obama era chanting health care, health care, health care.

The talk inside the Beltway, that super-incestuous, egomaniacal, reality-free zone, is that President Obama and the Democrats have a messaging or public relations problem. We’re being told — and even worse, Mr. Obama and the Democrats are being told — that their narrative is not getting through. In other words, the wonderfulness of all that they’ve done is somehow not being recognized by the slow-to-catch-on masses.



Nevermind the magnificent oratory; listening skills anyone?

A cynic might say what we really need now is a good world war to get us out of this economic fix. Students of history know, it wasn't the massive federal spending programs (big then, massive now) that led us out of the Great Depression. They helped, but it took the true wartime mentality and bloody fix of a world war to charge up America's economic engines again.

I pray to God that's not our big plan here, but "the more things change, the more they stay the same." And "if you don't learn from history, you're bound to repeat it", right?

Is there anybody in politics thinking about the American economy right now and looking out 10 to 20 years in the future? What will we make; what will we sell? Tourism, crappy films, and service industries can only take you so far afterall. And corporate America and the governments can only make work for so many at inflated salaries.

We've pretty much accepted, with our encouragement of the influx of our undocumented friends and neighbors, that a master-servant class relationship is ok again in America. Nevermind the wisdom of a gameplan that has you depending on your least educated, less rooted non-fellow countrymen for providing the most basic services. (I personally agree with MLK that such a mindset does as much to harm the master class as it does those serving....)

As the old Asia song goes: "But I can see that dark horizon looming ever close to view..." The smile has left your eyes, indeed.

MORE: Nevermind Sarah Palin; I want to know what newspapers, mags and tv shows the current Democratic administration tunes into to get their news. Don't they read this stuff and understand how things work: who needs to be leaned on, and most importantly who does not?

HINT: it's not the non-treating, by choice non-insureds asking for the blank taxpayer checks and running up the systematic costs of the game... No more bailouts for the big guys who calculated their numbers wrong. How will they ever learn? And no one-size-fits-all premiums not distinguishing between those health consumers who treat regularly and cost more, and those who practice preventative maintenance and don't run up thousands of dollars of bills to be passed along to others to share ... equally.

Rick Klein:
ABC’s Z. Byron Wolf reports: President Obama and Democrats launched a campaign to vilify insurance companies in the final stretch of their health reform effort. Republicans, meanwhile, pointed out that those very same insurance companies would get huge checks from the government if health reform is enacted.

“(Health Insurers) will keep on doing this for as long as they can get away with it. This is no secret,” the president said. “They're telling their investors this – ‘We are in the money. We are going to keep on making big profits even though a lot of folks are going to be put under hardship,’” the President told supporters at a stop in Pennsylvania today.

HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, meanwhile, wrote to insurance company executives demanding that they justify premium hikes.

Neither mentioned that the Senate health reform bill, which is the basis for Democrats' last best chance at comprehensive reform, would give the insurance companies millions of new customers required by law to buy health insurance. It would also require insurers to cover everyone, regardless of age, gender or pre-existing condition.

To help pay for the new insurance requirements the government would give to people money to buy insurance - $336 billion over the next ten years. That money, ultimately, would have to go to... drum roll... insurance companies.
...
During the 2008 Presidential campaign, then-Senator Obama criticized a proposal by Sen. John McCain because it would send government help for people to buy insurance directly to insurance companies.

“But The New Tax Credit [For Health Insurance] He’s Proposing? That Wouldn’t Go To You. It Would Go Directly To Your Insurance Company – Not Your Bank Account," said Obama in October on the Campaign trail.

And yet that’s exactly what Democrats' proposal would do...

So why do Insurance companies, if they're set to receive more than $330 billion in government subsidies to insure people without insurance now oppose the Senate bill?

"Health plans proposed more than a year ago robust insurance market reforms and new consumer protections to guarantee coverage for pre-existing conditions. Much more needs to be done in the current legislation to address the skyrocketing cost of medical care, which is making health care coverage unaffordable for working families and small businesses," said Robert Zirkelbach, a spokesman from America's Health Insurance Plans, in a statement today.

He argued that health insurers should not be targeted by the President and their profits are lower by margin than other sectors in the health industry.

"For every dollar spent on health care in America, less than one penny goes towards health plan profits. The focus needs to be on the other 99 cents," he said.

Saturday, March 6

45 in the sun. Still 37 at 10:30 pm.

Saw Mal on tv today. He's driving Zamboni again this year for the state tournament, and you can see the two machines circling the rink between periods in the long shots from above. One of the announcers ventured down rinkside to interview the University School Milwaukee* coach, and here came one Zamboni up against the glass... and then Mal, in the dark knit cap, making a path alongside.

Looking good Zamboni guy!

Myself, I've been enjoying the kind, higher-than-norm spring temps. And the sun, strong as she is these days. Itching to get the vegetable seeds sprouted, but much too early for that. And, if "in like a lamb, out like a lion" holds sway, then we might have a wetter than even-the-melting-now late March, right?

Personally, I rather like lions, but that's a story for another day.
----------------


* Damned if the long-shot didn't win this year, and I didn't see them coming -- had them bowing out in the semifinals: instead, USM beat Stoughton Thursday night, and even in the live stream, you could tell Stoughton's fans were out in force and making noise.

Last night, they took out Notre Dame Academy, who beat Madison Edgewood in opening play. And then USM, the non-top 10 ranked team, nor honorable mention even, played Giant killer: dashing Wausau West's championship dreams, handing the top-ranked team their only second loss this year. Those ones tend to hurt hardest I'll bet, coming as the kids aren't used to losing, and it's all over so suddenly.

But spring is in the air; other sports beckon. I think, in retrospect, the cashier at Walgreens was even flirting with me today. I won't recount the conversation, but really: who comes over to help you pick out gum these days? It's the spring weather, all right.

Friday, March 5

As it is in heaven.

A car-washin' kind of day...


Was it good for you?

Bring on the nighttime!

Thursday, March 4

78!

Wednesday, March 3

Healthcare 2010.

The closing ceremonies.

ADDED: This analysis hints at an Eastertime push, much like the Christmas Eve maneuvering that gained a temporary win in the Senate last year:

{T}here's no guarantee that the promise letter from Senate Democrats will reassure those in the House's larger, more ideologically diverse Democratic caucus. Conservative Democrats may worry about the political fallout of using reconciliation even for the sidecar bill, and liberals will still likely not get a public option and find that premium benefit plans enjoyed by some would be taxed to pay for newly mandated coverage for all individuals.

Additionally, Republican lawmakers have threatened to swamp any finalized bill with amendments, forcing Democrats into time-consuming debates and votes that the GOP hopes can drag the endgame into another August recess, which would unleash new waves of town hall tumult in the run-up to the 2010 elections. Reid is reportedly seeking to have his House counterparts hand off a passed reconciliation bill by March 26. That date allows Reid to finesse the amendment question by technically leaving debate on the measure open during the Senate's Easter recess, when Republicans are not going to be around in great numbers.

Drip, drip.

Melting temps are good, but this is kind of sad:

Maria Conneran's family sculpted Venus de Milo in last week's snow outside their home on Colonia Boulevard.

Gonzalez says Sgt. Dominick Sforza was apologetic when he went to the house and asked the family to dress the snow woman.

The family added a green bikini top and a blue sarong bottom.

The snow woman melted as the temperatures warmed up this week.

Photos at the link.

Monday, March 1

It's that time of year again. High school hockey comes to Madison this weekend, beginning with the state quarterfinals on Thursday.

I like Superior over EC Memorial; Wausau West over Rapids; Stoughton over University School; and you pick 'em with Notre Dame Academy vs. Madison-Edgewood Crusaders.

Here's the state's top 10:

1. (1) Wausau West (22-1-1)
2. (2) Notre Dame Academy (23-1)
3. (3) Stoughton (21-1-2)
4. (4) Eau Claire Memorial (18-5-1)
5. (5) Appleton United (16-4-3)
6. (6) Superior (13-7-1)
7. (7) Madison Edgewood (15-7-2)
8. (9) Middleton (17-4-2)
9. (8) Cedarburg (16-6-2)
10. (10) Waukesha (18-4-1)

I've said it before...

I'll say it again: (one of) the best thing(s) in life is to have your sisters as friends.

And a happy Casimir Pulaski Day to our Polish friends and all those celebrating today!

"I came here, where freedom is being defended, to serve it, and to live or die for it."