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A Most Unsettling Tendency
The Supreme Court’s Aggressive Term

John Roberts Jr., the chief justice of the United States, did not write the most important opinion of his court’s just-concluded term:  the one that allowed unlimited corporate and union spending in election campaigns. [Read full story]

A Financial Crisis?
Boehner Gets a Little Antsy

WASHINGTON--If U.S. Rep. John Boehner (Rep., Ohio) feels like renting a movie this weekend, I suggest he steer clear of the 1954 sci-fi horror flick, "Them!"
In it, nuclear testing in the New Mexico desert creates a marauding colony of giant mutant ants. [Read full story]

‘A Very Deep Hole’
Obama and Congress Blowing It on Jobs

NEW YORK--I know the president has a lot on his mind, but the No. 1 problem facing the United States continues to fester, and that problem is unemployment. [Read full story]

It’s Up to You, Attorney General
Stand Up on Prison Sexual Abuse Reform Standards

In 2003, Congress acknowledged the serious problem of rape in the nation’s prisons and created a commission to develop a set of national standards for preventing and punishing these crimes. [Read full story] 

College Graduates

In his first commencement speech as president to a Black college, President Barack Obama talked about the importance of education to graduates of Hampton University [Read full story]

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When Greatness Slips Away
Helplessness Becoming as American as Apple Pie

We’ve blown so many enormous opportunities over the past several years. 
In the immediate aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, when most of the world had lined up in support of the United States, President George W. Bush had the chance to lead a vast cooperative, international effort to combat terrorism and lay the groundwork for a more peaceful, more secure world.
He blew it with the invasion of Iraq. [Read full story]

Following BP’s Lead

I asked the sheriff of St. Bernard Parish, Jack Stephens, if he was at all optimistic about BP stopping the gusher of oil that is fouling the Gulf of Mexico...[Read full story]

Challenging Health Care Reform
Conservatives Persist in Their Demagoguery

The number of states jointly suing to overturn the new health care reform law on constitutional grounds swelled to 20 last week. [Read full story]

 

Editorials

 

President Rises to the Occasion
Let’s Start Now Rebuilding Our Infrastructure

On Labor Day afternoon in Milwaukee, President Barack Obama finally began to vigorously push the kind of high-profile, rebuild-America infrastructure campaign that is absolutely essential if there is to be any real hope of putting Americans back to work and getting the economy back into reasonable shape over the next few years.
In a speech that was rousing, inspirational and, at times, quite funny, the president outlined a $50 billion proposal for a wide range of improvements to the nation’s transportation infrastructure.  The money would be used for the construction and rehabilitation of highways, bridges, railroads, airport runways and the air traffic control system.
President Obama linked the nation’s desperate need for jobs to the sorry state of the national infrastructure in a tone that conveyed both passion and empathy, and left me wondering, “Where has this guy been for the past year and a half?”
After noting that nearly one in five construction workers is unemployed, President Obama told the crowd, “It doesn’t do anybody any good when so many hard-working Americans have been idle for months, even years, at a time when there is so much of America that needs rebuilding.”
The United States once had the finest infrastructure in the world, he said, “and we can have it again.”
The president’s plan would include the creation of an infrastructure bank that would use public dollars to leverage private capital for major projects.  If properly conceived and executed, the bank could become a crucial factor in financing the nation’s long-term infrastructure needs.
It should be kept in mind that President Obama’s proposal is only a first step.  Despite the $50 billion price tag, it’s not in any way commensurate with our overwhelming infrastructure needs or the gruesome scale of the nation’s unemployment crisis.  But it’s an important step.  It’s a smarter approach to infrastructure investment than the wasteful, haphazard, earmark-laden practices that we’ve become accustomed to, and it will put some people to work in jobs that pay decent wages.
The details of the proposal are less important than whether the proposal itself is a sign that President Obama and his party are ready, at long last, to engage this awful economy with the sense of urgency and bold initiatives it requires.  The plan won’t help Democrats in November.  It’s already too late for that.  But a good faith commitment to rebuilding the infrastructure would show that the party has some idea of the scale of the effort that’s needed to overcome the worst downturn since the Great Depression and, ultimately, to build an economy that offers the prospect of a decent living to the next couple of generations.
The president was eloquent on these matters in his speech.  Speaking of his grandparents’ experiences during the 1930’s, he said:  “They would tell me about seeing their fathers or uncles losing jobs during the Depression, how it wasn’t just the loss of a paycheck that stung.  It was the blow to their dignity, their sense of self-worth.  I’ll bet a lot of us have seen people changed after a long bout of unemployment, how it can wear down even the strongest spirits.”
Leaning toward the microphone, with his shirt collar unbuttoned, President Obama spoke in a way that belied his reputation for aloofness, for struggling to connect in a visceral way with ordinary working people.  He was speaking to a pro-Obama labor gathering, so he didn’t have to win over the audience.  But if his goal was to demonstrate that he genuinely cared about the struggles of the people in the audience and those watching on television--and about the long-term prospects of their children and grandchildren--he largely succeeded.
The question that remains, however, is whether he and his party will fight with the skill and tenacity needed to guide his infrastructure proposal to fruition, and whether they will finally focus intensely, as they should have been doing all along, on the difficult but absolutely critical task of putting millions of unemployed Americans back to work.
President Obama seemed to take a wicked, almost Truman-ish delight in going after the Republicans in his speech.  It doesn’t matter what actions are taken or proposed to help ordinary Americans or to rebuild the economy, he said, “almost every Republican in Congress says no.”
In fact, he suggested, the Republican Party is committed to saying no to absolutely anything and everything, no matter what the topic:  “If I said the sky was blue, they’d say, ‘No.’  If I said fish live in the sea, they’d say, ‘No.’ ”
As if on cue, Republican leaders denounced the president’s infrastructure plan as more “out of control” Democratic spending.
Ho-hum. 


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