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A Very Bright Idea
Two Years of College in High School

We hear a lot of talk about the importance of educational achievement and the knee-buckling costs of college. [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]

News Worth Noting
Next Phase in Health Care
War:  Applying the Law

The debate in Congress over President Barack Obama’s health care law is done, but the battle over how to carry out the law is just getting started. [Read full story]

Vetoed
Governor Sends a Strong Message

Gov. Brad Henry showed admirable wisdom and courage in choosing to veto two of the more onerous abortion restrictions Oklahoma lawmakers passed this session. [Read full story]

Rein in Wall Street
Do It Before History Repeats Itself

With the economy finally starting to rebound, it’s worth pausing for a moment to recall the roots of the financial crisis that cost millions of jobs and spawned untold misery. [Read full story]

Our Identity

Here I am answering my census questions and asking myself, “When will we name ourselves?”

[Read full story]

Quote Of The Month

Who will tell whether one happy moment of love or the joy of breathing or walking on a bright morning and smelling the fresh air, is not worth all the suffering and effort which life implies.

-Erich Fromm-

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WeatherBug

What's On TV?

News Worth Noting
Anti-Health Care Reform Suits Face Steep Hurdles

The moment that the U.S. House of Representatives passed the health care reform bill, 10 Republican state attorneys general were ready for it. [Read full story]

End of Rescission
Already, Health Care Reform Is Working

Americans are already starting to see the benefits of health care reform.  [Read full story]

Crist’s Change
Putting GOP on Defensive

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.--Charlie Crist returned to his hometown to launch a political campaign [Read full story]

Arizona’s Witch Hunt
State Challenges Federal Authority

WASHINGTON--Though it has been settled law since the Civil War ended that a state cannot secede from the union, Arizona’s extreme action suggests it imagines it can. [Read full story]

Wayne C. Chandler Sr.

Getting a Lot Done and Not Caring About Being Credited [Read full story]

News Worth Noting
For GOP, United Stands Might Net Drawbacks, Too

Passage of the health care legislation challenges the heart of the Republicans’ strategy this year [Read full story]

Civil Rights in Education
Education Secretary Should Follow Through With Promises

In a little over a year in office, Education Secretary Arne Duncan has used his bully pulpit and a burgeoning discretionary budget to focus state governments on school reform as never before. [Read full story]

Turning Our Backs on Heroes
Little Attention Paid to Wounded of Two Wars

While growing up just outside of Chicago, Dennet Oregon dreamed of being an artist. [Read full story]

Editorials

EUGENE ROBINSON
Washington Post

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.
That might be enough to afflict the House minority leader -- normally a study in Rat Pack cool -- with nightmares and cold sweats.
Congressman Boehner's jaw-dropping observation that President Barack Obama's financial regulatory reform legislation is "killing an ant with a nuclear weapon" has gladdened the hearts of Democratic political operatives from coast to coast.
President Obama got in his licks the other day.
"That's what he said -- he compared the financial crisis to an ant," the president told a Wisconsin crowd.  "This is the same financial crisis that led to the loss of nearly 8 million jobs. 
“The same crisis that cost people their homes, their life savings."
The Republican idea seems to be, President Obama joked, that all the country needs is an "ant swatter."
Later that day, Fox News host Greta Van Susteren asked Congressman Boehner if he wanted "a do-over on that metaphor."  But Congressman Boehner didn't really take her up on the offer.
He made clear that, basically, he meant what he said.
"I wasn't talking about the financial crisis," he said, but rather about "fixing the problems on Wall Street."
But that's a distinction without a difference, since it was the problems on Wall Street that caused the financial crisis, reckoned by most economists to be the worst since the Great Depression.
Then, Congressman Boehner continued with more of the blind ideology and deliberate distortion that have characterized his party's approach to, well, just about everything these days.
"My point is this," he said. "We could have fixed this problem, plugged the holes, brought more transparency to the system without a 2,300-page bill that puts the federal government in charge of our entire financial sector."
It's worth taking a moment to parse that sentence.  The distortion comes at the end.
No, the regulatory reform bill, which passed the House last week, doesn't put the government in charge of Wall Street.
What it does, essentially, is redraw the parameters within which financial firms operate -- in an attempt to constrain some of the irresponsibility and excess that led to the crisis -- while also providing some consumer protections.
Oh, and Congressman Boehner knows full well that making a big deal of the bill's page count is a canard.
Because any new legislation modifies or supplants specific sections and subsections of existing laws, final bills have to be written not in English but in dense gobbledygook.
Any substantial initiative proposed by Republicans -- if the party decided to do something, rather than just say no -- could also function well as a doorstop.
As for the ideology in Congressman Boehner's modified, limited clarification, look at that three-word phrase, "plugged the holes."
There you have the party's current philosophy in a nutshell:  Just chew up a wad of gum, stick it into the crack where water is leaking and whistle contentedly as you stroll away.
When President Obama called on Congress to address the shameful fact that 46 million Americans lacked health insurance, Republicans first opposed all reform and then grudgingly suggested a few incremental measures that would nibble at the problem from the margins.
When decades of deregulation and laissez faire enabled Wall Street to take such insane risks -- with other people's money --that the global financial system came within a whisper of collapse, the Republican response was to tinker rather than restructure.
The party's slogan for November should be:
"It's all good.  Except for that President Obama guy.  And Nancy Pelosi."
That's the worldview that produced U.S. Rep. Joe Barton's (Rep., Texas) assessment of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill:  that BP, which admits responsibility for one of the worst environmental disasters in United States history, is somehow the aggrieved party because mean old President Obama persuaded the company to set aside $20 billion to fulfill its legal obligations.
That's the philosophy that led Sharron Angle, who is trying to unseat Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (Dem., Nev.), to opine that the way to reduce unemployment is to cut unemployment benefits -- and to tell voters that if she's elected, trying to create jobs for Nevadans won't be part of her job description.
It's all good.  But, at least, after last week, I'm pretty sure that if actual giant mutant ants were to appear, they'd get the Republican Party's attention.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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