Sorry, it's been a while. Work, work, work. But I have been arguing with a friend of mine (both of us are members of Labor for Single-Payer, but he's more active in it), and here's my latest spew:
First let me say I do think the ACA is "woefully inadequate." Single payer is what we need, or nationalized health care, but some business
interests (and not others, interestingly enough) and their lapdog
politicians have blocked anything close to that (along with much that is
not even close). And since we failed to get either of those things, it
would have been nice for elected representatives (especially Democrats)
to at least include what was called "the public option" at the time. I
don't think any of those things would have necessarily solved the
problem this poor guy [see below] is bringing up, but I'll get back to that. I still have to say the ACA helped millions of people get coverage, and that is nothing to sneeze at.
Showing posts with label worker rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label worker rights. Show all posts
Monday, December 22, 2014
Sunday, July 8, 2012
Demand demand
We demand more demand!
And an economic policy that goes with it.
P.S. It's the opposite of 'supplyside' baloney, and it's based on the crazy idea that when workers make money, we spend it; when our wealthy overlords make money, they hoard it or play the stock market with it. Duh!
And an economic policy that goes with it.
P.S. It's the opposite of 'supplyside' baloney, and it's based on the crazy idea that when workers make money, we spend it; when our wealthy overlords make money, they hoard it or play the stock market with it. Duh!
Labels:
economic justice,
economy,
job creation,
job losses,
jobs,
labor,
money,
politics,
poverty,
president,
stimlulus,
stimulus,
taxpayer,
unemployment,
wall street,
worker rights,
workers
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Obamascare
Is the Obama Administration's health care reform package the end of American freedom and the beginning of broccoli-chewing fascism, or a monumental breakthrough in the centuries-long struggle of ordinary citizens yearning for full participation in society and government finally returning to 'promoting the general welfare'? Well, it may be neither, but it is a rare instance of the average Joe and Joanna stranded at the garage or busstop debating a US Supreme Court decision and how it impacts the most regular working-class folks. Is that good? I'm biased towards 'yes,' you know, because it ought to be good when the hogs look up from the slop, right? 'Course, most of these debates, it seems, are happening 'totally unencumbered' by anything resembling facts. And there are ways to check facts these days.
Labels:
economic justice,
health care,
healthcare,
laws,
taxpayer,
unemployment,
worker rights
Friday, February 25, 2011
Wisconsin, Indiana union-busting
Somebody said to me recently, "the Democrats are at their best when they are not there." Actually, I think that's a little harsh, but there is an important point there. Workers in this country have only rarely been able to count on politicians of any political stripe to back us up, much less pitch in with improvements.
Most often we have to fight like hell just to not get robbed, for example in the state sector when workers' contributions to their own pensions are used -- we should say "stolen" -- to pay the employer's other bills. (Somehow this little tidbit gets lost when the public debate begins over public employee pensions, along with the "pension holidays" we get in Illinois for example when the employer doesn't have to pay its obligations: maybe because so many in office are guilty of this legal racketeering?)
Democrats are often as guilty as Republicans on that score, sometimes moreso.
But these legislators who have fled their states to deny quorum to these reprehensible anti-worker bills are very close to heroes at the moment, , like a kind of more creative Mr.-Smith-goes-to-Washington-type-filibuster. See them as a suit-and-tie 300 in the pass at Thermopylae, if you like. (I actually think of the workers in Wisconsin more that way.) But these legislators are not avoiding their responsibilities, which are after all not to the governor and his nutcase agenda, or to some misbegotten sense of decorum, but to the people.
Don't let anyone tell you they are avoiding anything. They are doing the only responsible thing.
Most often we have to fight like hell just to not get robbed, for example in the state sector when workers' contributions to their own pensions are used -- we should say "stolen" -- to pay the employer's other bills. (Somehow this little tidbit gets lost when the public debate begins over public employee pensions, along with the "pension holidays" we get in Illinois for example when the employer doesn't have to pay its obligations: maybe because so many in office are guilty of this legal racketeering?)
Democrats are often as guilty as Republicans on that score, sometimes moreso.
But these legislators who have fled their states to deny quorum to these reprehensible anti-worker bills are very close to heroes at the moment, , like a kind of more creative Mr.-Smith-goes-to-Washington-type-filibuster. See them as a suit-and-tie 300 in the pass at Thermopylae, if you like. (I actually think of the workers in Wisconsin more that way.) But these legislators are not avoiding their responsibilities, which are after all not to the governor and his nutcase agenda, or to some misbegotten sense of decorum, but to the people.
Don't let anyone tell you they are avoiding anything. They are doing the only responsible thing.
Labels:
economy,
indiana legislators,
laws,
politics,
unions,
wisconsin legislators,
worker rights,
workers
Friday, October 23, 2009
Break 'em up while we still can!
So I'm in Northeast Mississippi just for a day or two and I happen to check out the Daily Journal, and I see that unemployment in the land of my birth has dropped (the same song we're hearing all around the country) - probably because more people have just given up. Even the official rate (we know how accurate that is) in Alcorn County is now 11.3 percent, and it's worse in nearby Tippah and Benton Counties. This is recovery?
Labels:
job creation,
job losses,
politics,
poverty,
stimlulus,
unemployment,
unions,
worker rights,
workers
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Depression, by any other name ...
“Private employers cut 250,000 jobs in November, the most in seven years, a report by a private employment service said on Wednesday, (Reuters 12-3-08).”
Labels:
capitalism,
politics,
poverty,
unemployment,
worker rights,
workers
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)