A lod of Bush baloney enacted since 9/11
Looting the treasury
Also in this issue
- congressional grab bag
- resurrecting cointelpro
- mr. schwab’s ducky deal
- please, bill, go away
- assembly-line surgery
After casting her ballot for Barack Obama, Amanda Jones said simply, "I feel good about voting for him." Ms. Jones, of Cedar Creek, Texas (a town just south of Austin), is African-American, and what gives her vote some historic punch is that she's 109 years old. Her father was a slave. Her mother was born right after Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation. She's been through it all--Jim Crow segregation, women's suffrage, the Great Depression, the poll tax, FDR, the civil-rights movement, desegregation, 13 years of George W (five as guv, eight as prez), and now: Barack Obama. This last change fills her with joy, she says.
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congressional grab bag
Question: What’s the opposite of progress? Answer: Congress.
When it comes to serving the public interest — as this month’s Lowdown demonstrates — this bunch just can’t seem to keep from going backwards.
But we’re pleased to report that at the very end of the 2001 congressional session, our lawmakers did stand up for a segment of our population that claims to be especially needy and deserving of taxpayer help: themselves!
In the last moments before Congress adjourned for the year, the members snuck through a $4,900 pay raise for themselves — their third hike since 1998, lifting them to $150,000 a year. Oh, they say, it’s just a little cost-of-living adjustment.
Hello? Did you get a COLA last year? Did your paycheck go up three times in the last four years?
In fact, most Americans are in a downturn. From janitors at the WTC to dot-com employees in Silicon Valley, from steel workers to Enron workers, millions of regular Americans were knocked down in 2001 and were unable to simply — abracadabra! — raise their own pay. Worse, our Congress critters did it on the sly, using procedural maneuvers to avoid having to go on record.
This is not about the value of a lawmaker, but about the value of the common good — whether we’re all in this together. Note that in the Great Depression, Congress cut its pay . . . twice. Today’s Congress is not into cutting — it’s into grabbing.