The Reverse Bullworth: Come On!

You’ve seen the historic abuse of the filibuster becoming standard procedure. Now the unprecedented economic blackmail we just lived through and are fated to revisit all too soon reveals a frighteningly undemocratic new normal for how business is conducted in the Nation’s capital.

The thought occurs, why haven’t we seen this before?  Why haven’t we seen the radical right (or left for that matter) act so irresponsibly as to put the nation’s economic vitality at risk just to score political points?

Part of it maybe what I’ll call a “Reverse Bullworth.”

Remember the 1998 Warren Beatty movie, Bullworth. Come On!  You remember.  Hum along to the Bullworth Obscenity Rap:

Bullworth:
Obscenity? The rich is getting richer and richer and richer while the
middle class is getting more poor/ Making billions and billions and
billions of bucks/ well my friend if you weren’t already rich at the
start well that situation just sucks/cause the riches mother fucker in
five of us is getting ninety fuckin eight percent of it/ and every other
motherfucker in the world is left to wonder where the fuck we went with
it/ Obscenity?/ I’m a Senator/ I gotta raise $10,000 a day every day
I’m in Washington/ I ain’t getting it in South Central/ I’m gettin it in
Beverly Hills/ So I’m votin from them in the Senate the way they want
me too/ and-and-and I’m sending them my bills/ But we got babies in
South Central dying as young as they do in Peru/ We got public schools
that are nightmares/ We got a Congress that ain’t got a clue/We got kids
with submachine guns/ We got militias throwing bombs/ We got Bill just
gettin all weepy/ We got Newt blaming teenage moms/We got factories
closing down/ Where the hell did all the good jobs go? Well, I’ll tell
you where they went/My contributors make more profits makin, makin,
makin, Hirin’ kids in Mexico/ Oh a brother can work in fast food/ If he
can’t invent computer games/ But what we used to call America/ That’s
going down the drains/How’s a young man gonna meet his financial
responsibilities workin and motherfuckin Burger King? He ain’t! And
please don’t even start with that school shit/ There aint no education
going on up in that motherfucker/ Obscenity? We got a million brothers
in prison/ I mean, the walls are really rockin/But you can bet your ass
they’d all be out/If they could pay for Johnny Cochran/ The constitution
is supposed to give them an equal chance/ Well, that ain’t gonna happen
for sure/ Ain’t it time to take a little from the rich motherfucker and
give a little to the poor? I mean, those boys over there on the
monitor/ they want a government smaller and weak/ but the be speakin for
the riches 20 percent when they pretend they’re defendin the meek/ Now,
shit, fuck, cocksuker, that’s the real obscenity/ Black folks livin
with every day/ Trying to believe a mothefuckin word Democrats and
Republicans say/ Obscenity? I’m Jay Billington Bulworth And I’ve come to
say/ The Democratic party’s got some shit to pay/ It’s gonna pay it in
the ghetto/

Yeah, it’s written by that hero of liberal movie aficionados everywhere, Aaron Sorkin of West Wing and American President fame.  Who else?

Over a dozen years later, after enduring the worst Bush/Cheney and a GOP Congress could bring, and things ain’t gotten any better.  Now they’re in the process of doing to us what they couldn’t even get done with that kind of power and influence controlling the entire government, dismantling the social safety net via extortion — something they didn’t have enough balls to try under the Clinton administration. Why?

Why don’t they fear a backlash? Why didn’t they try this before?  To me, the take-away money quote that sums up the whole movie’s message was this:

Angry black woman:
Are you sayin’ the Democratic Party don’t care about the African-American community?

Bullworth:
Isn’t that OBVIOUS? You got half your kids are out of work and the other
half are in jail. Do you see ANY Democrat doing anything about it?
Certainly not me! So what’re you gonna do, vote Republican? Come on!
Come on, you’re not gonna vote Republican! Let’s call a spade a spade!

What’s the reverse of that then? The thing that kept the GOP from complete radicalization for decades (if we only knew then how bad they could truly be when unleashed) was fear of a backlash.  Because unlike minorities who had been purposely vilified and overtly ostracized and insulted by the Republic party for more than a century of fighting civil rights and Jim Crow tactics who would never switch to the other side, the white Republic base could indeed turn their backs on a GOP (and occasionally did) who have always taken pains to spread the fable that “both sides do it” and there’s not a whisper of difference between the two parties.

Now, with their uniting principle the failure and defeat of President Obama, they can afford the take one particular segment of the GOP base for granted.  The modern GOP can afford to act like terrorists, irresponsible children, just plain stubborn asshats and they will never alienate the willfully ignorant, bigoted backbone of the T-Bagger consortium no matter who they hurt in the cross-fire or how bad they make the economy.

Come on, what’re they gonna do? Vote for the black guy? Come on!
Come on, they’re not gonna vote for the black guy? Let’s call a racist a racist.

 

Rep. Issa’s Seamy Past: Unfortunately Irrelevant

Surprise! Incoming chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform Rep. Darrel Issa has a LOT of skeletons in his past.

…[A] gun conviction (which Issa says was expunged), three allegations of car theft, an allegation that he dismissed an employee while brandishing a gun, and an arson allegation—some of his former associates suspected him of burning down the factory that housed his business, although no one was ever charged.

Sorry, but we’re getting distracted here. We’re focusing on Issa’s past actions instead of anticipating his future ones. And that benefits Issa, not us.

Clearly, this recitation of his past reveals Issa as a hypocrite. But accusations of hypocrisy are so common in Washington that they are now the coin of the realm. And because the market is flooded with these “coins,” a certain inflation has set in. What this means is that each accusation ends up having less and less impact.

Bottom line: focusing on Issa’s seamy past merely qualifies as a smear, i.e., while true, the incidents are not relevant to the execution of his job as Committee Chair.

Unfair? Probably. But as long as Issa continues to be reelected by his constituents, he is at least minimally qualified to run that committee.

Health Care Reform Will Help Everybody (Barbara O’Brien)

[Guest blogger Barbara O'Brien blogs regularly at The Mahablog, Crooks and Liars, AlterNet, and elsewhere on the progressive political and health blogophere. She has also been a panelist at Netroots Nation and a featured guest blogger at the Take Back America Conference in Washington, DC.]

Many Americans assume the new health care reform act will benefit mostly the poor and uninsured and hurt everyone else, according to polls. As Matt Yglesias wrote, “Basically, people see this as a bill that will take resources from people who have health insurance and give it to people who don’t have health insurance.” Those who still oppose the reform say that people ought to pay for their own health care.

We all believe in the virtues of hard work and self-reliance, but these days it’s a fantasy to think that anyone but the mega-wealthy will not, sooner or later, depend on help from others to pay medical bills. And that’s true no matter how hard you work, how much you love America, or how diligently you take care of yourself. The cost of medical care has so skyrocketed that breaking an arm or leg could cost as much as a new car. And if you get cancer or heart disease — which can happen even to people who live healthy lifestyles — forget about it. The disease will not only clean you out; it will leave a whopping debt for your survivors to pay.

And the truth is, we all pay for other peoples’ health care whether we know it or not. When people can’t pay their medical bills, the cost of their health care gets added to everyone else’s bills and insurance premiums. When poor people use emergency rooms as a doctor of last resort, their care is not “free.” You pay for it.

Another common fantasy about medical care is that the “free market” provides incentives for medical companies to develop innovative new drugs and treatments for disease without government subsidy. It’s true that private enterprise is very good at developing profitable health care products. But not all medical care can be made profitable.

For years, the U.S. government has been funding medical research that the big private companies don’t want to do because there is too much cost for the potential profit. This is especially true for diseases that are rare and expensive to treat. An example of a recent advance made possible by government grants include new guidelines for malignant pleural mesothelioma treatment developed by MD Anderson Cancer Center researchers. Another is a blood screening test developed by mesothelioma doctors like thoracic surgeon Dr. David Sugarbaker. The health reform act provides for more dollars for such research, from which even many of the tea party protesters will benefit.

The biggest fantasy of all was that people who had insurance didn’t have to worry about health care costs. But the fact is that in recent years millions of Americans have been bankrupted by medical costs, and three-quarters of the medically bankrupt had health insurance. And yes, insurance companies even dumped hard-working, law-abiding patriots. But the health care reform act will put an end to that, and now America’s hard-working, law-abiding patriots are more financially secure, whether they like it or not.