KY Reps Already Voted to Kill Medicare

found online by Raymond

 
From Yellow Dog at Blue in the Bluegrass:

The House took a vote last year to “privatize” (translation: destroy) Medicare. Kentucky’s only congressional Democrat, Congressional Awesome John Yarmuth, of course voted no. Hal Rogers, Ed “I live in Florida” Whitfield, Candy Barr and Brett Guthrie all voted to let their elderly constituents die in the street. Thomas Massie voted no, probably because it was part of a budget bill and he claims to hate all spending.

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Trump Voters: Here’s What You’ve Won

found online by Raymond

 
From Jon Perr:

So a former reality TV star won the 2016 presidential election on Tuesday.

While deeply disturbing, that victory by Donald Trump was somehow altogether fitting. After all, as research from Harvard revealed, throughout the 2016 election cycle “policy issues [were] nearly absent in presidential campaign ‘coverage.'” Even during the four weeks surrounding the parties’ nominating conventions, policy stories represented only 8 percent of media coverage surveyed (13 percent for Trump and only a paltry four percent for Hillary Clinton). Instead, scandals, gaffes, unexpected revelations, horse race coverage and other “medialities” represented over two-thirds of the reporting from the 10 media sources studied. Ultimately, the “policy free” 2016 election was a lot like the first season of CBS reality game show Survivor; the surprise winner was Richard Hatch, an off-putting, conniving white guy few viewers liked and even fewer trusted.

Now that Clinton has been voted off the island, the question remains: just what did Trump’s triumphant supporters actually win on Tuesday?

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Contact Your Reps about Medicare

found online by Raymond

 
From The Big Empty:

If anyone on this list below represents you, please contact them and ask them what their stance is on Paul Ryan’s Medicare privatizing proposal. Then send your representatives’ responses to: talk@talkingpointsmemo.com

Knowing how our representatives think and feel about Medicare will help us determine whom we need to target and how we will persuade them to vote against Ryan’s horrendous plan.

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Harry Reid’s Righteous Senate Rant on Trump-inspired Hate

found online by Raymond

 
From Tommy Christopher:

Following Donald Trump’s election, Senator Harry Reid immediately went on the attack, demanding that Trump repair the damage his hate-fueled campaign had caused. One week later, Reid took to the Senate floor to deliver a blistering rebuke of the dangerous effect that Trump’s win has already had, and called on Democrats to be leaders for the millions who live in fear in Trump’s America.

“We have the responsibility to be the voice of millions of Americans sitting at home, afraid that they’re not welcome anymore in Donald Trump’s America,” Reid said. “We have a responsibility to prevent Trump’s bullying, aggressive behavior from becoming normalized in the eyes of America.”

Reid correctly pointed out that most Americans opposed Trump, and yet are now made to feel unsafe.

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Empathizing With White Voters Who Screwed Us?

found online by Raymond

 
From Brotha Wolf at The Intersection of Madness and Reality:

As if conservative white folks aren’t aggravating enough, here comes liberal whites and their pleas for thinking of the white working class.

Kali Holloway of Alternet via Raw Story vents about how people should feel empathy for the white working class, the section of America where most of its people don’t give a damn about black people’s plight:

The only surprise to come out of this election is how many, and how quickly, white people want us to empathize with the people who voted against our humanity, our right to exist in this place. Even before the election, the Washington Post actually had the audacity to berate us for not crying for the white working class. In the days since Trump won, the number of articles urging everybody to be cool to Trump’s America, to understand what they are facing, to hear their grievances, has added insult to injury. Bernie Sanders issued a statement saying Trump “tapped into the anger of a declining middle class that is sick and tired of establishment economics, establishment politics and the establishment media.” I read it at least three times and couldn’t find the words “white supremacy” anywhere in it.

I want to add another article to the mix.

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Electoral College Gets
a Failing Grade

Mind experiments worked well enough for Erwin Schrödinger to get him a magical cat. Let’s try it here, shall we?

Now, let’s suppose your city government decides that democracy, as most of us know it, is just too dangerous.

Too dangerous.

So a council member comes up with an idea. In each election from now on, individual votes will not be counted individually. Instead, only city streets will get to vote.

City streets.

Oh, your vote will be counted, but it will be counted according to how your street voted. If you and 47 of your neighbors all vote for Candidate X …

(that’s 47 for X)

…but 49 other voters on your street vote for Candidate Y …

(that’s 47 for X, 49 for Y)

…all 96 votes, including yours, will count for Candidate Y.

You might really dislike Candidate Y. You might have volunteered to campaign for Candidate X, urging your neighbors to vote for Candidate X. You might even have a sign on your lawn: “Why Y? Vote X instead!”

No matter. If Candidate Y, the candidate you detest, gets a few more votes on your street than Candidate X, your vote for X will get switched, and it will now count for Y.

And that’s the plan. Any objections?

Okay, so someone objects.

Hey, says the protester, that’s not fair. The longest city street will have lots and lots of city blocks, and lots and lots of votes all bundled up together into one block vote. And the teeny tiny little street with only one or two blocks and only a few voters will get overrun by that long, long street. That leaves little streets out in the cold.

Unplowed every damn winter.

So the city council comes up with a compromise. They’ll count the voters in advance and invent about 20% more. They’ll call them “Street Votes.” The street votes will be divided up by street. Each city street, large or small, will get the same number of street votes to add to their block vote. That should equalize small and large streets, right?

This all doesn’t help you very much if you voted for Candidate X, but your vote for X gets turned around and counted for Candidate Y, You vote for X, but your vote gets counted for Y, because that’s how a few more of your neighbors voted.

There’s a word for that form of government. It’s called insanity.

But it has its defenders. It protects us from the tyranny of the majority, says the mayor. It protects small streets from big streets, says the City Council. It’s nuts, says anyone who has any sense.

Now you know we’re not talking about city streets, right? We’re talking about the United States Constitution as it has been fictionalized in lots of history textbooks. We’re talking about the Electoral College as many of us learned it in school.

This mind experiment might not buy any cats, but it does buy us an interesting body of historical falsehood. It didn’t happen the way lots of folks of my generation were taught. You know the lessons. Tyranny of the majority is averted. Conflict between small states and big states gets settled in a grand compromise by awarding 2 extra votes to each state.

Never happened. At least not that way.

What many of us were taught in school was a lie that started in the late 1800s. It began with publication of research by Professor William Dunning of Columbia University. It hit American textbooks in the early to mid 1900s. It hit the virgin minds of many of us in our classrooms right after that.

It was easy for us as children to believe that the crazy quilt device of choosing a President came from some solid set of principles. We were good little students and we knew teachers were telling us the rock steady truth.

Now that we are adults, we might ponder the fact that the reasoning we learned as children for this patchwork electoral system is as crazy as crazy can be. Then, we might go beyond that and consider the possibility that those writing the Constitution were not, in fact, insane.

Professor Dunning and his band of students were patriots who were emotionally invested in finding ways to deny what their research had to have been telling them.

Horrible truth is often the first casualty of wishful thinking. And they very much wanted a nation still shaken by the Civil War to experience brotherhood and peace. “Love your neighbor,” the scriptures taught. And your neighbors were not simply the folks next door. They were white, Caucasian folks everywhere.

Denial of blatant racism at the founding of our democracy became an easy exercise.

We can find the actual truth, and modern scholars are finding it, by skipping past the Dunning school of history and going to the original record.

There was no transcript of the Constitutional convention. But there were diaries and daily accounts by participants. They were there. They knew.

There was only a brief mention of large versus small states in the debate about how to elect a President. And that brief mention was coupled with the one and only mention of any principle involving distrust of a majority vote for President.

Those two issues were introduced by Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts. We mostly remember Mr. Gerry for his way of creative allocating of voting districts. His name was distorted a little when gerrymandering was named after him. We really ought to call it Gary-mandering.

He, and his two issues (large versus small and distrust of a majority vote), were hooted down and were not mentioned again at the Constitutional Convention. At least not in connection with the election of Presidents.

But there was debate about the Presidency, and lots of it. It mostly involved slavery.

That actual recorded, documented, real debate is reinforced by common sense.

Conservatives were for a representative republic as long as there was no chance democracy would interfere with slavery. So they insisted that the President must be elected state by state. Every state would get the same number of electoral votes as they had Congressional districts. Plus they were given two more votes per state – one for each Senator.

Then they got to the real trick.

Conservative slaveholders insisted that the number of electors, as well as the number of Representatives in Congress, must be determined by counting all residents. Those residents included slaves.

So slaveholders would cast votes for themselves. Plus they would cast the votes of their slaves. That would rig the vote enough to give them power for at least the next four score and seven years, give or take a Civil War.

Liberal delegates from the North didn’t exactly say no. They pretty much said Hell No! Eventually the two sides compromised. Southern conservatives would have their votes amplified by counting their own votes plus the votes of 3/5 of the slaves, slaves not being allowed to vote on their own.

The 3/5 philosophy resurrected this year with the refusal of Republicans to vote on President Obama’s nominee for the Supreme Court. The unspoken thought seemed to be that the Constitutional role of nominating Justices by the first African-American President was only valid for 3/5 of his final term.

For the most part, the patchwork system of electing a President, the anti-democracy system that came from stacking the deck toward slavery, has none-the-less coincided with the votes of … well … voters. But not always. In four cases, the candidate who got the most votes did not get the White House. The candidate rejected by voters became President instead.

One argument is often advanced by those who paraphrase those who, in turn, paraphrase one recent biography of James Madison. The argument didn’t start with this biography. It was invented and echoed in the late 1800s by followers of Professor Dunning. We still hear it occasionally quoted by conservatives. It is that majority rule was to be mistrusted because “democratic polities were prone to fits of passion.”

I suppose that someone, somewhere, will argue that the calm and reassuring followers of Donald Trump saved us all from those fits of passion.

Like most arguments supporting the electoral system, the Madison quotes turn out to be factually untrue. Madison argued for codifying rights, rights eventually contained in the first ten amendments, the Bill of Rights. In that regard he felt that majorities could not be trusted to preserve liberty, because “democratic polities were prone to fits of passion.”

In fact, historian Paul Finkelman and other scholars have documented Madison’s passionate arguments during the Constitutional Convention that direct majority election of the President was the only path to what was right and just.

He eventually accepted the electoral system, but he said it was for one reason, and one reason only. Direct election would be unacceptable to slaveholding conservatives.

Perhaps, someday, some combination of states will elect a liberal President that has been rejected by actual voters. Until then, conservatives will embrace this occasional obstacle to the ideal of a democratic republic. For now, it is unlikely that the Constitution will be amended to rid us of this holdover from slavery.

Other alternatives do exist. One that may eventually succeed is state action. California has passed a conditional law. If and when enough other states join to form a majority of electors, California will join with them in pledging that national majority of electors to whomever has gotten a majority of the national vote. At that moment, the Electoral College will still exist, but the ability to distort American democracy to a hoped for coincidence will end. So far, ten states have passed that agreement.

President-elect Donald Trump recently endorsed the idea of directly electing the President:

I would rather see it, where you went with simple votes. You know, you get 100 million votes, and somebody else gets 90 million votes, and you win. There’s a reason for doing this. Because it brings all the states into play.

Donald Trump, November 13, 2016

One day, with luck, we might actually neutralize that peculiar institution, an institution that remains a final gift from slavery.


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Last Word: ‘Bannon Is Going To Eat Reince Priebus For Lunch’

found online by Raymond

 
From Frances Langum:

And the “Don’t Sugarcoat It” Award for Monday goes to Jonathan Alter, who told us what he really thinks about the Reince Priebus / Stephen Bannon “leadership roles” in the Trump White House:

JONATHAN ALTER: People in Washington are comforted bit fact that Priebus is chief of staff and Bannon is chief strategist, like that’s a good thing. I urge them to look back to the Bush administration when Andy Card was Chief of Staff. Who was more powerful in that White House? Bannon is going to be number one in this White House. He will eat Priebus for lunch.

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Onus Now On GOP
To Fix US Economy

found online by Raymond

 
From Ted McLaughlin:

For the last eight years, the congressional Republicans have blocked everything President Obama has tried to do to fix the U.S. economy. While corporations and the rich have recovered fully from the Bush recession, most other Americans have not — and the Republicans used that to their advantage.

They told Americans that they tried to fix the economy, but couldn’t do it because of President Obama — just the opposite of what really happened. Unfortunately, a lot of Americans are either badly misinformed or not very bright, because they believed the GOP lie that Obama was to blame for the faltering economy.

That pathetic excuse is now gone.

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What We Can Do About
the Electoral College

found online by Raymond

 
From Infidel753:

By the time all the vote-counting is done, it will most likely turn out that Hillary Clinton got around two million more votes than Trump (link found via Progressive Eruptions) — a margin of about 2%, not too different from her lead in the RCP average shortly before the election. This may be of some comfort to pollsters, and in some ways to the rest of us as well — it simply isn’t true that a majority of Americans voted for Trump and the collage of bigotries he put forth. But it will not change the election outcome, which is determined by the Electoral College.

This is the second time in 16 years that the Electoral College gave the Presidency to a candidate who won fewer actual votes than his opponent. This time it’s worse, since the popular-vote lead was more substantial.

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How to Keep Steve Bannon
Out of the White House

found online by Raymond

 
From Jonathan Bernstein:

As Donald Trump builds his administration, it’s important to distinguish between his legitimate decisions on personnel and policy — even those that differ substantially from mainstream ones — and the scarier actions that need to be resisted by everyone committed to democracy.

Take the first big announcements on filling jobs at the White House. As the new chief of staff, Reince Priebus, the Republican National Committee chairman, is not the worst possible choice.

But the president-elect also has chosen Steve Bannon as chief strategist and senior counselor.

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