19 March 2010

A whole lot happened in DC


I went to DC last weekend and it rained almost the entire time we (me and my girlfriend) were there. We flew in on a red-eye on Friday morning, and I felt like didn't get any good sleep on the flight. But we packed it in. Saw the Capitol, Library of Congress (on Friday), the Holocaust Museum (on Saturday), the Portrait Gallery (on Sunday), and the Natural History Museum and the Hope Diamond (on Monday). In addition we walked the mall and saw the World War 2 Memorial and the Lincoln Memorial.

I also saw a couple of old friends and talked (on the phone) to a few more. The highlight of the trip was seeing cousins from my father's side of the family that live in the area. All in all a good visit.

Here's a brief lowdown of our trip, in case you are planning a visit to our Nation's Capital.

The Capitol Hill tour was a waste for me, as we got the cheap and impersonal one. Make sure to have someone in your congressman's office actually give you the tour.

The Library of Congress had an awesome exhibit by the political cartoonist Herb Block, who cartooned from 1929-2001, which was one of my two favorite things.

Check out Herb Block or Herblock's cartoons here:

http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/swann/herblock/fire.html


The Nazi Propaganda Exhibit at the Holocaust Museum was my other favorite. That exhibit contained video, newspaper clippings and other media on how the Nazi's came to power in Germany; how they coerced or convinced the rest of Germany (non Jewish or Gypsy) to follow them. Kind of crazy.

My saddest thought during the whole Holocaust Museum visit was the this stuff happened in Africa very recently. And we didn't really stop it(I don't know if we tried).


Here's a list of other things.

Thing the GF wanted to see the most: The Hope Diamond.
Best Flight: A nonstop on Jet Blue
Best Milkshake we ate: The Good Food Eatery; Southeast near the Capitol
Best View: (well besides from the Washington Monument) The 12th floor W Hotel on 15th St., NW
Best Dinner: Chef Geoff's in downtown
Best Reader: Cousin B. (She's a first grader)
Best Coffee: Elli's
Favorite Monument: Still the Jefferson Memorial (Although we missed it this year)
DC's Best Ethnic Food (with hot waitresses): Ethopian Restaurants
(hope the gf isn't reading this)
Best Place to Walk or Run: The Mall and Tidal Basin Area
Best Place to stage an intervention with a spouse that spends too much time following sports: Dave and Busters. (really I feel sorry for Cousin S. as Cousin B. (not the first grader) really does spend too much time on sports. I don't understand his sports addiction, but that's definitely what I would call his relationship to spectator sports.)

Best.
GCNOF

15 March 2010

The Cat Shepherd


When Liberals talk about the President there is plenty of having it both ways. We get so upset at his scathing betrayals because he is the Second Coming. Lately the needle has been swinging to the negative. There seems to be a flurry of “his first year sucked”, and “his agenda is stalled”, but I see a very different picture.

There is plenty to complain about, but it's important to remember that it could be so much worse. Theoretically, with the Presidency and a Super-majority in Congress, a much larger Stimulus, a public health plan, lawful adjudication of terrorists, meaningful banking reform, repeal of DADT, etc. should have been a matter of paperwork. The problem is that Obama isn’t fighting the Republicans. And by that I don't mean that he isn't fighting against the GOP with enough ardor. I mean the GOP is not the obstacle to his agenda. They have made it clear that they would filibuster a resolution to declare puppies cute, but that doesn't really matter, or at least it didn't for most of the last year.

The GOP has whole-heartedly embraced their irrelevance with proposals like a spending freeze, less banking regulation, and a “shadow budget” that raises most people’s taxes. If there was any chance of them being able to achieve these overwhelmingly unpopular, ill-advised objectives, I doubt they would still want to. And yet there are plenty of people listening to their cable news antics. The Stupacks and the Lincolns hear them loud and clear and are digging their heels in to have something to tell their angry, conservative-leaning constituents in November. When Obama talks about compromise and bipartisanship it means trying to placate both Democrats and conservative Democrats.

And yet Obama is actually accomplishing something. His policies have immediate benefits: a soldier comes home alive, a teacher keeps their job, a bridge doesn’t collapse. It is difficult to get excited about things being “less bad”, but it is none the less real. We are still waiting on health insurance reform, but it feels like we are going to get something, if not the public option that the vast majority of Obama's supporters, not to mention most Americans want. When HCR passes everyone who's been predicitng doom and gloom since Scott Brown's election will suddenly remember just how superhuman Obama is. Of course they will still be wrong.

I'd describe him as a cautiously effective centrist. Rahm Emanuel knows that the tasks set before his boss are too important to tackle boldly. It is more like a vicious uphill slog that we are slowly, painfully winning. Clearly everything that happens in Washington is a deal with the Devil, and it seems that Obama has made a calculation that to successfully fight the Neocons, health insurance providers, GM’s management, the Religious Right,and the conservative wing of his own party, he desperately needs the support of the pharmaceutical industry, the investment bankers and the military contractors. With friends like these…

03 March 2010

Health Care Reform By Easter; Moscow By Secular Christmas


Obama's recent speech was a remarkably good sign that this thing is in the bag, if only because he doesn't have the courage to stick his neck out unless it is a known outcome. This bill will not really affect most of us who get decent insurance through employers, but it should have a hugely positive effect on the slice of Americans who are being cut out by the current system either because of preexisting conditions, un(der)employment, or because their employer is too small to bargain for a decent plan.

And I hope this legislation is the first step towards something like the elusive "public option" and even single-payer. Yes, I'm saying it out loud, Michelle Bachmann is right; many supporters of this legislation do hope it will snowball into an eventual government takeover of health care. First we regulate the industry and set up "exchanges", then tomorrow we will have a public option, then with little or no fanfare you will wake up one morning to an essentially single payer system.

The way Bachmann and I see this happening is that a health plan run by the Federal government will be more popular and probably cheaper than private plans so private plans will go out of business. If you are a free-market ideologue you would know the outcome of this competition in advance: the back-asswardsness of public sector management would create a wasteful, bureaucratic, Kafkaesque nightmare of a health plan that wouldn't be nearly as attractive as the efficient, service-oriented system forged in the beneficent fires of the free-market. It seems pretty basic that you would only fear a public option if you actually thought it was going to be successful. Maybe Bachmann is a closet Marxist with her undue concern for the fate of private industry in the face of public competition. Her name does sound kind of foreign.

Obviously Medicare is popular because it is free, but it tends to get high marks for service too, and by any accounting, the government spends less money providing health insurance to senior citizens than private insurance companies charge healthy adults. A government run plan open to all citizens that charged self-sustaining premiums would presumably follow suit and most people would choose it over private plans. Only the very wealthy would choose very high-end private plans, which is certainly the American way. And insurance companies would have only their own greed and incompetence to blame for getting cut out. They should have taken a page from Hollywood's book and self-policed to keep The Man out. But Wall Street only sees the short game so here we are, very close to taking the first step towards what me and my new found comrade, Ms. Bachmann, predict will one day become something similar to single-payer health care. I love the smell of collective bargaining in the morning.