Quote:
Rapper Kanye West was wrong when he said this President doesn’t care about black people. Bush doesn’t care about the poor or middle class of any color. This is not a matter of being overlooked; it is a purposeful policy. The administration’s policy in dealing with Hurricane Katrina is a perfect example. First Bush puts incompetent contributor cronies in charge of a vital government agency, robs its budget to expand its police state controls and then fails miserably at execution of its mission. After the disaster, they blames others, exploits the tragedy by giving no-bid, high profit handouts to campaign contributors, erasing regulations, cutting requirements to pay the prevailing wage and allowing contractors a free hand to hire illegal aliens. To pay for what has become the Katrina Campaign Payback Machine, he sends the bill to poor people by proposing cutting food stamps, Medicaid, Medicare, higher education and teacher preparation.
But one thing the President does like is welfare. The oil companies, awash in profits, just received $14 billion in new tax breaks and he has just promised more along with loosened regulations to build more refineries. But that is just the beginning. There is the $125 billion that is being given in corporate tax abatements, price supports, tax shelters and subsidies, $44 billion to the space industry for a repeat trip to the moon, $8 billion for the unnecessary and unworkable Star Wars program. Bush’s sympathy is virtually boundless for the military industrial complex and he threatens to veto the imperial war budget of $480 billion dollars (more then the next 38 countries combined) because he says it isn’t enough. Killing people is a much higher priority than saving them.
Even more unbelievable, he still wants to move ahead with more tax cuts for the rich who are hardly carrying a crushing tax burden. Tax revenue from corporations fell 16% between 1995-2003 to only 7.4% of the total federal income. While corporate tax rates are theoretically 35%, the General Accounting Office reports that 45% of corporations worth more then $250 million paid no taxes from 1995-2003. The ten companies with the highest profits paid an average rate of 8.9%. Not satisfied with this, the Bush administration has proposed that $350 billion of profits hidden offshore be allowed back into the country at a special tax rate of 5.25%.
Wealthy individuals are also doing well under the Bush tax cut scheme. While the bottom 20% of taxpayers (under $13,478/year) will save an annual average of $23 and the median taxpayer saves about $800 dollars a year, those with an annual income of $1 million save $32,000; the top .1 of one percent $195,762; and the top 400 taxpayers $8.3 million dollars every year.
The chasm between rich and poor is widening by the day. Real income for working families declined 4.8% ($2576) while it increased 1.7% (that’s of a much bigger income) for the wealthy since 2000. Asset ownership is very revealing, with the top 5% owning 60% of all assets in the country while the bottom 40% shares 1%. The ratio of CEO to worker pay has increased from 301-1 to 431-1 since 1990. While 77% of the poorest performing wealthy children go to college, only 78% of the highest performing poor children go.
Drowning in debt, 5.4 million working class families fell below the poverty level of $19,000 for a family of four in the last four years. That standard hasn’t been adjusted in so long that it is estimated to be only half of what is needed to meet basic needs. That would mean that one-third of the children in the country are being raised in homes where their parents can’t provide adequate tools to succeed in life. One good indicator of the truth of this argument is that 45.8 million people don’t have insurance in addition to the 13.3 million children and elderly that is covered by Medicaid and Medicare.
GAM (The Kilted One) wrote:Jack: it's about Bush, not Katrina @!#$uppery in the grander scale. The post is about how Bush fumbled the ball, and keeps sticking it to joe-average Americans. And that's not MEDIA bias, that's from another person in another forum with an OT forum.
You didn't read the link either. Tsk Tsk.
kyle 102565 wrote:as for this country being alienated from the rest of the world, we really dont care. will you miss us? or do you depend on us?
GAM (The Kilted One) wrote:Frankly, I don't give a damn what or where you get your news, but if its from only one source and you buy into editorials from that source, you're getting one person's version of what actually happend, and one person's take on the bigger picture, and that's pitiable.
If you hang around long enough, you'll discover that i've probably alluded to this at least a dozen times in as many posts in this forum.
You, sir, have prejudged me. And for that, I can't help but wonder why, and hope that you don't do that to others so quickly.
unholysavage wrote:Since everyone who has responded to Gam's VERY interesting post (thank you again Gam!) has done so by attacking him, I wonder if those people (Jackalope, Borsty, Bill Hahn Jr., and Kyle 102565) would kindly share with us exactly who they voted for in the last US election. I'm guessing by your responses that the chances of any of you voting democrat are very slim to none.
Just because we can't vote doesn't mean Gam and other canadians don't have an opinion on just how big a war-mongering, fear-manipulating idiot George W. Bush is. This is the war forum, remember. You see, unlike most Americans we aren't subjected to CNN and we have a chance to hear more of what's REALLY going on, instead of pro-government propaganda being fed to americans by their media.
15 years ago we too had a complete retard as our leader. Aahhh, good 'ole Brian Mulroney. This wonderful man single handedly destroyed the Canadian economy, and put us so deeply in debt that our grandchildren will still be paying it off. Stick up for Bush all you want, but he has done nothing more than completely screw over your economy and do his best to start a civil war in Iraq, while at the same time alienate the US from nearly every other country on earth (not to mention the internal dealings that Gam just mentioned). Nothing good has come of that "war for freedom", no matter what your CNN tells you. If you don't believe me, take a look at all the continued car bombings, the value of your dollar, and the debt that this joke of a war is putting you into. Then you just have to take one look at the Katrina incident to wonder if the average joe means ANYTHING to the Bush administration. I think that stupid war means more to Bush than anything else, and it took hurricane Katrina to show the rest of the world just how much he values the well-being of his own people. Regardless of whether anyone here agrees with me or not, it's no hard to see that things are not good with the US.
What people need is proportional representation. With that, there would be little reason to bicker about politics, and who "should have won". Had the US had this system, there likely would never have been a Bush administration, and we would be arguing about some other corrupt government.
bliZsham wrote:You guys forgot to mention the Bush is responsible for killing upwards of 100000 people. Beyond all the idiots who voted for him and all of his terrible policies, I'd say murdering ten of thousands of innocent people is a good reason to hate him.
Bill Hahn Jr. wrote:
*sigh* More predictable recitations from the World Left list. The CNN one is cute, but so over-used now as to be approaching hilarity. The arrogant "We are not from America, so all Americans are blind to what we can see" is a yawn. The "who did you vote for", just as predictable (by the way, in this nation, that information is viewed as a sacred and private choice, so don't EVEN use anyone's reticence to answer as yet another left-bomb). These attempts to pigeonhole are typical, and indicate a desire to polarize and enrage, as opposed to discussing the issues.
If you truly view what I said to GAM as 'attacking', well, you just perpetuate what I am saying here...that inflammatory, canned, guerilla tactics seem just desperate.
I am curious though...as i weed through the invective, I see something about 'proportional representation'. My question for you is this: why does it so anger your group so that the last two presidential elections were so close?