conventionbloggers.com A community site for bloggers participating in the DNC, July 26-29
Denver's Talk Left, attending the Convention
This blog is written by members of the Boulder County Democratic Party but does not necessarily represent official positions of the organization. Your mileage may vary.
conventionbloggers.com A community site for bloggers participating in the DNC, July 26-29
Denver's Talk Left, attending the Convention
Also, due to state budget cuts, up to 1.6 million people are losing health care coverage, including a half million children. States are finding it hard to keep up with needs due to federal cuts. Finally, in contrast to his radio address, president's 2005 budget proposes cutting Medicaid by $16 billion over 10 years according to the Office of Management and Budget.
.. This will hurt the most vulnerable children as well as senior citizens.
These cuts show how much the Bush administration
values children!
via Donna
Dick Cheney, contrary to the rumours, is not going away in my opinion, with respect to the Republican Presidential ticket. It would only accentuate the essentially manipulative (often bait and switch) nature of this administration. So yeah Cheney's going to be there -I think we can count on it.
It is also interesting to me that Republicans are always so ready to attack Democrats and others for trying to start a diviisive economic class war (which it often really is).
They then turn around and attempt to cast this election as a war of American values and culture. What hypocrites! If that isn't the most divisive and most painful/personal kind of division of Americans then I'm afraid I don't know what is.
Methinks Bush/Cheney and company have picked one fight that they are NOT going to win this time. At least let' hope so.
Boulder
Start with:
BLITZER: "Brian Todd, thanks very much for that report. Samuel Berger is represented by another White House veteran."
Political Animal points out that Tom Davis, Republican chairman of the House Government Reform Committee, started this investigation in a day while the Valerie Plume probe has yet to start.
The piece is mainly about the textbook's author, Zig Engelmann, and the instructional methodology it was created for: Direct Instruction. Direct Instruction, according to the New Yorker article and DI's website, places the "willingness to follow certain carefully prescribed instructional practices" above the creativity and knowledge of individual teachers. Or, according to Engelmann himself, "We don't give a damn what the teacher thinks, what the teacher feels."
Though Engelmann might not like the comparison (the article describes him as "hard left" politically), it seems to me that this is a perfect metaphor for the Bush Administration. Republican party trappings notwithstanding, this president seems to have no interest whatsoever in letting the people who actually know what they're doing do it without interference. Doctors may not tell patients about abortion options. Scientists must modify their reports to match political expectations. Long-time Iraq analysts are ignored in the build-up to war. States may not decide issues of marriage law on their own. Homeland Security gets all the money it wants, but local police and fireman must make do.
Despite political differences, Bush should go ahead and make Engelmann a speech-writer. Then his campaign motto could be, "We don't give a damn what you think, what you feel."
* The first Amazon review for this book is classic:
"After reading the enclosed story "The Pet Goat," I was stunned by its lyrical beauty and easy cadence. The tempo, the choice of words, and the layout on each page captured my imagination so much that it took me about seven minutes to recover my bearings."[cross-posted at DugBlog]
Meanwhile, Bush's "cheneying' of retirees is coming out. The Department of Health and Human Services finally admitted that 3.8 million or 1/3 of corporate retirees will lose coverage under Bush's Medicare Bill. This was not surprise. Most independent analysts and Democrats have been saying this from the getgo. Details according to the New York Times (permlink) and a few others although I can't find it at HHS
Another possible headline is "Press Doesn't Cover Campaign"
There are other indications Consumer Spending Growth Slowed in May permlink
Of course Tom Toles has the best word.
Bush's web site doesn't have a specific plan although it seems to include Star Wars (the anti-missile boondoogle not the movie). Some say the plan is "Keep Digging".
The problem is Bush isn't using holding the shovel or paying the price.