Thursday, November 22, 2012

Most Expensive Campaign in World History


The most expensive campaign in the history of the Planet Earth ended this month.  The amount of money spent in the campaign, or perhaps “invested in the future” – depending on your intentions was the greatest in the history of the world.  

So what really happened?  

Well, the nation’s real problems were not even discussed!  What are those problems?  Here’s a list to begin with:
  1. Education for the nation’s people.  This is too important to be left to individual communities, counties or even states.  The rest of the developed world has solved this problem and they are educating their children very well and America is not.  PLUS, education really never ends, but is a constant challenge for all people, all their life.   Life changes and the need for education changes.  Education was never discussed.
  2. Health care for America – we are the only developed nation in the world that does not provide for the health of its work force, AND at the same  time we spend three times as much money on health-care as other nations do.  The health care available to many Americans ranks with that of Mexico and Turkey.  Health care was never discussed
  3. Infrastructure.  Bridges are crumbling, highways are deteriorating. Light rail and high-speed rail are a main part of all developed nations but not America.  Infrastructure was never discussed.
  4. Reforming the nation’s election process which was wrecked by the Supreme Court in its Citizens United decision.  Citizens United was never discussed.
  5. Climate change.  Ask the people in New York and New Jersey.  Or New  Orleans.   Climate Change was never discussed.
  6. Dependence on foreign oil.  Foreign Oil was never discussed
  7. Gun control.  America, according to the Bob Herbert of the NY Times http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/18/opinion/18herbert.html?_r=0  has lost 1,000,000 people to gun violence since Dr. King was shot down in 1968.  That is a little less than 23,000 people a year – every year – or  about 2,000 a month, some 60 a day, or about  3 Americans who are shot down every hour by American terrorists.  And not a SINGLE WORD was said about this in the recent campaign for president. We went to war when 3,000 people were killed in the Twin Towers attack, but that’s only about 40 days worth of our normal and constant carnage.  America's Killing Fields was never discussed.

Finally, we have to realize that all the money spent in this campaign really came from the same place.  Whether it was individual contributions from many people or from great corporations, all that money REALLY came from the individual people of america.  Does this amount to another tax?  And when the great corporations spend lavishly on these issues from money they have made from selling products and services to American consumers – does that amount to a tax without representation?  

Friday, November 16, 2012

Speaking of Taxes . . ..


The most expensive campaign in the history of the Planet Earth ended this month.  The amount of money spent in the campaign, or perhaps “invested in the future” – depending on your intentions was the greatest in the history of the world.  

So what really happened?  

Well, the nation’s real problems were not even discussed!  What are those problems?  Here’s a list to begin with:
  1. Education for the nation’s people.  This is far too important to be left to individual communities, counties or even states.  The rest of the world had solved this problem and they are educating their children very well and America is not.  Also, there is a continuing need for education for ALL people, not just the children.  This was never discussed.
  2. Health care for America – we are the only developed nation in the world that does not provide for the health of its work force, AND at the same  time we spend three times as much money on health-care as other nations do.  The health care available to many Americans ranks with that of Mexico and Turkey.  This was never discussed
  3. Infrastructure.  Bridges are crumbling, highways are deteriorating. Light rail and high-speed rail are a main part of all developed nations but not America.  This was never discussed.
  4. Reforming the nation’s election process which was wrecked by the Supreme Court in its Citizens United decision.  This was never discussed.
  5. Climate change.  Ask the people in New York and New Jersey.  Or New Orleans.   This was never discussed.
  6. Dependence on foreign oil.  This was never discussed
  7. Gun control.  America, according to Bob Herbert of the NY Times http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/18/opinion/18herbert.html?_r=0  has lost 1,000,000 people to gun violence since Dr. King was shot down in 1968.  That is a little less than 23,000 people a year – every year – or  about 2,000 a month, some 60 a day, or about  3 Americans who are shot down every hour by American terrorists.  And not a SINGLE WORD was said about this in the recent campaign for president. We went to war when 3,000 people were killed in the Twin Towers attack, but that’s only about 40 days worth of our normal and constant carnage.  This was never discussed.

Finally, we have to realize that all the money spent in this campaign really came from the same place.  Whether it was individual contributions from many people or from great corporations, all that money REALLY came from the individual people of america.  Does this amount to another tax?  And when the great corporations spend lavishly on issues designed to influence government action, and this money comes from the profit they made from selling products and services to American consumers that were totally unrelated to these issues, does that amount to a tax without representation?  

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Open Letter to Republicans.


We need to get to work after this election because our country is badly fractured.  The republicans had their say and they lost.    They have destroyed their own political party, now have to court the Tea Party and Christian extremists.  We don’t want America to go the way of the Republican Party. 

Bengazie?  Bad? Yes.  We need to study it and learn from it.  But it was a walk in the park on a nice day with free lemonade compared with the invasion of Iraq, which was one of the greatest blunders of American history.  

Wednesday, November 07, 2012

Election Night's Silver Lining



Nate Silver is a writer first of all, but second, his niche is that he knows statistics backward and forward.  He rose to prominence with some amazing statistics and their consequent predictions based on the the old national pastime which impressed certain portions of the baseball world  

Nate Silver now called this election weeks ahead of the actual voting.  His particular brand of selection of data to value has been proven to be astonishing.  The last two elections have shown him to have amazing powers to predict outcomes.  

Next election should find him in a vastly different position than he was in this one.


We had been tied to Nate Silver’s 538 Blog for a couple of weeks and the election went pretty well as we all expected it.  He performed almost down to the last detail.  As Bill Clinton said about something else, “It’s mathematics!”  Why the number 538? that is the total number of electors who will vote in the electoral college. 

Two big surprises:  One, why the Romney camp was so stunned by the outcome and the other was that he conceded that night.  Apparently though, Romney had arrived in his headquarters in Boston with his acceptance speech already memorized.  

Next election the republicans will probably have someone keep an eye on Silver's blog.  Remember, it's 538.