Click and Clack is the problem

The House recently voted to deny funding to NPR. Conservatives always say that it’s liberally-biased. But I’m guessing they’ve never even listened to it. Then again, maybe reality is just liberally-biased.

Anyway, here’s my favorite quote from the debate of the bill. This is Representative Anthony Weiner of New Work, discussing the popular (and very funny) program “Car Talk”:

Crisis averted, ladies and gentlemen. I’m glad we got the economy back going. I’m so glad we secured our nuclear power plants. So glad Americans are back to work. We discovered a target we can all agree upon. It’s these guys. This is the problem. – it’s Click and Clack.

Now, let’s look at the record here. For one, they talk in that Boston accent. “Car Talk.” It’s car, congressmen. Second, they talk about master cylinders. It’s kinky. I am glad my Republican friends are finally getting to the bottom of this.

All of these guys that finally are going to be taken off the public payroll. The Republican party, no one can say they are not in touch. They get it. They understand where the American people are. The American people are not concerned about the economy around the world. They’re staring at their radio station saying, ‘Get rid of Click and Clack.’

March 21, 2011  Leave a comment

Almost Walloon

  by Jon Sustar
a photo by Jon Sustar on Flickr.

Sometimes jogging through the MetroParks feels like Walloon. But only if you replace the trees with pine trees, convert the paved path to a dirt road, and reduce all stress to zero.

March 17, 2011  Leave a comment

Almost Spring

  by Jon Sustar
a photo by Jon Sustar on Flickr.

The snow is finally melting, and it was warm enough for shorts and a t-shirt on my jog today. Let’s hope this weather sticks around!

March 17, 2011  Leave a comment

A letter to Governor Walker

I’ve been wanting to write something about the ongoing battles in Ohio and Wisconsin over unions and the odd disgust with those who choose teaching as a profession. However, I have a hard time putting into words how frustrating and depressing it is when I think about these legislative battles.

As the son of a public school teacher, I’ve witnessed the enormous effort it takes to be a good teacher, along with the increasing pressure from society as teachers encompass more and more responsibilities (while parents are held less accountable). As a former student of public schools (elementary, middle, and high school, along with going to a state university), I’ve benefitted from strong schools and strong teachers, and the lessons I learned from them will continue to serve me well in the future. Most importantly, as the brother of a public school teacher whose career has only just begun, I want our state and country to respect their profession as much as I do.

Eric Brehm, a teacher in Wisconsin, recently sent a letter to his governor, and also posted it to his blog. I think he raises a lot of great points, and I hope many who are on the fence stumble upon it and read it. Even if you’re not in a union or not in one of these states, the decisions being made in Wisconsin and Ohio will eventually affect all of us.

To the Duly-Elected Governor of Wisconsin, Scott Walker (and anyone else who gives a hoot):

It has only been a week, and I grow weary of the political struggle that your Budget Repair Bill has caused.  I am tired of watching the news, though I have seen many of the faces of those I hold dear as they march on the Capitol.  I am tired of defending myself to those who disagree with me, and even a bit tired of fist-bumping those who do.  I am tired of having to choose a side in this issue, when both sides make a certain degree of sense.  And so I offer you this desultory (aimless or rambling) philippic (angry long-winded speech), because at the end of the day I find that though this issue has been talked to death, there is more that could be said.  And so, without further ado, here are my points and/or questions, in no particular order.

1.  You can have my money, but. . .. Ask any number of my students, who have heard me publicly proclaim that a proper solution to this fiscal crisis is to raise taxes.  I will pay them.  I have the great good fortune to live in a nation where opportunity is nearly limitless, and I am willing to pay for the honor of calling myself an American.  Incidentally, Warren Buffett, the second richest man in the nation (and a Democrat) agrees with me.  Your proposed Budget Repair Bill will cost me just under $3000 per year at my current salary, with the stated goal of saving $30 million this year on the state budget.  I say, take it.  You can have it.  It will hurt me financially, but if it will balance the budget of the state that has been my home since birth, take it with my blessing.  But if I may, before you do, I have some questions.

According to the 2009 estimate for the U.S. Census, 5,654,774 people live in the state of Wisconsin.  Of those, 23.2% are under the age of 18, and presumably are not subject to much in the way of income tax.  That still leaves about 4,342,867 taxpayers in the state of Wisconsin.  If you wished to trim $30 million off of the budget, that works out to about $6.91 per Wisconsin taxpayer.  So I must ask:  Is it fair that you ask $3000 of me, but you fail to ask $6.91 of everyone?  I know that times are tough, but would it not be more equitable to ask that each taxpayer in the state contribute an extra 13 cents a week?

  • Would you please, kindly, explain exactly how collective bargaining is a fiscal issue?  I fancy myself to be a fairly intelligent person.  I have heard it reported in the news that unless the collective bargaining portion of this bill is passed, severe amounts of layoffs will occur in the state.  I have heard that figure given as 6,000 jobs.  But then again, you’ve reportedly said it was 10,000 jobs.  But then again, it’s been reported to be as high as 12,000 jobs.  Regardless of the figure, one thing that hasn’t been explained to my satisfaction is exactly how or why allowing a union to bargain collectively will cost so much money or so many jobs.  Am I missing something?  Isn’t collective bargaining essentially sitting in a room and discussing something, collectively?  Is there now a price tag on conversation?  How much does the average conversation cost?  I feel your office has been eager to provide doomsday scenarios regarding lost jobs, but less than willing to provide actual insight as to why that is the case.  I would welcome an explanation.
  • Why does your concern over collective bargaining, pensions, and healthcare costs only extend to certain unions, but not all?  Why do snow plow drivers and child care providers and teachers and prison guards find themselves in “bad” unions, but firefighters and state police and local police find themselves in unions that do not need to be effected by your bill?  The left wing news organizations, of course, state that this is because these are unions that supported your election bid, while you seek to punish those unions that did not; I would welcome your response to such a charge.  You have stated that the state and local police are too vital to the state to be affected.  Can I ask how child care, or prison guards, or nurses or teachers are not vital?  Again, I would welcome a response.
  • Though you are a state employee, I have seen no provision in your bill to cut your own pension or healthcare costs.  The governor’s salary in Wisconsin was about $137,000 per year, last I checked.  By contrast, I make about $38,000 per year.  Somewhere in that extra $99,000 that you make, are you sure you couldn’t find some money to fund the state recovery which you seem to hold so dear?  As you have been duly elected by the voters of Wisconsin, you will receive that salary as a pension for the rest of your life.  I don’t mean to cut too deeply into your lifestyle, but are you sure you couldn’t live off $128,000 per year so that you could have the same 7% salary reduction you are asking certain other public employees to take?

2.  Regarding teachers being overpaid and underworked. I don’t really have many questions in this regard, but I do have a couple of statements.  If you haven’t already figured it out, I am a teacher, so you may examine my statement for bias as you see fit.  I admit I find it somewhat suspect that teachers are mentioned so prominently in your rhetoric; those protesting at the Capitol are indeed teachers.  But they are also students, and nurses, and prison guards, and plumbers, and firefighters, and a variety of other professions.  If you could go back to “public sector employees,” I would appreciate it.  But as far as being overpaid and underworked . . . I grant you, I have a week’s vacation around Christmas.  I have a week off for Spring Break.  I have about 10 weeks off for summer.  With sick days and personal days and national holidays and the like, I work about 8.5 months out of every year.  So perhaps I am underworked.  But before you take that as a given, a couple of points in my own defense.

  • The average full-time worker puts in 40 hours per week, 50 weeks per year, with two weeks’ vacation time.  That makes for a grand total of 2000 hours per year.  Part of the teachers’ arguments regarding their time is that no one sees how many hours they work at home to grade papers, or create lesson plans, or things of that nature.  I am in a rare state, in that I am not one of those teachers.  I work an hour from where I live, and I like to keep my work at work.  I, therefore, do not bring work home with me, but rather stay at school, or come in early, so that I can grade papers or create lesson plans while at school.  So I am more prepared than most to explain the hours it takes to do my job.  I also supervise an extra-curricular activity (as many teachers do), in that I serve as the Drama Coach for my school.  The school year, so far, has lasted for 24 weeks.  I have, in that time, averaged 78 hours per week either going to school, being at school, or coming home from school.  If you remove my commute, of course, I still average 68 hours per week, thus far.  That means I have put in 1,632 hours of work time this year, which works out to over 80% of what your average full time worker does in a calendar year.  If you include my commute, I’m over 90%.  If ikeep going at my current pace, I will work 2,720 hours this school year (or 3,120 hours if you include my commute).  That means I work 136% to 156% as much as your average hourly worker.
  • As to underpaid — I’m not sure I am underpaid in general, though I do believe I am underpaid in terms of the educational level expected to do my job.  I have two Bachelor’s Degrees, and will be beginning work toward my Master’s this summer.  By comparison, sir, you never completed college, and yet, as previously stated, you outearn me by almost $100,000 per year.  Perhaps that is an argument that I made the wrong career choice.  But it is perhaps an argument that we need to discuss whether you and others like you are overpaid, and not whether teachers are.

3.  Regarding the notion that teachers that are protesting, or legislators currently in Illinois, are hurting the state. Very briefly, if I may:

  • Teachers have been accused of shirking their duties by protesting for what they believe to be their rights instead of being in school.  The argument has been, of course, that no lessons have been taught when classes aren’t in session.  I must submit that lessons in protest, in exercise of the First Amendment right to peaceable assembly, in getting involved as a citizen in political affairs, have been taught these past few days.  The fact that they haven’t been taught in the classroom is irrelevant.  Ultimately a very strong duty of the school system is to help students become citizens — I think that has clearly happened this week.
  • As to the legislators, it seems to me as though they feel their constituents deserve to have a length of time to examine the proposed bill on its merits, not vote it straight up or down three days after it was presented.  As the current budget does not expire until June, this seems to me like the only response left them in light of your decision to fast-track the bill without discussion.  Give them another option, and perhaps they will come back.  I can’t say that I agree with their decision, but I can say that I understand it.

4.  Regarding the notion that protestors at the Capitol are rabble-rousers and/or thugs. Such name-calling on the part of conservatives in the state and the conservative media could be severely curtailed if you would speak out against it.  True, most of the people protesting, if not all, are liberals.  Historically, liberals have always tended to think that they have far more support than they actually do.  They also (in my opinion) have a tendency to get extremely organized about three months too late, if at all.  So you can fault them for their decision-making, but I would ask you to speak out against the notion of thuggery.  Again, very briefly:

  • So far, 12 arrests have been made.  Estimates say there were about 25,000 people at the Capitol today, and about 20,000 yesterday.  Let’s be conservative (mathematically) and say that 40,000 people protested over two days.  That would mean that officers arrested .0003% of all protestors.  By almost any definition, that is an extremely peaceful demonstration, and of course you are aware that the U.S. Constitution guarantees the right of peaceable assembly for a redress of grievances.  So in the main, these people have done nothing wrong.

5.  If I may provide you with a sense of history. You work in the largest and most magnificiently appointed state capitol in the nation, built by Bob LaFollette (a Republican).  You work in the same building where Phil LaFollette (a Republican) helped guide Wisconsin out of the Great Depression.  You work in the same building where Gaylord Nelson (a Democrat) was the first in the nation to offer rights to unions of state employees, rights that you now seek to overturn.  And you work in the same building where Tommy Thompson (a Republican) provided more state funding to education than any other governor before or since.  Are your current actions truly how you would choose to be remembered?

6.  Finally, Governor, a note of thanks.  Whatever the outcome of the next several days, you deserve a certain degree of credit.  As an educator, I understand how difficult it can be to get young people interested in politics.  You have managed to do this in the space of one week.  A number of Wisconsin’s youth support you.  A number of them do not.  But whatever else can be said of you, you have them paying attention, and thinking about voting, and walking around the Capitol, and turning out to be involved.  You have taught your own lessons this week, Governor, and that has its own value.

Thank you for your time,

Eric Brehm

XXX North XXXXXX Street

Endeavor, WI  53930

Thanks, Eric, for writing this letter, and, although very unlikely, I hope Walker eventually responds.

March 16, 2011  Leave a comment

Remarks by the President

It turns out that President Obama echoed similar sentiments in his remarks at the memorial service for the victims of the shooting in Tucson, Arizona, which took place yesterday. Of course, he said it a lot better than I did.

The loss of these wonderful people should make every one of us strive to be better.  To be better in our private lives, to be better friends and neighbors and coworkers and parents.  And if, as has been discussed in recent days, their death helps usher in more civility in our public discourse, let us remember it is not because a simple lack of civility caused this tragedy — it did not — but rather because only a more civil and honest public discourse can help us face up to the challenges of our nation in a way that would make them proud.

We should be civil because we want to live up to the example of public servants like John Roll and Gabby Giffords, who knew first and foremost that we are all Americans, and that we can question each other’s ideas without questioning each other’s love of country and that our task, working together, is to constantly widen the circle of our concern so that we bequeath the American Dream to future generations.

They believed — they believed, and I believe that we can be better.  Those who died here, those who saved life here –- they help me believe.  We may not be able to stop all evil in the world, but I know that how we treat one another, that’s entirely up to us.

And I believe that for all our imperfections, we are full of decency and goodness, and that the forces that divide us are not as strong as those that unite us.

That’s what I believe, in part because that’s what a child like Christina Taylor Green believed.

Imagine — imagine for a moment, here was a young girl who was just becoming aware of our democracy; just beginning to understand the obligations of citizenship; just starting to glimpse the fact that some day she, too, might play a part in shaping her nation’s future.  She had been elected to her student council.  She saw public service as something exciting and hopeful.  She was off to meet her congresswoman, someone she was sure was good and important and might be a role model.  She saw all this through the eyes of a child, undimmed by the cynicism or vitriol that we adults all too often just take for granted.

I want to live up to her expectations.    I want our democracy to be as good as Christina imagined it.  I want America to be as good as she imagined it.    All of us -– we should do everything we can to make sure this country lives up to our children’s expectations.

As has already been mentioned, Christina was given to us on September 11th, 2001, one of 50 babies born that day to be pictured in a book called “Faces of Hope.”  On either side of her photo in that book were simple wishes for a child’s life.  “I hope you help those in need,” read one.  “I hope you know all the words to the National Anthem and sing it with your hand over your heart.”    ”I hope you jump in rain puddles.”

If there are rain puddles in Heaven, Christina is jumping in them today.    And here on this Earth — here on this Earth, we place our hands over our hearts, and we commit ourselves as Americans to forging a country that is forever worthy of her gentle, happy spirit.

January 13, 2011  Leave a comment

Where do we go from here?

The shooting that took place this past Saturday is tragic. A United States Representative was shot. Thirteen others were injured. And six people were killed, one of which was a nine-year-old girl.

Forget what the pundits are saying on TV. Forget what’s being printed in articles and press releases. Forget what’s being discussed on talk radio. Regardless of what factors played into the event that led to an attempted assassination and the deaths of six individuals at a constituent meeting in Arizona, I think people need to take a step back from the whirlwind of the political landscape.

People were murdered at a meeting with their representative. A representative who was elected by the voters in her district was shot in the head. An injured elderly woman had to wrestle an ammunition cartridge away from the killer. Two other older men had to tackle him to the ground. An intern only a few years younger than myself had to quickly help those that were caught in the line of fire. He had to stop the bleeding of the representative he just started working for, keeping her upright so that she wouldn’t choke to death. Others were laying there injured or dying.

And a nine-year-old girl was dead.

Christina was born on September 11th, 2001. She wanted to go to Penn State and get a job helping the less fortunate. She wanted to be the first woman baseball player in the major leagues. She had just been elected to the student council at her elementary school.

She was only at the event on Saturday because of her desire to learn more about her government.

So where do we go from here? What can we learn from this tragedy? What can we do to honor those that have fallen?

The language so often used by candidates, politicians, and the media might not have had a direct effect on this particular instance. But that doesn’t matter. It needs to end. Let’s say goodbye to the unnecessary fears and welcome constructive debate on issues that matter most to the people. Let’s encourage everyone to work together and understand each others’ views, before jumping to conclusions about their motives. Let’s be more peaceful. Let’s tone down the rhetoric. Let’s speak not of violence, but of sound arguments. Let’s respect our representatives, because they were elected with the support of your neighbors, even if they did not have your support. Let’s agree to disagree.

Let’s create the type of political landscape that you think Christina would appreciate.

January 10, 2011  Leave a comment

The better angels of our nature

In these divisive times, President Obama has quoted lines from President Lincoln, used back when Lincoln was trying to mend the conflict between the north and south. Of course, now Obama is trying to mend the conflict between Republicans/conservatives and Democrats/liberals. In particular, Obama has used Lincoln’s line “the better angels of our nature” to describe the good that resides in all of us to overcome the differences that separate us. Christopher Dickey wrote an article in Newsweek about these parallels, and I think he brings up some good points.

Lincoln didn’t rely on these “better angels” to bring the union back together. Instead, he relied on his “killer angels” to squash the south from successfully seceding. There was no reasoning with the secessionists, since they firmly believed that they were simply defending the rights given to them by the Consitution — in particular, the right to property (slaves). This same reasoning is being used today (mostly by the Tea Partiers), but to defend other so-called “rights” in the Constitution, and I’m doubtful that any of them are likely to find their “better angels” any time soon.

Dickey concludes his article with this, referring to Lincoln and Stephen Douglas:

What both of those great politicians understood by then was that there may be better angels in the nature of some people, but there are others who are willing to weaken, even destroy a nation to serve their own self-righteous self-interest, and they will do it in the name of the Constitution. If Obama hasn’t learned that yet, perhaps it’s time he did.

November 10, 2010  Leave a comment

What motivates us?

This video is fascinating:

November 10, 2010  Leave a comment

Global warming may still be an issue

The Onion reports on how global warming, surprisingly, is still an issue, despite the lack of attention paid to it:

While several years have passed since global warming was considered the most pressing issue facing mankind, recent studies from the Center for Atmospheric Research, the National Academy of Sciences, NASA, the Pew Center on Global Climate Change, and basically any scientific report available on the issue confirmed that it is not only still happening, but might also be worth stopping.

“Global warming, if you remember correctly, was the single greatest problem of our lifetime back in 2007 and the early part of 2008,” CGD president Nancy Birdsall said. “But then the debates over Social Security reform and the World Trade Center mosque came up, and the government had to shift its focus away from the dramatic rise in sea levels, the rapid spread of deadly infectious diseases, and the imminent destruction of our entire planet.”

November 10, 2010  Leave a comment

Electoral dissonance

Here’s a good explanation of why the Democrats lost last week from the article “Electoral Dissonance” by Hendrik Hertzberg in The New Yorker:

Part of the Democrats’ political problem is that their defense, confusingly, depends on counterfactuals (without the actions they took in the face of fierce Republican opposition, the great slump would have metastasized into a Great Depression), deferred gratification (the health-care law’s benefits do not kick in fully until 2014), and counterintuitive propositions (the same hard times that force ordinary citizens to spend less money oblige the government—whose income, like theirs, is falling—to spend more). Another part of the problem, it must be said, is public ignorance. An illuminating Bloomberg poll, taken the week before the election, found that some two-thirds of likely voters believed that, under Obama and the Democrats, middle-class taxes have gone up, the economy has shrunk, and the billions lent to banks under the Troubled Asset Relief Program are gone, never to be recovered. One might add to that list the public’s apparent conviction that illegal immigration is skyrocketing and that the health-care law will drive the deficit higher. Reality tells a different story. For ninety-five per cent of us, taxes are actually lower, cut by around four hundred dollars a year for individuals and twice that for families. (The stimulus provided other tax cuts for people of modest means, including a break for college tuition.) The economy has been growing, however feebly, for five straight quarters. Most of the TARP loans have been repaid and the rest soon will be, plus a modest profit for the Treasury. And the number of illegal immigrants fell by close to a million last year, thanks in part to more energetic border enforcement. The health-care law, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office says, will bring the deficit down.

So where do we go from here to make up these losses in 2012?

November 9, 2010  Leave a comment

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