A Change Election—In the Wrong Direction
Republicans are disconnected from reality
But the
furious and frustrated electorate should be careful when they demand change in
the upcoming midterm elections—because what they get may well be very different
from what they actually want.
To
understand why, let's look again at the findings of that poll. While that
survey (and many others) show Americans deeply polarized over partisan
preferences, the Obama presidency and other questions, there is broad agreement
on at least one critical issue: extending unemployment benefits for the
millions who have lost jobs and remain out of work. Fully 62% said that
Congress should continue to extend benefits; only 36% said it should not, with
2% undecided. Most independents joined most Democrats in supporting extended
benefits—and even 43% of Republicans agreed.
But when
Republican congressional and Senate candidates are asked that same question,
their responses are negative—strangely and sometimes harshly out of touch with
the current realities of American life.
Listen to
Sharron Angle, the Republican candidate for U.S. Senate in Nevada, a Scientology adherent who also
favors returning the country to prohibition of alcohol. Although there are five
unemployed workers in this country for every available job, she believes that
unemployment insurance is keeping people from seeking work.
"You
can make more money on unemployment than you can going down and getting one of
those jobs that is an honest job but it doesn't pay as much," she said not
long ago. "We've put in so much entitlement into our government that we
really have spoiled our citizenry." She is not only heartless, but also
badly misinformed, since she apparently doesn't know that the average weekly
unemployment check is scarcely higher than the minimum wage in most places. It
would be educational for her to attempt to maintain a family with that level of
income.
Cutting
Benefits Won’t Increase Employment
Not every
Republican running for office this year necessarily shares that brutal
viewpoint, and few of them are stupid enough to say so as bluntly as Angle. Yet
the idea that unemployment benefits ought to be cut off to encourage people to
find work—even when there is no work to be found—reflects the Republican
consensus.
Kentucky
Senate candidate Rand Paul, for example, sees cutting off benefits as
"tough love." The only way to revive the economy, in his view, is for
Americans to "accept a wage that's less than we had at our previous job in
order to get back to work."
Neither Paul
nor Angle should be seen as outside their party's mainstream. In the Senate,
Republicans have consistently blocked the extension of unemployment benefits
using similar arguments. Sen. Jon Kyl, the Arizona Republican who holds his
party's second-ranking position in the Senate, explained last March on the
Senate floor that he would vote against extending benefits because unemployment
insurance "doesn't create new jobs. In fact, if anything, continuing to
pay people unemployment compensation is a disincentive for them to seek new
work."
Such is the
Republican vision in 2010, echoing that of the 19th century: a nation of
workers toiling longer hours for far less money, descending to the threshold of
poverty. Nobody who votes for Republicans in anger should complain when that is
what America
becomes.
© 2010 Creators.com



I love that republicans in the sentate are trying to block the extension of unemployment benefits. Maybe the lazy bums collecting their government checks will really start pounding the payment for a job. I won't even waste my time trying to debate with you leftist bozos about the entitlement mind set that is prevailing in this country. I mean, why bother? The fact of the matter is that you liberal buffoons are dangerous because if your leftist ideology of a nanny state succeeds then we are all doomed.Â
Don't you just love rightard trolls that hide behind their keyboards, posting bullshit like this that they would never have the balls to say to anyone in the RW? Â Full of sound & fury, signifying nothing...
Who are the people that have been unemployed for 99 weeks? If the best applicants are hired first and then the second best applicant etc. What kind of skills do people who have been unemployed for 99 weeks have to offer?
WiscActor, good comeback, you are a typical inferior leftist. I would love to bury you in person with my superior intellect. Once again, I will assert that after a couple of weeks anybody collecting unemployment is simply lazy. Go waitress or bartend somewhere, Go to a temp agency. Go on craigslist.com. But to collect unemployent month after month is pure laziness.
You think a person can just waltz into an establishment and expect to pick up a job waiting tables or bartending (which actually requires some experience and skill)? Even low-level jobs are affected by hiring trends, and if nobody in a reasonable distance is hiring, you're kinda screwed. Oh, and craigslist? Don't make me laugh. The chances of finding a job lasting more than a week, or even a couple days, is slim. People post there looking for short-term help with small projects, not serious jobs that one could expect to live off.
But feel free to rest easy in your superiority complex, because you can simply shrug off anything we say because it's just coming from "inferior leftists" like us.
Oh, and it's craigslist.org, not .com. Enjoy your fail.
Don't bother, thefailtrain. You are responding to an internet troll who gets off on posting crap & seeing the reaction she gets.
I own you socialist bozos.