Medina County Dem News
Friday, September 21, 2007(Medina County Democratic Action Committee)
MCDAC Newsletter for
September 21, 2007
Medina
County Democratic Party Jefferson-Jackson
Dinner on October 6
The Medina
County Democratic Party Annual Jefferson
Jackson Day
& Silent
Auction
Satuday, October 6, 2007
Sharon
Party & Event Center
6600 Ridge Rd
(Route 94), Sharon Center, OH
6:30 - Party
Time! Cash Bar
7:30 Buffet Dinner
$40
per person / $320 for a table of eight
Theme: Celebrate our local roots by
bringing township/city memorabilia for display
tables.
Please RSVP by September 28th
by either
Making your reservation online at
http://www.medinadems.org/ht/d/RegisterForEvent/i/136806/pid/278209
Mailing a check payable to "JJ
Dinner Committee" to Medina County Democratic
Party, P.O. Box 583, Medina, OH
44256
Clicking on "related document" link
below to download a flyer/RSVP form
Note:
Please consider making a donation of a silent
auction item!
State Government Job
Positions Open
Pam Miller, Chair of
the Medina County Democratic Party and Carol
Gurney have teamed up to put openings for Ohio
State Government positions online at
www.medinadems.org. Click here to view the
openings:http://www.medinadems.org/ht/d/sp/i/278202/pid/278202
Recent MCDAC Blog
Entries
September 16,
2007
Netherlands Approach to
Health Care: Would it Work in Ohio?
The
Netherlands has adopted a very intriguing
approach to health insurance. First of all, it
uses private insurance companies. Second, it
requires all citizens to get health insurance.
Third, it makes all health insurance companies
accept all applicants. Fourth, it makes all
health insurance companies offer the same basic
policy with the same benefits. People can buy
supplemental insurance, but the same standard
policy with the same benefits has to be offered
to everyone. You can read more about the Dutch
approach to health insurance here.
One thing that should be kept in
mind is that the Netherlands is bigger than the
State of Ohio, but not a lot bigger. Ohio has a
population of 11 million plus while the
Netherlands has a population of 16 million
plus. The advantage of such an approach is that
it people who have health insurance would
probably be able to keep such coverage,
increasing their comfort level with the
concept. Another advantage for doctors and
other providers of health services is that
there would be a universal insurance policy
with a standard amount of benefits. Consumers
wouldn't have to worry about being denied
coverage for pre-existing
conditions.
Another advantage of this
program is that insurance companies would be
forced to compete with each other by becoming
more efficient. Right now there is a big
difference between the administrative costs for
private insurance companies and Medicare. The
administrative costs, as represented by the
percentage of health care dollars going to such
costs, are much higher for private insurance
companies than for Medicare.
The
change would be politically difficult, but
probably easier than establishing a state-run
insurance program. Democrats should think about
adopting the Dutch model as the model for
Ohio.
Check out
www.OhioMoneyTree.org
Want to find out
who gets political money from who? Check out
www.ohiomoneytree.org. You can check either by
contributor names or by candidate/committee
names. It is pretty interesting and is very
comprehensive.
Alan Greenspan Says
Iraq War is About Oil
Alan Greenspan has
a new book
out in which he is quite critical of the Bush
Administration. Most of the press coverage of
the book has been centered around his
complaints about Bush and his disappointment
with Cheney, who he served with in the Ford
Administration. There is, however, a
fascinating quote about Iraq. Here is the
quote:
"I am saddened that
it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge
what everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely
about oil."
Now,
apparently, he doesn't go into an explanation
of what this quote means or why he believes
that the Iraq War is about oil. This could just
be speculation, but if it is, it is speculation
coming from a man who is wired into both
Republican and Washington power circles. The
next time that some Bush loyalist tells you
that this war was started because of weapons of
mass destruction or to spread democracy, or any
of the other discarded reasons we have been
given, give them Greenspan's
quote.
September 15,
2007
Western Colorado Trending
Democratic Because of Environmental
Concerns
The Washington Post posted an
article on its website dated Sunday,
September 16, 2007, about the growing
Democratic vote in western Colorado. The
Democratic vote is growing because of
environmental concerns brought on by the Bush
Administration's plans to vastly increase oil
and natural gas drilling in Western Colorado.
According to the residents of western Colorado,
this increased drilling is destroying the
beauty of the area. The natural beauty is one
reason why many people have moved to the
western part of the state.
This is a
quote from the article:
At the
behest of the White House, which made
accelerated oil and gas leasing the top
priority of the Bureau of Land Management, the
gas industry has in the past five years
transformed huge tracts of an iconic Western
landscape into something resembling an
industrial zone. As Coloradoans struggle to
adjust to the changes -- a steady flow of heavy
rigs on back roads, powerful odors from
evaporation ponds and a small army of
roughnecks gobbling methamphetamine to work
12-hour shifts -- disquiet grows over federal
plans to open the spigot wider
yet.
If you haven't visited western
Colorado, you may want to schedule a visit
before Bush turns the state into one great big
oil and gas drilling
field.
Voinovich's Iraq Position:
Troop Withdrawal Good, Deadlines
Bad
Ohio's other United States Senator,
George Voinovich, gave an interview to WOSU radio in which he came
out for the Bush Administration developing a
plan to withdraw from Iraq, but, according to
WOSU, he will not vote for a deadline. He says
that he believes that a deadline of one year
would be disastrous.
This is classic
Voinovich: Do just enough to look like you are
listening to Ohio's voters, but, when the chips
are down, support Bubble-Boy's Iraq policy.
This way he gets the praise of moderately
conservative Ohio newspapers like the Plain
Dealer and the Columbus Dispatch for being
realistic about Iraq, but doesn't earn the
animosity of the wing-nuts who vote in Ohio's
Republican primaries.
This is always
the problem that Cuyahoga County Republicans
have in Ohio politics. Since they are from
Cuyahoga County, they tend to be much more
reasonable than some of the downstate
Republicans. They have to be because Cuyahoga
County, even in its Republican areas, will only
tolerate a certain amount of right-wing
craziness. This tendency toward reasonableness
makes them hard for Democrats to beat in
general elections, but makes them vulnerable in
Republican primaries.
Look what
happened, for example, to Jim Petro. Here he
was a successful state-wide vote getter, a
winner of races for Ohio Attorney General and
Ohio State Auditor, a proven vote getter in the
biggest Democratic county in the State, and he
gets whacked in the primary by a right-wing nut
job named Ken Blackwell. You can be sure that
Voinovich took note of that election,
especially if he is thinking about running for
re-election in 2010.
Iraq, though, is
different than other problems Voinovich has
faced in his political career. The cost in
human suffering and financial treasure to the
United States is high compared to the
importance that most of us who aren't oil
company executives attach to the country.
Voinovich's political balancing act may come to
a crashing end over this issue if he decides to
run in 2010.
September 14,
2007
Pelosi Goes After Bush's
10-Year War
Speaker of the United States
House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi issued a statement today, September 14, 2007,
claiming that Bush's plan means a 10 year
American presence in Iraq. Although the
Republicans are going to deny it, her statement
is based on comments that General Petraeus
made to Congressional
delegation.
This is a theme that has some legs.
Bush spoke in his statement on Thursday
evening, September 13, 2007, about creating an
"enduring relationship" with Iraq's government.
Of course, that assumes that Iraq will have a
functioning government, but that is another
matter altogether. We have already been in Iraq
for over four years, and have actually
increased the number of troops in Iraq over the
last 12 months. So the American public might be
very willing to believe that Bush and his
neo-con friends would actually be in favor of a
10 year war.
Conservative Columnists
Greatly Outnumber Liberal & Progressive
Columnists
Media Matters has a report out that shows the tremendous
conservative advantage in columnists that are
published by American newspapers. This is a
quote from the report:
Sixty percent of the nation's
daily newspapers print more conservative
syndicated columnists every week than
progressive syndicated columnists. Only 20
percent run more progressives than
conservatives, while the remaining 20 percent
are evenly balanced.
In a given week,
nationally syndicated progressive columnists
are published in newspapers with a combined
total circulation of 125 million. Conservative
columnists, on the other hand, are published in
newspapers with a combined total circulation of
more than 152 million.
When you
consider the tremendous advantage that
conservatives have in the electronic media with
their own network, Fox News; the advantage they
have on talk radio; and the advantage they have
in newspaper columnists, it is remarkable that
they sincerely believe that there is such a
thing as a "liberal" media. It is also
remarkable that in spite of all these
advantages, they still can be beat in honest
elections.
September 13,
2007
Did Petraeus Arm Both Sides
of Iraq's Civil War?
Here is another view of General David
Petraeus and his
role in Iraq. In this article, the person being
interviewed by Amy Goodman argues that Petraeus
has helped arm both Shia death squads and now
Sunni death squads. These death squads are
basically private militias under the control of
tribal leaders and religious leaders in Iraq.
They are definitely not under the control of
the Iraqi government. It is well worth the time
it takes to read it.
Fact-Checking
the Prez
Salon Magazine's Tim Grieve has
a post out that fact checks Bubble-Boy's speech
last night about Iraq. You can read it
here. Needless to
say, BB stretched the truth last might and that
is being charitable.
Master Narrative
of the Bush Presidency
Jay Rosen, who
blogs on media matters at Huffington Post, and
on his own blog, has an entry on Huffington Post about the
missing master narrative of the Bush
Administration. That missing master narrative
is the effort of the Bush Administration to
increase the unchecked power of the presidency.
Rosen uses the term "master narrative" to mean
the story that drives all other stories. It is
a way for the media and its public to make
sense of the world around us, a way, if you
will, "to connect the dots."
In this
case, Rosen says that most political reporters
used the master narrative that the Bushies were
skilled at politics. The evidence was that Bush
had won the 2000 election, although disputed,
helped Republicans win the 2002 off-year
election, and won re-election in 2004. The
theory was that these wins demonstrated the
political skill of Bush and Karl Rove.
What such a narrative overlooks,
however, is that political campaigns cannot be
separated from the political aims of the people
conducting the campaigns. It is as if political
reporters never asked themselves why exactly
did Bush plan to accomplish with his political
power. How exactly did he plan to govern? What
goals would he try to accomplish with is
political power?
Those questions were
strangely missing from the media coverage of
both the 2000 and the 2004 presidential
campaigns. Consequently while Bush would claim
a mandate for everything that he tried to do as
President, the voters who supposedly gave him
this mandate never really was told what he was
trying to accomplish as President.
The
master narrative suggested by Rosen allows
consumers of news to understand what the Bush
Administration is trying to accomplish. It
explains why he waged a war on the rule of law,
why he reacts viscerally to the idea of
Congressional oversight, why he feels that it
was permissible to start a war using
questionable or false evidence, and why he
believes that his administration can spy
without a warrant on Americans or imprison an
American without due process of law. The Bush
Presidency is about turning the American
presidency into a unchecked instrument for
governing.
Boehner Says U.S. Is
Paying a "Small Price" in Iraq
So
here we have an incredible remark by
Congressman John Boehner, who is the Minority
Leader of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Here is the question from Wolf Blitzer of CNN
and Boehner's answer:
BLITZER: How much longer will
U.S. taxpayers have to shell out $2 billion a
week or $3 billion a week as some now are
suggesting the cost is going to endure? The
loss in blood, the Americans who are killed
every month, how much longer do you think this
commitment, this military commitment is going
to require?
BOEHNER: I think General
Petraeus outlined it pretty clearly. We're
making success. We need to firm up those
successes. We need to continue our effort here
because, Wolf, long term, the investment that
we're making today will be a small price if
we're able to stop al Qaeda here, if we're able
to stabilize the Middle East, it's not only
going to be a small price for the near future,
but think about the future for our kids and
their kids.
Only a politician who
doesn't have a family member serving in Iraq,
who doesn't have to worry every day and night
whether his loved one is safe in Iraq, could
make that kind of statement. Frankly it is
obscene and a hell of a lot more insulting to
American soldiers than some ad run by
Moveon.org.
Joyce V.
Kimbler,
Treasurer
MCDAC
P.O. Box
1213
Medina, OH 44258
On the world wide
web at http://www.mcdac.org/.
Medina County Democratic Action
Committee
Joyce Kimbler, Treasurer
P.O.
Box 1213
Medina, OH 44258
joycekimbler@medinacountydemocraticactioncommittee.org
