Friday, February 6, 2015

Where's Les McCann When We Need Him?

Whenever I hear a Republican speak these days I have a serious Les McCann moment.

You know the one that McCann, along with Eddie Harris, gave the world at the 1969 Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland.

"I love the lie and lie the love/A-hangin' on, with push and shove/Possession is the motivation that is hangin' up/The God-damn nation looks like we always end up in a rut (everybody now!)/Tryin' to make it real -- compared to what." 

Since Jan. 20, 2009, Republicans have repeatedly shown that they are a callous and irksome lot that loves the lie. Don't simply take my word. Look at the GOP's six-year policy of obstructionism that was hatched as Barack Obama was being sworn in as the nation's 44th president.

For years Republicans lied about the President's economic policies and the Affordable Care Act, saying each would destroy the economy. Now that we have seen more than 50 months of steady job growth -- 3.1 million jobs in 2014 alone -- since 2011, a drop in the unemployment rate to below 6 percent, records set on the stock market, soaring profits by the nation's major corporations, and GPD growth we haven't had since before 2008, Republicans seek to take the credit, saying it was the anticipation of a Republican takeover of Congress this year that pushed the economy forward. Of course, they still lie about the Affordable Care Act and their so-called replacement plan, which seeks to gut the ACA and would leave millions of Americans without health insurance -- again.

But if those six years of Republican "no's" and obstructionism in Congress are not enough then look at the actions of the Republican party since it expanded its majority in the House of Representatives and took control of the Senate after the 2014 midterm elections. One can also look at the actions of Republican governors and state legislatures around the country. Whether it is the doubling down of broken fiscal and tax policies in Kansas, Wisconsin, or Louisiana, the ridiculous comments of state legislators on what constitutes rape, or efforts to further destroy unions, the evidence is there.

Let's look at Congress first. After six years of making Congress as dysfunctional as possible and lowering its favorability rating to single-digits at various times by shutting down the government, playing brinksmanship with the debt ceiling, and blocking all meaningful legislation, the first bills the newly empowered Republican majorities voted in the House and Senate do nothing to break the logjam of do-nothingness in Congress or help the American people who continue to face economic hardship six years after the economy collapsed.

Instead, they have voted to put the Federal Government on the hook again for reckless banking practices that the Dodd-Frank financial regulations sought to curb; have voted to repeal or alter the Affordable Care Act for the 56th time; pushed through a law that would thwart Obama's actions to block the unnecessary Keystone XL pipeline project; have voted that future analysis of tax bills should use a questionable formula that would make all tax cuts seem good; and have added a poison pill to the Department of Homeland Security funding bill in an effort to block the President's executive order granting a reprieve to immigrants whose parents brought them into the country illegally as children.

Oh yeah, we also have a Republican U.S. Senator who says restaurants should be able to "opt-out" of the requirement that employees must wash their hands after using the restrooms, and several so-called Republican doctors who equivocate on the importance of vaccinations to stem preventable diseases that have the potential to kill.

And that is just the tip of the iceberg.

We also have several Republican governors doubling down on failed tax and fiscal policies that have stymied economic growth in their states and have blown large holes in their budgets. With the 2016 presidential election season already in progress, Republicans have said that the next president should be a governor, someone with executive experience.

Yet, a look at those Republican governors gives us Bobby Jindal whose home state is facing a $1.6 billion budget hole this year and in the foreseeable years because of tax cuts, budget gimmicks, one-shots, and a drop in oil prices; Scott Walker whose home state faces so large a budget gap that he plans to cut about $300 million from the state's vaunted public college system; Rick Scott who faces multiple claims of ethics violations, the most recent for allegedly firing the top state law-enforcement official investigating the governor for wrongdoing; Chris Christie -- a bellicose, bullying, buffoon -- who has more scandals and junkets from businessmen than any other governor should ever have and still be walking free; and Jeb Bush who we now know was a hashish smoking alleged bully who wants other people's kids incarcerated for something that he did and seemed to enjoy as a teenager.  

To add further insult, Republican-led state legislatures are filled with "whacko birds" that have no idea of what constitutes rape. According to one Republican state legislator, while rape of a woman is ugly, it becomes less ugly if the woman gets pregnant. Then there is the Republican legislator who wonders why it is considered rape to have sex with an unconscious woman.

And we can't forget the religious right, which is trying to change state laws to make discrimination legal as long as one can cite religious belief. Yes, Les McCann was right.

"Church on Sunday, sleep and nod/Tryin to duck the wrath of God/Preachers fillin' us with fright/They all tryin' to teach us what they think is right/They really have to be some kind of nut (I can't use it!)/Tryin to make it real -- compared to what."