Thursday, April 16, 2015

You Are Being Trickled Upon


In my opinion the whole mess surfaced on a national level with Ronald Reagan when he famously spoke his infamous nine words, “Government is not the solution; government is the problem”.  I don’t believe for a minute those words were original with him, but I must acknowledge he had some great speech writers.  At one point in our lives, we knew an Oscar-winning cinematographer who told us that a Director had told him that he loved working with Ronald Reagan.  Reagan could memorize his lines, find his mark and ride a horse.   

That being said, it brought to the national level this hatred of government, and the long time animosity of the radical right for any part of government that did not make a profit for them, and they had the perfect foil to express this in Reagan.  Thus, war was a good thing because the military-industrial complex, which Dwight Eisenhower had warned us about, make big profits from building and selling war machinery, to us, our allies and probably enemies as well.  Social justice programs such as Medicare, Social Security, food stamps, and veterans’ medical care because they were no longer profitable, or any other government program that required the wealthy 1%ers to pay taxes, and thus were to be eliminated.  Even our national infrastructure was a drag on their profits, so our roads, bridges, schools, and any government building or program was anathema.  Taxes were the very worst thing that could happen to them, and if the 99% wanted these things, they had to pay the taxes for them, or donate to charity to take care of the poor, elderly, homeless, and mentally ill, etc.   

As a result of this constant anti-government rhetoric, along with anti-union rhetoric, the government agencies that people rely on the most have had their budgets slashed beyond belief.  It is possible to drive around potholes, when bridges fall down usually not too many people are killed, and schools don’t do a good job anyway, so why bother.  But emergency response agencies such as fire departments, ambulance and medical response, and law enforcement had their budgets slashed as well.  I remember an incident when I was in office when our local bomb squad had come in for approval of the acquisition of a robot to pick up potential bombs and place them in the bomb container.  One of my fellow Supervisors voted “no” because she said it was just “more toys for the boys”.  No thought to the fact that this robot would save both civilian and officer’s lives.  Pre-employment screening of personnel hiring was cut drastically.  Training was slashed because there were no tax dollars to pay for that continuing training.  All of the emergency response personnel must have continual training in order to weed out inappropriate individuals who slipped through the employment screening, as well as keep the skills required to respond to violent situations foremost in officer’s automatic responses.   

We are now seeing the result of these short-sighted policies in the surfacing of the totally nauseating behavior of some law enforcement personnel.  If these shootings, chokings and vehicle ramming’s have indeed been race related, these officers should never have been hired in the first place.  Their prior records should have been scrutinized in detail, but, alas, there was no funding for that.  Apparently there was no funding to scrutinize the behavior of officers who had already been hired to determine if their behavior was going over the line when they were found to use excessive force more than once.  Citizens have the right to be up in arms over these violent actions by law enforcement. But putting the blame on officers only is avoiding the issue of why these situations are occurring in the first place.  Further, if one officer takes it upon him or herself to complain about the actions of another, retaliation of some degree is sure to happen.   

No.  Let’s place the blame where it ultimately belongs.  On us.  Why do I say that?  Because so many of us don’t bother to find out what elected officials really mean when they say that they must cut government spending, or that government is out of control, and they will fix it.  Make them be specific from the local all the way to the federal levels.  When we have such low turnouts during an election, we get the government we deserve.  We need people at the federal level who understand that tax dollars must be made available to government agencies to assist them in working economically and efficiently, but properly and adequately.  And we need voters who will go to the polls and vote people in to office who will raise taxes on wealthy individuals and corporations, bring tax dollars back from where they are stashed overseas, and see to it that these dollars are distributed to agencies that serve the people.   

It is not just the President who makes things happen.  We need to vote in US Congresspeople and Senators who understand that “trickle down” economics is really unscrupulous.  Instead it ends up with the people being “trickled on”! 

Taxes are the dues we pay to live in a democratic society.  To rig tax laws to benefit corporations and people who do not need to be benefitted is extremely detrimental to a democratic society, creating what we have now, which is profound income inequality.  It is destroying our nation, and our souls.

 

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