Posted on 03/10/2011 4:01:58 PM PST by nkronos
Make no mistake that the events of the past few weeks in Madison, Wisconsin will go down in the history books alongside such precursors to great upheavals as the Boston Massacre and Harpers Ferry. Only five weeks after Jared Loughners shooting of Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and 19 others elicited calls for a new civility in American politics, Wisconsins Democratic state senators fled Madison, lighting a fuse that now threatens old greasy rags accumulated for decades in the garages, basements, and tool sheds of American civics and government.
Rather than work within the procedural rules of Wisconsins elected body, these senators sought by their extraordinary action to block a vote on Governor Walkers budget-repair bill, and, in their words, call attention to the measure. For a while they succeeded in the former; they succeeded in the latter more than they dared to dream.
(Excerpt) Read more at kronosphere.com ...
nkronos
Since Feb 5, 2011
Rather than work within the procedural rules of Wisconsins elected body, these senators sought by their extraordinary action to block a vote on Governor Walkers budget-repair bill, and, in their words, call attention to the measure. For a while they succeeded in the former; they succeeded in the latter more than they dared to dream.
Early on President Obama inserted himself into the battle both openly and from behind the scenes. Verbally, he accused Governor Walker of an assault on his states employees and of denigrating them. Surreptitiously, his political machine organized 25,000 protesters and coordinated efforts in Madison with other organized protests in other states like Ohio and Michigan, where similar battles loomed. Democrats and militant labor recognized at the very top of their organizations that the stakes in Wisconsin were the stuff of real political wars because elections are temporal. Presidents and governors come and go, but fundamental changes in the strategies and structure of governmentlike health care takeovers and collective bargaining reformsoutlast lifetimes.
As happens in many battles, Walker won his with a flanking action, reminiscent in its gutsiness of the Inchon landings during the Korean War. Like General MacArthur before him, Walker realized that in his current position he would keep giving ground, faced by the superior manpower and propaganda of his foe. His poll numbers were plummeting, and recall petitions for his senate allies began circulating. So rather than continue to offer concessions to the Democrats and run the risk of their return in triumph to Madison, hailed as heroes by the mob thronging the capitol, Walker used a parliamentary maneuver to claim victorys laurels. Republicans surprised their Democratic opponentswho were left ridiculously sputtering about not being given enough time to debate the billwith passage of the controversial part of the bill last night, a reverse reconciliation as Mickey Kaus calls it.
Walker stole a march, but the war is far from over. Last night like Red Chinese volunteers streaming across the Yalu River to thwart MacArthurs advance, Starbucks-swilling riff-raff stormed the Madison state house (video), smashing windows, chanting, and generally letting it be known their panties were in a wad. Despite calls from some like former Labor Secretary Robert Reich that those opposed to the bill continue to follow the democratic process and build opposition through conventional political means, firebrands like the gelatinous Michael Moore have used more deep-fried rhetoric. Besides warning the rich to watch their asses, he told them their wealth was a natural resource for all to take and use. Certainly Moore has the mien of one who believes whats mine is mine and whats yours is mine also.
Socialist parties and groups have called for a general strike and the rise of a militant workers movement: Our democracy is not contained within the assembly houses and state capitols; we build it in the streets!
Already some elements are not content with merely metaphorical languagethe kind condemned when Sarah Palin or other Tea Partiers used it during the last campaign. Republican state senators have received death threats and released one such letter to the press. Nevertheless, should these threats weaken Republican resolve or otherwise influence the outcome in Madison, the elected executives and legislative bodies of Michigan, Tennessee, Ohio, New Jersey, and elsewhere can expect to see them too. Tolerating them is how societies devolve into the political repression common in the Middle East, where those opposed to the status quo live in constant fear of what the street may do.
Today the Wisconsin General Assembly passed the bill, 53 to 42, sending it to Governor Walker to sign, which he will undoubtedly do. One assumes its passage will lead to the return of the Democratic exiles. And then the fight over Americas future goes on.
Government entitlement programs are now equal to 35 percent of wages, quadrupling their share during the last half century. Although that number is clearly unsustainable, its size makes it almost politically impossible to reduce: too many of those receiving taxpayer largesse have too great an incentive to tolerate any government action. And so they scream. And so they will fight.
Because even if a disease is eventually going to kill its host, the disease still does not want the host receiving treatment.
Hey, I read it on his blog...no problem.
HG are you in the shower?
HG are you in the shower?
Oh boy. Got to the last one pretty quick anit was already gone...
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HG are you in the shower?
Grilling.
Thanks for catching this for me.
Early on President Obama inserted himself into the battle both openly and from behind the scenes. Verbally, he accused Governor Walker of an assault on his states employees and of denigrating them. Surreptitiously, his political machine organized 25,000 protesters and coordinated efforts in Madison with other organized protests in other states like Ohio and Michigan, where similar battles loomed.
Why would the people who won the election listen to a group of protesters put together by the President when the President ignored a group of protesters 10x that size and villified them while passing the Obamacare monstrocity against their wishes? Does he really think he is so very special that we would forget being mocked, ignored, called filthy names etc. Well, we didn’t forget!
Re: your tagline...
allah wuz a girl goddess who had a forced sexchange op, courtesy of mo and friends...now he/she just sucks.
Ooo! What are you grilling? Can I have some? Please? Please???
I would like them to give examples as to how they were personally abused by the government, or what abuse by the government they think they were protected from by unionizing.
-PJ
I liked the imagry you used with the greasy rags in the tool sheds etc. Thanks for the link.
This is a good article, but I got to tell ya, having just spent two long and frustrating days clearing malware off my computer, I would NOT have gone to your blog to read it. And THAT’S he truth!
Thank steveo for posting it here because there are a whole lot of people who are getting more and more leery of clicking blog links.
What? This makes no sense.
For the rest of this exciting, MUST-READ post, Click Here
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