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Aquarian
Weekly 12/16/09
REALITY CHECK
HEALTH
CARE FINALE
The clock is ticking for Democrats.
The
Health Care Reform Bill has now become for all intents and purposes
as politically charged and attached to their success or failure
going into 2010 as Iraq and the oft-befuddled and always erratic
War on Terror was for Republicans. Much like our compromised ability
to wage war while reconfiguring centuries of damaged theocratic
lunacy plunged us deeper in debt, not to mention robbing the lives
of thousands of our youth and alienating us from the rest of the
world, this excessively dissected congressional fiasco resulting
in hundreds of pages of gobbledygook and failed backroom deals
clearly demonstrates how wrong political myopia can go.
As
the opening decade of the new millennium comes to a close and
the winds of change begin to shift once again, it is now the Democrats,
after four years of a surge and then a significant shift in power,
who find that the Two-Minute Warning has sounded. They are not
down, but the game is tied. They have moved the ball painstakingly
to midfield, but seemed to have stalled in every possible way.
Their
president has been underwhelming at best; choosing to conclave
with the intelligentsia and weigh every option on foreign policy
while allowing his party's legislators to juggle his most pressing
agenda. A Super Majority in Congress has not been super enough
to combat what is clearly a mass filibuster on "All-Things Obama"
from Republicans, who have maintained an impressive solidarity,
unlike Democrats back when their sweeping victories in 2006 heralded
an anti-war cry by voters but bore no anti-war votes against the
questionable military surge. Less ideological than political,
the Republican negation ploy has served to stall what is unquestionably
the closest the United States has come to sweeping National Health
Care Reform, angering many Liberals and frightening away Independents
in droves.
This
current Democratic majority has had no footing on key Democratic
issues emerging from the overwhelming 2008 elections; climate
change legislation, scaling back of military engagements, increasing
tax burdens on the top one-percent, introducing primary social
agendas, etc. These and other pertinent issues are not merely
a reflection of the historic Obama presidential bid, but the tattered
remnants of what looked a year ago like a new age in progressive
politics.
Ironically,
the morbid U.S. economy, which ushered in this proposed new age
in record numbers, has reduced its subsequent governing to nothing
more than a rash of failed bills and inter-party fisticuffs, leaving
those in power with an increasingly limited window in which to
press forward.
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Ironically,
the morbid U.S. economy, which ushered in this proposed
new age in record numbers, has reduced its subsequent governing
to nothing more than a rash of failed bills and inter-party
fisticuffs, leaving those in power with an increasingly
limited window in which to press forward.
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It
is an accepted tenet of politics that in the first year of a new
president's initial term there will be a backlash. And since there
is only Ronald Reagan's popularity and political gravitas to compare
to what Barack Obama accomplished in 2008, a fair comparison reminds
us that the fortieth president of the United States went from
a ridiculous seventy percent in mid-1981 to the mid-fifties by
early '82, which then plummeted to the forties and cost the Republicans
27 seats in the House.
It
was a crippling recession in '82 that felled The Gipper, a referendum
on his Supply-Side economics, which many observers, and ultimately
the voters decided was ill-conceived and too far-reaching. This
time around the new Mr. Popular and his party will also go as
the economy goes. Right now the fringe furor over the Recovery/Stimulus
package, replete with mounds of government pork and sink holes
of funding, which could be fairly argued wrested what looked like
a complete collapse of the Western world back from the brink,
polls as a bust.
Suddenly
after nearly a decade of ignoring it, there is real fear about
the national debt assuredly fueled by a steady rise in unemployment
numbers that show no sign of subsiding before rising nearly into
the teens. And just as the Afghan War has now shifted from the
Bush Problem to the Obama Problem, so has the fallout of Bush's
disastrous economy. After nearly three years in power on the Hill
and one year in the oval office with the strongest mandate handed
to a Democratic president in two generations, it is put-up or
shut-up time.
The
tell-tale sign that things are getting into the "cornered" stage
is the always-predictable Party Split, seen two years ago when
many Fiscal Conservatives began jumping ship on the Cultural Warriors
inside the soon-to-be doomed Republican Party. The troubling Terry
Schiavo case, coupled with more than a few incidents of weird
a-moral behavior by previously pious congressmen and a feeling
among many conservative pundits and intellectuals that denying
evolution and using a fear of homosexuality and decaying school
prayer arguments to gain political favor were losing moderates
and consequently elections.
Now,
as the calendar gets set to turn to a mid-term election year,
Democrats fighting for their political lives are seeing less liberal
rooting and more anti-big government outcry from constituents.
All politics is local and survival in congress is paramount, turning
votes that previously could be counted on for Speaker Pelosi and
the Left in a radical restructure of National Health Care into
powder.
Moderates
in the party are becoming more entrenched, emboldening Republicans,
who wisely play a waiting game in the hopes that nothing is passed,
which would spell complete failure for Obama and his party in
the most crucial period of their time in power. This has led to
at best a dilution of a serviceable Health Care Bill and at worse
a rejection of what will likely be its only chance at succeeding
for many of our lifetimes. What was once an ideological imperative,
however popular (and it still holds a solid majority in the voting
public) or unpopular (there is equally a trenchant paranoia that
a government-run plan will rob and pillage all that is held dear)
has now devolved into a political cause celeb.
The
Democrats simply have to get something passed, check that, anything
passed. Meanwhile half have no idea what that would be or what
it would mean, the other half don't care. The same can be said
for their opponents, who continue to irresponsibly unleash one
horror scenario after the other, much of it fiction, and all of
it hyperbolic.
'Tis
the season for rancorous debate and desperate measures, which
will only lead to results come the autumn of 2010, when we the
people get to weigh in.
Tick-tock.
Reality
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