The court scholar serving Hermann of Thuringia.

The court scholar serving Hermann of Thuringia.
The scholar

2023/09/27

Response to Senator Mike Lee

 

We’ve known all year that government funding would run out on September 30th, and yet—even as recesses (long and short) came and went—spending bills weren’t being aggressively moved and scheduled for votes on the floor of either chamber of Congress until the last few weeks. Even then, Congress continued to recess every weekend. 

I dislike the "BothSides" approach here. The problem isn't "Congress," the problem is the Republican-controlled House which has spent all of its free time holding hearings that go nowhere. 

We could have easily had this debate months ago, but the Law Firm (currently organized as “Schumer, McConnell, McCarthy and Jeffries”) has long preferred to wait until the last minute to make an aggressive push to pass spending bills. When we approach the end of September (or any other spending deadline), The Firm then insists on writing its own legislation in secret, often revealing it to members of Congress for the first time only 48 hours before a long-scheduled shutdown window. 

I really don't think this is accurate. Republicans are in favor of less government spending and more tax breaks for the wealthy. Democrats are in favor of spending government money in order to solve problems. Not the same, even if results are similar. Who is responsible for delays this year? Yeah, let's look at the people who did fruitless investigations instead of their jobs! 

This pattern has repeated itself over and over again. It always ends the same way—avoiding a shutdown, but producing deficits in the trillions of dollars, and empowering The Firm each time it happens. This, in short, is perhaps the single biggest reason why we’re $33 trillion in debt. It has also effectively excluded most members of Congress, along with the Americans who elected them, from arguably the single most important thing Congress does each year. 

Actually, in 2009-2010, the whole government, from the House to the Senate, to the presidency, was putting in long hours and lots of effort to pass the ACA/Obamacare. Why did Democrats feel the need to do that? Because there was a necessity to handle medical expenses for the regular citizen. There had been a need to do so since Harry Truman was the President, but the expense of health care was reaching crisis proportions under Clinton and was absolutely intolerable under the younger George Bush. Why couldn't Bush handle the problem? Republicans demonstrated during the first two years of Trump (2017-2018) that they simply didn't have any sort of practical answer as to how to handle health care without the government spending a lot of money. Private enterprise was useless. 

I’ve long said that this ugly cycle will keep repeating itself “until it no longer works” for The Firm—that is, until members stop reflexively voting for such bills, under duress and mild protest. 

As I point out above, "cycles" have nothing to do with anything. 

This could be the year when “it no longer works.” Enough members of Congress are fed up, along with those who elected them, with a corrupt system that empowers the few at the expense of the many.

Being "fed up," is fine, but Republicans simply don't have practical answers. My recommendation is to throw out useless hearings and focus on how government can actually save money.  We can also establish how much more the wealthy can pay in taxes.  

If a shutdown results from this year’s iteration of The Firm’s manipulative scheme, there will be many who will blame those who are speaking out against it. If you’re one of those people, please stop and ask yourself: “could I be blaming the wrong people?”

Well, yes! "those who are speaking out against it" simply don't have practical answers. All they have is the vague desire to "do something." 

To his credit, Speaker McCarthy has promised House Republicans that he won’t subject them to any omnibus spending package, much less the kind of rushed, abusive omnibus that The Firm has long been known to force through Congress. 

Passing a whole series of smaller bills WOULD have been a great idea, had the process started several months ago!

But promises to avoid an omnibus aren’t enough—especially if they aren’t backed up by scheduling decisions that back up the Speaker’s long-asserted desire to have a “regular order” spending process, whereby each of the twelve spending bills (organized by government function) are considered individually. 

Again, a dozen separate spending bills are a great idea, but where was the Republican House for the last nine months? Holding hearings to try and bust President Biden!

3:44 PM (Link to original piece) Sep 26, 2023

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2023/09/23

Israel/Palestine for the last several years

 

From March 2009 to June 2021, Benjamin Netanyahu was Prime Minister of Israel. His policies can be described as continuing the policies that were in place when he came in, slowly squeezing the Palestinians in general. Gaza in particular has been under siege for 17 years. Hamas took control of Gaza in 2007, Fatah/Palestinian Authority (PA) took over the West Bank at the same time. Over the years, Gaza has been controlled solidly by Hamas, the West Bank has been increasingly cut up by walls and checkpoints. PA authorities cannot travel through Israeli checkpoints at will. Their travel permits can be revoked by Israel.

Israel’s military occupation of the West Bank entails onerous physical barriers and constraints on movement, demolition of homes and other physical infrastructure, restrictions on political rights and civil liberties, and expanding Jewish settlements that are widely considered to constitute a violation of international law.

For a short time, Netanyahu was replaced by Prime Ministers Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid. In their coalition government, the United Arab List, with four seats, was able to get Bennett and Lapid’s coalition to majority status (The Knesset is 120 seats, so 61 is the magic number). The driving force behind the coalition though, was “personal animus for the Likud leader (Netanyahu) and the concern at the threat he may pose to Israeli democracy.”

One good thing that happened during Naftali Bennett’s brief tenure was that “budget money that had been approved by the previous government and earmarked for developing the economy and improving the infrastructure of Arab communities inside Israel’s Green Line borders, while combating rampant crime there.” Unfortunately, the Israeli Finance Minister under Netanyahu canceled that money.

Significantly though, the Israel-Palestinian peace process ran into a brick wall under Bennett with his “Six No’s,” which rejected BOTH a two-state solution AND a one-state solution! And of course, Bennet didn’t want to stop Israeli settlements on the West Bank. Settlements there are illegal under international law.

Israel, lacking a constitution, depends for separation of powers on informal arrangements. Netanyahu decided he wanted to remove “the power of the Supreme Court (and lower courts) to cancel government decisions deemed ‘extremely unreasonable.’" The reasonableness rule was summarily tossed out. Up to 200k Israeli citizens have been protesting on a regular basis ever since.

Some nights have turned violent – with police clashes, counter-protests and cars ramming into the crowds. It can feel like the country is unraveling.

Netanyahu addressed the UN General Assembly anyway.

Israel and Saudi Arabia in talks right now.

The Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC) stands with the majority of the fraternal people of Saudi Arabia in its overwhelming condemnation of the normalization efforts between the Saudi dictatorship and apartheid Israel.

One of the big events lately has been the Jenin raid. It was the most devastating strike on the Jenin refuge amp in about 20 years. Israelis say they need to “clean out” the camp regularly, otherwise terrorists gather there. Several Israelis died in the battle as well. Israelis claimed that terrorists had been living in the camp and used the civilians there as cover after committing raids in the vicinity. The camp also saw fighting back in 2002. But Israel’s response punishes every resident who’s in the vicinity, thereby again, violating international law.

As various folks have pointed out, Is Israel defending a pure and true democracy? Ehh, depends on which ethnic group you’re talking about. Israel practices apartheid, so it’s only democracy if you’re speaking of the Jewish population, not if you’re speaking of Palestinians. 

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Christian-Jewish Allies – I meet regularly with this group. We have an active mailing list on everything affecting Palestinians.

Combatants for Peace – Members of this peace group have spoken at FUMCOG a few times.

Al-Bustan Seeds of Culture – Arab arts, including writing, dancing, singing. I attended an outdoor festival with short film clips of theirs a few months ago.