tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-974773076690597683.post5234171309922744157..comments2024-03-27T18:00:02.032-04:00Comments on Sardonicky: A Balanced Approach to SadismKaren Garciahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15612731479365562803noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-974773076690597683.post-75602132301691485042013-05-20T20:02:47.162-04:002013-05-20T20:02:47.162-04:00I'm curious about the issue of food stamps as ...I'm curious about the issue of food stamps as welfare. It's basically subsidized sustenance, right? Then I think about the other things that are subsidized by the government. Specifically, I get stuck thinking about fuel subsidies. Which are regularly employed by people driving huge new SUVs with very low gas mileage. "Status" vehicles which are contributing to global warming.<br /><br />I've been trying to figure out how this balances out. Say a family, or say even an individual, is getting the maximum food stamp allocation per month. For an individual living in the inner city who walks everywhere, this can be as much as $200 in food stamp benefits (don't ask how I know), which though it sounds like a lot may actually be necessary given that a person poor enough to qualify for that $200 a month may not have kitchen facilities or even a refrigerator. Many of the remaining affordable places to rent in the city do not allow you to cook, or even to keep food in your room. Don't ask about city food prices.<br /><br />I have this weird feeling that if you crunched the numbers, even the $200 a month food stamp individual would be receiving a lower subsidy than the average SUV driver, because fuel is so expensive to process/procure and involves so many additional variables. Whereas for frozen peas and unfrozen avocados, the price has been relatively stable for the last few years, and we don't have to occupy other countries for it.<br /><br />So once again, we are horrified by the food stamp user, but we don't even question our neighbors and friends, who are driving huge Mercedes SUVs. <br /><br />It's really strange. I think the guy in the inner city who is walking everywhere should get food stamps, period, as a compensation for the government subsidy he "sacrifices" by not driving. <br /><br />We really need to get a handle on our weird car infrastructure.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-974773076690597683.post-48674032968073491352013-05-20T08:42:37.725-04:002013-05-20T08:42:37.725-04:00Douthat on lonely desperate people…into the Douche...Douthat on lonely desperate people…into the Douchehat…empathy?<br /><br />“We must learn to regard people less in the light of what they do or omit to do, and more in the light of what they suffer.” - Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Letters and Papers from Prison<br /><br />Judith Shulevitz, “The Lethality of Loneliness We now know how it can ravage our body and brain,” http://www.newrepublic.com/article/113176/science-loneliness-how-isolation-can-kill-you#<br /><br />“Who are the lonely? They’re the outsiders: not just the elderly, but also the poor, the bullied, the different. Surveys confirm that people who feel discriminated against are more likely to feel lonely than those who don’t, even when they don’t fall into the categories above. Women are lonelier than men (though unmarried men are lonelier than unmarried women). African Americans are lonelier than whites (though single African American women are less lonely than Hispanic and white women). The less educated are lonelier than the better educated. The unemployed and the retired are lonelier than the employed.<br /><br />“…loneliness research forces us to acknowledge our own extraordinary malleability in the face of social forces. This susceptibility is both terrifying and exhilarating. On the terrifying side is the unhappy fact that isolation, especially when it stems from the disenfranchisement of the underprivileged, creates a bodily limitation all too easily reproduced in each successive generation. Given that we have been scaling back the kinds of programs that could help people overcome such disadvantages and that many in Congress, mostly Republicans, have been trying to defund exactly the kind of behavioral science research that could yield even better programs, we have reason to be afraid.”<br /><br />Ross Douthat is not religious.<br /><br />“I call him religious who understands the suffering of others.” - Mahatma GandhiDenis Nevillenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-974773076690597683.post-18581012730825639482013-05-19T18:39:20.870-04:002013-05-19T18:39:20.870-04:00Here is my Dowd comment, buried deep with the usua...Here is my Dowd comment, buried deep with the usual indignant Obama Defense League commenting avalanche (my response to the Douthat follows):<br /><br />President Obama is the poster child for presidential term limits. Had he been elected to one six-year term, he could have started pulling his Bulworth for all it was worth, calling out GOP bull right from the get-go.<br /><br />He might have campaigned to overturn Citizens United instead of embracing it, spending the last half of his first term licking the Prada shoes of millionaires in what turned out to be a billion-dollar campaign. He might have prosecuted the banks without worrying if Wall Street would get its feelings hurt and hire another corporatist to primary him. He might have given a thumbs-down to endless wars and kill lists without worrying what Dick Cheney would say about his machismo on the military-industrial complex-funded Sunday shows. He might have actually had Cheney and the rest of the torturers prosecuted!<br /><br />In any case, mulling over the the trials and tribulations of one politician won't heal a country torn apart by unfettered capitalist greed, chronic unemployment, the worst income disparity in history, a suicide rate that's increased by 30% in the past decade. Let the media start paying attention to the problems of ordinary, everyday people for a change; stop the Hollywood-ization of the political class.<br /><br />That being said, I'd rather Obama channeled Chris Christie instead of JFK or Warren Beatty. Nothing would be so cathartic to an inattentive, bored, sick nation that the president going on national TV and treating a joint session of Congress to a barrage of F-bombs.<br /><br />******************************<br /><br />Re Douthat on lonely desperate people who "retreat" from life (one of his more disgusting efforts, disguised as concern):<br /><br />"That’s exactly what we’ve seen happen lately... a retreat from family obligations, from civic and religious participation, and from full-time paying work."<br /><br />That paragraph in particular and this whole column in general has a "blame the victim" subtext reminiscent of Mitt Romney's infamous makers v. takers remarks, when he smarmily sniped that 47% of us care nothing for our own lives.<br /><br />Adhering to the right wing script, Ross also uses the old canard of "structural unemployment" (plenty of jobs, too few skills!) to explain away the fact that his party has voted against every single government jobs program introduced by Democrats. There's unemployment because of lack of demand, period. <br /><br />He similarly implies that suicide victims are deadbeats who "retreat" (selfishly surrender!) instead of being illegally foreclosed upon, aged out, and made redundant by profit-hoarding CEOs who typically make 300 times as much as the average worker. No mention of the fact that job loss equals health insurance loss. Who has the money to seek professional help these days? The deficit hawks have defunded the very mental health clinics that help prevent people from giving up in despair. Austerity kills. Literally.<br /><br />And it wouldn't be a Ross Douthat column without his blaming lack of religion for all that ails us. Take a cue from Pope Francis, Ross -- start blaming the capitalist predators instead of their victims. Empathize, don't moralize.<br />Karen Garciahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15612731479365562803noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-974773076690597683.post-401785873757244412013-05-19T18:28:48.433-04:002013-05-19T18:28:48.433-04:00Karen: Please print your comment to Maureen's ...Karen: Please print your comment to Maureen's column in our comments<br />section. You are the only one who tackles the basic problems and basic<br />people in power as most of the readers are bamboozled by all the<br />distractions going on and can't focus their comments on the realities. And<br />these are many of the progressives writing these columns who can't face what is really threatening the country. I think Maureen could have done a better job but at least she tried to describe the circus going on. Wish she had more comments about how it all came about. <br /><br />Pearlnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-974773076690597683.post-42419262651022376152013-05-19T17:10:27.629-04:002013-05-19T17:10:27.629-04:00This Democratic political willingness to horse-tra...This Democratic political willingness to horse-trade with regard to basic sustenance is indeed sadistic; one can't get more fundamental than whether poor people get enough to eat. Democrats such as Pelosi and Obama disgust me. I'm tempted to say that they disgrace the Democratic Party, but then I remember that such behavior has become the norm for most Democrats, who have become political eunuchs, one testicle cut off by the Republicans, the other one negotiated away so that they can remain at what passes for government these days inside the beltway. Inside the beltway allright, but nothing below the belt.<br /><br />As far as the banks or "defense" contactors being paid ANYTHING to administer benefits for the poor, that is beyond rip-off. The large banks were rescued by the government from an insolvency caused by their own imprudent actions, while "defense" contractors have been gorging from the government nipple for decades, sucking it dry. The LEAST that both could do would be to underwrite banking services and the mechanics of benefits cards for the poor at no charge. Creative accounting notwithstanding, my guess is that both sectors have ample unused computer capacity, and could do these tasks at little cost to themselves, and also perhaps take a tax write-off. Of course, performing such tasks as a public service would require that these corporations have some sense of civic duty and appreciation/thankfulness for what they have received from the nation --- when in fact they have none, instead viewing it all as their entitlement.Fred Drumlevitchhttp://www.freddrumlevitch.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-974773076690597683.post-43215216774457962682013-05-19T07:52:35.332-04:002013-05-19T07:52:35.332-04:00400,000 tons of subsidized refined sugar to help t...400,000 tons of subsidized refined sugar to help the austerity medicine go down…<br /><br />The forgotten wisdom of George McGovern…His life was a testament to peace, truth, and the promise that everyone should eat well. His Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs defied the sugar lobby by trying to set up national dietary standards. As Mark Bittman said, “George McGovern’s impact on food policy could have been greater, but not through more effort on his part.”<br /><br />“A bone to the dog is not charity. Charity is the bone shared with the dog, when you are just as hungry as the dog.” - Jack London<br /><br />“Unrespited, unpitied, unreprieved. Ages of hopeless end.” – John Milton, Paradise Lost<br /><br />A Tsar rules the world, A Tsar without mercy, And his name is Hunger. (Russian traditional)<br /><br />Honor, nobility, truth, ethics, integrity. These values of true human greatness have become such a rare commodity in American leadership.<br /><br />Neoliberal idolatry.<br /><br />"We have created new idols. The worship of the golden calf of old has found a new and heartless image in the cult of money and the dictatorship of an economy which is faceless and lacking any truly humane goal." - Pope Francis<br /><br />WWJC? Would Jesus cut food stamps? Republican and Democrats argue about where Jesus Christ would stand on food stamps.<br /><br />Jesus as a political tool! <br /><br />Nanny state politicians have money for war and corporate welfare, but can’t feed the poor.<br /><br />"Christians in Name Only" give more credence to Ayn Rand's writings than Jesus.<br /><br />"The great scandal of Christians is the way they have persecuted fellow Christians, driving out heretics, shunning them, burning their books, burning them.” - Gary Wills<br /><br />"I like your Christ. I do not like your Christians; they are so unlike your Christ." - Mahatma GandhiDenis Nevillenoreply@blogger.com