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June 17, 2013
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Will Symbols Trump Logic?Posted on May 19, 2011Symbolism doesn’t pay off debts or cover the costs of Social Security and Medicare. This has not stopped politicians in the nation’s capital from engaging in an extended and entirely symbolic fight over how to raise the debt ceiling. It’s time to stop the charade. The outlines of an eventual deal are already clear. Both parties will agree to some spending cuts and to a deficit-reduction trigger that won’t take effect until well after the 2012 elections. The triggering language will be vague enough so Republicans can say it would force large spending reductions and Democrats can say it would allow for a mix of cuts and tax increases. Republicans holding the increase of the debt ceiling hostage to their efforts to eviscerate programs know perfectly well that Congress will not risk a financial crisis. They even acknowledge this. “At some point it’s clear to me that we have to increase the debt ceiling,” House Speaker John Boehner said Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” Yet Boehner needs to push things to the brink because the tea party members of his caucus believe that last year’s election gave the GOP a “mandate” to make their wildest small-government dreams a reality. Boehner is trying to appease the right with extended rounds of shadow-boxing and big slabs of anti-spending rhetoric. Advertisement And the evidence is unmistakable that Republicans realize the budget they adopted last month, confected by Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., is a political albatross. In the campaign for next week’s special election in New York’s 26th congressional district, Republican Jane Corwin is in unexpected jeopardy because Democrat Kathy Hochul has turned the election into a referendum on Ryan’s budget and its Medicare cuts. Astonishingly (and falsely), Corwin is now accusing the Democrat of favoring Medicare cuts. The lessons: Corwin can’t successfully defend the cuts, so she wants to sow confusion; and Republicans will toss the Ryan budget overboard if that’s what it takes to save House seats. Even Ryan himself isn’t defending his Medicare cuts much any more. As The Washington Post’s Ezra Klein pointed out, Ryan’s major speech in Chicago this week devoted only three, detail-poor paragraphs to Medicare. And Newt Gingrich is being punished by his party for the great sin of telling the truth about the Ryan budget: voters simply won’t buy “right-wing social engineering.” Then there was the withdrawal of Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., from the “Gang of Six” that was seeking a broad anti-deficit agreement. Coburn’s defection showed that a comprehensive bipartisan accord is impossible as long as Republicans are unwilling to admit the need for substantial new revenues. All the good will in the world can’t get around the fact that the bulk of the deficit problem over the next decade is created by the Bush tax cuts. Sooner or later, all these realities will lead Congress to raise the debt ceiling without pretending that it can resolve the central budget questions. But there is still one major danger. Having lost on Medicare, Republicans are likely to drop back and seek huge Medicaid cuts—and Ryan’s reductions here are, if anything, worse than his Medicare reductions. As even the cautious Congressional Budget Office concluded, his Medicaid plan “would probably require states to ... curtail eligibility for Medicaid, provide less extensive coverage to beneficiaries, or pay more themselves.” The cuts would especially harm the disabled, who account for 42 percent of Medicaid expenditures. The administration has been strangely reserved about Medicaid, which plays a key role in the new health care law’s effort to expand coverage. You have to pray that this will not be the issue on which President Obama revs up his Pre-emptive Concession Machine. The president could also usefully interrupt our deficit obsession for a moment to remind Congress that 13.7 million Americans are still unemployed. If setting up a mechanism for cutting the deficit in the long term makes sense, slashing it now would be foolish. That’s why a quick and narrow deal to raise the debt ceiling is the only sensible way out of this time-wasting confrontation. It is truly irrational to risk the nation’s credit standing for the purpose of offering empty symbols to the tea party. E.J. Dionne’s e-mail address is ejdionne(at)washpost.com. Previous item: Strauss-Kahn Scandal an Embarrassment for France Next item: Meltdown on the Launch Pad New and Improved CommentsIf you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy. |
By anaman51, May 21, 2011 at 3:22 pm Link to this comment
As usual, the nation is being held hostage by the RepubliNazis so they can manipulate the eradication of funding for programs that help the poor, and pass the saved money along to their wealthy keepers. In order to stop the RepubliNazis from doing this, the Democrats will band together and sell the poor and helpless down the road—-again. Will someone in the Democratic Party please grow a set of balls and stand up to these lying bastards?
Report thisBy mc.murphy, May 20, 2011 at 11:20 am Link to this comment
Instead of blathering on and on, this is the picture which E.J., with his vast
audience should be presenting; a simple eye popping chart which speaks a
thousand words, and can easily be grasped by the dumbest of dumb-fucks.
Of course, if disseminated too broadly, it could also turn every American town and
citi square into Tahrir or Puerta del Sol, and that, we just can’t have.
Fuck you E.J.
Please, link to it, disseminate, twitter, copy and share with co-workers, for hardly
a better and clearer case can be made against the fascist lovers in Congress.
http://mosquitocloud.net/this-chart/
Report thisBy TDoff, May 19, 2011 at 8:26 pm Link to this comment
Let’s hope the Dems and Obama have the guts and wisdom to call the republican bluff on the debt ceiling, and refuse to accept any ‘conditions’ for raising the ceiling to honor our past obligations. Not that the republicans could, or would, recognize that as the correct, responsible thing to do. But hey, Eff’Em, we have to draw the line somewhere, this is a good place to do it.
Report thisBy MarthaA, May 19, 2011 at 8:26 pm Link to this comment
The most horrific and memorable example of this process that I know of
Report thisis that which Hitler applied to the Jews in Mein Kampf to accuse,
condemn, denounce, and kill the Jews as related in Mein Kampf, and as
duplicated by the Conservative Right-Wing EXTREMIST
Republicans from the time of Nixon to the present to accuse,
condemn, denounce, and put the Left and Liberals in the cross hairs.
By MarthaA, May 19, 2011 at 8:20 pm Link to this comment
Also, the English Lettering System, A through Z, is used in
Report thisthe same way; in the Alphabet A is the beginning and Z is the end and
B through Y are all points in between A and Z; examples are
DOG=D+O+G, CAT=C+A+T, RUN DOG RUN = (R+U+N)+(D+O+G)+
(R+U+N), and so on and so forth.
By MarthaA, May 19, 2011 at 8:11 pm Link to this comment
With regard to simple forms of the use of dialectic for simple minds,
Report thisthe Arabic Numbering System, 1 through 10, is a simple form
of dialectic where 0 is the beginning and 10 is the end, together with all
points in between and combinations thereof, for example; 0=0, 1=1,
2=1+1, 3=2+1, 4=2+2, 5=3+2, 6=3+3, 7=5+2, 8=4+4, 9=5+4,
10=10 and etc.
By Daniel, May 19, 2011 at 5:46 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
When do symbols ever fail to trump logic?
Report thisBy PatrickHenry, May 19, 2011 at 3:56 pm Link to this comment
Putting ‘Trump’ and ‘logic’ in the same sentence is a non starter.
Move along, nothing to see here.
Report thisBy Monk-in-the-ruins, May 19, 2011 at 1:33 pm Link to this comment
Politics is all about symbols and seldom about any of the concrete matters which are only tangentially related to the symbols. The far right has cynically grasped this post-structuralist fact, but the old 19th century rationalist political left has yet to comprehend it.
Report this