Return The Democratic Majority To The House And Senate in 2012: OPEN LETTER TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA


Return The Democratic Majority To The House And Senate in 2012: OPEN LETTER TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.

OPEN LETTER TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

In response to this letter, written by former general partner of Goldman, Sachs & Co. and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Goldman Sachs Asset Management, and current Investment Fund Manager at Omega Advisors, Leon G. Cooperman, who apparently thinks he can shame the president into letting the Republican Party steamroll right over him so he will lose the election in 2012. I’d like to know where the hell his letters to John Boehner, Eric Cantor or Mitch McConnell are. You might want to read Cooperman’s letter hateful screed first, for context, as the below borrows heavily from its construct.


UPDATE, November 30, 2011: It has come to my attention that CNBC gave Mr. Cooperman free air time to read his rebuke of President Obama aloud on the air. Without equal time for the counter argument, this is an unconscionable breach of journalistic ethics. So I’m challenging CNBC to read this letter on air, as well.

For those of you reading this blog, please contact CNBC (select Show Feedback – CNBC TV as the subject) and ask that they give equal air time to this rebuttal.

Thank you.


The 99 Percent | Everywhere, USA
Small Business Chief Executive Officer, Accountant, Dishwasher, Truck Driver, Receptionist, Cashier, Customer Service Representative, Tech Support Guru, File Clerk, Soccer Mom, Executive Assistant, Photographer, Medical Billing Specialist, Super Dad, Writer, Machinist, Pharmacist, Teacher, Painter, Gardener, and so on.

November 29, 2011

President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20500

Dear Mr. President,

It is with a great sense of pride that we write this. Like many others, we believed that your election would bring a salutary change of direction to the country, despite those critics who called you naive, unfit and too inexperienced to lead. We are glad to know that we were right. We do not blame you for the economic mess that you inherited, even if your opposition has taken every opportunity to ensure that any effort to address it has been largely ineffectual. We understand that when surrounded by cries of “This is just a lot of wasteful Washington spending,” even the strongest of minds will be hard pressed to effect the kind of sweeping change necessary to stave off the predicted apocalypse.

Unfortunately, in spite of your extraordinary efforts, you are now being held accountable for creating a tenor of rancorous debate that was actually started by your political opponents. You are being held personally responsible for “roiling” us in what Republicans were the first to characterize as “class warfare.” We know that this does not reflect on any “principled belief that the eternal divide between the haves and have-nots is at the root of all the evils that afflict our society,” nor is it “just a cynical, populist appeal to your base by a president struggling in the polls.” Understanding this fact is actually of monumental importance. It matters that the divisive, polarizing tone of your opponents’ rhetoric has already cleaved a widening gulf, at this point as much visceral as philosophical, between the downtrodden and the wealthy, who refer to themselves as “those best positioned to help us,” even though we don’t want their “help,” what we want is our fair share of the spoils of our labor, which they have not shared with us in decades.

It matters because if we continue to blame the wrong people — ourselves, or worse, you — we will never be able to successfully put a stop to it. Their tack is at once counterproductive and freighted with dangerous historical precedents. And it is an approach to governing that owes itself to desperate demagoguery that the Republican Party has spent the last 35 years becoming more and more comfortable with and adept at.

Just to be clear, we were not “to-the-manor-born,” and have struggled our entire lives to enjoy even a modicum of success and financial stability, only to be rewarded with diminishing savings accounts, homes with no equity, lost retirement accounts and wages that have remained stagnant since 1965. We went to public schools because that was our only option. We are plumbers and carpenters and assembly line workers. We come from all corners of the globe and bring with us a diverse and rich background that serves this country well. We have parents who have prodded us and children we have prodded, too. We have had successful businesses go under because the banks who were “too big to fail” played games with the market, lost big, got bailed out, then refused to lend us any more money so we could no longer meet our payroll.

We may not all have the kind of minds necessary to start private investment firms, but we know how to cut hair, make jewelry, copy edit manuscripts, program computers or groom pets. And in spite of our modest means, we still tithe to our churches, feed the homeless, volunteer at our children’s schools, run or walk to help find cures for AIDS or breast cancer or heart disease. And we think it’s in pretty bad taste to gloat about our giving. We do it privately, and gladly, even if it hurts, because we all know that as bad as things might be for us, there is always someone who has it worse.

None of us are policy wonks, polemicists or pamphleteers (whatever those things are). We won’t try to impress you by using big words in long sentences when we couldn’t begin to understand them without a dictionary at hand. But there are others we can direct you to who have written with eloquence and authority on the subject that most needs addressing if we are to survive as something more than a Third World Nation. For recent examples of what we are up against, we point you to: “Subsidies of the Rich & Famous” (A Report by Senator Tom A. Coburn, M.D.; U.S. Senator, Oklahoma, November, 2011), “Wall Street Isn’t Winning — It’s Cheating” (Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone, October 25, 2011), “Occupiers Occupied: The Hijacking of the First Amendment” (Robert Reich, November 15, 2011), “The Fascinating History of How Corporations Became “People” — Thanks to Corrupt Courts Working for the 1%” (Joshua Holland, AlterNet, November 23, 2011).

As taxpaying citizens with families to feed and more than a passing interest in righting this capsizing ship, we do feel justified in reminding you that for you to forgo acknowledging the existence of this divide and the destructive policies that have been designed by our legislators over a period of decades to create it, would be entirely irresponsible. We have had far too many presidents who have ignored the ever-increasing disparity in this country to our long-term detriment, not only as individuals, but as a nation. It’s about time someone spoke the truth of what has happened and who, exactly, has caused it, be they Republican or Democrat, whether they like how it makes them look or not.

While it’s true that people of differing political persuasions can (and do) reasonably argue about tax rates, the Bush-era tax cuts, various deductions and exclusions, unemployment benefits, payroll tax cuts, entitlement programs, “too big to fail” financial institutions — the list goes on and on — we all know that anyone suggesting that you discuss these issues during a political campaign without acknowledging the elephant in the room would be tantamount to asking you to roll over and play dead. Don’t fall for it.

And while we’re grateful that a small handful of high-income taxpayers find the reassessment of so many entrenched economic premises healthy and long overdue, the vast majority of them are not speaking out, many in hopes that they can skate by without enduring any “harm” as they have with every prior Administration, some who are blatantly rubbing our faces in their superiority, and some, like two former staffers for John Boehner, who are secretly drafting schemes to destroy the populous movement that has finally had its belly full of the wealthy and powerful controlling every corner of a government that is supposed to be “of the people, by the people and for the people,” but that has become “of the lobbyists, by the CEOs, and for the corporations.”

But what we find most objectionable is the highly politicized idiom your opponents have chosen to erroneously charge you with. We have never once heard you lay that charge or use that terminology, and we’re mystified as to how anyone could begin to accuse you of fostering it. Now, we may not be the wealthy elite, but we are not naive. We understand that in today’s Congress, this is how Republicans have forced the business of governing to get done — a situation that, given the gravity of our problems, is as deplorable as it is seemingly ineluctable.

But as President first and foremost and leader of your party second, we are impressed that you have clearly endeavored, time and time again, to rise above the partisan fray and raise the level of discourse to one that is both more civil and more conciliatory, that seeks collaboration over confrontation. That is what “leading by example” means, even if many people have heretofore refused to acknowledge that you have attempted to do so.

We know that capitalism itself is not the source of our problems. Big businesses do employ many millions of taxpaying people, pay our salaries, include healthcare coverage as part of our compensation, start new companies, found new industries and create new products. But they are wrong that it is they who fill store shelves at Christmas, and keep the wheels of commerce and progress moving; it’s those who labor for them who accomplish those tasks, something that the wealthy elite all too readily overlook. And unfortunately those same big businesses have bought enough of our legislators that their share of the taxation burden (or lack thereof) to keep our government running at all, let alone efficiently, has dwindled, generating a smaller and smaller share of the revenue it takes to run it. To not frame the debate as one of “those who have taken and kept the bulk of the nation’s wealth” versus “those whose wealth has been decimated over the past several generations by reverse Robin Hood-style legislation,” is to both let down the populace and further inflame an already outraged citizenry.

Do not listen to those who would accuse you of naked, political pandering. That would be the long-used methods of the opposition, who play to some of the basest human emotions, not the least of which are fear and hatred — a strategy, as history teaches, that never ends well for anyone but totalitarians, which is what we’ve become convinced they want to be. Do not allow them to project their own shortcomings onto you.

With all the respect we can muster, Mr. President, it’s about time we had a president willing to throttle-up the rhetoric of The People. We don’t assume that the wealthy are a monolithic, selfish and an unfeeling lot who must be subjugated by the force of the state, but we know that enough of them hold enough sway with our government that we must do something now, before it’s too late, to wrest the power away from them and return it to the people where it belongs. And saying so does not make you guilty of the ridiculous charges laid at your feet by people who are very clearly opposed to your presidency and who would like nothing more than to see you defeated. Make no mistake, Mr. President, these men are not your friends and they do not come to you with their advice out of good will. They are wolves in sheep’s clothing who are crass enough to attempt to play on your good conscience.

You know you are the same man who led communities out of poverty and into self-sufficiency in Chicago. And we know you are still that same man, no matter which side of the “force” you’re representing, because we have seen that man create and implement a health care system that is broader and fairer than this country has ever had. We watched you calmly and effectively negotiate a budget deal that kept our country from defaulting on our obligations. We’ve seen how you have championed women’s rights with the Lily Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, and gay rights with the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. You have been the most effective president this country has seen since the 1960s, signing over 500 pieces of legislation into law in the first two years of your first term alone. History will show you to have been a man of courage and fortitude. Of principles and grace.

Do not let the naysayers get you down. We are not your “minions” and we resent being called that by people pretending to ask for a higher level of discourse yet resorting to partisan slams of their own. Please continue to fight for us, Mr. President. We need you now more than ever.

Sincerely,

The 99 Percent

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The Forgotten 15: Job Creation through Deregulation | Mashed Potato Bulletin


The Forgotten 15: Job Creation through Deregulation | Mashed Potato Bulletin.

The Forgotten 15: Job Creation through Deregulation | Mashed Potato BulletinIllinois Rep. Bobby Schilling, in this past Republican weekly address, introduced into the current political lexicon, The Forgotten 15, a reference to 15 pieces of House legislation awaiting perusal in the Senate. Offered as a counter to the President’s criticism of the GOP’s inaction on his Jobs Bill, Schilling and other Republicans throughout the week, touted this legislation as job creation through deregulation.

     Discussion pertaining to details of the Forgotten 15 has been surprisingly absent in the news media given the overall job creation debate. To encourage public awareness and dialogue it is necessary to delve into the specifics of these bills. Over half of them involve environmental deregulation while the others deal with mineral resource extraction, oil and gas development, changes to financial reform, and labor relations.

Environmental Deregulation

     Eight of the fifteen are aimed at clean air and water regulations with 3 geared towards nullifying the Environmental Protection Agency’s carbon and greenhouse gas emission rules. These are same rules the EPA was required to create as a result of the 2007 Supreme Court lawsuit, Massachusetts v. Environmental Protection Agency, in which 3 cities and 13 states and US territories filed against the EPA to regulate CO2 and other greenhouse gases as pollutants under the Clean Air Act. Of particular interest related to the Republican Party’s emphasis on states’ rights – and is evident in a number of the “Forgotten 15” – is the Party’s condemnation of this decision and subsequent EPA rules as government overreach yet the lawsuit stands as an exemplary example of the very state and local government empowerment they champion.

        The first of these environmental bills is the oddly monickered H.R. 872 Reducing Regulatory Burdens Act which amends the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act to eliminate some permitting previously required for point-source pesticide discharge into navigable waters. Navigable waters are defined as waters utilized for commercial and transportation purposes which include but are not limited to coastal waterways, harbors and rivers.

     H.R. 2018 Clean Water Cooperative Federalism Act places significant portions of Clean Water Act regulatory authority into individual states’ hands allowing each to determine which water quality standards to maintain. This will result in downstream water quality issues such as those involving multi-jurisdictional watersheds and coastal waters. For example, assuming the passage of this bill, a river flowing through Western U.S. will pass through multiple states with varied water quality standards. If one upstream state institutes fairly low standards which allow for increased pollutant discharge, those downstream states will be subjected to higher levels of those pollutants than they would otherwise under their stricter standards. This will impact the various uses of the same waterway  from recreation to agriculture to drinking water.  Minimum, national standards like those currently in place alleviate these problems and provide states with recourse options should they arise.

     A third bill, H.R. 2401 Transparency in Regulatory Analysis of Impacts on the Nation Act institutes measures to assess full, cumulative and incremental economic impacts of all air quality related EPA rules implemented since January 2009. It requires the creation of a new committee comprised of a full range of government agency representatives and discussion with various members of the public. If the economic impacts go beyond predetermined limits the rules will be eliminated.

Mining and Oil and Gas Development

     Three pieces of legislation are geared towards increasing offshore oil and gas development. All three bills place requirements on the Secretary of the Interior to expedite the sale of leases. H.R. 1230 Restarting American Offshore Leasing Now Act specifically targets leases in the Gulf of Mexico and offshore areas of Virginia. H.R. 1229 Putting the Gulf of Mexico Back to Work Act, along with opening more leases, places additional restrictions on civil action by instituting limitations on filing times and prospective relief and includes judicial review limitations. H.R. 1231 Reversing President Obama’s Offshore Moratorium Act passed the House in May 2011, named for the moratorium lifted in October 2010, places further requirements on the Secretary of the Interior to lease out 50% of available outer continental shelf oil and gas acreage for development. This bill appears to imply there has been a permit stoppage of offshore drilling since the Deepwater Horizon oil spill despite the issuing of  39 shallow-water and 6 deep-water permits as of March 2011.

     In the area of mineral extraction, H.R. 1904 Southeast Arizona Land Exchange and Conservation Act authorizes a federal land exchange of 2,400 acres with the London- and Australia-based Resolution Copper Mining for development of the 3rd largest copper mine in the world. In return the US receives 5,000 acres of parceled land scattered throughout southeastern, central and northern Arizona. Supporters state the project will create upwards of 3,700 jobs but opponents dispute the projections citing Resolution’s high level of automation which they say will, more realistically, create only about 450 jobs.

Financial Reform

     Endeavoring to curtail aspects of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, H.R. 1315 Consumer Financial Protection Safety and Soundness Improvement Act will replace the Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau with a commission and requires more congressional oversight for regulations it seeks to institute. This will undoubtedly subject new rules to  additional levels of bureaucracy through required commission and congressional hearings.  This bill also terminates the Federal Housing Administration’s Mortgage Refinance Program rescinding and permanently canceling all unspent program funds.

Labor Relations

           The final piece of Forgotten is H.R. 2587 Protecting Jobs From Government Interference Act amends the National Labor Relations Act (29 USC 160) – Prevention of Unfair Labor Practices – by restricting the powers of the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) stating;

That the Board shall have no power to order an employer (or seek an order against an employer) to restore or reinstate any work, product, production line, or equipment, to rescind any relocation, transfer, subcontracting, outsourcing, or other change regarding the location, entity, or employer who shall be engaged in production or other business operations, or to require any employer to make an initial or additional investment at a particular plant, facility, or location’”

In what can clearly be construed as a reaction to the recent NLRB complaint against Boeing, these fairly broad restrictions of the NLRB’s ability to intervene in employee-employer relations may become applicable to closely related powers of The Board to arbitrate employer-union disputes or to reconcile cases of discrimination against employees seeking labor organization. In line with emerging trends of restricting public employee rights in Wisconsin and Ohio, this legislation may lead to curtailing private sector employee rights in the near future.

        While regulations do create a fair amount of consternation among employers of particular industries and a streamlining of many regulatory processes may well be necessary to increase efficiency, the notion that clean air and water standards, increased consumer financial protections and responsible oil and gas development represent significant barriers to job creation is highly questionable. Support for this claim of regulations as “job killers” is further eroded according to a recent survey by National Federation of Independent Business in which less than 20% of small business owners cite government regulation as an important problem. The largest concern expressed in this survey and in agreement with many economists is low consumer demand, an area this effort at deregulation simply does not acknowledge much less address. The time has long since arrived for Congress to implement proven economic recovery strategies of government investment in much needed infrastructure development, emerging private sector technologies and continued stimulus until such time the economy strengthens to a point the baton can be handed back to the private sector.

Further information and full texts of the Forgotten 15 and other related bills sent to the Senate can be accessed at GovTrac.us.

1) H.R. 872: Reducing Regulatory Burdens Act of 2011

2) H.R. 910: Energy Tax Prevention Act of 2011

3) H. J. Res. 37: Disapproving the rule submitted by the Federal Communications Commission

4) H.R. 2018: Clean Water Cooperative Federalism Act of 2011

5) H.R. 1315: Consumer Financial Protection Safety and Soundness Improvement Act of 2011

6) H.R. 2587: Protecting Jobs From Government Interference Act

7) H.R. 2401: Transparency in Regulatory Analysis of Impacts on the Nation Act of 2011

8 ) H.R. 2681: Cement Sector Regulatory Relief Act of 2011

9) H.R. 2250: EPA Regulatory Relief Act of 2011

10) H.R. 2273: Coal Residuals Reuse and Management Act

11) H.R. 1904: Southeast Arizona Land Exchange and Conservation Act of 2011

12) H.R. 2433: Veterans Opportunity to Work Act of 2011

13) H.R. 1230: Restarting American Offshore Leasing Now Act

14) H.R. 1229: Putting the Gulf of Mexico Back to Work Act

15) H.R. 1231: Reversing President Obama’s Offshore Moratorium Act

16) H.R. 2021: Jobs and Energy Permitting Act of 2011

17) H.R. 1938: North American-Made Energy Security Act

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