Unaffordable Education

I paid for my 1965-1971 college education by working summers and weekends, student jobs, a graduate assistantship and a small monthly check because of my father’s disability. I carpooled for my junior college years using my parent’s car and gasoline. I bought a car and went to a Kentucky college with out-of-state tuition.

My first semester at Murray State University cost less than $800 for tuition, dorm and fifteen meals per week. I doubt if books were over $200. My parents paid for my insurance and sometimes paid for my bi-weekly trips home for food, laundry, and $.35 a gallon gasoline.

The ratio of the money I made to my college costs made it possible. The money a kid can make today will not pay for an education. The costs have risen so much that financial aid is required. Large loans are required for most middle class kids and less-than-middle class kids — massive loans. When they get out of school they are saddled with having to pay off their huge loans stifling their new life for decades.

Our new president and education secretary want to make loans harder to get and cost more. If this happens, many kids will not be able to take that step toward a better life. One governor is starving our universities’ funding forcing them to close or raise tuition. Our country has provided education for everyone until now!

The New Swamp Smells Worse

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Donald Trump campaigned on going to Washington to “Drain the Swamp”. After becoming President he has created an even larger and smellier swamp on his own. His business and his enormous ego are now entwined with the Presidency. In business he had allowed the ego to come forward as a showboat and grandstander. In business he was the face of a real estate company where his direction and decision didn’t require approval by anyone else. Today he does executive orders that are mostly meaningless without congress’ approval.

He says he has turned over his company’s operation to his son and a company officer but he meets quietly with them on a regular basis at company properties. His promotes his properties by his weekend visits to Florida, New Jersey, Scotland, and New York City. His Florida Gold Club has filled it’s $500,000 plus membership. Russians and others have bought condos in the NYC Tower where wife and son live. Before the election many floors were empty. The D. C. hotel was losing money until November when foreign countries took long term bookings on rooms and started doing galas and meetings in Ballrooms.

His family is no slouch in using the White House prestige to promote their own companies. His daughter’s fashion business continues to expand as she continues to push its products. His son-in-law’s sister went to China to sell green cards before Trump signed the bill extending the law he had said was wrong. Her first sales meetings were just afterward.

Many of the people he has nominated are billionaires and multi-multi-millionaires who now have influence over people who oversee their businesses.

The odor of the new swamp covers up the fragrance of the old swamp.

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A National Paranoia

When I hear about people of authority in American or another country wanting to lock up or deport an ethnic or religious group, I remember the famous words of Martin Niemöller. He was a German Lutheran Pastor and an early supporter of Nazism. Later, he saw the error of that philosophy and spoke against it. He survived his stays in Dachau and Sachsenhausen death camps.
Of all his writings, Niemöller is perhaps best remembered for the quotation:
“First they came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out—Because I was not a Socialist.
Then they came for the Trade Unionists, and I did not speak out—Because I was not a Trade Unionist.
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—Because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me.”
It should concern every moral, civilized person when they hear our country or another jailing or deporting religious or ethnic groups. A country does this because a few powerful people have created an infectious paranoia to increase control of a population.
Niemöller’s quote shows how Adolph Hitler used one group after another to gain control over his people in the 1930s. Colonists and later Americans used paranoia of Indians to kill 18 million of them and take the resources of their lands. Later, the Chinese, Germans, Japanese, Mexicans, and Catholics among others were pilloried as America’s bogeyman.
Now we are supposed to be scared of the Muslims, immigrants, and the usual minorities. Now we are told by the gun lobby, the far right wing groups, the religious right, and other to fear those groups and deport or lock them up. During the last election we saw how such paranoia can be stoked and its effects on our people.
Today, more easily than any other time in our history, a few Americans or Russians can create such paranoia to incite such extremist views and actions. The goal is to disrupt the fact that a nation that stands together and stays together is invincible, but a divided nation falls from within.
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Tranquility versus Progress

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I grew up in southern Illinois on a farm and in a small town. I went to a rural Kentucky college where I got a Master’s Degree in Geography with an emphasis in industrial and urban planning. My wife and I have taken many vacations in the lower forty-eight states where we avoided noisy built-up areas where possible. We live in a rural subdivision where we can enjoy the relative quite.

My lifestyle and training shows how I am conflicted by the Great Lakes Basin Transportation, Inc’s plans to build a much needed railroad and highway around the Chicago bottleneck. My training tells me it will be a transformative economic boon and destroy the area’s tranquility. I can totally understand the feelings of those people living within five miles of the proposed railroad and highway because it will definitely change the area’s rural complexion. It will upset farms, pollute the air, close hundred of small roads, and change the communities nearby forever.

The “positives” of the proposal is the long term economic benefits. Manufacturing, warehousing, and residential will explode. Dying communities will grow from the boost and thousands of people will move to be nearer to the roads. Poor school districts will grow and build new schools, towns will grow, and prosperity will to some areas that are losing hope.

All of this will happen within the next three or four decades if the roads are build. I doubt if another issue will ever be as contentious as this one in this area. I don’t know how I would vote if given the chance. I am sure thousands of other people are going to have to fall off the fence, too.

Millions will be spent, thousands will protest at meetings, the social media will roar, and politicians will speak out of both sides of their mouths, but the big, big money will ultimately be the deciding factor, as always.

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Problem with “Saber Rattling”

“Saber Rattling” is a historical term that means putting a military unit in a threatening position near another country, or making threatening statements.

Such actions should not be taken unless one is sure the action will end with a desired effect or else one of two possibilities will occur. One is the target country thumbs its nose at the threat making the saber rattler look foolish. This gives the one making the threat two options. Carry through on the threat starting a war, or tuck tail and slink away. Verbal threats can be just as humiliating unless actions to back them up are taken. The other possibility is making a threat and the other county takes action first. The best example of this is the 1967 Six Day War involving Israel and its neighbors.

This brings us to Trump making himself look extremely foolish and losing credibility by saying he was moving the Carl Vinson Battle Group to North Korea. It’s irresponsible in so many ways. He said he had ordered it North but it went south to the Indian Ocean making headline news around the world.

What if the unstable North Korean leader attacks the carrier group with its anti-ship ballistic missiles? What if they sink the Vinson? If Trump responds, 35,000 howitzers rain shells on Seoul’s 9,750,000 people.

North Korea cannot be intimidated into doing something because they think they can win any conflict by destroying bases in South Korea and Japan, killing millions of civilians, and don’t care how many North Koreans we kill. Threatening North Korea with military action holds the United States up to ridicule as a “Paper Tiger.” Dropping a bomb or using cruise missiles against defenseless targets makes Trump look cowardly and bombastic.

Buying President’s Ear and Pen

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The White House is not going to release the visitor’s list so those people’s advice can be kept secret. In order to see where some of those scary plans are started we need to look at who is on the economic advisory council.

One says Trump must do away with a rule to make railroad tankers have double walls so they don’t leak during accidents. (Remember all the recent leaks and fires, plus trains going through your town.) The why is his company owns hundreds of the old single wall tankers.

Another is pushing to cut back on regulations and regulators in the Gulf of Mexico. You guessed it, he is a BP executive. They learned nothing from the Deep Water Horizon disaster.

Apparently every person on that advisory council has a regulation or law they want eliminated. The financials want to go back to pre-Great Recession rules. The coal miners want to pollute the air and streams and ecology forever. The oil industry wants to drill wells in the National Parks.

Trump has over $40,000,000 in his re-election campaign. Much of it is from these people and companies on that advisory council. They have bought the President’s ear and his pen on executive orders.

Unstable Leaders Can Kill

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October, 1962, I was a high school sophomore. I still remember watching some of our neighbors suddenly digging “Root Cellars” during the Cuban Missile Crisis. People around the world were nervous about an imminent nuclear war. Our neighbors were terrified because McLeansboro had been the Initial Aiming Point for mock attacks on Evansville. Seeing B-52s and their contrails left a lasting impression.

JFK and his experienced, level-headed advisors averted the catastrophe by his and Khrushchev’s agreement being trusted. When the evidence of the Cuban missiles was being shown to allied leaders, DeGalle said it wasn’t necessary because the President was an honorable man.

Both leaders operated under Mutual Assured Destruction policy which meant a war would destroy both nations and likely the entire planet. Both knew a misstatement or an unplanned action could launch either country’s missiles.

Secretary of State Tillerson recently came close to saying we were prepared to make a first launch in order to hit North Korea’s missiles and nuclear facilities before they launch.

Kim Jung Um is unstable, megalomaniac, and like Hitler, has no regard for his people. People know his statements have little meaning. Kim has stated his missiles could destroy all the American bases in South Korea and Japan. How does anyone know when it’s a warning or bluster? We have ICBMs targeting his country; when do we launch? How can we be certain of hitting every mobile launcher?

Kim might launch because our President, whose stability is questionable, says or tweets something provocative. Many reports have been aired by the media of several foreign countries of the mental state of President Trump and his advisors.

If our missiles start flying over China and Russia to hit North Korea will they sit idle or launch?

Broken Healthcare System

Steve Brill wrote a very extensive article in the March, 2013 issue of Time on Health Care in America. I can’t think of any other industry that rips off Americans as much as the pharmaceutical industry. Other countries negotiate and get greatly reduced prices for their people. Congress has passed laws prohibiting the Medicare and Medicaid from trying to lower prices like the V.A.

The factories (often in foreign countries) make the pills for pennies and then sell it for thousands of percent mark up. Every week brings another news item of a drug that was a dollar a pill and now a hundred dollars or a new Medicine costing $35,000 – $75,000 a year. Ever wonder what a European or Canadian will pay?

The ACA was a good first step and the AHCA kept some of the good, but got rid of some of the things the poor needed and cut expenses for the rich.

The critics of ACA and Medicare say the programs are too costly to the government. The ACA’s insured are sick and/or older but not 65. The younger healthy people don’t sign up to balance the costs.

Many people and think tanks have found our current mish-mash is the reason so many other countries’ citizens are healthier than we are.

By covering the healthy kids, young adults, middle-agers, and seniors, the flat cost to everyone balances the programs income and expenses. It could be adjusted up or down to make it revenue neutral. Additional private insurance could be purchased by each individual at the level of coverage they want. The poor might not be able to afford expensive private coverage and the rich could buy complete coverage.

Two more criteria: our government would not pay any more than other governments, and doctors and hospitals would cost what the local living standard requires.

Real Healthcare News

While Congress toys with our healthcare almost all of us can only hope for the best. The rest of the industrial countries solved the insurance and healthcare for their people years ago. Only one of the many people I have talked to from the U.K., Canada, Australia, France, Germany, Japan, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Italy, Brazil, and Columbia would want our system. Most had our free market cockeyed, hodgepodge medical system before fixing it with a sensible plan.

Americans spend $2.8 trillion on it each year or $1 of every $6 of our GDP. That’s more than the next ten countries combined! What do we get for all that money? We get higher rates of disease, shorter life expectancy, and a rating of 50th in infant mortality. The majority of bankruptcies are caused by the inability to pay medical bills.

Fewer people every year are covered by private insurance through their employers. More people are covered by Medicaid and Medicare and ultimately taxpayers.

Every president since FDR has tried to solve the problem. The ACA was a poor, quick compromise. The recently defeated AHCA plan was big on reducing the taxes for the rich and reducing benefits for the poor.

A fair plan is to lower Medicare to birth and everybody pay $100 per month for what benefits seniors get. Additional insurance can be purchased to cover deductibles. It would solve the healthcare problems and fix the budget shortfall on healthcare.

That will never happen because there’s too much money being made with today’s mesh-mash system! Think that is why the rich live a longer, happier life? Trickle-down economics means a trickle for healthcare!

Baseline Syndrome

During an episode of Madam Secretary Secretary McCord used and explained the term “baseline syndrome.” In the story it referred to the creep of climate change. Each generation starts at a higher temperature and a more damaged ecology than the previous generation did so they don’t feel the cumulative change and damage.

The same term can apply to many situations. In the military it is called mission creep. We send 500 troops in a year with little discussion. The next year another 750 are sent which gets little discussion because it’s a little more than last year but less than 1,000. A 1,000 is big enough to sound huge. Carefully timed steps are better than one big step.

Small budget cuts that pertain to a small number of people are easier to get through than a bigger more widespread cut. Cumulative cuts are less provocative to many groups or people.

A public official might abhor any corruption but watch a game from a V.I.P. Box. The official might then allow their child to take a high paid job from someone who wants some help on some pending legislation.

A generation ago we valued our privacy. Today people put their most intimate details on social media for strangers to read.

Television, broadcast and cable shows get more risqué and violent each year as people get used to the previous level. Talk shows drag their audiences farther left and right to keep their share of ratings.

Baseline Syndrome is why those of my age group are able to talk about “the good ole’ days.”