Budget Policy Choices

Do you ever wonder what would have happened if we had used the trillions given to the financial industry to fund hunger, education and medicine, not only in our own country but around the globe?

Then do you ask, what would our quality of life be today if we had used the money that went to fighting two wars in Iraq, to build a light-rail public transportation system?

Every day, every year, we are making choices. What kind of choices are we making? What kind of world are we creating?

The New York Times today reported that 75 Catholic professors publicly criticized house speaker John Boehner for promoting budget cuts that most impact the poor and vulnerable and therefore, are inherently anti-life and against Catholic teaching. Boehner claims to be Roman Catholic. The article states:

“House Speaker John Boehner, a Republican who grew up in a devout Roman Catholic family in Ohio, is scheduled to give the commencement address Saturday at the Catholic University of America in Washington, a prestigious venue in church circles for its affiliation with the nation’s bishops.

But now Boehner is coming in for a dose of the same kind of criticism previously leveled at some Democrats – including President Barack Obama – who have been honored by Catholic universities: the accusation that his policies violate basic teachings of the Catholic Church.

More than 75 professors at Catholic University and other prominent Catholic colleges have written a pointed letter to Boehner saying that the Republican-supported budget he shepherded through the House will hurt the poor, the elderly and the vulnerable, and that he therefore has failed to uphold basic Catholic moral teachings.

‘Mr. Speaker, your voting record is at variance from one of the church’s most ancient moral teachings,’ the letter says. ‘From the apostles to the present, the magisterium of the church has insisted that those in power are morally obliged to preference the needs of the poor. Your record in support of legislation to address the desperate needs of the poor is among the worst in Congress. This fundamental concern should have great urgency for Catholic policymakers. Yet, even now, you work in opposition to it.’

The letter writers go on to criticize Boehner’s support for a budget that cut financing for Medicare, Medicaid and the Women, Infants and Children nutrition program, while granting tax cuts to the wealthy and corporations. They call such policies ‘anti-life,’ a particularly biting reference because the phrase is usually applied to politicians and others who support the right to abortion.”

You can read the full article here.

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Root Problem: U.S. Oil Addiction

Many of our country’s problems stem from our addiction to oil: our pre-emptive strikes leading to war in Iraq, debt from our wars, pollution – including oil spills world wide, our lack of political will to develop mass transit, cost inflation for almost everything (plastics, packaging, transportation costs) due to increased prices of oil, continued use of oil for unsustainable agri-business’ fertilizers and our agricultural tax subsidies that support this, taxpayer bail outs of oil, gas & automotive companies or those who supply and finance them and finally our reluctance to switch our tax subsidies to green industries of all types.

Below is a recent commentary on the stupidity of clinging to our oil addiction from Roland Martin. You can read the complete article published on CNN here.

“Gas prices are skyrocketing nationwide and Americans are angry that they have to spend more of their hard earned money at the pump each week.

The crisis in northern Africa, specifically in Libya, has led the dramatic rise in the cost of oil, which now tops $101 a barrel, over the past month. And with summer approaching, Americans are fretting over whether to hit the highway for vacation because the price of gas, averaging $3.52 a gallon nationwide, is expected to go even higher.

Our political leaders? Some Democrats and Republicans are leaning on President Barack Obama to open the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and use some of the millions of barrels of oil we have on tap to provide some relief as a result of the price increase.

In a news conference Friday, President Obama said he’ll release the oil if needed.

“All options are on the table when it comes to any supply disruption,” he said.

Is this Groundhog Day or what?

Three years ago this nation went through convulsions when gas prices skyrocketed. Folks were sharing rides and pushing elected officials to broaden public transportation plans. Hybrids and electric cars started getting a second look from gas conscious drivers, and all the talk was about alternative energy and not being dependent on Arab leaders in the Middle East.

And when those gas prices went back down? We yelled, screamed and cheered, and then pulled the SUVs out of the garage, filled them up with gasoline and forgot all about the pain we endured.

This is the American story: Alleviate our pain so we can go back to business as usual. And when the crisis comes back, we’ll fret, scream and go bonkers.

Please, stop the madness!

When are we simply going to reach the conclusion that as long as this nation has a Charlie Sheen-like addiction to gas, our chains can be yanked at any time, which will send our economy into a tailspin?

The U.S. Energy Department predicts that with the dramatic rise in gas prices, the average American family will spend an additional $700 annually on gas. And with money already tight, that is a huge hit.

Unfortunately, our crack-like dependence on oil continues to lead us down the road of agony and despair, and our political leaders have no courage to own up to the special interests and gas lovin’ Americans and say, “Dammit, enough! We can’t move forward like this!”

Democrats and Republicans are now saying President Obama needs to allow for more drilling off the shores of the United States. Really? So that’s the only answer? Everyone knows there isn’t enough oil to satisfy America’s thirst. But oh no, we keep this charade up.

America will never be able to transition our system from an oil-dependent economy to an alternative plan unless we show the courage to make the tough choices today and get the payoff later.

. . . Until the nation accepts this reality, we will continue to be at the mercy of oil-possessing countries.

Embracing non-oil energy alternatives — wind, natural gas, electric and solar — can absolutely create jobs in this country, and we should require Americans to make their homes more energy efficient with products built by Americans. What’s wrong with that? How can the United States create solar technology and then allow the Chinese to become the leading manufacturer of wind turbines and solar panels?

No one alternative energy source can replace oil. It has to be a comprehensive plan that addresses our long-term needs. And it is going to mean we will have to spend money. Yes, we will be affected in the short-term, but if someone told me we could spend $500 billion today, and that would create millions of jobs over the next several years and lead to a transition to an alternative-energy economy, I would ask where I should sign up.

But if we have no courage, we will lose every time.

So, if the only thing you know is “drill, baby, drill,” and that gasoline is our only option, great. Have a wonderful time. And every time gas skyrockets, just smack yourself upside the head with that gas pump, because you’re the reason we remain stuck on stupid when it comes to energy in this country.”

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New Books

Photo: ArtsJournal.com

It’s always interesting to know what someone is reading. You can learn a lot about someone by perusing their books, looking at what they fill their minds with, browsing what’s on their bookshelves.

If their TV takes up more room than their books – that tells me something too. TV is junk food for the mind. Read. Read. Read. The most important ideas take time and space to explain. Magazine or internet articles won’t do it. It takes books.

As a voracious reader I am always looking for new books that offer insight and new perspectives, especially in the areas of alleviating hunger or solving the complex problem of poverty.

As an author and theologian I read in order to process, understand and ultimately to write. Books that go deeper help me to do this.

As a professor I keep an eye out for inspirational books for my students, books that will change how they view the world.

Here are some new books that I’m reading now, recommended by my friend L., a librarian –

Enough: Why the Word’s Poorest Starve in an Age of Plenty by Roger Thurow and Scott Kilman, PublicAffairs: 2010.

A Thousand Sisters: My Journey Into the Worst Place on Earth to Be a Woman by Lisa J. Shannon, Seal Press: 2011.

The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind by Willam Kamkwamba and Bryan Mealer, New Harper: 2010.

Exodus From Hunger: We Are Called To Change the Politics of Hunger by David Beckmann, Westminster John Knox: 2010.

29 Gifts: How a Month of Giving Can Change Your Life by Cami Walker, Brightside Communications: 2009.

I haven’t finished these yet – but they promise to be good.

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Ugly Truth About School Funding

As the school year comes to a close I think it is important to remember that good schools and poor schools are no accident.

Often people will say to me “I was blessed to grow up in a neighborhood with good schools.” Actually, this was not a blessing from God at all, rather it was the result of a system WE have set up.

We pay for schools through property taxes. Therefore, if you live in a high income or higher cost property community you will pay more in property taxes and your schools will have more property tax dollars to spend. By the same token, if your neighborhood is poor or low income the schools will have far fewer dollars available.

The long term effect is that this system we have created keeps most poor people from having a better education – thus they are more likely to remain poor. They face other daily challenges as well, by virtue of being poor, but a good education will not likely be available to them.

So – I benefit from a short-sighted system that is designed to benefit some at the expense of others. This is systemic injustice. Overall of course, when people are poorly educated, everyone suffers. We are all connected. A well educated society benefits everyone in the long term.

Some things may actually be blessings, but more often than not they aren’t. They are the result of systems we have created. It’s time we start speaking about things truthfully, as they really are.

We set this system up and we can change it. Use your voice. Educate, vote and volunteer.

$$$$ Government Shutdown?

It’s appalling that both Republican and Democratic elites are focused on balancing the budget on the backs of the poor – mostly women and children.

As an American citizen do they really expect me to be upset that we are running a deficit of a mere $300 billion after loaning predatory banks trillions of dollars???? Further, no regulatory changes of any substance were enacted to prevent another financial industry crisis in the future. It’s back to greedy business as usual.

Meanwhile, a government shutdown will stop paychecks to thousands of struggling families.

What kind of moral values are these? Appalling.

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