Saturday, March 22, 2008

Hillary Clinton at Millersville University

Anyone who reads my blog knows I am no Hillary supporter, but when a college friend invited me to see her in nearby Millersville (outside Lancaster), my curiosity won over and I accepted the invitation. As luck would have it, we got in just in time for her appearance (thousands were still in line even when it was over). Even though her performance was no doubt well rehearsed, I was surprised at how well she spoke. She had the crowd going throughout her speech, and even more impressive, held my attention more or less the whole time. She advocated a lot of politics I disagreed with, but I found myself applauding a few times.

I will get the negatives out of the way first. I've never written about it here (I intend to sometime before the election), but universal healthcare is not a good idea, especially her version of it. She explained the difference between her healthcare plan and "her opponent's" plan, which is that she would require every American to own the universal plan, while Obama would make it optional. Any policy that removes personal choice from the equation, especially in the domain of healthcare, shoves us further down this steep slope of government intrusion in our lives. I fail to see the legitimacy of a bureaucracy deciding the who, what, and where of my own health insurance.
When I think of things that should be sacred, personal, and individualized, healthcare is near the top of my list. There are also practical ramifications of UH, and these should not go unnoticed. It never ceases to make me chuckle when I hear democrats scream about the outlandish deficit spending of the Bush Administration, and in the next breath, advocate socialized medicine (and what a sad state of the Republican Party when democrats are in a position to criticize "conservatives" for excessive spending). Clinton performed this very stunt at MU. In her speech, she explained how closing a tax loophole that "benefits big business and the rich" would go toward paying for her healthcare plan. I have no doubt that corporate CEOs and billionaires manipulate the complexities of the tax code for their benefit. I have significant doubt that funding Clinton's healthcare plan wouldn't require some national tax hike, which she failed to mention on her stump in the MU gym. It is hard for me to imagine a scenario where universal healthcare is implemented, and at the same time the national debt is reduced. Lastly, removing free market competition will invariably lower the quality of services like healthcare, and that benefits no one.

Hillary spent a few minutes railing against the greed and selfishness of big business, citing CEO salaries and oil company profits as examples. All I have to say to that is: welcome to the United States of America, Senator Clinton. Capitalism was and is the driving force of this country's success, no matter how many social programs and business restrictions Clinton and her peers advocate. To what else could we attribute the amazing quality of life we enjoy? Even most of our poor know nothing of the strife faced by the poor overseas, where non-capitalist economies are unable to create enough jobs or generate enough overall wealth to support the less affluent. Penalizing businesses for making money is antithetical to the capitalist nature of this country. I am well aware of the commodities some of these companies control, like energy, and I understand that their profits can seem to be at the expense of average Americans. In reality, it is the market that dictates value and cost, and the market is controlled by us, not Exxon Mobile or any CEO. The demand for energy is created by the American public. It is our choices, not big oil's, that make energy expensive. Fuel inefficient vehicles, lack of genuine support for energy alternatives, and our decisions to drive so much in the first place, all lend themselves to high energy costs (it is important to note that it is the Japanese and other overseas car companies that lead the way in fuel efficiency). The funny thing is that in her speech, Hillary seemed well aware of America's failures here, as I will get to in more detail later, but she still couldn't resist plenty of zingers at big oil, surely in an attempt to pander to her antibusiness base. Lastly, it is useful to highlight the circumstances beyond our control that are contributing to expensive energy. The emergence of countries like China and India on the world economic stage, with their massive populations, are spiking the demand for energy worldwide. The growth of rural centers in these areas also increases the need for automobiles in countries where public transportation has always been more convenient. As the world economy grows, the demand for energy will increase prices for everyone.

Clinton paid some lip service to the war, but I was surprised at how little time she spent on it. She advocated a "responsible withdraw" from the war she voted for, saying she would begin bringing troops home after 60 days in office. I'd love to know where she came up with 60 days, as if that's any better than bringing them home in 16 or 6 days. I won't go into it much here, but it seems to me that Iraq is a failed project. The Administration was caught with its pants down after it took Baghdad, seemingly at a loss for what to do next. There is a lack of political will among the Iraqis to agree on anything, most notably the allocation of oil reserves, and the religious divisions within the region seem insurmountable. This is purely speculation on my part, but Clinton's 60 day withdraw plan seems to be merely a way to distinguish herself from Obama, who would remove troops more aggressively. It seems to me that waiting 60 days and calling it "responsible" is disingenuous in the first place, and downright stupid in the second. As the number of American casualties closes in on 4,000, Clinton will pay politically against Obama, who's more aggressive withdraw policy will draw more support from democrats.

On to the positives. Hillary said she would "end the Bush Administration's war on science," and that one of the first things she would do as president would be to "ask congress to send me that stem cell research bill for my signature." Good for her. The Bush Administration's position on stem cell research has delayed a science that could provide therapeutic breakthroughs for a host of diseases and ailments (diabetes, burn victims, certain types of cancers, and Alzheimer's, just to name a few) , tacitly prolonging the suffering of millions of current and future human beings. While there is a legitimate secular debate to be had about the morality of abortion, the indignation some on the right have for stem cell research is incoherent at best, and downright unethical at worst. The facts are these: embryonic stem cells are compromised of blastocysts, which are made up of about 100 cells (for comparison's sake, there are over 100,000 cells in the brain of a fly). These blastocysts have no neurons, much less brains, and have no nervous system or quantifiable consciousness. There is no reason, therefore, to believe this miniscule collection of cells suffers its destruction on any level. The stem cells that are acquired through in vitro fertilization are due for destruction whether or not they are used for scientific purposes or not, and yet research of this sort has still been criminalized. Bush's legacy will no doubt contain his complicity with the opposition of a science that could save millions of lives at the expense of none.

Clinton also proposed a presidential commitment to energy independence, which I find to be a solid idea. She correctly pointed out that the political will for the moon race was created by JFK in 1960, when he promised that we would land on the moon by the end of the decade. He was right, and the country was the better for it. Hillary eloquently articulated the argument for energy independence, and said she would fully commit her office to the goal of clean and safe energy alternatives to relieve our dependance on foreign oil. She pointed out, again correctly, the economic potential of such a goal, as a new and burgeoning energy industry could be a catalyst for new jobs, both in the scientific realm and the actual creation and distribution of an alternative energy. I agree with her that a good use of her office would be to spearhead this effort in coordination with the private sector, just as JFK imagined for NASA at the outset of his presidency.

My last major area of agreement with Clinton during her speech was the complete abandonment of No Child Left Behind, which has been an unmitigated disaster. President Bush's lack of humility on this subject, by the way, is obscene. He continues to support an endeavor that has clearly failed, and even deludes himself, and by extension, attempts to delude us, with misleading signs of NCLB's "successes." Don't be fooled. It is an unfunded mandate, it promotes testing over actual learning, and it is too restricting to local boards of education, who should have the authority to dictate their own terms of education based on the needs of their district (which is the way education was done for hundreds of years in this country until the last half century, as educational performance has declined). I go into some more detail about NCLB toward the end of my previous post on American conservatives.

Overall, I was more impressed than I expected to be with Senator Clinton, even though I know that is what these rallies are designed to do. She still won't get my vote, but my opinion of her has changed in the positive direction.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Neoconservatives and the Death of True Conservatism

Today's Republican Party seems to be dominated by evangelicals, "social conservatives," and neoconservatives (hereafter known as neocons). The Reagan presidency, the emergence of Christian dogmatists like Jerry Falwell and Billy Graham, and the tumultuous tenure of the Bush Administration represent the wholesale changes that have taken place among the American right. Displaced in this rise of new Republican thought are classic conservatives, who have been forced to obscure third parties and to the Republican fringe. The true characteristics that separated the Republican Party are diminishing as "conservatives" abandon true conservative principles for a massive pseudo-theocracy, a hawkish foreign policy, and the risible idea of "compassionate conservatism." We will see that many of the positions modern conservatives take on contemporary issues are backward when applied to the historical and sensible definition of conservatism. While the alignment of the parties is free to change as the political climate invariably shifts with time, they very way in which we describe our political beliefs should not be so easily altered. With this in mind, I am suggesting that we simply call a spade a spade. "Conservatives" as we know them today are not really conservatives.


It is possible, using an elementary understanding of the term, to arrive at the conclusion that today's conservatives truly are what they say they are. They are generally uncomfortable with change, especially on a social level, and this is one characteristic that can be defined as conservative. Other rudimentary generalizations such as this can be easily made, but when it comes to the issues that dominate Republican discourse, there is very little true historical conservatism to be found in the corresponding rhetoric. Take the issue of gay marriage and the proposed constitutional amendment banning it. Today's conservatives, like evangelical hero Mike Huckabee, so detest the idea of homosexual marriage that they support a constitutional amendment banning the practice. Just how conservative of a position is this? A federal law etched into our founding document that defines marriage, removing all state and local discretion, seems hardly indicative of the sort of ideals that defined conservatism for so long. A conservative approach may be uncomfortable with the notion of gay marriage, but would find little legitimacy in legislating it on the national level, as it would represent a striking example of government overreach.

Current trends of foreign policy belief among modern Conservatives are perhaps the best example of where actual conservatism has been left behind. The goal of the Bush Administration, from the beginning of the heavy U.S. presence in Iraq and Afghanistan, has been to establish a democracy in the troubled region. It is this influential faction of the right, represented by Bush and John McCain, that promote the exportation and implementation of democracy wherever possible. The idea of political independence through democracy in the Middle East as a solution to international terrorism is well subscribed to among today's conservatives. Yet these people are so far from the shady groves of conservatism here that it is hard to understand how beliefs of this sort are labeled as such. Historically it is has been liberals that have promoted the spread of democracy and American values. It was liberal democratic President Woodrow Wilson who first advocated the expansion of American and demoratic principles to foreign nations (hence the term for sort of policy as "Wilsonian"). This was a foreign policy that would be trumpeted by future liberal presidents FDR, Harry Truman, JFK, and LBJ. Truman would work to democratize the reconstruction of Europe and Japan after World War II, and JFK and LBJ had their hands in conquests for democracy in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. Somewhere along the way, however, it became conservative to advocate policies of this sort. The long entrenched anti-interventionism of conservatives has conspicuously disappeared from their popular discourse. Bush, McCain, and aggressive foreign policy advocates are articulating a liberal vision, not a conservative one.

My third and final example of "conservative" nonsense is in regard to the Bush Administration's No Child Left Behind education policy. It is required of all education majors in the state of Pennsylvania to complete at least one course on special education and exceptionalities, and I am fulfilling that requirement this semester. In my studying of the laws regarding special education, I came across this gem of unreason: (the following quotes are from my textbook)

"The [No Child Left Behind Act] has the intention of improving students with disabilities by making sure that these students are included in the assessment of educational progress demanded of all students."
How in the name of common sense does lumping disabled students in with general students help special education students at all? This is that notion of "compassionate conservatism" roaring its ugly head again. Disabled students are not like everyone else, and it is antithetical to the purpose of education to judge them in the same way general education students are judged. Children with dyslexia, dysgraphia, and discalcula, for example, will on average almost uniformly perform at a lower level on standardized testing meant for general education students. This is to say nothing of more severe disabilities like Down Syndrome, autism, and Multiple Disability Disorder, where some students could hardly read standardized testing, much less comprehend it. Yet the scores of children of this sort are supposed to be judged the same as scores of general education students? Compounding this problem is that this will invariably lower overall test scores for most schools, resulting in funding cuts that harm all students in schools. No Child Left Behind also states that:
"Students with disabilities should not only be expected to learn the general curriculum, but also be expected to perform at a level comparable that of students without disabilities."
The idiocy of this bit of policy is scarcely comprehensible. Beyond being unrealistic and unpractical, this is pure cruelty to the special education students involved. You are going to force children with severe functional, emotional, social, and learning disabilities to take tests they cannot possibly succeed on, and then judge their results against the the same grades of regular education students? It isn't a matter of will or effort. These kids have been afflicted with disadvantages that render some tasks simply impossible to perform. Would you judge an arm amputee's strength by making him do the bench press? My non-partisan textbook puts it best: "Expecting students with disabilities to score the same, on average, as students without disabilities is expecting the impossible." (p. 60) Lastly, what is conservative about this policy? This is a national mandate effecting every public school in the United States, and not a single school can hide from its lunacy. It contradicts and overrides any privilege local governments have to dictate the terms of their own education systems.
Amid all this false characterization of political intentions, true conservatives like Ron Paul try desperately to be heard over the deafening rhetoric of the current Republican Party. If Paul falls off into obscurity, I hope someone else picks up the ball and tries to help the Republican Party find itself.