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Monday, July 02, 2012

FloriDUH’s Rick Scott Doesn’t Care About His Struggling/Poorer Residents…

or the average one, for that matter. If you are not a corporation you do not exist in Scott’s eyes 

     Not that this comes as a surprise to anyone, Governor Snott  Scott has told Fox Noise Channel that he will not expand Medicaid nor will he set up insurance exchanges in FloriDUH because it is bad policy and that it would be to costly to Floridians.

    Scott also told Fox News that he is hopeful that the law will be repealed by a new president in November, that being Mitt Romney, the original implementer  of the bill ( RomneyCare ) in the state of Massachusetts while he was the Governor.

   “ We’re not going to implement Obamacare in Florida. We’re not going to expand Medicaid because we’re going to do the right thing. We’re not going to do the exchange.” tampabaytimes.com

   Of course, this had been expected by the FloriDUH Democrats all along.

    In another observation, it would appear that Mr. Scott has been reading the Romney “ flip-flop “ manual in order to pick up a few pointers as Scott has stated to many news outlets that in the unlikely event that the ACA was upheld by the Supreme Court, that the state would be ready to implement the law in Florida.

  “ It’s my job, if it’s the law of the country, to be ready when it’s the law…when it’s the law of the land, we’ll implement the law.” Palm Beach Post- Nov 2011

   “ We will follow the law, but we’re not going to make any movements until that unlikely day comes.” Florida Today Scott’s spokesperson in June 2012

   “ If it’s the law of the land, then we will comply…” Gov. Scott in conference call 11 days ago.

  Dick Rick Scott and his hoods in Tallahassee have had 2 years to come up with their own plans for healthcare in the state, and, just as is with the rest of the Republicans sitting on their asses in Washington, D.C., they have nothing on the table. Zero, nada, zilch. The Republican’s in government do not give a shit about the middle class or the poor in America. They cannot create a jobs program. They cannot create a healthcare program. They can create massive unemployment, a very shitty economy, and tax cuts for corporations who pay next to nothing already!

   The racist Republican Party are still seething because they had their asses handed to them by a black man back in 2008. They’ve spent the past 4 years trashing America and, thanks to Citizens United, they and their corporate masters are now trying to buy the next election because they have nothing to run on. Republicans cannot win an election on policy ( they have none ) and they cannot win a fair election. They have to steal everything to get anything.

   If you, my friends, are stupid enough to put Romney in the White House, then you deserve the royal fucking that you will be getting. Unfortunately, the rest of us have to pay for it also.

   To the state of FloriDUH. You are getting what you voted for, so deal with it. Maybe you’ll learn what many of us already know.

     Republican SUCK

 

President Obama: Corporate Globalizer

By Mark Engler     on  Friday, June 29, 2012

With recent revelations about the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement, it is now safe to say that President Obama has surpassed George W. Bush as a champion of the flawed and offensive ideology of corporate globalization.

This argument requires some explanation. Here’s the backstory: As the Bush administration commenced in the early 2000s, many argued that his foreign policy represented a continuation of the Clinton-era approach to promoting “free trade” neoliberalism overseas. However, I contended that, especially after the launch of the Iraq war in 2003, the unilateralist bullying of the neocons represented a split from past practice.

No doubt, big arms and big oil had their needs met by the Bush agenda. But his administration was wary of multilateral institutions such as the World Trade Organization and the World Bank, which were central instruments of U.S. policy under Clinton. The Bush approach relied on our-way-or-the-highway, coalition-of-the-willing hard power. This made a significant portion of corporate America uncomfortable, especially businesses trying to navigate and expand in foreign markets. It also left the soft-power agenda of “free trade” in an uncertain state.

This was essentially the thesis of my 2008 book, How to Rule the World: The Coming Battle Over the Global Economy. Around the time the book came out, I wrote:

In October 2007...the Wall Street Journal reported that the [Republican] party could be facing a brand crisis as “[s]ome business leaders are drifting away from the party because of the war in Iraq, the growing federal debt and a conservative social agenda they don’t share.”

When it comes to corporate responses to [Bush’s] Global War on Terror, we mostly hear about the likes of Halliburton and Blackwater—companies directly implicated in the invasion and occupation of Iraq, and with the mentality of looters. Such firms have done their best to score quick profits from the military machine. However, there was always a faction of realist, business-oriented Republicans who opposed the invasion from the start, in part because they believed it would negatively impact the U.S. economy. As the [Bush administration’s] adventure in Iraq has descended into the morass, the ranks of corporate complainers have only grown.

The “free trade” elite have become particularly upset about the administration’s focus on go-it-alone nationalism and its disregard for multilateral means of securing influence. This belligerent approach to foreign affairs, they believe, has thwarted the advance of corporate globalization. In an April 2006 column in the Washington Post, globalist cheerleader Sebastian Mallaby laid blame for “why globalization has stalled” at the feet of the Bush administration. The White House, Mallaby charged, was unwilling to invest any political capital in the IMF, the World Bank, or the WTO....Frustrated by Bush’s failures, many in the business elite want to return to the softer empire of corporate globalization and, increasingly, they are looking to the Democrats to navigate this return.

My concern back then was that a Democrat (either Obama or Hillary Clinton) would be elected to office and then abandon the overt militarism and “imperial globalization” of the Bush administration, but embrace a subtler, more multilateralist “free trade” neoliberalism—reclaiming the agenda of corporate globalization. I would have been pleased if this prediction had proved wrong. Sadly, Obama has provided irrefutable evidence that he has boarded the corporate globalist bandwagon.

At the end of the administration’s first year, I gave Obama a “B” for trade policy on a report card for Foreign Policy In Focus. While there was some rumbling about resurrecting stalled bilateral trade deals with Korea, Panama, and Colombia, the administration hadn’t done much to push things forward. Things were quiet. And given the kind of trade deals that Washington has brokered in the last couple decades, no news is good news in this arena.

Unfortunately, by 2011, the administration was pushing these so-called “free trade” deals hard. It succeeded in passing them through Congress and then signing them into law last fall.

Obama’s trade policy grade was plummeting, but new information shows things to be even worse. In the past month the president has officially failed out of “fair trade” class. On June 13, Public Citizen released a leaked document showing that the TPP—a trade agreement being negotiated between the United States and eight Pacific countries under considerable secrecy—is shaping up to be as bad as NAFTA or worse.

Public Citizen wrote in a press release:

Although the TPP has been branded a “trade” agreement, the leaked text of the pact’s Investment Chapter shows that the TPP would:

—Limit how U.S. federal and state officials could regulate foreign firms operating within U.S. boundaries, with requirements to provide them greater rights than domestic firms;

—Extend the incentives for U.S. firms to offshore investment and jobs to lower-wage countries;

—Establish a two-track legal system that gives foreign firms new rights to skirt U.S. courts and laws, directly sue the U.S. government before foreign tribunals and demand compensation for financial, health, environmental, land use and other laws they claim undermine their TPP privileges; and

—Allow foreign firms to demand compensation for the costs of complying with U.S. financial or environmental regulations that apply equally to domestic and foreign firms.

In the weeks since that leak, it has been reported that Mexico and Canada will both be joining TPP talks, setting the stage for the creation of a behemoth trading bloc. This bloc will operate based on rules backed (and often concocted) by corporate lobbyists.

It didn’t have to be this way. It was not preordained that President Obama would become Corporate-Globalizer-in-Chief. The base of the Democratic Party has aligned itself firmly against the “free trade” agenda—so much so that both Obama and Clinton campaigned in 2008 against the NAFTA model and in favor of a “fair trade” alternative. In fact, going into the 2012 elections, there’s evidence that Obama’s betrayal of earlier vows could be a significant liability among voters and a bitter pill for key constituencies the president needs if his campaign is going to overcome the enthusiasm gap between progressives and the Republican faithful.

Yet instead of taking the chance to redefine American interests in the world as something other than securing profits for U.S. businesses, Obama has allowed an ingrained pro-corporate obsequiousness to permeate the office of the U.S. Trade Representative and the Department of State.

It’s not the unilaterist hubris of the Bush administration. But it’s still a detestable foreign policy—and a sorely missed opportunity for something better.

© 2012 Dissent Magazine