Greg Palast Exclusively for BuzzFlash: Damn that Lincoln. Abe's to blame for Jindal
A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION
by Greg Palast
Damn that Abe Lincoln. When Louisiana and Mississippi seceded from the Union, a sensible president would have sent them a box of chocolates with a note, "Goodbye and good riddance."
Tonight, following Barack Obama's budget presentation to Congress, effectively the president's first State of the Union Address, the Republicans chose to give their party's response, the governor of the state that wanted to leave the Union, to Louisiana's Bobby Jindal.
Jindal's told us that Barack Obama is a terrible President who passed a stimulus bill "larded with wasteful spending." Where's the lard? All week, Jindal has been screeching that Obama wants to require states such as Louisiana to extend unemployment insurance to -- get this -- the unemployed! (Technically, the federal government would pay 100% of the cost of reforming Louisiana's and Mississippi's Scrooge-sized benefit requirements.)
Jindal, and some other Republican governors, notably Haley Barbour of Mississippi, are actually turning down millions in federal funds for their own state's unemployed out of fear that, four years from now, they may have to maintain full unemployment insurance like the rest of America.
Barbour's excuse, parroted by Jindal, is that the Obama payments to the unemployed of their states would mean, when the economy returns to expansion, that their state would have to increase unemployment insurance taxes and payments to the U.S. average, scaring away new employers. "I mean, we want more jobs," says Barbour. Um, this is the Governor of MISSISSIPPI talking. Exactly what new "jobs" is he talking about? Is Microsoft based in Gulfport? Is Genentech opening its new headquarters in Bogalusa?
As an economist, I can tell you that the only industry Mississippi leads in is deep-fried chicken-dog manufacturing. I will admit that Louisiana and Mississippi can boast of growing employment at several casinos and cathouses spilling across what the locals charmingly call the "Coon-ass Riviera." Jindal's Louisiana is, after all, the state that solved its unemployment problem by sending its unemployed to Texas in FEMA trailers.
And it's true that Jindal's and Barbour's states do lead the nation in a few indicators. Such as poverty: Mississippi has America's highest poverty rate. Louisiana is 3rd-worst in America.
How about their commitment to education? Louisiana ranks 5th and Mississippi 2nd worst in school kids' math scores. As Randy Newman notes about the Gulf States' education policies, "good ol' boys... from LSU, went in dumb, come out dumb, too."
Jindal himself is a product of a more advanced culture: His parents are Democrats. The Jindals are Hindus who come from the Punjab in India, a state known for its welfare safety net. Jindal, turning away from the successful example of his parents' politics and culture, has gone native, becoming a born-again Christian Republican who doesn't accept Darwinian evolution nor Keynesian economics. (I hear he may complete his redneck makeover next week by marrying his cousin at a tractor pull.)
For over a century, Louisiana and Mississippi have been trying to attract employers by changing their economy from one based on involuntary servitude to one based on voluntary servitude, selling their citizens to the lowest bidder. The results are blindingly visible: Mississippi and Louisiana have, under the Barbour/Jindal Republican regime, maintained the lowest per-capita incomes in the nation (50th and 46th respectively). Louisiana and Mississippi infant mortality rates (1st and 3rd in deaths in the USA) would shame Costa Rica.
Years back, when I worked as an economic consultant to New Orleans, the Louisiana State Legislature was about to require that schools teach evolution as merely a theory equal to the Bible's literal creation myth. When asked if this would harm big employers' views of the state, I said, "Not at all: most national employers think of Louisiana as a state filled with Bible-thumping, dumb-bell rednecks. You won't have to worry about changing that impression."
OK, it's easy to make jokes about America's own Third World states. And before I get a zillion complaints, I'll be the first one to note that Louisiana has birthed the extraordinary, including the greatest of America's investigative journalists, the late Ron Ridenhour, jazz, Ruth Chris' Steakhouse, and gris-gris. And it was Louisiana that long ago led the nation in social reform, whose governor in 1932 led the national fight to create a program now known as "unemployment insurance." Really.
Nevertheless, Jindal's rejection of funds for his state's own unemployed simply follows a history of local Republican plantation-mentality cruelty. After Hurricane Katrina, I met a young man, Stephen Smith, who was stranded with a family on Highway 10 for four days while George Bush photo-strafed him from overhead. An elderly man with Stephen died of dehydration after giving his grandchildren his last bottle of water.
I investigated the drowning of New Orleans and the "let'm drown" rescue plans of the Bush Administration. What I found was sickening, heartless, and Republican. Marie Antoinette at least offered cake.
Now, once again, the Republican Party, by making Jindal the party's official spokesman, is adopting the Barbourous refusal to reach out a saving hand to Americans drowning in this economy.
So, let me make a suggestion for Governors Jindal and Barbour. If you cannot join America in accepting our President's call to arms against disaster, if you reject our President's State of the Union -- then leave the Union.
As the prescient Phil Ochs sang,
And here's to the government of Mississippi
In the swamp of their bureaucracy they're always bogging down...
...And the speeches of the governor are the ravings of a clown
Oh, here's to the land you've torn out the heart of
Mississippi find yourself another country to be part of
Amen.
Photo credit by Matt Pascarella. Greg Palast interviews Stephen Smith on the slab of concrete where his apartment once stood.
A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION
Greg Palast's investigative reports can be seen on BBC Television Newsnight. Palast, author of the New York Times bestsellers Armed Madhouse and The Best Democracy Money Can Buy, is a Nation Institute/Puffin Foundation Writing Fellow for investigative reporting.»
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Founded in March 2001, the
Founded in March 2001, the Cormac Group is a "strategic consulting and lobbying firm" advocating "open and fair markets." Cormac works in the telecommunications sector and seeks to construct "a barrier-free regulatory structure that enhances competition." Cormac's Founding Partner John Timmons was a fundraiser for McCain and former Senate aide and has represented AT&T. iyinet frmtr trkygnclr webmaster seo yar??mas? | iyinet frmtr trkygnclr webmaster seo yar??mas? | iyinet frmtr trkygnclr webmaster seo yar??mas? | iyinet frmtr trkygnclr webmaster seo yar??mas? | iyinet frmtr trkygnclr webmaster seo yar??mas? | zay?flama lida fx15 ve biber hap? zlfvbh | zay?flama lida fx15 ve biber hap? zlfvbh | burmeh yaza lida fx15 biber hap? ile formda girin Another partner at Cormac, Jonathan Slade, "has developed a well-known reputation from helping American and foreign companies impact the U.S. foreign policy process, particularly related to Latin America."
Barack Obama
Crackers
Barboury Pirates? I love it.
The facts about what is really happening is now at least partially available about different states in Gapminder and the real differences are often not as is in the imagination.
If the Gang Of Pirates think that the only good Democrat is a dead Democrat, only a fool would think it bipartisan to accommodate them.
My B.S. Detector is Going Off Loudly
Wrong
You won't find me defending Jindal or Barbour, not for a moment. In fact, nothing would make me happier in this situation than to see this position, combined with a Democratic trend and a decent candidate from our side, swing the Louisiana governorship back to the Democrats. One can only hope that this is the kind of perfect political poison that plays well with the 20% base and alienates everybody else. You know, kinda like Sarah Palin.
None of that changes the ignorance, arrogance, and bigotry dripping from this hate screed disguised as political commentary. When the writer insults and slanders an entire region while clearly not knowing what he's talking about, does it really surprise you that natives to the region in question might respond negatively? And when they do, your response is a baseless accusation of closet Republicanism? I say to you, really? That's all you've got? I'm not sure whether to consider that more amusing or more pathetic.
[=^.^=]
Cali Democrat
FACTS ARE STRAIGHT!
Really?
The Democrats are looking bad and are about to disintegrate? Really? Because I'm reasonably certain that the poster is identifying as a "California Democrat". Thus, either your political assessment is sorely lacking, or your reading comprehension is.
[=^.^=]
haha, nice one. there's a
Ann Arbor Libertarian
Turn Around Or Two faced?
You have angered people in Louisiana and Mississippi
^&%# you too
Read below for my rebuttal to the ignorant and bigoted misinformation being bandied about in this article. Tell me, have you ever been here? If you think Louisiana has anything in common with Georgia then you're as misguided and ignorant as the rest of the Yankees who thinks this state is like some scene out of Gone with the Wind.
I say that as a yearly visitor to the beautiful city of Atlanta for it's yearly Dragon*Con fandom convention, so I know a little of which I speak. When was the last time you were here, that you know so much about us?
[=^.^=]
Do they speak English where you come from?
Yankees don't "thinks"; they "think."
"It's" is not a possessive.
I don't need to know much about you to know that you need grammar lessons.
No, what I need is an option
No, what I need is an option to edit my posts so I can correct errors like that on proofreading. I'm just a little too accustomed to more advanced forums that allow you to do things like that, rather than this crude comment system. Nice try though.
[=^.^=]
Corrections
There most certainly is an option to proof read and correct. Just click on "preview comment," view it, correct it, and resubmit it.
It's not rocket science.
Keep digging, Watson
Yes, I figured that out, thank you. Now do you have a substance-based argument to make, or not?
[=^.^=]
PS Some of you "anonymous" posters would do well to sign your posts, unless you're too cowardly to do so. Providing your real name isn't necessary, an alias will do just as well, just something to keep track of who's who. It's helpful in separating out the trolls and holding people accountable for what they say.
it is because of people like you who have no respect for others
You know what? %$#@& you
I'm a native of New Orleans, a hardcore Democrat who's only pulled the lever for a Republican once, in the 2000 primary for John McCain in a vain attempt to prevent Dubya from reaching the general election. In my adult life I've voted for Bill Clinton, Al Gore, John Kerry, and Barack Obama and been proud to do so.
That said, this piece is disgustingly hateful, ignorant, and filled with bigoted rhetoric that any progressive should be ashamed of. Especially coming from a foreigner who clearly doesn't know his ass from a hole in the ground regarding this area, this is repellent. But if there's anything we're used to down here in New Orleans regarding the rest of the world, it's that they know fuckall about us, our culture, or our history --all of which we're rightfully proud.
If I felt like turning this post into a novella, I could enlighten you all about the history and multiculturalism that this city has that outstrips the rest of the western hemisphere --and modern England-- combined. I could correct the woeful use of "Coon-ass" as an insult when the Cajun people (of whom I'm a proud member) wear it as a badge of pride after reclaiming it from ignorant bigots both local and foreign alike. I could discuss at length the way that backwards mid-state politics marginalizes and ignores the needs of the coastal regions of both states, despite that we're their primary source of revenue and culture. I could write a scathing rant on the glaringly, embarrassingly stupid incompetence of Democratic governor Blanco that allowed the Republicans to steal the governor's office in defiance of a long Democratic tradition in Louisiana. I could write how the upstate area controlled by David Vitter and his party are considered west Texas and South Arkansas by real Louisianians, or how the Gulf Coast of Mississippi has more in common culturally with New Orleans and South Louisiana or even Florida as compared with the rest of the state and how the term "north of I-10" is local code for the very sort of backwards, inbred redneckism that this article ignorantly and foolishly paints the entire region with in it's indiscriminate brush.
But you know what? Bigotry and ignorance doesn't change in the face of facts, especially when there's a sense of personal superiority tied up in it. So by all means, continue to keep your nose in the air, your heads in the sand, and your sphincters clenched firmly around your necks.
And I will continue to say $%##^*# you.
Foreigner?... no he's not!
Since this thing won't let
Since this thing won't let me enter a name, or I simply cannot find the place to do so, I will sign my above post as follows:
[=^.^=]
I'm someone who lived south
you are seriously in need of
Don't worry about that!
Jindal is no Obama and neither is Steele!
Maine Atheist
Jindal's Not Dumb, Just Devious
Who knew Randy Newman could be so spot on?
Rednecks...
Tell It Like It Is........................
*eyeroll*
Thank you for a funny and informative...