6/29/2006

Steve King's Blind Followers

I don't know why, but I am continually astonished at the blind allegiance that Steve King's followers give the man. For example, in today's mini-editorial on the front page of the Sioux City Journal, the writer attempts to deflect criticism of the really stupid things King said last week -- by making another lame joke about Helen Thomas. Boy, that's the way to show those godless liberals: make another joke about the appearance of an elderly journalist!

Earlier in the week another letter writer to the Journal made basically the same point in another defense of King. Obviously neither has seen the new Steve King website: KingWatch.org. If you want to defend King, try using facts and logic instead of smearing one of America's great journalists.

KingWatch gives you plenty of hard facts about King (as well as a few sharp opinions!) For example, did you know that King has accepted campaign money from a PAC that was formed to protect cockfighing? Or, did you know that King has said that he'd love to build the anti-Mexican wall himself, and "I'd make a ton of money doing it."

All of these facts are online for the world to see at www.kingwatch.org. Perhaps if King's blind followers read it they will realize that their "leader" is taking them over a cliff.

6/20/2006

Immigration Debate

It saddens me to see some people displaying so much hatred and rage about undocumented workers. There’s no question that there are serious issues that need to be addressed, but many people are also not acknowledging the positive impact of so many people from Mexico and Central America working in our country. Calling all of these people hard-core criminals is an appalling appeal to all of our worst fears.

Millions of undocumented workers pay income taxes. They are issued special identification numbers from the IRS. They also pay into the Social Security system. One article I read said that contributions from these workers are helping keep the Social Security system afloat in the next few decades as more and more people retire. They also pay local taxes, including sales taxes on almost everything they purchase. The vast majority work hard and contribute to our community and our economy.

Many of these workers are performing jobs that companies can’t find anyone else to do, which is why their wages increased 30 percent from 1994 to 2000. A lack of supply of workers increased demand and increased their wages. As baby boomers retire, the supply of workers in this country will only shrink, and we’ll need more workers.

It is estimated that Mexican workers in the Unites States send $20 billion back to their home country each year. This has a positive impact because it makes Mexico more stable and less likely to descend into chaos and become a haven for terrorists. In effect, the money these undocumented workers earn and send home replaces funding the government has to spend on foreign aid.

In our area, these undocumented workers are responsible for most of the population growth in the past decade. Many areas of Iowa are dying because more people are moving out than moving in. We have avoided that fate so far. With population growth comes more federal and state aid because some of it is based on how many people live here. Conversely, if all of these workers left, we would lose countless dollars in tax income and governmental aid.

What to do about this wave of undocumented workers coming to our country is not an easy question. There are issues that need to be addressed. Corporations recruiting them for cheap labor need to be held accountable. Border security is too lax. Raising the minimum wage to make work pay better for all unskilled laborers would help. Finding ways to encourage Mexico to raise labor standards and create more good jobs should be part of any solution. (A quick aside: Mexico is now creating more engineers each year than we are.)


But whatever we do, we need to remember the good side of immigration, not just the bad. And while I don’t believe everyone who wants to address these issues of immigration is racist, you don’t have to scratch too hard to unveil racist undertones, ugly stereotypes and unfathomable hatred in this discussion. Would so many people be this outraged if these immigrants were from Europe, instead of Mexico? Would we even notice?

6/17/2006

In one bellwether Iowa county, Democrats upbeat

Doug Simkin has a little extra bounce in his step as he travels around this congressional district on the eastern edge of this politically pivotal Midwestern state.

That's because like a lot of people here, including some Republicans, the 40-year-old Democrat senses a shift in the political landscape toward the Democrats heading into upcoming November congressional elections and, beyond that, the 2008 presidential contest.

Full Article


6/09/2006

Bob Vander Plaats: Our Secret Weapon

During a news conference Wednesday morning, Bob Vander Plaats exceeded our expectations.

Immediately after accusing Chet Culver of not being ready for primetime, Bob knocked over a WHO-TV microphone.

Immediately after Jim Nussle said: "I think it's important to talk about issues and not just talk about the other fella," Bob criticized Culver.

Both of these tidbits are from Radio Iowa. Good stuff. A nice start for the Nussle-Vander Plaats juggernaut.

6/07/2006

Pay lags

This article is from the Career Journal, part of the Wall Street Journal. It's not exactly known as a liberal publication....


Having a college degree doesn't guarantee a raise these days.

For the typical American worker with a bachelor's degree, surging U.S. productivity isn't showing up in his or her paycheck.The average hourly wage of workers with bachelor's degrees, but no graduate degrees, was $24.67 in 2005.

That was only 1.3% higher than in 2000, after adjusting for inflation, according to an analysis of monthly government data by the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal think tank. That's not a partisan calculation: President George W. Bush's latest Economic Report of the President displays a different set of government numbers showing that average annual earnings of college-degreed workers fell 5% between 2000 and 2004, adjusted for inflation.

Perhaps this is one reason Mr. Bush gets so little credit from a U.S. economy that is growing fast enough to push down unemployment -- and one reason Republicans worry about voters turning against them in November's U.S. congressional elections. Workers who play by the rules and still don't enjoy raises would seem more likely to turn on the party in power.

That's not to say that college is a waste. Wages of workers with bachelor's degrees averaged 75% more than those of high-school grads in 2005, a reward for schooling that has grown in recent decades.And there are a few caveats: No single statistical snapshot can tell the complete story. Choosing an inflation gauge other than the Consumer Price Index to measure whether wages are beating prices can alter the picture a bit. And many employers are spending more on health benefits, leaving less money for wages. Still, there remains something of a mystery. It's easy to understand how technology, immigration and competition from abroad are eroding wages of low-skilled U.S. workers, the 40% who haven't gone beyond high school, and perhaps even the 30% who have taken some college courses but not earned a B.A.

But why aren't the 20% of workers who have finished four years of college (but not gone on to graduate school) doing better in a growing economy?One explanation boils down to "just wait." A similar lag in wages marked the "jobless recovery" of the early 1990s, but then wages picked up.

Average hourly wages of four-year grads rose just 2.5% faster than inflation from 1991 to 1996, then zoomed 15% from 1996 to 2001. Maybe that surge is just around the corner if Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will keep his foot off the interest-rate brake as Alan Greenspan did in the late 1990s. Early indications from surveys by the National Association of Colleges and Employers are that starting salaries for the Class of '06 are up from last year.A second is that changing technology is making skills ever more valuable and that only some college grads have the skills in hot demand.

Surveys of starting salaries show that a Class of '05 graduate with a bachelor's in chemical engineering was offered $56,549 on average, nearly 70% more than a history major. Back in 1990, starting salaries for chemical engineers averaged 56% more than history majors.

But these factors don't explain the whole puzzle. At least two other factors are at play. Anxiety about losing one's job to India and China, once limited to factory workers, has spread to U.S. college grads, and employers are exploiting that. "Workers just don't have any bargaining power," says Frank Levy, an MIT economist. "They're very afraid of outsourcing and offshoring. If an employer offers minimal raises and readjusts benefits to your detriment, the main alternative is to get another job. But right now people are afraid to do that." It will take more than a few months of low unemployment to turn that around.

And American attitudes seem to have changed in the past quarter-century. In workplaces of all sorts, there's less pressure to share the goodies; giving the bulk of the raises to already well-paid workers, including the chief executive, is more socially acceptable. Among college grads, the bottom three-quarters haven't enjoyed raises large enough to beat inflation in the past five years, but the best-paid have, says Harvard economist Lawrence Katz.

College grads who earn $30,000 a year aren't keeping up with inflation. Those who make more than 90% of college grads, the ones earning roughly $90,000 a year, have seen an average raise of 6% after inflation.

The U.S. politics of inequality are hard to decipher. When their own fortunes are improving, Americans don't tend to be class-conscious, jealous voters. The question for this fall is how voters, particularly those who believed that earning a college diploma would put them on the up escalator, will react if they don't see economic good news showing up in paychecks.

6/04/2006

Nussle Can't Be Trusted

Published: Friday, June 2, 2006 12:09 AM CDT

Candidate Nussle runs afoul of parade officials
By JOHN SKIPPER, Of The Globe Gazette

MASON CITY — Gubernatorial candidate Jim Nussle’s staff apparently knowingly violated North Iowa Band Festival rules by having a campaign sign on his car in the annual parade Saturday, a Chamber of Commerce official said Thursday.

The Band Festival allows elected officials to walk or ride in the parade but prohibits campaigning.Nussle had a car in the parade. When Band Festival officials checked the car before the parade started, it was in compliance.

When the parade started, someone had switched it for a sign that said “Jim Nussle/Governor,” according to parade volunteers.Robin Anderson, executive director of the Chamber, said Thursday she is disappointed because she personally informed Nussle’s campaign staff about the “no campaigning” rule prior to the parade.

Maria Comella, communications director for the Nussle campaign, said Thursday, “If there was confusion on our part, we certainly apologize.”

Anderson said, “Originally, ‘Iowans for Nussle’ sent in a parade entry form with a check for $80. I sent them back their check with a letter explaining that Congressman Jim Nussle was welcome to participate in the parade as an elected official but that the festival committee has a firm policy against political campaigning of all kinds.”

She explained in the letter that Nussle would be placed in the parade with other elected officials and that his car sign could only identify him as “U.S. Congressman Jim Nussle” and that there could be no “Nussle for Governor” signs anywhere.“

At the checkpoint, our volunteers verified the Nussle entry was in compliance with our rules,” said Anderson. “When the car turned the corner to begin the parade, a volunteer noticed they had placed a ‘Nussle for Governor’ sign on the car.”

Anderson said she is upset that the Nussle campaign made it appear that that the sign was approved by the Chamber.“This is exactly the reason the festival committee has voted again and again not to allow political statements in our parade. These situations always, always detract from the spirit of the festival,” she said.

6/02/2006

Was the 2004 election stolen?

It's shocking to read this. We're supposed to believe the election in Ohio was fair. Riiight. One tidbit from the article -- voters in several rural Ohio counties supposedly voted for George Bush and gay marriage. Sure. No one messed with the Kerry vote in those areas....

Click here for the Rolling Stone Article