University Park needs a race-class-gender analysis, pronto!

It’s probably true that every small town has its dramas, but the ones in University Park seem to always fall out along lines of race and class. This shouldn’t surprise me, given that I live in a town that was incorporated with racial covenants in a county that was and is predominantly black. Language is an important window into thinking; here, whenever the town needs to make a choice about access and distribution of resources, the desire for exclusion of outsiders and fear of a loss of privilege predominates. This was true when the town invested in a playing field in the public park — who would be allowed to use it, would they pay, how would it be policed — and years ago when a major road was closed off to through-traffic and the metro line extended to our area.

Currently, this dynamic is playing out over the issue of enrolling the 24 town employees in a defined-benefit pension plan run by the State of Maryland. The pension plan would replace the 401(k) plan that’s been in place for over 20 years and is now essentially worthless, would provide defined contribution and payout amounts, and would provide disability insurance for the police and maintenance workers without the risk that a claim would send the Town’s rates through the roof. There are debates about the specifics of the numbers, but the proponents of the plan perceive it to be essentially affordable and a more secure way of meeting our obligations as an employer and the opponents would rather not spend the money at all.

This last is where language, rhetoric, and a whole bunch of unseemly underlying assumptions come into play, and where an intersectionality approach is useful. There has been rhetoric about how federal social security benefits are adequate for the (majority black) working class employees, rhetoric that would be appalling were it to be offered to any of the resident doctors, lawyers, professors and bankers as a rationale from their own employers. The underlying belief is that the folks working for us in town are fundamentally different from us, and there is no reason to provide to them the quality or extent of benefits that we expect to be provided to us as a matter of course at our own jobs. There’s also the underlying assumption by the opposition that in matters of finances, we would all rather have more money in our pockets than pay more for better services; this assumption is revealed by talk of doing away with town employees altogether and outsourcing their jobs. Of course, race and class play into this argument as well, because if there’s a working population more vulnerable to exploitation than the men who work jobs in city maintenance, it’s the usually-recent-immigrants who work for large companies that supply the outsourced labor to clean office buildings and haul trash. But if folks have no qualms about suggesting workers retiring after 30 years of service live on social security alone, they certainly have no qualms about suggesting the town benefit financially from further exploitation of vulnerable workers.

None of this is anything new, and is entirely typical of an entitled cultural attitude wherein people who do our dirty work are nothing more than a cost on a balance sheet to be whittled down whenever possible. Certainly this type of race and class privilege cloaked in the language of economics and cost-benefit analysis is something with which we’re all too familiar. What’s different in this particular debate is the fall back on a deep-rooted and classic sexism in categorizing the proponents as ’emotional’ and the opponents as ‘rational,’ conflating all ethics with emotion and assuming that the most rational action of all is one that moves to block expenditures whenever possible. Perhaps it should be heartening that the opposition perceives itself to be backed into a corner and is grasping at straws, but it plays like a case study for a feminist analysis straight out of the 1970s. Patronizing language and attitude? Check. Insistence that your side alone has the true facts and the other is guided by the whims of emotion, which of course has no place in decision-making? Check. Insistence on speaking first, last, and repeatedly at all meetings related to this subject? Check. And last but certainly not least, loud and derisive interruption of women speaking on the other side? Check, check, check. (There are men speaking on both sides, but it’s only the opponents who do the interrupting and only to the women on the other side.)

I know I should be finding it amusing that the people nearly apoplectic and sputtering at the Town Council meetings are those who are accusing the other side of being guided by irrelevant emotion, but it’s such an old and galling argument that I find myself frequently unable to see the lighter side. The behavior and rhetoric is insulting to everyone, and I don’t think the opposition realizes just how much they are alienating people with their continued pursuit of this approach: the Mayor who’s crafted this proposal with knowledge from a long career in financial data analysis; the employees who are constantly being publicly characterized as not worth equal treatment; and the town residents ourselves whose collective choice to be responsible and ethical employers is being ridiculed as irrational and weak-minded. The opposition spends a lot of energy claiming to have the facts on their side, but I have to think that if they actually did they wouldn’t perceive a need to be behaving in this manner. Unless of course, a rational and strategic assessment of the tactics most likely to succeed isn’t what’s guiding their actions after all.

University Park needs a race-class-gender analysis, pronto!

Fox News : still a GOP patsy

Either J-hole Jindal or Fox News — or both, most likely — need a refresher on what happens after the President signs pieces of paper that are submitted to him by Congress. Because no one is ‘taking on the spending bill’ anymore, but one big bobble-headed blatherer in particular is talking smack about blocking access to federal funds to which citizens are entitled by law. That is — I hope — what the headline would be if it were Jennifer Granholm in Michigan. Can you imagine? No. You can’t, because that would be crazy talk for a Governor of a state with high unemployment, no industry, and lots of people needing housing assistance. Oh. Wait. Huh.

This, my friends, is the Bush legacy. Hyperbole, irrationality, and just plain idiocy. But you know this, man.

Fox News : still a GOP patsy

Buy Nothing Day

Today is international Buy Nothing Day. I encourage you to celebrate it this year in remembrance of Jimmy Damour, if for no other reason.

On a separate note, over the past few weeks I’ve fallen into a blogging black hole, for which I sincerely apologize to my loyal reader(s). No excuse, really, just a busy month. I have several posts on deck, most of them about food, as I’ve spent much of the past few weeks processing food in various ways. So I’ll get to those and fill in some of the dead space and hopefully have new things to write about this coming month.

Buy Nothing Day

the last word on Joe Lieberman (I promise)e

Here’s the thing about Joe Lieberman that I keep coming back to. Well, there are a few things about Joe Lieberman, and I will do my best to say them, be done, and never mention them again.

Joe Lieberman did not ‘earn’ the committee chair position he currently holds, he bargained for it. Joe Lieberman got primaried out in 2006 because he no longer represented his constituency. Joe Lieberman is no longer in the Democratic Party. Joe Lieberman was needed in the Democratic Party caucus from 2006 through 2008 in order to secure majority control of committees. The party with majority control gets more staff, more offices, and the ability to determine the course of the bills in the Senate: what they’re about and whether they ever move out of Committees to the floor for a vote at all. This was, obviously a valuable contribution that Joe Lieberman could make to the Democratic Party, this shift to majority control, and it is (1) why he was needed in the caucus and (2) why he was able to barter for an important committee chair position in return.

The democrats do not need Joe Lieberman anymore. They do not need him for majority control, as they have a clean majority without any independents caucusing with them, although I recommend they keep Bernie Saunders because he’s a respectable human being more in line with the party platform. I will not be the first to assert that the line about Joe being with the dems 90% of the time is just that, a line of bull, nor will I be the first to point out that the 10% divergence rather markedly coincides with the topic of the committee he currently chairs. Beyond pedantic arguments about which of his votes are or are not in line with the party, he actively campaigned against a fellow Democratic senator as the candidate for President chosen by the party he caucuses with. It seems like the most basic function of a Democrat (even a self-described pale shadow of a former one like Joe Lieberman) would be to support the party’s candidates, if not in all state-level and national races, at the very least in the instance of the presidency.

Which brings me to the summation: (1) Joe Lieberman is no longer needed in the caucus, (2) his chair position was payment for keeping him in the caucus when he was needed, and (3) he is totally off the ranch and is no longer a Democrat in either form or substance. Which means his committee chair position can be given to someone else, he can stay or go, and we can close this sorry chapter in American political life. Frankly, I don’t really get what the problem is. Are the Democrats afraid to acknowledge that they bartered with Joe to gain control of Congress? Do they think their voters will shun them for demonstrating a pragmatic grasp of the workings of government and accurately assessing the cost of the greater of two evils — continued control of the Senate by Republicans with a Republican president — and choosing the lesser? I don’t think so. I think that the country has pretty much agreed they’d rather have the Democrats running things, and they accept the reality of what has been done. Up until now. Now, they are looking to see that the Democrats are not, for lack of a less sexist term, wusses. They want to see that the Democrats are able to make a second, arguably more important, pragmatic choice and take away the chair position from Joe Lieberman now that they no longer need him. It is not the responsibility of the Senate Democrats to prolong Joe Lieberman’s political career for as long as humanly possible while he does his best to tank it.

Everyone except Joe Lieberman seems to understand that the Democrats no longer need him, which makes his positioning a bluff, a situation which I am again not the first person to characterize in this manner. It is in Joe’s best interest to remain in the caucus, and he will likely not walk away from it. Which doesn’t matter and solely affects him and his own career because (I can’t emphasize this enough) the Democrats no longer need him. Offer him another less important chair position, one where he maybe, I don’t know, actually holds Democratic Party opinions with regard to the topic area. If he doesn’t take it, he doesn’t take it. Oh well.

I hear that other old increasingly out of touch Senators feel for Joe and fear that his fate will be theirs, too. Maybe. Probably it won’t help their cause to take Joe’s side on this, though. If they are looking for a way to show their goodwill toward fellow long-term Senators outside their party, I recommend lobbying for Dick Lugar to get a cabinet position. Joe is a sinking ship, my friends. Reassign his chair position, give him his choice about remaining in the caucus, and let him be the architect of his own fate. Seriously, this is way past overdone and requires some actual senate leadership, Mr. Reid. Get it done, and deal with your personal feelings on your own time.

the last word on Joe Lieberman (I promise)e