Claudette Konola
 
Lately it feels as though the air waves are full of ignorance and lies, which makes me both sad and frightened for our democracy. Democracy only thrives when people are using the same facts to find legislative solutions to problems identified by society. Our democracy has reached the point where facts are ignored and lies are promoted by both charlatans and respectable news sources.

One example is the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The problems it was designed to solve include:

·         People with pre-existing conditions being unable to get health insurance.

·         People with chronic illness being dropped and/or exceeding life-time caps on insurance payments.

·         Women paying more for health care than men, because pregnancy is expensive. (Everyone knows men have nothing to do with a woman getting pregnant, so men should not pay for this female-only condition.)

·         Huge executive salaries and advertising expenditures by health care companies, while denying actual health care to people paying for insurance.

On Tuesday I attended a demonstration in favor of Obama Care. The demonstration was in response to a protest against Obama Care, which was organized by Kelly Sloan of Americans for Prosperity. The name of the organization is itself a lie. The only prosperity AFP is concerned about is the prosperity of the top 1% of wage earners, including the Koch brothers, who pay the AFP bills.

Colorado Peak Politics, a right wing blog, reported on the demonstration/protest. If the only report on the event was in Colorado Peak Politics, one would believe that all of the people on my side of the issue were nothing but a bunch of unwashed Occupy Grand Junction anarchists.  To be fair, some of us have attended Occupy Grand Junction protests, because we recognize that we are part of the 99%. But we live most of our lives outside of the Occupy movement.

I already said I was there. I am a retired banker. I write a column for the Free Press, which appears every other week alongside a column by Kelly Sloan. I ran for office against Steve King. I am involved in managing a campaign for Dan Robinson. I am the Treasurer of the local Democratic Party. I am the Treasurer of Western Colorado Congress of Mesa County(WCC-Mesa), a group that is concerned with both a healthy planet and healthy humans. I sit on the board of Western Colorado Congress (WCC), an umbrella organization that includes five community organizations across the western slope. I sit on the board of WORC, an organization in Montana that follows agricultural and environmental legislation at the federal level.

Western Colorado Congress of Mesa County (WCC-Mesa) was well represented at this demonstration/protest. Benita Phillips, a Registered Nurse who once managed whole floors of other nurses at VA hospitals both in Denver and in Grand Junction, is the President of WCC-Mesa. Joel Dyar, a graduate student with lots of community work under his belt, is the Vice-President of WCC-Mesa. Robyn Parker, an accomplished stay-at-home mom, who is busy organizing women to go to Denver on April 28 to demonstrate against the GOP war on woman, is the Secretary of WCC-Mesa.

Establishment of the Democratic Party was there. Rick Baer, who is Vice Chairman of the Mesa County Democratic Party and a retired union organizer, was one of the people quoted by the press. Tedi Gillespie, acting station manager of KAFM radio, and secretary of the Mesa County Democratic Party helped to hold up the banner. Troy Douglas, drummer for Desert Moon, Vietnam era veteran and Vice Chairman of the Mesa County Democratic Party, held up the banner. Dave Edwards, Democratic candidate for County Commissioner was quoted by the press in support of Obama Care.

Mike Burr, pastor of Koinonia Church in Grand Junction, and co-chair of the group that fought the evil three ballot issues, and won, in 2010 was quoted by the press in support of Obama Care, and helped hold up the banner.

Gil Fuller and his wife Susan were there. You may remember that name. Gil, a retired dentist, ran for the seat in Senate District 7 at the same time that I did. He ran as a Libertarian. Gil and Susan favor Obama Care and helped hold up the banner.

There were quite a few more very accomplished people holding up the banner in favor of Obama Care. The banner, handmade by Benita Phillips (a registered Republican and recent delegate to their County Assembly) was 50 feet long, and had one message to those protesting—read the actual bill so that you know what is in it and a link to both the Colorado website for information and another source. Those of us demonstrating in favor of the bill have all read the actual bill, and know what it says. Those demonstrating against the bill delight in mentioning how long it is, and how nobody has read it; their information is based on lies and willful ignorance.
 
 
Two reports have come out in the past two weeks that criticize the philosophy that governments have to tighten their belts at the same time that families are tightening their belts. Belt tightening usually means that the wearer has lost weight. In this case the lost weight is because of starvation.

The first report was commissioned by Colorado’s legislature to analyze the future of Colorado. The report is shocking. Within 12 years the only thing Colorado will be able to pay for are the three major programs: K-12, Healthcare, and Prisons. Within 13 years even those programs will need massive cuts. Lawmakers are cautioned that there is no way to tighten Colorado’s belt enough to save any program other than the big three. Good luck if you want to sue somebody; there won’t be a court. Good luck if you want to send your kids to college; there won’t be a public system of higher education in Colorado. Good luck if you are injured in a motorcycle accident and can’t get out of your wheel chair; there won’t be any public assistance for you. Grover Norquist won, and he didn’t even need to drown government in a bathtub. TABOR is killing Colorado.

The second report was issued by a UN think tank, UNCTAD. Post-crisis Policy Changes in the World Economy blasts the austerity focus of governments worldwide. It blames the slow recovery on the lack of demand for goods and services all over the world. Its opening paragraph says, “… in most developed economies private demand is subdued due to stagnating wages and little improvement in employment. The recent shift towards fiscal and monetary tightening represents a major risk for the global economy.”

The UNCTAD report demands that financial reform include a separation of investment banking and commercial banking as insurance against the excesses of the financial industry that caused the mortgage crash with which we are still suffering.  It almost feels like I’m beating a dead horse, but I’ve been saying for a very long time that the US financial system needs more, not less regulation. Yet even the “grass roots” Tea Party is against any financial regulation. Maybe because the “grass roots” were fertilized with a load of crap from the Koch Brothers, who recently hosted a conference in Vail, where billionaire Charles Koch called the 2012 elections the mother of all wars.

This is the mother of all wars. The elite of the world have declared war on workers. It is time for workers to unite and fight back. There are way more of us than there are of them, even if about 20% of us have been brainwashed into swallowing the kool-aide offered by the Koch Brothers, Americans for Prosperity (What a joke), and ALEC. Stop voting against yourselves. In the words of James Hoffa, “Let’s take these son of bitches out.”

Homework

University of Denver Report on Colorado's Economic Future

UN Report on the World's Economic Future

Mother Jones Story About Vail Conference

Tea Party's Hissy Fit over James Hoffa's Comments
 
 
When I ran for office I ran on a platform of creating jobs. It was something I had some experience with while working for Community Reinvestment Fund. Sitting from the sidelines, I confess that I am frustrated to see bills that would actually help to create jobs either flounder in the legislature or be absent altogether. Even more frustrating is the firmly held beliefs of local voters, especially of the Tea Party persuasion.

One of them commented right here, on this blog, that regulation killed the economy in Western Colorado. This belief is widely held because it is what local in-the-pocket-of-the-oil-and-gas-industry officials and chamber of commerce has told them. The belief is so strong that nothing can cause the true believer to look at other factors. It is a religion. Just have faith. Believe.

Except the belief is absolutely wrong. For starters, other states have even tougher regulations, and they still have an oil and gas industry. The industry discovered that they could make more money in the Marcellus Shale play a bit to the east of here. They also found it difficult to attract investors for their exploration wells when the market crashed in 2008. Believe me, regulation of the oil and gas industry did not cause the market crash—a housing bubble and some questionable lending practices did.

So long as we drive automobiles and put a week’s worth of groceries in a refrigerator, we are going to need to produce oil and gas, and coal, and electricity. The industry is going to be around for a long time. It is the most profitable industry in the history of the world. They could put people back to work in Western Colorado tomorrow if they wanted to—but there is no incentive for them to do so.

One year after the BP disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, BP posted record profits of $7.12 billion for the first quarter of 2011, which is up 17% from the same quarter a year ago. Assuming that profits continue at that pace, they are on track to have profits of $28.48 billion for the year. That’s PROFIT, after paying all of their expenses, including regulatory, Gulf clean-up, and litigation expenses. This company is not suffering because of regulations.

Exxon Mobile did even better. Their profits soared 69% in the first quarter of 2011 to $10.65 billion. That is $42.6 billion in annualized profits. This company is not suffering because of regulations.

All of the suffering is happening to American families. Why the local officials continue to suck up to the Koch Brothers through their Tea Party flavored Americans for Prosperity, and Grover Norquist through his pledge of no new taxes and drowning government in the bathtub is beyond me. The Koch Brothers aren’t suffering. Nobody in the oil and gas industry is suffering. It is time for them to show their patriotism and invest in America and American workers. Stop the suffering.

Homework

Community Reinvestment Fund

BP Profits

Exxon Profits

David Koch, Americans for Prosperity, Tea Party

GOP, a Wholly Owned Subsidiary of Koch Industries?

Koch Industries Makes Billions