Last
week, we got to see how the �big boys� play the old childhood
neighborhood game of chicken. You know, that old foolish
game of dare you�d play with your friends where you�d risk
life and limb (usually standing in front of a car, or a
train or a firecracker/cherry bomb) to prove no point at
all, other than maybe you were a bigger fool than the person
you were playing with. Of course, then we thought we were
being brave, or courageous. As we learn later in life, bravery
is standing in the face of danger for a just cause. Courage
is standing for right, regardless of the consequences, when
most others choose not to. All the rest of that was (is)
stupid.
We
certainly saw Congress� version of �stupid� last week when
they threatened (and are still threatening) to shut down
the federal government. The danger of politics is that it
is open to disingenuous interjection where it ends up becoming
more foolish banter than courageous engagement.
It
is more chicken (little) rhetoric than brave posturing.
For nearly a week, we witnessed our federal government leaders
go back and forth while the clock ticked down on if or when
the government would run out of money. Well, certainly reasonable
men can come to some reason conclusion for the benefit of
all, right? No, not really. Not when one of them are operating
under a disingenuous premise. Sometimes, when you play chicken,
it�s because the other person wants to see you get hurt
when they have no intention of getting hurt. That�s what
we witnessed however. A staring contest of chicken in which
nobody intended to blink unless they got their way.
We
know, theoretically, the government can never really run
out of money. It would just do what it has done for nearly
100 years, spend at a deficit or money it doesn�t have�or
simply print more (and devalue the currency). What they
were really saying that since the federal government needs
Congress to approve a budget in order to operate, we will
use this opportunity to espouse our ideological positions
and hold the budget hostage until we can make our point.
And that�s what was done.
The
Republicans in the House of Representatives proposed a budget
that sought to cut the guts out of America�s social safety
net. President Obama said there was no way in hell he�d
sign that budget�and the gamesmanship began.� The question
the public needs to ask is, was it ever a sincere negotiation
or just an opportunity to dominate the 24 hour news cycle
for five straight days? In John Boehner�s first opportunity
to extract leadership in the 112th Congress, rife with new
Tea Party ideologues that registered as Republicans but
not even he can control, the nation witnessed a cruel, insensitive
proposal of �Reaganequese� across the board budget cuts,
that included eliminating Medicaid, reducing Social Security,
cutting Pell Grants and cutting education.
The
Republicans sought to exact a nearly 30 year old failed
strategy (Reagan cut $700 billion dollars out of the 1983
budget) while exempting the rich from a tax increase. The
flaw in the federal budgetary discussions is that most of
it focuses on the expense side while failing to come up
with viable alternatives on the revenue side. To the President�s
credit, he has sought to address the question of new revenue,
a very modest increase in taxes for the one percent of the
population we call �the rich.� The Republicans, who represent
a significant portion of the middle class, refuse to consider
it. And the Democrats in the Senate, where they still hold
the majority, refuse to consider any of the proposed tax
cuts that would adversely impact the poor and middle class.
So, gridlock prevailed, the very thing the America public
said they were tired of.
Then
the government shutdown started to buzz, and the question
of which party would be responsible for the government being
shut down. Both party says it�s the other party�s fault
and the President gets involved. Now once the deal points
were set, both parties had to take the deal back to their
respective caucuses and that�s when the deal got twisted.
The Democrats deal points remained the same. The Republicans
moved each time, clearly an attempt to leverage the Democrats�just
because they could. Once the Democrats refused to move anymore,
the game of chicken began while the clock ticked.
It
might have been entertainment for them but it most certainly
wasn�t very entertaining for the American public. As the
clock ticked down, it became obvious that neither side had
no intention on letting the government shut down. Neither
party wins if that happens. Both parties blinked and more
rational minds prevailed amid the ideological rhetoric.
It was just an opportunity to dig at President Obama, and
play chicken with each other�and the livelihood of the American
people. Too bad.
We
can�t wait for the next round�hopefully, it will not be
just about the rhetoric.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad,
is a national columnist, managing director of the Urban Issues Forum and author of Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is AnthonySamad.com.
Click here to contact Dr. Samad.
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