Our suddenly fierce Congressman, Peter Roskam, today released a statement condemning President Obama for a suggestion that Iran might have a right to the peaceful development of nuclear power:

“President Obama’s recent comment in support of Iranian nuclear power is both shocking and reckless. Supporting Iran’s “legitimate [nuclear] aspirations” ignores all recent history and smacks of the same naive and misguided approach that allowed for North Korea to gain nuclear power – and now possess nuclear weapons. In a bow to our worst enemies, the President is showing a striking ability to imitate former President Jimmy Carter.

“In just recent memory, Iran has funded terrorist activities against U.S. troops and our allies, called for the destruction of both the U.S. and our strong ally Israel, and sought to systematically destabilize the Middle East and world. Does the President believe Iran wants nuclear power to do their part in combating climate change? Iran has made it abundantly clear what sinister plans they have with nuclear power – and both the U.S. and our allies have great reason to worry.

“There are few scenarios worse than Iran gaining nuclear power – and subsequently nuclear weapons – to threaten and potentially attack the U.S. and our closest allies. The President should immediately recant his support for Iranian nuclear power and consider better options to protect our nation, not endanger it.”

Before tackling Roskam’s statement, lets take a moment to refresh our memories as to how we got ourselves into our present position relative to Iran. President Bush and Vice President Cheney assumed office in 2001 determined to invade Iraq for the benefit of U.S. oil interests. So distracted were they by that project that they were unable to attend to warnings of an imminent terrorist attack on the United States.  Because of that failure to focus on the real threat, the United States suffered the worst terrorist attack in our history on September 11, 2001, at the hand of Jihadists based in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Reluctant to take on the terrorist where they were situated, members of the administration lobbied to invade Iraq instead because it would be easier. But wiser heads prevailed and the invasion of Afghanistan was initiated in late Autumn 2001.

But the administration was still obsessed with Iraq and its oil reserves and consequently began to fabricate evidence to suggest that Iraq posed a threat with its nuclear/chemical/biological weapons programs that no longer existed, having been dismantled after the Gulf War. We have learned recently that the administration went so far as to use torture, at Cheney’s insistence, to try and induce detainees from Afghanistan to give false confessions of a link to Iraq. They proceeded to lie to the American public and to the world to justify the invasion of Iraq, which they launched in 2003, and  which they told us would be a cake walk. Not so much a cake walk, however, that they didn’t have to redeploy resources from our operations in Afghanistan, where the terrorists were. Things predictably began to go badly in Afghanistan. But, on the brighter side, Saddam Hussein was captured and executed (although Bin Laden remained free) and a bloody civil war was provoked in Iraq, further distracting us from the situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

So once President Bush had done Iran the favor of eliminating its only threat in the region, Iraq, what did he do? He began to threaten and posture against Iran, leading us to believe he was mad, and Iran to believe that an invasion was imminent. So it seems pretty natural that they would want to ramp up their nuclear weapons program as a deterrent to U.S. agression.

Meanwhile, President Bush continued his efforts to destabilize the region by totally ignoring the plight of occupied Palestine and maintaining a totally one-sided policy regarding Israel, failing to call our ally on its misdeeds. Neither did Bush in any way challenge our other good ally, Pakistan, home of nuclear proliferator A.Q. Khan who helped Iran get their nuclear program going, most probably with the complicity of the Pakistani state.

Through his lies and his arrogance Bush diminished the moral standing of the United States on the world stage. And by squandering resources in Iraq Bush piled up massive debt and limited our military’s ability to deal with real threats elsewhere. Both severely limited our country’s ability to cope effectively with whatever threat may be posed by Iran.

And you, Peter Roskam, our pissant chickenhawk neocon Congressman, you did not so much as emit a solitary squeak of protest at any of this, and therefore you are complicit in all, and not entitled to judge President Obama as he tries to find his way out of the mess that you left him.

As far as Obama’s statement is concerned, it was not anything like Roskam characterized it. Speaking to a BBC interviewer recently, the President said:

“Without going into specifics, what I do believe is that Iran has legitimate energy concerns, legitimate aspirations. On the other hand, the international community has a very real interest in preventing a nuclear arms race in the region”

Earlier, in Prague, he had stated that his administration would “support Iran’s right to peaceful nuclear energy with rigorous inspections” if Iran proves it is no longer a nuclear threat.

Obama further stated his intention to pursue escalated action against Iran if it fails to enter into good faith negotiations with the U.S. over its nuclear program.

Obama is doing a good job in handling the multiple crises that the Republican administration left him. He has been firm without being aggressive, and he has attempted to open dialouge rather than resort to the bullying and name-calling of his predecessors. I appreciate that he has had the courage to confront our friend and ally Israel on the issue of settlements. This is a very strong and capable President.

Roskam’s statement is pure political posturing. He and his Republican colleagues don’t have a positive idea between them. They are just desperately seeking to swift boat Obama in a futile attempt to diminish his popularity and instill groundless fear amongst their constituents. They couldn’t care less about what is the best course for our nation. Theirs is not honest dissent. They present only complaints and no solutions.

I find Roskam’s use of Jimmy Carter’s name to smear Obama particularly loathsome. Jimmy Carter is a good and decent person, though perhaps he wasn’t our most politically astute President. If we’d all listened to Jimmy Carter 30 years ago we’d be in a much better position with regard to energy. Like Obama, Carter was left a mess in regard to Iran by his Republican predecessors who propped up the brutal Shah, provoking the revolution and the hostage crisis. Still Carter was able to free the hostages while Reagan claimed the credit. It was Roskam’s sainted Reagan who actually turned around and sold arms to Iran to finance his campaign of terror in Central America.

My advice to Roskam is that he stick to his principal project of lowering taxes for the wealthy and returning American workers to the 19th century. He should leave the chickenhawk stuff to his good buddy Dick Cheney.

cheney_roskam

Peter Roskam’s been going to a lot of trouble to publicize his media appearances lately on his House website.  Of course they consist mostly of clips from Fox News, Don Wade & Roma, and Big John & Cisco. Roskam doesn’t like to talk to anyone who might ask him a serious question. He just wants a friendly outlet for his talking points – designed to keep his base in a lather about the Dems so that they won’t realize that he’s screwing them in Washington. But I appreciate the time he’s taken to organize this material so its easy for me to find.

This video was interesting and Roskam seems to be pretty proud of it.  Its a clip from Fox News back in March around the time the House voted on H.R. 1586, the measure that would have imposed a 90% tax on bonuses received in 2009 by high-paid employees of companies that received TARP bailout money. Roskam voted with the majority of House members (including about half of the Republicans) to approve the measure. And then he went on Fox News to play the outraged populist while smearing Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and the Obama administration for a mess they inherited from President Bush. I don’t think the measure ever went anywhere – just died in the Senate after AIG’s Chairman urged his employees receiving more than $100,000 to return at least half.

So was this a new Roskam we were seeing? Concerned all of a sudden about the outrages committed by big corporations at the expense of the little people back home in his district? Not so much. This was just Roskam the politician taking advantage of the moment.

Roskam showed his true colors on April 1st, when H.R. 1664, the Grayson-Himes Pay For Performance Act of 2009, came up for a vote. This was a more serious and comprehensive measure to address the issue of excessive compensation, not just for AIG but for other companies receiving bailout money as well:

The Pay for Performance Act of 2009 prohibits the payment of “unreasonable or excessive” compensation, including bonuses that are not based on performance, by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the federal home loans banks, and firms that have received funds under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act. The Treasury Secretary must define “unreasonable or excessive” compensation and outline what constitutes an appropriate performance-based bonus using criteria including the stability of a financial institution, ability to repay taxpayer funds, and adherence to appropriate risk management requirements. The prohibition only applies while government payments to the firms are outstanding. Firms subject to the Pay for Performance Act must report their compensation practices to the Treasury Secretary. Finally, the legislation applies bonus prohibitions included in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to all employment contracts.

When Roskam figured the folks at home were no longer paying attention, he dropped his faux outrage and voted against the measure. But you won’t see him promoting that fact on his website.

This was not the first time Roskam had stood up for outrageous executive pay. One of Roskam’s few floor speeches during his first term was to fight against a  measure that would have given shareholders a voice in limiting the excessive pay of corporate executives. But I bet you’ll never see that video on his website.

That he uses his office to fight for unlimited executive pay is particularly sad given that Roskam has been an opponent of any efforts to raise the minimum wage for people who actually work for a living and voted against the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act earlier this term.

Interestingly, we understand that Peter’s new Press Secretary,Daniel Conston, is an A.I.G. alum. He also worked on the failed campaigns of Fred Thompson and John McCain. Let’s hope this endeavor goes better. But what happened to Matt? Did we convert him?

Obama Notre Dame

It happened on May 20, 2001. President George Bush delivered a commencement address at Notre Dame, focused mainly on compassion, and on his plan for establishment of religion through the White House Office of Faith-based and Community Initiatives.  The President was awarded an honorary doctor of laws degree.

Now in fairness, President Bush had not yet distinguished himself as Torturer-in-Chief and did not yet have the blood of thousands of innocent Iraqi civilians on his hands. But he had just come off a run as Governor of Texas, where he had proven to be an enthusiastic practitioner of capital punishment, sending 152 people to their deaths by lethal injection over his 6 years as Governor, a record pace in modern times. In order to maintain that pace, Bush had to deny clemency to virtually everyone who petitioned (serial killer Henry Lee Lucas being the lone exception) and execute all comers, including the mentally retarded. In this herculean task he was ably assisted by his toady, and future Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales.  Much later, as President, Bush would attempt to institute a “fast track” for the death penalty to get things moving at a more satisfying pace.

And yet this monster Bush, is pretty much deified by the so-called “pro-life” movement in this country. Makes it pretty hard to take their protests at Notre Dame today seriously.

Abortion isn’t pretty. It would be difficult to defend it as a positive good. But the State compelling women to carry unwanted pregnancies to term is equally ugly. My judgment is in agreement with President Obama: abortion should be safe, legal, and rare. Women should be allowed to reach their own ethical evaluations of the option of terminating a pregnancy with the counsel of their families, physicians, and spirtual advisors. The State should not be allowed to intrude into this process.

I applaud President Obama for his stance in favor of allowing women to control their own bodies and I applaud the University of Notre Dame for standing up to the anti-abortion protesters in defense of the ideals of a university.

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Thanks to Kitty Kurth for this news:

Peter Roskam, who is diametrically opposed to almost everything that Barack Obama stands for and is a member of the McCain leadership team, has been trying to peel off Obama voters. But, Obama supports Jill Morgenthaler for Congress in Illinois 6th District.

“While we’re pleased that Barack Obama continues to attract support from across party lines because of his long record of working with Republicans and independents to bring change, he believes Congressman Roskam would continue President Bush’s failed policies and is supporting Jill Morgenthaler for Congress.”

Justin DeJong, Illinois Director of Communications for Obama for America

Jill Morgenthaler’s press release is here.

Summer has been busy and I haven’t had time to write as much as I’d like. Some important votes have slipped by without comment. One that I think is of particular interest is the vote on June 24 on H.R. 6331: Medicare Improvement for Patients and Providers Act of 2008. Medicare recipients and the physicians who care for them should take special note.

On July 1st 2008, physicians participating in the Medicare program were scheduled to receive a 10 percent cut in reimbursement. An additional 5 percent cut was to take place in 2009. These cuts, if enacted, could have been devastating to both physicians, who are struggling to maintain the solvency of their practices in the face of reimbursement reductions by state, federal and private payers, and to Medicare recipients, who are faced with increasing difficulty in finding physicans willing to treat Medicare patients. According to the American Medical Association, as many as 60% of physicians would have been forced to limit their services to Medicare recipients under the proposed cuts.

In an effort to prevent these cuts from taking place, Democrats in the House, led by Rep. Charles Rangel, introduced H.R. 6331. In addition to to stopping the physician pay cuts, the bill provided for a number of modest improvements to the Medicare program to aid beneficiaries including:

  • Coverage of additional preventive services
  • Elimination of late enrollment penalties for the part D drug benefit
  • Coverage of pulmonary and cardiac rehabilitation
  • Elimination of higher co-payments for mental health services

Prior to the vote, President Bush threatened to veto the bill because it would have reduced payments to Medicare Advantage plans – private health insurance plans that offer alternatives to traditional Medicare under contract with CMS. Such plans currently receive, on average, about 12% more than the cost of services for recipients in traditional Medicare. Outside the Administration, there is widespread feeling that these plans, which are supposed to reduce costs through careful medical management, should be receiving reimbursements at a level lower than the costs of traditional Medicare, although insurance companies argue that the cuts will increase out-of-pocket costs and decrease options for Medicare Advantage recipients.

When the bill came to a vote on June 24, Peter Roskam voted no, siding with the Bush administration in its desire to allow the pay cuts to take effect. The bill passed but was vetoed by the President on July 15. That veto was quickly overridden by the House and Senate and has become law.

Physicians and Medicare recipients in the 6th district should ask Peter Roskam why he voted to support pay cuts for Medicare physicians. Roskam can be reached at his Washington office at (202) 225-4561 or in Bloomingdale at (630) 893-9670.

Peter Roskam, who this past week signaled his desire that the military occupation of Iraq be prolonged indefinitely, failed to stand up in support of Illinois veterans returning from honorable service in Iraq and Afghanistan. Roskam continues to support hundreds of billions of dollars in appropriations for George Bush’s wars but refuses to vote to for any spending to aid the men and women who have fought so bravely in those wars.

The vote came on Thursday, May 15 in an amendment to the Military Construction and Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies Appropriations Act. Peter Roskam voted no. The amendment passed by a margin of 255-166.

The new GI bill, if enacted, will provide veterans with a more substantial package of educational benefits including tutition payments up to the amount of the most expensive public school in the Veteran’s state plus additional funds toward books and housing. It is funded by the veterans themselves, who must buy-in at the beginning of their enlistments and by a tax surcharge of 0.5% on individuals with more than $500,000 and couples with more than $1,000,000 in annual income.

President Bush, who sent these men and women to war, has vowed to veto the bill if it reaches his desk. John McCain, Peter Roskam’s choice for our next President, has also refused to support it, despite his ardent support for the military occupation of Iraq, even to the point of keeping our troops there for 100 years.

Residents of the 6th district who believe in taking care of our veterans should let Roskam know of their displeasure with his continuing failure to stand up for vets. Roskam can be reached at his Washington office at (202) 225-4561 or in Bloomingdale at (630) 893-9670.

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