Hypocrites and
Liars
Once upon a
time, Republicans branded themselves as the party of real, honest, hardworking
Americans. A large part of this was a rather derogatory attitude towards people
on unemployment who in their opinion weren't trying hard enough to get work.
How times have changed.
Not so long-ago
Republicans spoke derogatorily about extended unemployment benefits at a time
when the economy was struggling to get back on its feet. They sometimes even used
“the S word” (Socialism) and simply called it excessive Democratic pandering to
the working class. They said President Biden was “encouraging people to sit at
home” rather than work because they were getting extended benefits. So what?
So, now those
same Republicans, in some “red”
states where employment is back up, are extending unemployment benefits to
people who have lost (actually chosen to leave) their jobs because they refused
to become vaccinated and therefore are unsafe in the workplace.
States that
terminated unemployment benefits for those who were not vaccinated are seeing little difference in the number of people coming back to work. In truth, job numbers
were significantly up, and increasing for June, July, August, and September. Red
states that discontinued unemployment benefits did not fare any better in
getting people back to work than those that continued benefits.
Unlike the
depths of the recession when jobs were scarce, there are now significantly more
job openings than people to fill them. However, rather than acting to tide over
people who really need help, Republicans prefer to advance their cultish
aversion to vaccinations. The Washington Post reported: “Workers who quit or
are fired for cause — under which defying company policy would qualify — are
generally ineligible for jobless benefits. Regardless of that policy
precedent, Arkansas, Florida, Iowa, Kansas, and Tennessee have simply made
exceptions for those who won’t submit to the multi-shot coronavirus vaccine
regimens." So, after a gain of about six million jobs, employers are desperate
to find workers to fill jobs, yet Republicans are subsidizing idle sponging for
the irresponsibly unvaccinated.
This is simply bad policy for several reasons:
First, MAGA
practice of encouraging people not to get vaccinated puts complacent and
compliant people at risk of serious illness or death. Any governor or state
legislator who favors this has forfeited any claim to be “pro-life.”
Second, forcing
taxpayers to subsidize such irresponsible conduct and then adding to increased health
care costs when many wind up in the hospital flies in the face of long held
alleged conservative “values” such as personal responsibility and
self-sufficiency. Imagine how the Red Hat mob and their Congressional enablers
would react if Democrats changed unemployment rules to allow people who quit or
refused to follow company rules to get benefits.
Third, they are
sabotaging their states’ economic recoveries. Why would any start-up locate in
a state that encourages employees to defy vaccine requirements — and then cost
employers money by going on unemployment?
The very idea
of paying people for intentionally being laid off or fired would have made Dwight
Eisenhower and Ronald Reagan’s heads explode. It is indicative of a party in
which traditionally conservative values and principles such as limited
government, work, and capitalism now take a back seat. If the value of work ethic
is diminished and economic recovery stunted, well, too damned bad. That’s the cost
of identifying with a movement in which oppositional behavior is valued above
being socially responsible. In the new Republican party, simply being in
opposition to sound medical and economic policy “Trumps” reason and judgement. (See
what I did there?)
So much
for the hypocrites, now for some liars”
Let's start with world class prevaricator, Sean Hannity, who
said in an interview with the oldest Trump spawn: "If you look
pre-COVID, your dad, he got us to energy independence.", Hannity
told the younger Trump that during the Dec. 1 episode of "Hannity,"
his primetime TV show. "We didn’t import a single barrel of oil from Saudi
Arabia, the Middle East." So,
what's wrong with that? Simply that the truth is that, in 2019, the United
States imported half a billion barrels of oil a day from the
Middle East. In the first two years of the Trump administration imports were
actually closer to three quarters of a billion barrels a day, and only dipped
in 2020 because of the COVID pandemic and lower US consumption. Yes, I know,
Sean Hannity is a liar? Surprise, surprise.
Or there's always Tucker Carlson:
In what has been a continuing Carlson effort to diminish the
legitimacy of the January 6th committee we have this statement:
“DEA agent Mark Ibrahim was forced from his job and
later indicted simply because he was near the Capitol protest on Jan. 6.” In fact (remember facts?) Ibrahim had already
submitted his intent to resign from the DEA weeks before Jan. 6 and was
considered a probationary employee on leave from the agency on the day in
question. Ibrahim was indicted because he brought a gun with him onto Capitol
grounds and then made false statements to federal agents. Carlson also said
that Ibrahim did not use his DEA badge to get past guards. However, there is a
photo of him doing just that, and in the process of flashing said badge,
revealing the Glock he was carrying.
For Carlson’s part, this is simply one lie upon many he has
forwarded in attempts to make the January sixth, 2021, insurrection seem like
just a group of friends on an outing who took a wrong turn and ended up, armed
and dangerous in the US Capital. As regards the loathsome Mr. Carlson, it is
worth noting that, when he is fact checked, 71% of said checks are either rated
“false” or “pants on fire” which is like false with double secret probation. On
the other hand, PolitiFact has found absolutely zero “true” statements in the
21 Carlson diatribes they have investigated this past year.
Finally, just because it is so outrageous. I will end this
with a claim from one Dr. Sherry Tenpenny who is, believe it or not, a licensed
osteopathic physician who lives and works in Cleveland OH. In a statement
before the Ohio State legislature, she actually said the following: “The
COVID-19 vaccines make people "magnetized.” They can put a key on their
forehead, it sticks. They can put spoons and forks all over them, and they can
stick." She is, to no surprise, a rabid anti-vaccine advocate and
is the author of “Saying No to Vaccines: A Resource Guide for All Ages.” She
also espouses the debunked claim that vaccines cause autism.
Note”: I am
vaccinated and boosted. Dinnerware and keys still simply refuse to adhere to my
forehead.
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