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Rhonda Chriss Lokeman
Rhonda Chriss Lokeman
28 Dec 2008
A Peek Under the Christmas Tree 2008

—Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, the subject of a federal investigation, is accused of selling the U.S. … Read More.

21 Dec 2008
The Other Shoe Dropped

Shortly after President George W. Bush dodged shoes in Iraq, his vice president dropped another shoe here at home.… Read More.

14 Dec 2008
Them That's Got Shall Get

When you put the cart before the horse, no matter how many times you lash the beast, you won't get far. … Read More.

Shock and Aw, Shucks

Comment
Ward Cleaver turns to his wife and says, "Gosh, June, how are we goin' to explain to Wally and the Beave that I just got laid off from my job of 25 years, our 401(k) tanked in the '08 market crash, and we can't get loans to send them to community college, much less Harvard, Yale or Princeton?"

To which June turns off the Hoover, knocks back a gin shot and replies, "Betcha didn't see that coming."

Despite Sarah Palin's Rockwellian performance at the first and only vice presidential debate, there aren't a lot of warm and fuzzy Americans full of folksy charm right now. Left out of the debate was news that Palin's reliable drinking buddy, Joe Six-Pack, is actually Two-Beer Joe. Wink! Wink!

Even in the heartland, where people tend to mince and measure words and avoid speaking ill of people in public, there is anger bordering on rage. People here went from "darn it" to "damn it" months ago. Palin seems to think we got to this place overnight, and John McCain kinda sorta stumbled upon it.

People were angry over Hank Paulson's original $700 billion ransom note to save Wall Street but angrier still that even with a rescue plan for the fat cats, most people still cannot afford to buy cars, washing machines or other durable goods, which indicates we are headed toward recession.

People in other countries are angry because their markets, sensitive to ours, are toppling like dominoes, and our allies are warning financiers and legislators not to follow the poor American example. European leaders boasted that unlike the USA, "We know how to take care of our own."

Third World countries, used to begging for debt forgiveness from the International Monetary Fund and others, were so surprised to find this nation insecure about its financial future that printing new money seemed to be the only option.

We remain a superpower, certainly, just one with the cape tugged on and the mask ripped off.

Factories have closed.

Our manufacturing sector has disappeared. U.S. workers are shipping equipment and their jobs overseas and often to countries where workers are paid less and safety standards are nil.

The middle class has watched people with more than one home get a break on bankruptcy declaration. The working class no longer can pull itself up by its bootstraps because those boots were sold cheap at the most recent neighborhood garage sale just to make ends meet and buy school lunches.

So, fellow Americans, why was Sarah Palin smiling, and to whom was she winking when she said in St. Louis, "We're gonna fight for the middle class, everyday American men and women"? And why did John McCain hit the campaign trail the next day talking about liberals vs. conservatives? The old labels don't work when both liberals and conservatives are standing in the same unemployment lines.

Palin may not have blinked at the St. Louis debate, but all over the country, civil libertarians convulsed when she said, without being asked, that she intends to expand the executive powers of the vice presidency. This Dick Cheney in lipstick doesn't want to be a Senate tiebreaker but would directly intervene in congressional affairs and significantly blur the lines between two key government pillars. (I'd like to give a "shout-out" to Ben Franklin, Tom Jefferson, James Madison and Tom Paine, who knew better.)

The bloom is off the hothouse rose Palin, which thankfully did not wilt next to Joe Biden. Our attentions have since returned to the real world, where Wall Street and Main Street intersect. Senate and House lawmakers were reluctant, but they ultimately agreed that it was better to put out the fire now and quibble later about whether it was caused by arson or was an accident.

We're still a great nation, but -- gosh darn it! -- what happened to us? I mean besides nearly eight years of Dubya and the possibility of more Bushit should McCain-Palin win this election.

Ever wondered what a pig in lipstick is? Check out the bailout plan that is the new "rescue plan."

Rhonda Chriss Lokeman (RCLCreators@kc.rr.com) is a contributing editor to The Kansas City Star. To find out more about Rhonda Chriss Lokeman and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.



Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
Ma'am; we''re coming face to ace with the fact that capitalism does not work. The only problem is that we are possessed by the omnipotent idea of Capitalism. The Idea of Capitalism goes hard against the reality of capitalism, pushes here, charges there, climbs, sneaks, tunnels, and bluffs; but it cannot get around the fact that capitalism does not work. It does not work as a system in a single country, and it does not work as a system of the whole world. It is like the idea of the Ptolemaic Universe. A great idea to be sure, but it did not work. And humanity could only progress when humanity moved beyond it. That is how humanity progresses. When they realize that an idea, a form does not work to explain reality, and they move beyond it.., The trail of human progress is littered with failed ideas. Humors are gone, but so are absolute monarchs. Human sacrifices still remain, but rather than a single victim, all are expected to give their lives an inch at a time. The pain is about over. No more drugs are required. This can be difficult, or easy. The only reason the failure of capitalism hurts is that we believed in it. It was supposed to work. We believed it would work. We are told the fault is in us. Dis believe. Believe in yourself and in each other. Don't waste a moment of your life believing in capitalism. Don't ever believe you can put greed into one end of something and have virtue come out the other end. Capitalism is a failed idea. It is time for a new idea, and one that recognizes that people need justice every minute of their lives, and need as much from their lives as they put into them. We have been liiving short for a long time, living on promises, living on pain. That is about to end. Either we will be killed off by the transformation before us or we will find the promised land in America.
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Sun Oct 5, 2008 8:52 PM
"Joe Sixpack." Didn't anybody but me take offense to that insulting phrase? Remember how Barack was savaged for saying that working folks turn to guns and whatever in their bitterness? By the same standard, Palin's calling them alcoholics, and worse yet, implying that if they're not, they just don't cut it as real men. Fits right in with all the binge drinking going on among the college students trying to get somewhere else.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Masako
Mon Oct 6, 2008 6:10 PM
YOU're RIGHT ON THE PAPER MONEY! As worthless it it until Joe- Main St. pays his taxes. Good luck to Joe when he finds a job within a 1000 miles of his tent that he has to bicyle for days to get to. Because He had to give up the car that he can't afford gas for anymore.. This story does have a silver-lining- Joe's slim and trim and he looks good when he drives-up to take his sugar to tea!
Comment: #3
Posted by: Boni
Tue Oct 7, 2008 8:39 PM
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