Filosofa Takes on Mitch

Mitch McConnell has found a permanent home on my radar, it would seem.  Every day he says or does something to spark my temper and this week he’s been on a veritable roll.


Mitch McConnell, aka Moscow Mitch, says we don’t matter!

I have never been a fan of the ignoble, inglorious Mitch McConnell, but now he has crossed my red line.  Referring to President Biden’s plan to increase taxes on corporations and on the wealthy (such as Mitch himself), McConnell claimed he would not support Biden’s infrastructure plan because of the “massive tax increases on all the productive parts of our economy.”  Think about that one for a minute, friends.  “All the productive parts of our economy” in Mitch’s mind, are the wealthy like himself.  We, the people who have worked 40+ hours per week every week of our adult lives, the people who built the cars, mined the coal, grew the food, educated our children, are nothing!  F*ck you, Mitch McConnell!

I had my first full-time job when I was 13 years old, and apart from a few years off to raise three children and earn three college degrees, I worked my entire adult life until I retired in 2008.  Throughout my career, I often worked long hours, sometimes as much as 16 hours a day … but I’m not one of the “productive parts of our economy”???  Today, my daughter works 12-14 hour days as a nurse, but according to McConnell, the rich bastard sheltering his assets offshore is a more productive part of our economy than she is?

President Biden guaranteed there would be no tax increase on anyone earning less than $400,000 per year.  In my wildest dreams, my most profitable year, I came nowhere close to making $400,000 per year, or even $100,000 per year.  Anyone making more than $400,000 per year ought to pay a higher tax rate!  Corporations profiting hand over fist ought to be paying their fair share.  And those millionaires and billionaires who have long enjoyed paying accountants to create tax shelters and loopholes rather than pay their fair share in taxes ought to have to make amends!  For years, the wealthy and the corporations they own have paid a smaller percentage in taxes than the average working stiff.

The backbone of our economy is the people who produce the goods and services, and they already pay more than their fair share in taxes.  They are the productive parts of our economy.  NEVER forget that, Mitch McConnell!


And in other Mitchie-related news …

I wrote in August 2019 about the New York Times venture into history in the 1619 Project

… a worthy project …

The 1619 Project is a major initiative from The New York Times observing the 400th anniversary of the beginning of American slavery. It aims to reframe the country’s history, understanding 1619 as our true founding, and placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of the story we tell ourselves about who we are.

I haven’t spent as much time as I had hoped reviewing the project, but everything I’ve seen of it has been absolutely excellent … a factual, honest view of our history.  But yesterday we learned that Mitch McConnell sent a letter to Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona asking him to abandon the factual recounting of the true beginnings of the United States as perpetuated by such as the 1619 Project.  McConnell calls this “revisionist history”!  WHAT, Mitchie … do you think your friggin’ ancestors didn’t own slaves, beat them with whips, and sell their children to the highest bidder?  Do you think that is all a myth?  Do you think that Black people were brought here on tourist cruise boats and made to feel welcome at the Ritz-Carlton???

McConnell claims these programs such as the 1619 Project “re-orient” the view of American History “away from their intended purposes toward a politicized and divisive agenda.”

Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr …

In fairness, Mitch makes a valid point near the beginning of his letter …

“A 2020 survey found that only 51% of Americans can name the three branches of our federal government. A 2019 study found that majorities of Americans in 49 states and the District of Columbia would earn an “F” on the U.S. Citizenship Exam. The most recent National Assessment of Educational Progress found that just 15% of American eighth-graders are “proficient” in U.S. history. School closures during the COVID-19 pandemic have almost certainly intensified these problems by triggering substantial learning losses, particularly for students from underserved backgrounds.”

He is right, our children are not being taught the things they need, and the former Secretary of Education, Betsy DeVos, added a heaping dose of ignorance to our education system.  But then he continues, putting down the administration’s proposal to update American history curricula to more fully flesh out the consequences of slavery and contributions of Black Americans.

The most ludicrous statement in Mitch’s letter is …

“Americans do not need or want their tax dollars diverted from promoting the principles that unite our nation toward promoting radical ideologies meant to divide us.”

Say WHAT???  I cannot speak for everyone in this country, but for my part I want our children to be taught truth – the good, the bad, and the ugly. Facts, man, just the facts.  Fact:  the United States was a slave-owning nation from 1619 until 1865 … nearly 250 years!  Fact:  even today, in the 21st century, Black people are still fighting for equality, to be treated as equals.  Children need to learn all of the history of their nation, not just the rosier parts.  In the words of Winston Churchill …

“Those who fail to learn from history are condemned to repeat it.”

The U.S. has some very ugly things and dark periods in its history, along with some wonderful, bright moments.  They are all part of our history, from slavery, the Japanese internments, turning away the St. Louis, the white man’s treatment of the original people who were here long before Europeans came.  The United States is no worse, no better than most Western nations and we must remember both the good and the bad.

If the civil rights legislation that was passed in the 1960s were put forth today, no doubt Mitch McConnell would filibuster and ensure it didn’t pass.  Perhaps it is Mitch that needs to be educated.

27 thoughts on “Filosofa Takes on Mitch

  1. Jill, like former Senator Harry Reid on the Democrats side, I view Mitch McConnell in the same way. They both flip flop their positions in a “causal” relationship to whether their party is in power. The same issue becomes a two-sided coin. It stands firmly in the way of helping people and civil discourse. And, neither one cared what we thought. For example, when McConnell delayed the second impeachment trial until after Biden was sworn in, I knew what he was doing, then he did it. He wanted to have the right to vote down conviction of an obviously seditious former president because he was no longer in office. And, that is precisely what happened.

    Keith

    Liked by 3 people

    • Agreed … and both Reid and McConnell are/were poster boys for why we need term limits! Just once I would like McConnell … everyone in Congress … instead of thinking “What’s going to win me the most votes?”, to think, “What’s going to help the most people?” Just ONCE! Yes, McConnell played games with the impeachment, just like he does with everything, and now we are stuck with McConnell for another 6 years, unless he either dies or decides to hang up his hat at some point.

      Like

  2. Sometimes the like button just isn’t good enough. Excellent post!

    Moscow Mitch is a real piece of, despicable, work. The R party is much the same. What I see in the R party today, I can’t believe I ever voted R. But I did at one time. There was a time I bought what they were selling. Never again.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Thank you so much!!!

      Yes, Moscow Mitch is a real piece of work, and yet the voters in Kentucky keep sending him back to Washington! I don’t know what sway he has over them. Oh, I have voted Republican a few times, and in fact voted for G.W. Bush once. I would have voted for Nixon, but I was just a year shy of being old enough to vote at the time. But today’s Republican Party … I cannot foresee ever voting R again!

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  3. Y’see this is why Trump was put there. He would appeal to the mob, and distract from the more ‘thinking’ crew who were they about their white elitist agenda.
    And now folk like McConnell have got it made, they don’t have to try hard to hold onto the voting bloc. If Biden says it ‘Bad’, if Mitch says it ‘Good’.
    Let Trump do the bawling and behind the scenes….
    Confrontational Politics ‘101’

    Liked by 3 people

  4. Moscow Mitch is trying to destroy democracy. He may not have always wanted to do that, I don’t know, but since he became the head Republican in the Senate, the power he has taken upon himself has gone to his anus, which exists in the front bottom part of his head. Everything that comes out of it is shit.

    Liked by 4 people

    • Well, I suspect that Mitch defines many words, among them ‘democracy’, ‘integrity’, ‘honesty’, and ‘compassion’ differently than you and I define them. Like most on his team, only certain people actually matter in our society, primarily those with wealth and/or power. The rest of us don’t matter. Good to see you … you’ve been away for a few days and I was getting worried. Hope all is well?

      Liked by 1 person

  5. I agree that the workers are the real producers. And let’s not forget their families who support them in their work.

    Yes, we also need managers, etc. But, at present, those are vastly overpaid, relative to what they contribute to productivity.

    Liked by 3 people

    • Agreed. I think even managers are below those McConnell was considering the “productive”, for how many managers do you know who make over $400,000? The rich look after their own, and to heck with the rest of us, apparently.

      Liked by 2 people

  6. I wonder if Mitch enjoys his roll as obstructionist since he does it so well and even warns that certain behaviours by the legitimate Government will result in more of it. Whatever happened to proper debates on policies and the abilities of political opponents to be given the freedom to vote their conscience knowing that bipartisanship is what the voters want.
    Cwtch

    Liked by 2 people

    • I halfway think that Mitch has played this game for so long that it just comes naturally to him. He reminds me of the child who says “NO!” to everything, just because it’s his nature. We’re stuck with Mitchie for another 5+ years, unless he dies or retires. Imagine how much more damage he could do in the time. Sigh. He has been in office since 1985, 36 years … some things just start to smell really bad when they’ve been around too long … Mitchie is one of them. I think the days of bipartisanship are over, at least for now, for the people of this nation are so ideologically divided that there is no longer a middle ground. Mitch McConnell is a large part of the reason for that divisiveness, as is the former guy.
      Cwtch

      Liked by 1 person

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