Tag: US Politics

  • Today was a bad day

    First, let’s acknowledge that this was a terrible day for two West Virginia National Guardsmen, who as of this writing are still fighting for their lives after being shot at close range in Washington D.C. And a gut-wrenching day for their families, who were likely preparing for their Thanksgiving holiday, hoping to at least talk on the phone with their loved ones tomorrow.

    Based on the words tonight from our administration, this will be the start of some very bad days for Afghan refugees living in America, most of whom celebrate this country with as much Thanksgiving as those of us lucky enough to be born here.

    Looking into the near future, I’m watching to see if this will also turn out to be a bad day for freedom.

    A screenshot of a facebook post from @conservmillen that responds to Jesus' "Love thy neighbor" charge with MAGA talking points. It ends with the statement, "Love your neighbor enough to work for a more peaceful, orderly, free, safe, & stable nation."

    I keep seeing Christian Americans using Christ to try and justify their policy preferences. Tonight I noticed this piece of propaganda as I doom-scrolled. The dissonance in the last line jumped out at me. “Love your neighbor enough to work for a more peaceful, orderly, free, safe, & stable nation” (emphasis mine).

    The more order we have, the more safety, the more stability, the less freedom we have. I think we should at least recognize the trade-offs. When the right speaks of safety and stability, they usually mean law and order, being “tough on crime”, and, if Sean Duffy speaks for conservative values, no pajamas on planes.

    There are trade-offs on the left as well. When I talk about safety and stability, I’m usually referring to an FDR-style freedom from want, from hunger, from illness. Of course there is a trade-off: wealthy people have slightly less freedom with their money (though they benefit from the same freedom from want that everyone else does).

    I worry that “safety and stability” in the context of an attack on the Guard will mean more military in our streets, more surveillance of our daily lives, more internment and deportations of immigrants, and more policing of our thoughts and words.

  • Letter to my Senators: DOGE

    I hope you’ll agree with me that protecting Hoosiers’ personal data is of paramount importance. Assuming that is true, can you please tell me what you’re doing to hold the Department of Government Efficiency to account? I have serious concerns about un-vetted 20-year-olds gaining access to our government’s payment systems and taxpayer information. Their activities at Treasury also make them prime targets for recruitment by our adversaries.

    What are you and Congress doing to ensure 1) the security of our sensitive data, and 2) that DOGE employees are loyal to the United States and not to their own bank accounts? The fact that you have flip-flopped on Tulsi Gabbard’s nomination makes me doubly concerned about your commitment to national security. I don’t understand why you and other members of Congress have chosen to stop exercising your oversight powers.

    Finally, your office used to respond to these emails with, at the very least, form-letter language addressing the “Message Topic”. I have written several times this term requesting a response, and have yet to hear from you. You are my voice in the Senate: I need to know that you acknowledge my concerns, and consider them as you make decisions affecting me and my family.

  • An ode to policy

    An ode to policy

    Congratulations, America. You’ve gotten the policy-driven presidency you said you wanted. Let’s see what you’ve won:

    We’re about to find out if Walmart can pay a 200% tax on everything it imports and still keep those low, low prices. We’re gonna see what happens to the cost of food when we deport our cheap agricultural labor force. Watch what happens to affordable housing after we deport 1/3 of this country’s construction workers.

    I’m personally excited to see whether I get turned away from a public ladies’ room because the sex police decide I’m not feminine enough.

    When private health insurance companies are no longer constrained by the government (of the people) to meet the needs of all Americans, let’s see what happens to the cost of premiums. To the types of cancer treatments that are available under low-cost plans. We’ll watch as people change employers, and therefore health plans, and find out that their diabetes is now considered a pre-existing condition and that they’ll have to pay for related treatment on their own.

    How much will your kids’ dentist visits cost when non-fluoridated water isn’t keeping their teeth from rotting?

    Let’s see how many pregnant people die in emergency rooms because the right of their state’s legislature is more valuable than their right to life.

    Let’s count down the days until Ukraine is no longer a sovereign nation.

    How many new jobs will we suddenly lose when we abandon the microchip factories currently under construction?

    I’m going to be tracking these policy benchmarks. Will you be paying attention to how they affect the real world?