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Maine's Tea Party Governor: 'Slash Health and Human Services or I'll Close Schools'
Republican Governor of Maine and Tea Party favorite, Paul LePage, angered many residents of the northeast state Thursday when he said that if the legislature did not pass his proposed cuts to the Department of Health and Human Services' budget, he would order a statewide closure of public schools on May 1 of this year.
Gov. Paul LePage (R-Maine). The Tea Party favorite who won the governorship with less than 40% of the popular vote has threatened to close Maine schools if he is not granted the cuts he's proposed to the state's Dept. of Health and Human Services. (Pat Wellenbach | AP) The Portland Press Herald reports:
The governor on Thursday held a town hall meeting in Lewiston after a day touring the region as part of his 12th Capitol for a Day event.
The Sun Journal reports that LePage, describing the DHHS budget gap as a "runaway train," told the audience that if the Legislature didn't ratify his proposed budget he would be forced to close the state's schools. It's unclear what authority he has to take such a measure.
Many of the questions posed by meeting participants had to do with LePage's proposed Medicaid cuts.
Lee Myles, CEO of St. Mary's Regional Medical Center, said the governor's proposed reductions in Medicaid were a "nuke approach" that would leave thousands of Mainers without health insurance. The Sun Journal reports that Myles said the resulting increased emergency room visits would have a $6 million impact on St. Mary's.
Here's video:
WGME-13 in Maine, added:
As with other town hall meetings a sizable group of those that call themselves Maine's Majority - the 61% of people who didn't vote for the Governor - showed up. While there were no disruptions during the meeting, only debates, some did walk out, frustrated with the Governor's answers.
Those critics, as the Sun Journal reported, were most concerned about his plans for Medicaid and what would happen "to those who would be left without health insurance."
LePage acknowledged that hospitals would see increased emergency room visits. However, he said he was working on a proposal that would require an individual to register with a primary care physician after his first emergency room visit. He added that changes in the state's insurance laws would make private insurance more affordable to some of those who would be left without health care if his budget passes.
The governor also defended the tax-cut package he signed into law last session. While critics said that the cuts benefit the wealthy, LePage stressed the package benefited all Mainers, including about 70,000 of the poorest residents in the state.
"I'm proud of (the tax cuts); I'm not ashamed of it," he said.
He added, "(The tax cuts) have nothing to do with the structural problems the state is facing now."
LePage acknowledged that the cuts would be painful. However, he rejected what he described as "emotional arguments about welfare," which he said, were "inappropriate."
After the meeting, some tried to question LePage's State Treasurer, Bruce Poloquin, about the constitutionality of the move:
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87 Comments so far
Show AllI give you a little gift: before I had read one word of Rand, based on observations of people who 'followed' her and what little I gleaned otherwise, I said I bet her entire corpus of works could be titled "Why Ayn Rand Must Be Served". After reading Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead, I saw that I had made the right call.
Some reading: Of course every corporate bookstore always has a copy of The Road to Serfdom by Friedrich Hayek on the shelf. if you want to read a rebuttal see Herman Finer's Road to Reaction which of course no bookstore carries, go to bookfinder.com to get a copy. See Spencer's The Man and The State, first thing I read in it despises the unemployed as vermin; and William Graham Sumner's What Social Classes Owe To Each Other (his answer: nothing.) Also, Richard Hofstadter's Social Darwinism in American Thought.
Almost forgot! So tasty and fun! Jerome Tuccille's It Usually Begins with Ayn Rand (25th anniversary edition.)
In Indiana, in response to people screaming about property taxes, the legislature took on the "burden" of funding the schools, so the money does not come from local property taxes any longer. Of course, that means that school funding competes with every other line item in the state's budget, and cuts happen every year.
LePage doesn't have to close the schools formally, if he can cut their funding to the bone. That will accomplish the same thing.
If residents of Maine want their schools to continue, perhaps they should take a look at what is going on in Wisconsin.
Ron Paul is a Social Darwinist whether he realizes it or not. For anyone to put this guy up as "credible" simply means they're more enamored with his style than that they have any idea what he stands for. He stands for the worst the Republicans have to offer in the sense of totally shredding social institutions working for social justice. In Paul's world, again whether he can comprehend and admit it or not, justice will be for sale and you can either afford it or you can't.
These whack-jobs have been refuted in the academic historical literature for more than 100 years. The schools paid for by Paul's fellow-traveling rich people have suppressed all that history or we would all know that we got the Welfare State because Laissez-Faire totally sucked; and that if we had been paying attention we as a people would have remembered this continuously since the early 1900s. See Sidney Fine, Laissez-Faire and the General Welfare State, Ann Arbor Paperbacks, 1964.
Ron Paul is a throwback to the time of America's Imperial Past and the age of the Robber Barons. The businesspeople who gave us the Great Depression were isolationists too, so what? You don't stop the wars because you believe in isolationism, which is a cheap excuse. You stop the wars because they are morally and legally wrong. So Paul ends up being wrong on both counts.
People are such saps for "straight-talkers", listening to their presentation for style and conviction and ignoring what is being said. Perot had that advantage and here Paul does too. With that comparison even a young Adolf Hitler could probably get a lot of media attention right here right now as "a man of conviction."
Another reminder: LePage won in a three way race. There was an independent who ran against LePage and a Dem.
Take from that what you will.
At this point, the survival of the United States as a political entity looks as promising as that of the dinosaurs did some 65 million years ago, at the end of the Cretaceous Period when an asteroid probably hit the Earth.
This time the asteroid is called Ayn Randism, one of the most socially and politically corrosive ideologies devised in the last century, next to National Socialism and Stalinism.
Well put. A decidedly de-evolutionary trend. Though, it may be necessary for evolution to resume.
Stay tuned.
The warden said: "I believe in two things: discipline and the Bible. Here you'll receive both. Put your trust in the Lord; your ass belongs to me. Welcome to Shawshank." -
Shawshank - a fitting symbol for our times. May we be as patient and clever as Andy Dufresne.
Another recent book about cellphone damage:
Disconnect: The Truth About Cell Phone Radiation, What the Industry Has Done to Hide It, and How to Protect Your Family
(ISBN 10: 0525951946 / ISBN 13: 9780525951940 )
Devra Davis
A link to the cheapest copy to be found online (at the time I looked:)
http://www.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=6706391657