This Blog Hates America!
Musings of the Bemused, by Michael D. Zungolo. Politics, Food, Film, Music, Passion. Dig In!

 



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  Wednesday, January 04, 2006


The Best Music of 2005 (According to Me)

I'm not a critic, so I'll offer these without comment. These reflect my taste and my taste alone. Yours may differ.

 

SONG OF THE YEAR (Songwriter Award): We Can't Make It Here, James McMurtry (written by James McMurtry)

RECORD OF THE YEAR (Producer Award): Rebellion (Lies), The Arcade Fire (produced by the Arcade Fire) 

 

CDs OF THE YEAR (In No Particular Order):

Funeral, Arcade Fire

Twin Cinema, New Pornographers

No Direction Home: The Bootleg Series Vol 7, Bob Dylan 

Childish Things, James McMurtry

Transatlanticism, Death Cab for Cutie

Okemah and the Melody of Riot, Son Volt

Prairie Wind, Neil Young

Devils and Dust, Bruce Springsteen

Magic Time, Van Morrison

Come on Feel the Illinoise, Sufjan Stevens

Gimme Fiction, Spoon

Electric Blue Watermelon, North Mississippi All-Stars

Hope and Desire, Susan Tedeschi

Cold Roses, Ryan Adams

Get Behind Me Satan, White Stripes

Picaresque, Decemberists

 

 

 

 

 

 


10:49:30 AM     comment []

It's typical of the Congressional Republicans' arrogance, and utter cluelessness, that Judd Gregg can say, regarding the massacre of the student loan program, ``This is our responsibility to our children.'' Irony-free zone indeed.  

 

Posted on Mon, Jan. 02, 2006

GOP's deficit cutting hits students too hard

Mercury News Editorial

Congressional Republicans made a self-satisfied gesture of fiscal constraint before heading home to hornswoggle voters into believing they're really worried about the federal deficit.

The $40 billion in spending cuts, spread over five years, was barely a pinprick -- about a third of 1 percent of the federal budget. This year's budget deficit alone is $319 billion. The spending cuts will soon be swamped by $56 billion in extended tax cuts that Congress is poised to pass early next year, along with $27 billion in additional tax write-offs for the wealthy that took effect Jan. 1.

In fact, $40 billion in cuts would be barely worth mentioning were it not so irresponsible. Bearing the brunt will be the federal college loan program, which Congress instead should be increasing in light of soaring higher education costs and the fact that American industry is clamoring for a better educated workforce.

Because of the cuts, students will be piling up several thousand dollars of additional debt and parents will be paying higher interest on loans -- up to 8.5 percent. Lenders will no longer be able to subsidize new loans from the money they make. And, despite promises to raise Pell Grants -- the foundation of federal student aid -- by $1,000 to keep up with rising costs, the grants will remain capped at $4,000. (The 650,000 students attending California's public colleges at least got some good news last week, with the announcement that Gov. Schwarzenegger's budget will rescind the increase in student fees -- $492 for UC schools, $204 for CSU campuses -- that were to go into effect next year.)

The $22 billion in cuts and restructuring will be partially offset by $3.75 billion in new grants for students studying foreign languages, math and science, plus $2 billion to forgive loans of special-education teachers and students who enlist in the military after college. But the net $13 billion cut marks the biggest hit in the history of the program.

The House version passed narrowly with no Democratic support. It took Vice President Cheney, rushing back from the Mideast, to break a 50-50 tie vote in the Senate.

Describing the vote as the only chance this year to ``actually do something about deficit spending,'' Senate Budget Committee chair Judd Gregg of New Hampshire told senators, ``This is our responsibility to our children.''

Actually, Congress and the Bush administration have socked it to them. They have piled on a mountain of federal debt with an unbudgeted war in Iraq and a drug program for kids' grandparents. And now they have compounded this by pinching on college aid. Some high school grads will give up altogether on pursuing a degree, to the detriment of the U.S. economy in the future.

The next generation is paying a big price for Congress' lip service to austerity.

 

9:04:35 AM     comment []


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