Someone should have walked out of the room over this. Last week when
President George W. Bush cobbled together a handpicked group of black
religious and community leaders for a chat at the White House, he tried
to sell them on his plan to add private accounts to Social Security.
But while Bush has used youth as a way to sell the plan to people who
have come of age after the 1970s and who believe, erroneously, that
there will be no money left for them once they hit retirement age, for
blacks, he is using another sales pitch: Death. Bush said, in essence,
that blacks will benefit from his plan because they die sooner than
whites, and because of that, they end up paying more into the system
than what they get out of it. At that point, the atmosphere in the room
should have shifted from one of congeniality to one of concern and
outrage. I mean, here’s the president telling black folks, in a
nutshell, that their shortened lives – lives shortened by racism and
lack of access to decent health care and other essentials – is
something that they ought to look at cashing in on rather than trying
to change. But judging from news reports, no one in that crowd caught
the insult. It seems that many of them were too busy worrying about
Bush’s goals to stop gays from marrying than his goals to help black
folks live longer. And that’s a shame. [more]
Democrats hammered Mr. Bush's cornerstone proposal as a risky gamble
that would swell the nation's deficit and imperil the retirement of
millions of Americans. Come on, it's designed to enrich Wall Street
brokers who support the GOP. [more] Buzzflash.com