This is a very informative, very important, and very distressing article that appeared in the Washington Post. It is a shocking account of how Congress was stripped of its staff, how its intellectual firepower was stifled by deep cuts to the Congressional Research Service, The Congressional Budget Office, and the General Accountability Office, nonpartisan sources of independent analysis that serve Congress. The author calls this “Congress’s self-lobotomy.” As Congress has grown intellectually depleted, an army of lobbyists have stepped up to fill the gaps.
The author is Rep. Bill Pascrell Jr. (D-N.J.), who was elected to Congress in 1996. He represents New Jersey’s 9th Congressional District.
I urge you to read this article.
In a year of congressional lowlights, the hearings we held with Silicon Valley leaders last fall may have been the lowest. One of my colleagues in the House asked Google CEO Sundar Pichai about the workings of an iPhone — a rival Apple product. Another colleague asked Facebook head Mark Zuckerberg, “If you’re not listening to us on the phone, who is?” One senator was flabbergasted to learn that Facebook makes money from advertising. Over hours of testimony, my fellow members of Congress struggled to grapple with technologies used daily by most Americans and with the functions of the Internet itself. Given an opportunity to expose the most powerful businesses on Earth to sunlight and scrutiny, the hearings did little to answer tough questions about the tech titans’ monopolies or the impact of their platforms.
It’s not because lawmakers are too stupid to understand Facebook. It’s because our available resources and our policy staffs, the brains of Congress, have been so depleted that we can’t do our jobs properly.
Americans who bemoan a broken Congress rightly focus on ethical questions and electoral partisanship. But the tech hearings demonstrated that our greatest deficiency may be knowledge, not cooperation. Our founts of independent information have been cut off, our investigatory muscles atrophied, our committees stripped of their ability to develop policy, our small staffs overwhelmed by the army of lobbyists who roam Washington. Congress is increasingly unable to comprehend a world growing more socially, economically and technologically multifaceted — and we did this to ourselves.
When the 110th Congress opened in 2007, Democrats rode into office on a tide of outrage at the George W. Bush administration and the Republican Congress, which had looked the other way during the Tom DeLay, Jack Abramoff and Duke Cunningham scandals. My colleagues and I focused our energies on exposing corruption. But we missed crucial opportunities to reform the institution of Congress. As my party assumes a new majority in the House, we confront similar circumstances and have a second chance to begin the hard work of nursing our chamber back to strength.
Our decay as an institution began in 1995, when conservatives, led by then-Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.), carried out a full-scale war on government. Gingrich began by slashing the congressional workforce by one-third. He aimed particular ire at Congress’s brain, firing 1 of every 3 staffers at the Government Accountability Office, the Congressional Research Service and the Congressional Budget Office. He defunded the Office of Technology Assessment, a tech-focused think tank. Social scientists have called those moves Congress’s self-lobotomy, and the cuts remain largely unreversed.
Gingrich’s actions didn’t stop with Congress’s mind: He went for its arms and legs, too, as he dismantled the committee system, taking power from chairmen and shifting it to leadership. His successors as speaker have entrenched this practice. While there was a 35 percent decline in committee staffing from 1994 to 2014, funding over that period for leadership staff rose 89 percent.
This imbalance has defanged many of our committees, as bills originating in leadership offices and K Street suites are forced through without analysis or alteration. Very often, lawmakers never even see important legislation until right before we vote on it. During the debate over the Republicans’ 2017 tax package, hours before the floor vote, then-Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) tweeted a lobbying firm’s summary of GOP amendments to the bill before she and her colleagues had had a chance to read the legislation. A similar process played out during the Republicans’ other signature effort of the last Congress, the failed repeal of the Affordable Care Act. Their bill would have remade one-sixth of the U.S. economy, but it was not subject to hearings and was introduced just a few hours before being voted on in the dead of night. This is what happens when legislation is no longer grown organically through hearings and debate.
Congress does not have the resources to counter the growth of corporate lobbying. Between 1980 and 2006, the number of organizations in Washington with lobbying arms more than doubled, and lobbying expenditures between 1983 and 2013 ballooned from $200 million to $3.2 billion. A stunning 2015 study found that corporations now devote more resources to lobby Congress than Congress spends to fund itself. During the 2017 fight over the tax legislation, the watchdog group Public Citizen found that there were more than 6,200 registered tax lobbyists, vs. 130 aides on the Senate Finance Committee and the Joint Committee on Taxation, a staggering ratio approaching 50-to-1 disfavoring the American people. In 2016 in the House, there were just 1,300 aides on all committees combined, a number that includes clerical and communications workers. Our expert policy staffs are dwarfed by the lobbying class.
The practical impact of this disparity is impossible to overstate as lobbyists flood our offices with information on issues and legislation — information on which many lawmakers have become reliant. Just a few weeks ago, at the end of the session, I witnessed the biennial tradition of departing members of Congress relinquishing their suites to the incoming class. As lawmakers emptied their desks and cabinets, the office hallways were clogged with dumpsters overflowing with reports, white papers, massaged data and other materials, a perfect illustration of the proliferating junk dropped off by lobbyists.
Congress remade its committees in the 1970s to challenge Richard Nixon’s presidency and move power to rank-and-file lawmakers. Many segregationist chairmen were ousted and replaced by reformers, and committees and subcommittees were given flexibility to study issues under their purview. It’s no accident that some of the most significant legislation and oversight by Congress — Title IX; the Clean Water Act; the Watergate, Pike and Church hearings — came from this period. Congress had strengthened its pillars, hired smart people and accessed the best information available.
Following the reforms of the 1970s, the House held some 6,000 hearings per year. But eventually, the number of House hearings fell — from a tick above 4,000 in 1994 to barely more than 2,000 in 2014. On the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee, of which I am a member, oversight hearings are virtually nonexistent, as is developing legislation. We had no hearings in 2017 on the bill that would dramatically rewrite our tax code. And in the last Congress, we didn’t haul in any administration officials for a single public hearing on the renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement. Assessing this state of affairs in a 2017 report, the Congressional Management Foundation noted that committees “have been meeting less often than at almost any other time in recent history.” This neglect has become the norm. Instead, leadership, lobbyists and the White House decide how to solve policy problems.
Indeed, Congress has allowed the White House to dominate policymaking. Trade is a perfect illustration. Despite our current president’s braggadocio, most Americans would be surprised to learn ultimate trade power rests with Congress. But over and over we’ve willingly, even eagerly, handed off that responsibility given to us by Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution. President Trump’s power to renegotiate NAFTA was granted by Congress, as was his power to issue tariffs, allowed under the Trade Expansion Act of 1962. I disagreed with the decision in 2015 to give President Barack Obama — a member of my own party — fast-track power to advance the Trans-Pacific Partnership. During that debate, I sat stupefied as some members of our committee sought to award not only Obama but also future, unknown executives an extended and open-ended authority to make other deals. Congress was prepared to simply abdicate our job.
Perhaps the most striking instance of political interference I’ve seen in my career occurred in the Ways and Means Committee in 2014. Then-Chairman Dave Camp (R-Mich.) had toiled for months with Democrats, Republicans and budget experts to craft a comprehensive tax reform bill. I may not have loved the final product, but I respected the process. Republican leadership killed the proposal almost immediately after it was unveiled. The reason? They wanted to deny Obama a legislative accomplishment.
For decades, nearly every piece of legislation would reach the floor via committee, but beginning in the 1990s, the rate began to drop. In the 113th Congress, approximately 40 percent of big-ticket legislation bypassed committees. Before 1994, Camp would have informed the speaker of his proposal and brought it to the floor. Now, a chairman has much less power to realize meaningful legislation. Meanwhile, longstanding House rules have essentially blocked the amendment process on the floor, meaning bills can’t be modified by members of the wider chamber.
In addition to committee weakness, House lawmakers collectively employ fewer staffers today than they did in 1980. Between 1980 and 2016, when the U.S. population rose by nearly 97 million people and districts grew by 40 percent on average (about 200,000 people per seat), the number of aides in House member offices decreased, to 6,880, and total House staff increased less than 1 percent, to 9,420.
The first lobe of Congress’s brain we can bulk back up is the Congressional Research Service. The CRS provides studies from talented experts spanning law, defense, trade, science, industry and other realms. Some of our greatest oversight triumphs — Watergate, Iran-contra, the Freedom of Information Act — were achieved with the CRS’s support. Great nations build libraries, and much of the CRS is housed in the Library of Congress’s Madison Building.
But the CRS has become a political target. In 2012, a CRS report finding that tax cuts do not generate revenue enraged my Republican colleagues, who had the report pulled and began browbeating CRS experts. According to figures supplied by the CRS, the next year, the service saw its funding cut by $5 million, nearly 5 percent, recovering to previous levels only in 2015. (The CRS did get big funding bumps in recent years.)
The Congressional Budget Office and the Government Accountability Office, crown jewels of our body that provide nonpartisan budget projections, are similarly ignored or maligned for partisan purposes. Last year, when the CBO debunked claims that the GOP tax plan would create jobs, Republicans savaged the agency instead of improving the law. It reminded one of my colleagues, Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.), of an episode of “The Simpsons” in which Springfield residents, rescued from a hurtling comet, resolve to raze the town observatory.
The GAO also furnishes rich information to Congress on virtually any subject. Last year I requested and obtained a study on the live-events ticket market. It was a probing report with fresh data. Former senator Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), one of the most conservative lawmakers of the past generation, praised the GAO, estimating that every dollar of funding for the agency potentially saved Americans $90. Nonetheless, from 1980 to 2015, GAO staffing was cut by one-fifth.
While I never had the pleasure of collaborating with the Office of Technology Assessment, its reputation is legendary. Like the GAO, it operated as a think tank for Congress, tasked with studying science and technology issues. The OTA was Congress’s only agency solely conducting scholarly work on these issues until Gingrich disemboweled it. Today, few members of Congress know it ever existed.
The congressional hearings on big tech showcased my colleagues’ inability to wrap their heads around basic technologies. But our challenges don’t stop at Silicon Valley. Biomedical research, CRISPR, space exploration, artificial intelligence, election security, self-driving cars and, most pressingly, climate change are also on Congress’s plate.
And we are functioning like an abacus seeking to decipher string theory. By one estimate, the federal government spends $94 billion on information technology, while Congress spends $0 on independent assessments of technology issues. We are crying out for help to guide our thinking on these emerging areas. I have backed motions to bring the OTA back to life, and I was heartened last year when the House Appropriations Committee approved funding for a study on the feasibility of a new OTA.
The creation in the House rules of a Select Committee for the Modernization of Congress in this new session is a terrific beginning — and a signal that Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Rules Committee Chairman Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) understand the importance of these issues. Providing capital and staff to the institution should be a major priority in the 116th Congress. The budgets we approve fund 445 executive departments, agencies, commissions and other federal bodies. But for every $3,000 the United States spends per American on government programs, we allocate only $6 to oversee them.
After decades of disinvesting in itself, Congress has become captured by outside interests and partisans. Lawmakers should be guided by independent scholars, researchers and policy specialists. We must recognize our difficulties in comprehending an impossibly complex world. Undoing the mindless destruction of 1994 will take a lot of effort, but with investment, we can make Congress work again.

“Indeed, Congress has allowed the White House to dominate policymaking.”
Sort of reminds you of a Roman Senate, which surrendered its power to an Emperor.
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“Lawmakers should be guided by independent scholars, researchers and policy specialists.”
The WH dominates policymaking because Trump is smarter than his generals and has ‘great intelligence”. He is also smarter than independent scholars, researchers and policy specialists.
Aren’t we lucky?
The whole system is sick. “A stunning 2015 study found that corporations now devote more resources to lobby Congress than Congress spends to fund itself.” [No wonder our ‘small’ voices aren’t heard. No wonder ignorant, hurtful decisions are being made.]
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Yup.
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When, since at least the Bush years, has Congress ever not allowed the White House to dominate policymaking?
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I say it started more around the Clinton era…it got very big business friendly then. Just my opinion!
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You’re probably right, or maybe it goes back even further. I just remember how outraged liberals got about it during the Bush years, then proceeded to turn a blind eye to it during the Obama years, thus paving the way for the Trump years….
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Pacrell is my representative, a very decent and smart Congressperson. Corporate conservatives have been successfully playing a long game to nullify “govt” as a social force vulnerable to mass movements and citizen protests from below, which the 1960s/1970s gave rise to with some deep effects on corporate power. The long game of social nullification exempted the security apparatus from cuts(military, CIA, intelligence, etc.)and targeted using legislative power to transfer wealth from the public to the private sector and from the great majority of working-class and middle-class families to the top 1%. This was accomplished by drastically reducing the income taxes on profitable corporations and individuals of high net worth, who then had enormous revenue streams to buy the politicians, candidates, and policies they needed to control govt at all levels, while also having on hand a vast bank acct of unpaid wages available for venture capital–that is, to finance all the tech wonders, supertankers, fracking adventures, conglomerate takeovers of smaller companies, etc., with proviso that the super-rich also used their money and power to win govt subsidies for their ventures, like outsourcing production to cheapl-labor anti-union dictatorships abroad, on the public dime to nourish private profits. I could go on but you all get it, I’m sure–reason I post this is that the very bright and honest Pascrell ends his essay calling for independent research etc., when I would propose that the looting of America by corporate forces and the nullification of govt.’s social services and programs has been a 45 year ideological attack from the right which now requires a counter-attack from the left–namely, an explicit policy agenda of vastly raising corporate and individual tax rates on the super-rich(as AOC proposed), bans on fracking and massive investment in renewable energy, a public takeover of educ policy which disenfranchises charters while over-funding public schools and under-regulating them(no centralized testing), strong anti-racist program to stop police violence against young folks of color especially, persistent focus on gender-equity to produce national parity in male-female median wages soon, withdrawing the blank check to Israel’s illegal occupation and to Arab dictators like Sisi and MBS, among other progressive goals.
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We need a Senator Shore in office!
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Thankful for this sharing of the New Jersey veteran Congressman’s worries and I note that my Congressman Jim Himes is sited as someone with sympathy for properly funding and staffing of the research arms of Congress and creating new research divisions to keep up with today’s world issues. Kudos once again for our LA-picketing wise heroine Diane Ravitch.
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As I read this, I became disgusted at the negligence of legislators in whom voters have placed their trust. Instead of trying to “reform” education, we need to rewrite the rule book for Congress. Pascrell cannot be the only legislator aware of this morass. One of the first comments Ocasio-Cortez stated was that lobbyists were a big part of the legislative process, and they shouldn’t be. I can understand that the Republicans are in big business’ pocket, but too many Democrats have also become part of this corrupt process. Unless we have stricter rules about access to legislators, we can never have legitimate democratic representation. We need to invest in unbiased research and limit campaign funds in order to end the special interest arms race in Congress.
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One of the joys of being a young, idealistic staffer in Congress was having access to CRS reports. These were in-depth, non-partisan reports about every minute issue under the sun. I remember going to the room where the were kept and walking out with armloads of reports I would keep near my desk to refer to when having to write memos for the boss or answer constituent correspondence. I also used to send them to students—from high school to graduate school—when they requested information about anything…I mean anything. If you wanted to know about what oceanographers were doing in Antarctica, to education of girls in Mongolia, or how a tax credit affected the textile industry, you could find a CRS report. If there wasn’t one, you could call up CRS staffers and request one. And you knew you would get the best objective view of the issue that existed. If that function is diminished, then Congress really can’t make educated decisions about policy. The rampant ignorance that some members of Congress seem to revel in can be traced back to the diminution and politicization of CRS.
The other thing that struck me reading this is that people cannot really understand how dysfunctional Congress has become if they do not understand how the appropriations process is supposed to work. And I doubt if 2% of Americans understand it at all. Certainly the people who report on it, with very, very few exceptions, do. Prior to 1994, the appropriations process worked. Most bills were passed by the annual Sept. 30 deadline and the few issues that were sticking points were confined to one or two of the 13 appropriations bills—if at all—and continuing resolutions were passed for days or a week to get them ironed out. No departments were held hostage to political ideology. When the Gingrich-led Republicans took the House in 1994, they destroyed the process. They took power and authority away from the subcommittees and literally broke the system. John Kasich was one of the key members, as chair of the Budget Committee, who oversaw this destruction.
When I later worked for a national civic education organization and had contact with many of the best high school government teachers in the country, not ONE of them could either explain or understand how important the appropriations process was to the functioning of government. But it is the keystone of the American federal legislative process. When it fails to function, it has a ripple effect that paralyzes every phase of governing. There are hardly any members of Congress who are still in office who remember how it worked. Nancy Pelosi is one. Rep. Pascrell is not. But he’s figured it and explains it well.
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Thank you, GregB, for this illuminating post!!
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Thanks, Bob. I enjoy activating my civic ed chops every now and then. One mistake above, sentence should read: “Certainly the people who report on it, with very, very few exceptions, do not.”
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Your chops, there, are considerable, GregB. Thank you!
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This definitely explains how Citizens United got legs. But I ask…is anyone surprised about this? Those who are wondering how we could have let our politics get so bad that we have a foreign super power interfering with our elections while the middle class keeps shrinking may need to read this.
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Another super power, China, steals our intellectual property. A leading Chinese developer of AI is Kai-Fu Lee, a former American immigrant, that has worked for a number of American tech giants, returned to China to push ahead of Silicon Valley in tech innovation. Each of his engineers are from top American universities. We have a reverse brain drain on our hands.
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retired teacher
Our intellectual property. How do I get some of that intellectual property? Because apparently, you own some of it. I mean, I guess I own some of it too in my IRA. But I never thought of the Patents these companies held as my property. If anything the rental of that property costs Americans 100s of billions on patent-protected prescription drugs alone.
Most Americans, in fact, own none of that intellectual property.
It would be nice if Congress legislated using educated opinions from professionals working for the Government. However, we have gone way past that. I am afraid we have gone through the looking glass. And it did not start with Clinton it has been every elected Republican since Nixon and their congressional enablers. If your purpose is to destroy government in order to shift power to oligarchs. To shrink Government to the size of a pinhead; to maintain power by whatever means necessary the last thing you need is an educated opinion.
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Diane – your daily blogs are wonderful. Keep up the fight!
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Welcome to the idiocracy.
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Run by idiologues with their idiologies!
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Shared on FB
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Congress has not lost its way at all.
The American voter has . . . . .
Let’s correctly assess the genesis of why we are where we are. After all, we are the ones who have the numbers, even if we don’t have the dollars.
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I still haven’t decided who is worse, stone-faced Pence who is a fake religious zealot or the Orange Mussolini who has no brain.
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Just some of his government malfeasance: In 2015 Indiana Gov. Mike Pence signed a bill that made it ok for Indiana businesses to discriminate against LGBT customers. The backlash against the law was so intense he had to quickly sign a bill amending the legislation, which he claimed had been subject to “mischaracterizations.” Pence has previously supported the idea of using federal funding to treat people “seeking to change their sexual behavior,” but he didn’t state outright such funding should extend to electroshock therapy, which was part of anti-gay “aversion therapy” treatments until the American Psychological Association announced in 1973 that they would stop classifying homosexuality as a mental disorder.
Pence signed a law which gained national attention for prohibiting women from electing to have an abortion due to the race, gender, or disability of the fetus and the bill required that aborted fetuses receive what amounts to a funeral.
Pence blocked the resettlement of Syrian refugees in Indiana — and illegally tried to cut off federal aid to existing refugees. A federal judge blocked Pence’s action, writing that the governor’s order “clearly constitutes national origin discrimination” and “in no way directly, or even indirectly, promotes the safety of Indiana citizens.”
And, at a time when lawmakers are trying a new approach to drug problems, Pence signed a bill reinstating a mandatory minimum drug sentence, which stripped judges of discretion in drug sentencing.
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“I still haven’t decided who is worse, stone-faced Pence who is a fake religious zealot or the Orange Mussolini who has no brain.”
Never be fooled – Pence is far, far worse. For all his many, many faults, Trump reveals himself openly – his monstrosity is on full display, which is far easier to counter because you can see what’s happening (which is why the #NeverTrump Republicans and #Resistance neocons hate him – not because of what he does, but because it does it so nakedly). Pence is, like most well-schooled politicians, a snake in the grass – appearing to be “statesmanlike” and “reasonable” in his monstrosity.
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Agreed!
Also, Trump is motivated by vanity and greed. Getting retweets, or applause at rallies, seems to keep him happy.
Pence is an extreme right-wing ideologue and religious zealot, he would relentlessly attack civil rights at home, and aggressively pursue war with Syria, Iran, and beyond abroad.
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Pence is a stone-faced hypocrite.
Here is Pastor Pence’s 1998 holy advice on impeaching Bill Clinton:
…Further, the Presidents repeated lies to the American people in this matter compound the case against him as they demonstrate his failure to protect the institution of the presidency as the ‘inspiring supreme symbol of all that is highest in our American ideals’. Leaders affect the lives of families far beyond their own ‘private life’. In the Bible story of Esther we are told of a king who was charged to put right his own household because there would be “no end of disrespect and discord” among the families of the kingdom if he failed to do so. In a day when reckless extramarital sexual activity is manifesting itself in our staggering rates of illegitimacy and divorce, now more than ever, America needs to be able to look to her First Family as role models of all that we have been and can be again.
The challenge for the Republican Congress lies in the fact that the polls may be right. The American people may deeply wish to move on and put this unpleasantness behind us. Regrettably, the Constitution does not permit such a national denial. If the President does not resign, the Republican Congress must impeach him even if it costs them their majority because the laws of this republic charge them with the duty to so act. Absent an uncharacteristic act of selflessness by the President, it is left to the Republicans to live up to their label and defend the laws and institutions of this Republic. If our leaders flinch at this responsibility, they would do well to heed the Proverb “if a ruler listens to lies, all his officials become wicked”. Our leaders must either act to restore the luster and dignity of the institution of the Presidency or we can be certain that this is only the beginning of an even more difficult time for our land. For the nation to move on, the President must move out.
https://bit.ly/2DkCOaM
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In a parallel universe, beginning in the late 1970s State Departments of Education began hemorrhaging expertise in the same way. When I began my career as a Superintendent in the early 1980s it was possible to call someone in the State Department who could offer guidance on an array of issues from staff development to transportation to school construction to curriculum. While many of us in administration and many school boards lamented the “bureaucrats in the State Department”, it wasn’t until they were cut from the State budget and/or retired that we began to realize what we missed.
One of the reasons the Common Core was appealing to Governors was that it provided off-the-shelf “expertise” from contractors. So instead of having to hire staff who understood curriculum, the districts could call a 1-800 number and talk to someone who worked for a vendor to get the information they needed. The ultimate result of State Department cuts, then, was an open door for the Common Core vendors to replace the “bureaucrats at the State Department”.
Smaller school districts in particular need expertise in many areas… and if that expertise is not available at the State level they will outsource it elsewhere. Cutting “bureaucrats” opens the door for the privatization of expertise… and lobbyists and salespersons are very happy to offer it.
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” Lawmakers should be guided by independent scholars, researchers and policy specialists. We must recognize our difficulties in comprehending an impossibly complex world. ”
I dunno what a policy specialist is, but it’s a statement grasping the essence of what’s needed.
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It’s not only Congress and Trump who have lost their brains. What is the punishment for caring about immigrants and saving lives?
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Arizona: Four women convicted after leaving food and water in desert for migrants
A federal judge has found four women guilty of entering a national wildlife refuge without a permit as they sought to place food and water in the Arizona desert for migrants.
US magistrate Judge Bernardo Velasco’s ruling on Friday marked the first conviction against humanitarian aid volunteers in a decade.
The four found guilty of misdemeanours in the recent case were volunteers for No More Deaths, which said in a statement the group had been providing life-saving aid to migrants.
The volunteers include Natalie Hoffman, Oona Holcomb, Madeline Huse and Zaachila Orozco-McCormick…
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/jan/19/arizona-four-women-convicted-after-leaving-food-and-water-in-desert-for-migrants?CMP=share_btn_link
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This Native American elder showed a lot more poise and education than the rude youths who assume to ‘know it all”. These students learned from Trump how to act towards other cultures. Dumbing down is working.
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Students In ‘MAGA’ Hats Mock Native American Elder At Indigenous Peoples March
A ground of young students wearing “Make American Great Again” hats continuously ridiculed a Native American elder at an Indigenous Peoples March in Washington, DC on January 19. Nathan Phillips, an Omaha tribe elder and Vietnam veteran said he heard the boys yelling “build the wall, build the wall”…
https://www.onenewspage.com.au/n/World/1zkg35yeh9/Video-of-US-teens-taunting-Native-American-draws.htm
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One more lie that was caught by Factcheck.org.
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Trump Wrong About Wall Effect in El Paso
By Robert Farley
Posted on January 18, 2019
Trump, Jan. 14: In El Paso “… it was one of the most dangerous cities in the country. A wall was put up. It went from being one of the most dangerous cities in the country to one of the safest cities in the country overnight. Overnight. Does that tell you something?”
El Paso has never been “one of the most dangerous cities in the country.” The city had the third lowest violent crime rate among 35 U.S. cities with a population over 500,000 in 2005, 2006 and 2007 – before construction of a 57-mile-long fence started in mid-2008.
There was no “overnight” drop in violent crimes in El Paso after “a wall was put up.” In fact, the city’s violent crime rate increased 5.5 percent from 2007 to 2010 — the years before and after construction of the fence, which was completed in mid-2009.
https://www.factcheck.org/2019/01/trump-wrong-about-wall-effect-in-el-paso/
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There is a lot of power if the federal workers organize.
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Federal Workers, Rise Up!
By Michael Moore, Michael Moore’s Facebook Page
19 January 19
What would a nonviolent mass uprising and revolt by 800,000 federal workers look like? Sit-ins. Takeover buildings. Shut down all air travel. A human “wall” around the White House. Hound Mitch McConnell so that he has no sleep, no lunches with lobbyists. Refuse to show up for work that you’re not being paid for. Local rallies in front of federal buildings all over the country. I’d join that! Wouldn’t you?
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Too bad Alec Baldwin isn’t the real Trump. He makes much more sense.
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Deal or No Deal Cold Open – SNL
Saturday Night Live
Published on Jan 19, 2019
Saturday Night Live has been on hiatus since before President Donald Trump’s shutdown showdown started.
SNL opened its first show of 2019 with a skit that found Trump playing Deal or No Deal over the re-opening of the government.
Steve Harvey (Kenan Thompson) hosts a special Deal or No Deal where President Trump (Alec Baldwin) fields offers from members of Congress, like Nancy Pelosi (Kate McKinnon), Chuck Schumer (Alex Moffat), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (Melissa Villaseñor) and Maxine Waters (Leslie Jones), to end the government shutdown.
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May Trump continue to enjoy McDonald’s hamburgers, french fries, Doritos, Oreos, chocolate cake and drink gallons of Diet Coke.
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Trump – McDonald’s Commercial (2002)
Brand X
Published on Aug 19, 2016
The Donald comes face-to-face with a very iconic McDonald’s character (no, not The Ronald!) in this commercial from 2002.
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This is a good description of the Orange Buffoon.
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A look back on two dismal years of the Trump administration
Max Boot, The Washington Post
Trump’s presidency so far can be summed up with four bleak words: Racism. Authoritarianism. Incompetence. Megalomania….
Racism: …His views are, in fact, almost indistinguishable from those of Rep. Steve King, R.-Iowa, who was stripped of his committee assignments for his advocacy of white supremacy. …
Authoritarianism: Trump fawned over foreign dictators. He said Russian President Vladimir Putin is “very much of a leader,” Chinese President Xi Jinping is “a highly respected and powerful representative of his people,” Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is doing an “unbelievable job,” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is “getting very high marks,” and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is “very open and terrific.” These are five of the worst human rights violators on the planet…
Incompetence: If Trump has a saving grace, it is that he is so incompetent: A more cunning populist would be far more dangerous. His tweets are riddled with spelling, grammar and factual mistakes…
Megalomania: If measured by conventional metrics, the first two years of the Trump presidency have been a dismal failure. But if Trump’s chief goal is to make himself the center of the world’s attention, a president who is obsessed with TV ratings has succeeded beyond his wildest dreams. Even those who hate Trump can’t stop talking about him. May our next president be extremely boring…
https://www.newstimes.com/opinion/article/A-look-back-on-two-dismal-years-of-the-Trump-13547929.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Desktop)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
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How sad that a ‘Trump induced teenager’ would denigrate a Native American whose ancestors lived on this land a long time before whites ever appeared on the scene. [Check out the totally disgusting comments. Trump has distorted the beliefs of way too many in this country,] Of course this was aired on CNN…Trump’s ‘fake’ news station.
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Native American mocked by ‘MAGA’ hat-wearing teens speaks out
CNN
Published on Jan 19, 2019
Nathan Phillips, a Native American elder with the Omaha tribe and Vietnam War veteran, shares how he felt after he was mocked by a crowd of teenagers wearing “Make America Great Again” hats during the Indigenous Peoples March in Washington.
https://youtu.be/Jvbsqk0HOWw
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Now conservatives are saying that ‘the facts don’t matter’ to the L. Great thinking. No wonder these kids were rude. Look at the community and what it inspires.
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After Viral Video, Families of Covington Are Swiftly Circling to Protect Their Boys
A Catholic high school in Kentucky has been thrust into a firestorm that touched seemingly every raw nerve in this polarized country — race, President Trump and the behavior of young white men.
…The community south of the Ohio River began to see itself as facing a politically motivated siege. Families and churches swiftly circled to protect their young men.
Bill Gerdes first heard about what happened when the students pulled into the school’s parking lot after the drive back from Washington. His son, who participated in the March for Life, had filmed the incident.
Using an expletive to express his outrage at the news media for its coverage of the students, Mr. Gerdes called the events a “nonstory.”
“It should be reported how great these young men did in the face of these protesters who were trying to bait them,” he said in a phone interview on Monday, calling the events a political attack against Catholics for their opposition to abortion rights.
“The left has an agenda,” he said. “Facts don’t really matter to them if it goes against their agenda.”…
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Fact Checker • Analysis
President Trump made 8,158 false or misleading claims in his first two years
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