the Pathkeeper—blogging about the worlds in which we live
We are building a Maginot Line across our southern border with Mexico to control illegal immigration from Latin American nations, primarily to prevent crime and protect jobs.
Of course, these immigrants, in most cases, "take" jobs for which most US citizens do not seek. Middle-class Americans decry the large US companies that lay off skilled manufacturing and IT workers by outsourcing those positions outside our country. Voters are very responsive to complaints by Tea Party groups and Republicans that the Obama administration and Democrats in general have not yet overcome the loss of jobs that continues from the Great Recession.
It seems, though, that approaches offered by Democrats and Republicans to resolving the jobs crisis—and this is a jobs crisis—are contradictory and counter-productive. As a body, Republicans are using this crisis to backup their demand to continue the famed tax cuts for the wealthiest 1% of taxpayers that they passed during their Majority during the previous Administration. Democrats, on the other hand, have actually offered legislation to reduce the tax incentives that encourage outsourcing.
Both the US Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers oppose S3816. The Chamber declared it would be best to extend the Bush Administration tax cuts of 2001 and 2003. The NAM complained that the bill would increase taxes, lower competitiveness, and result in fewer US jobs.
Republicans in the US Senate have blocked consideration of S3816, the “[rokdownload menuitem="222" downloaditem="40" direct_download="true"]Creating American Jobs and Ending Offshoring Act[/rokdownload],” offered by Senator Richard Durbin (D-Ill). The bill that would worked to curtail job outsourcing by US companies by:
Republicans scorned the legislation as political “gamesmanship.” The bill failed to advance on a vote of 53-45 to invoke cloture (that would have ended a filibuster)—a minimum of 60 affirmative votes were needed. Senator Durban commented:
I wish this election would be a simple referendum on the debate we're having on the floor of the Senate right now.
Yes. On July 29, House Republicans successfully opposed HR 5893, the “[rokdownload menuitem="222" downloaditem="41" direct_download="true"]Investing in American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act of 2010[/rokdownload],” introduced by Rep. Sander M. Levin (D-MI). The bill would have reformed the tax exemptions provided businesses on income from foreign sources. These provisions include:
The National Association of Manufacturers, the US Chamber of Commerce, and Americans for Tax Reform all oppose this legislation. ATR declared, in fact, that:
A more rational system would tax on a territorial basis (only seeking to tax that income earned in the United States).

I am attracted to the notion of pathways as a metaphor for life. I turned the metaphor into reality by my attraction to hiking the Appalachian Trail.

Pathkeeper follows divergent paths, such as: Short stories, History, Politics, Community issues, Philosophy & Theology, and just plain stuff.
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