Thursday, April 17, 2008

House Approves Jubilee Debt Relief Act

The U. S. House of Representatives stood up and reaffirmed the compassion and wisdom which characterizes the American people by voting 285 to 132 in favor of the Jubilee Act yesterday.

Let me thank those of you that responded to my e-mail and contacted your Congressperson -- this is truly what Democracy is all about!

Now the bill moves to the Senate and we will have to press the case once again. But first I encourage you to take a moment and thank your Congressperson for his or her vote ( assuming it was the right vote) We should also give special thanks to Reps. Barney Frank (D-MA), Maxine Waters (D-CA) and Spencer Bachus (R-AL) for their leadership. The vote yesterday was particularly appropriate because it occurred on the day Pope Benedict XVI arrived in Washington, D.C.

While we celebrate the victory today -- keep in mind that according to the The Center for Individual Freedom opponents to this bill generated nearly 30,000 letters to Congress urging their Representatives to vote against the bill.

Concerned that American tax dollars may go to fund debt relief initiatives that benefit corrupt foreign rulers and dictators they see this measure as counterproductive and will lead to waste and greater indebtedness.

But we must keep in mind that according to the World Bank, more than 10 million children in developing countries die every year before the age of five, most from preventable illnesses. More than a billion people in developing countries do not have access to safe drinking water, and approximately 100 million school-aged children do not attend school. In Sub-Saharan Africa, 41 percent of the population lives on less than $1 a day.

Debt cancellation has proven to be effective at freeing up resources for poverty reduction. In my last post I mentioned Uganda but here are two more success stories: Cameroon is using its savings of $29.8 million from debt cancellation in 2006 for national poverty reduction priorities, including infrastructure, social sector and governance reforms. Zambia is using its savings of $23.8 million to increase spending on agricultural projects and to eliminate fees for healthcare in rural areas. Debt relief has and can make a difference to real people struggling for a better existence.

As I have said before ending poverty will not occur simply because we provide debt relief. The U.S. government must also work to raise the level of education and healthcare in these countries. Additionally we must become partners with in trade and economic development. Through this type of involvement we will also be helping to end the corruption that concerns the opponents of aid. Once again, this is the right thing to do and is in our best long-term interests.

Honor Roll of Shame:
(Iowa - Indiana and Illinois Reps that opposed the measure)
As always, Number 1 on my hit parade is Rep. Steve King (R-IA). Out there in western Iowa, King is by far the state's worst Congressperson and is an embarrassment. King was the only Iowa representative to oppose the measure -- it figures!

In Illinois only Donald Manzullo and Tim Johnson opposed the measure. Johnson's vote is no surprise given the district he represents.

Most of the representatives in Indiana went the wrong way. Only the two representatives in Northwest Indiana and the southern most district supported the bill. Indiana's representatives in the 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th and 8th district all opposed the bill.

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Gallup Polls - Politics

Take Action

This section highlights key legislation and links for you to contact your elected officials.

Health care reform is front and center on the nation's agenda. The group Sojourners has an interesting "Christian Health Care Creed" that can be sent to Congress. It in part says:

"I believe that Christians should seek to bring health and well-being (shalom) to the society into which God has placed us, for a healthy society benefits all members (Jeremiah 29:7).

I believe in a time when all will live long and healthy lives, from infancy to old age (Isaiah 65:20), and "mourning and crying and pain will be no more" (Revelation 21:4). My heart breaks for my brothers and sisters who watch their loved ones suffer, or who suffer themselves, because they cannot afford a trip to the doctor. I stand with them in their suffering."

A Little This..A Little That...

06/20/08
Gallup Poll: Currently, 79% of Americans hold negative views about the economy, while 13% hold mixed views, and only 5% hold positive views. In comparison, 61% of Americans held a negative view at the begining of the year, 21% held a mixed view and 16% were positive.

04/19/08
Gallup Daily: Hillary Clinton now receives 46% of the support of Democrats nationally, compared to 45% for Barack Obama, marking the first time Obama has not led in Gallup's daily tracking since March 18-20.

04/06/08...The Milwaukee Brewers are starting the 2008 Season where they belong atop the NL Central. Ben Sheets was dazzling Sunday as he helped the club sweep the Giants with a 7-0 victory.

02/06/08...A bit of old news, but the casual dining chains continue to struggle as folks like me have to look twice at our spending habits due to the high price of gas, groceries and a slumping housing market. As you know, IHOP bought Applebee's last November -- a deal that I for one questioned. Applebee's sales continue to decline and that does not bode well for the future of the chain. The management strategy for IHOP is the franchise model so the company-owned Applebee's may be on their way out faster than you can say "baby back." With the debt of the purchase, you can imagine they're under pressure to turn things around or else. Look for IHOP to make a deal with a private equity firm to take the stores off their books. The National Restaurant Association recently issued the following release: Restaurant Performance Index Declined for the Fourth Consecutive Month in December

01/26/08...The Civil Rights Project at UCLA published astyd discussing the resegregation of the public schools. The report finds that segregation of African Americans is back to what it was in the late 1960s. The only kinds of communities with high levels of school integration are the nation’s rural areas and towns, once the center of the most intense resistance. By contrast, extreme segregation is concentrated in the largest metropolitan areas. Read the report: The Last Have Become First; Rural and Small Town America Lead the Way on Desegregation

01/04/08...Federal efforts to eliminate racial and ethnic disparities in health care are underfunded and indicate a lack of seriousness about accomplishing the goal, according to former U.S. Surgeon General David Satcher. You can view Dr. Satcher discussing health disparities and current federal legislative efforts and the factors that may influence the outcome of these efforts.

12/31/07...The U.S. Census Bureau says that on this New Year's Eve, morethan 303 million Americans of all ages are ready to greet the year 2008. Fifty years ago, the U.S. population was just over 171 million. A centuryago, it was 87 million. To show how fast the nation is growing, by thistime tomorrow, there will be some 7,800 new babies on hand to welcome the new year.

12/28/07...Sales of new one-family houses in November 2007 were 9.0 percent below the revised October rate and is 34.4 percent below the November 2006 rate. The median sales price of new houses sold in November 2007 was $239,100; the average sales price was $293,300, according to estimates released jointly today by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

The outlook for the restaurant industry continued to weaken in November. Forty-four percent of operators reported a same-store sales decline in November, up from 36 percent who reported similarly in October, according to the National Restaurant Association's comprehensive index of restaurant activity. The index fell to its lowest level in more than four years. FYI...News Report on the Casual Dining Sector