Scott Walker's budget epitomizes the Koch-Republican "vision for
America" and not at all unique among states ruled by Koch-governors with
Republican legislatures.
If idiot Americans were unsure, or confused, about what kind of damage
the Koch Congress intended to wreak on the nation by way of “dynamically scored”
budget cuts, they should be aware by now after Republicans released
what can only be called a Draconian austerity attack on domestic
programs. The House budget leaves no domestic program unharmed, and
increases tax breaks for the rich and more money for the defense
industry including racist warmongering Israelis. More on that in another
article.
The only remote hope to thwart austerity madness at
the national level is a united Democratic caucus in the Senate. But with
Republicans planning a “reconciliation” plot, the only firewall to a
devastating austerity attack is President Obama’s veto pen. Sadly, in
Republican-controlled states there is no firewall, and since the Koch
brothers own and operate GOP governors and legislatures, there is some
seriously Draconian cuts on the horizon; none as harsh and damaging than
Wisconsin’s Koch governor’s attack on public education.
Scott Walker’s budget epitomizes the Koch-Republican “vision for America”
and not at all unique among states ruled by Koch-governors with
Republican legislatures. In Wisconsin, because Walker has driven the
state’s deficit over the $2 billion mark with tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy, he intends on slashing yet another $300 million
from the University of Wisconsin system over two years, and for fun
will make seriously Draconian cuts to health care and food stamps. All
to preserve tax cuts for the rich and corporations and funnel hundreds
of millions of dollars to build a professional basketball stadium. It
is why the Koch Congress lusts to change Medicaid and food stamps to
block grants; so Koch governors can appropriate them according to the
Kochs’ “vision for America;” a vision that does not include a public
education system.
Walker’s cuts already have colleges across the state
suffering, and now they are bracing for the worst funding cuts to
levels not seen in twenty years. Thus far, at just one campus, 325 staff
and faculty members were offered “go away packages” which is over 25% of UW-Eau-Claire campus. Another campus reports having to completely “eliminate several entire majors” regardless of how many students are already enrolled, and will have to layoff half the school’s departments.
Public primary schools across Wisconsin will fair no better and will lose
about $127 million more in education aid next year that a three
decade-long teacher said is beyond “breathtaking;” particularly since
public schools they are “still reeling” from Walker’s 2011 deep
education cuts. Walker, like most Republican governors will use money
from the education cuts for property tax relief specifically slated for the wealthiest people in the state. State educators say Wisconsin schools already suffer from “Depression-like economic conditions”
such as overcrowded classrooms and epic cuts to music, art, and
physical education programs. It is important to reiterate that the Koch
brothers want public education eliminated completely; this is just a
start and a portent of what Republicans intend to do nationwide.
Wisconsin is just one of several states preparing their residents for
what is certainly a nation without public education.
In Illinois, residents are organizing against Governor Bruce Rauner’s education cuts to take funding levels back to the 1950s
despite the student population is three times larger today. Like in
Wisconsin and Kansas, the education cuts, along with healthcare and food
stamp cuts, are an attempt to cover in excess of a $6.2 billion budget deficit. At the University level, officials already predicted
there will be “hundreds of staff cuts” at campuses and complete
elimination of the pharmacy and flight schools. Students are pushing for
the cuts to be distributed fairly among college presidents and
chancellors who earn salaries in excess of $400,000 a year, but more
education damage is possible laying off hundreds of professors making a
tenth of that.
Like other Koch-governed states, Republicans could
fund schools and keep bloated-salaried administrators and pathetically
underpaid teachers employed if they eliminated tax cuts for the rich and
corporations. But that is not something the Kochs will allow at the
state level any more than the federal level because where the public
education system is concerned, they want it eliminated entirely; a goal
Republicans adamantly share.
Another Koch governor, Louisiana’s Piyush Jindal
intends to impose more than $200 million more in education cuts to cover
the more than $1.6 billion
budget deficit; a direct result of “massive tax cuts” for corporations
and the rich. In fact, legislators on both sides of the partisan divide
have begged Piyush to consider ending just a fraction of the epic tax
cuts, but like the Koch-devotee in Kansas Sam Brownback, Jindal said
ending any tax cuts is off the table. He told an audience in Washington
that, “I’ll veto any tax increase and I’ll veto any budget that includes
a tax increase.”
It is noteworthy that Brownback, Jindal, Walker, and
Rauner, all Koch Republicans, are leading states that are running
monumental budget deficits due to tax cuts for the rich and
corporations. Every one of the Koch-owned Republicans are drastically
cutting education, healthcare, and food stamps to cover the budget holes
and not one of the Koch acolytes will consider ending tax breaks for
the wealthy and corporations. It is far easier, and part of the Koch
vision, to impose massive cuts to education funding and fire teachers
that, as a value-added bonus, keeps the next generation of residents as
monumentally stupid as the voters that elect them in the first place.
What
is happening in Wisconsin, like Kansas, Louisiana, and many, many other
Republican states is a well-conceived and executed plot to keep a
perpetual stupidity-loop among the voting populace in place. The recent
midterm elections fairly prove that cutting education is working to
perfection for Republicans who will stay in power until they fulfill the
Koch brothers’ goal of eliminating public education in America; even If
they have to do it in one bankrupt Republican state at a time.
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