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B Calm

(28,762 posts)
23. By Clint C. Gold - Republicans, name one bill that helps the working man?
Sun Jun 7, 2015, 10:13 AM
Jun 2015

CLINT C. GOLD
10/24/1999
Tulsa World

Not too long ago, my wife and I attended a TV football
party in south Tulsa. With a lopsided score, the
conversation turned to a livelier subject -- politics. The
crowd was, of course, top-heavy with Republicans. With each
point expressed their faces became more flushed, eyes
bulging a little more and veins popping in their foreheads
as they railed against the liberal programs.

Finally a lone, liberal voice asked: "Will you people
name me one bill your party ever passed to help the working
man of this country?" The question created much din and
clamor, and someone sputtered, "Well, what have the
Democrats done?"

The liberal responded with a few programs and was
interrupted by howling and disdain. He noted that he had
not promised they would like the programs and he asked to
complete his statement -- a difficult task to ask of
Republicans.

He spoke of Social Security; Medicare-Medicaid; Peace
Corps; unemployment insurance; welfare (for the poor and
corporate); civil rights; student grant and loan programs;
safety laws (OSHA); environmental laws; prevailing wage
laws; right to collective bargaining (which brought about
paid medical insurance, paid vacations, pensions, etc.);
workers" compensation; Marshall Plan; flood-disaster
insurance; School Lunch Program; women"s rights.

He spoke of the Fair Labor Standards Act, which
established a minimum wage, instituted child labor laws,
and set up time-and-a-half pay for over a 40-hour week.

He mentioned FHA-HUD with its public housing, urban
renewal and 44 million residential homes (before WWII
almost 70 percent of our nation were renters; by the 1970s
this had been reversed). And farm-conservation
subsidies -- USDA programs, Farmers Home Administration (the
bankers didn't want to make rural loans), small
flood-control lakes (more than 3,000 in Oklahoma alone),
rural water districts, rural electricity (REA).

The GI Bill was passed, which the Republicans at the
time bitterly opposed. They were salivating over millions
of returning veterans to hire as cheap labor. More than 8
million have used college benefits, creating millions of
entrepreneurs; most of us had never dreamed of college. For
the unemployed GI, there was $20 a week for 52 weeks to
help get started (a lot of money in those days). The
Veterans Administration provided more than 2 million home
loans.

For the bankers at the football party, it was pointed
out that the liberals saved their industry with the
creation of FDIC and FSLIC, insuring their deposits, and
saved Wall Street with the establishment of the Securities
Exchange Commission.

The oil men came on bended knees to FDR at a time when
East Texas oil was 4 cents a barrel and begged him to save
their industry. He did; prorationing overturned the rule of
capture and the days of flush production were over.
Prorating has served this great industry (and nation)
well.

And the list went on and on, but of course this group
didn't let him get halfway through. He noted they were
weary, inattentive, so again he challenged them to offer up
any Republican legislation examples.

I'm sure your party has authored one or two comparable
bills from time to time, but I can't think of any, and
apparently you can't either. What it boils down to is this:
the liberals dragged you into the 20th century scratching
and screaming with your heels in the mud, fighting anything
that"s progressive, everything that"s made this country
great. You Republicans have never understood that the
spending power of blue-collar workers, obtained through
Democrats and unions, is what really made this country
great. You really believe "The Good Life" was obtained from
your own endeavors. You cloak your greed in religion and
patriotism, railing against any form of tax, never
comprehending that these programs have benefited all of us
and our country."

Well, I almost didn't make it out of the house. My wife
and I didn't even get to see the end of the football game.

If Reps. Steve Largent or J.C. Watts had been there,
perhaps politics would never have come up, only the game
plan ... pity.

Clint C. Gold is former mayor of Moore and a retired
savings and loan executive.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

The ones where they lose elections. Archae Jun 2015 #1
shrugs* retrowire Jun 2015 #2
They do some things that help the 99 percent. Um..Halley's comet comes to mind. BlueJazz Jun 2015 #3
I'm 58. HooptieWagon Jun 2015 #4
That depends on what you define as "conservative." NuclearDem Jun 2015 #5
Wasnt the Earned Income Tax Credit originally a GOP idea? DJ13 Jun 2015 #6
Don't know if it originated with them, but they've trumpeted it... JHB Jun 2015 #21
Well, you could say sadoldgirl Jun 2015 #7
I think it's more based on what came out of the Massachusetts legislature - 85% Democratic pampango Jun 2015 #15
can't remember at all why you were once a republican? bettyellen Jun 2015 #8
Your deep knowledge of my past is flattering. MannyGoldstein Jun 2015 #17
No answer? Just funny how suddenly you don't understand the attraction to RW opinions when you've bettyellen Jun 2015 #24
I've been pretty clear as to why, more than 30 years ago, MannyGoldstein Jun 2015 #25
Search doesn't work with phones. See how easy it can be to give a straight answer? bettyellen Jun 2015 #26
LOL. MannyGoldstein Jun 2015 #27
never had such luck with outside searches but I'll take your word for it. bettyellen Jun 2015 #29
I think any positive idea they passed was already in the works. joshcryer Jun 2015 #9
Running Barry Goldwater MFrohike Jun 2015 #10
Yup nadinbrzezinski Jun 2015 #11
You make a good point about Teddy Roosevelt. joshcryer Jun 2015 #13
Didn't Teddy call himself a Progressive? MannyGoldstein Jun 2015 #18
There were some very different political constellations at those times... JHB Jun 2015 #22
obamacare was a product based on conservative principles Demonaut Jun 2015 #12
Good point! MannyGoldstein Jun 2015 #19
If they ever have, it was by accident Warpy Jun 2015 #14
Depends on how you define "worked." malthaussen Jun 2015 #16
Medicare Part D? Nye Bevan Jun 2015 #20
"Not perfect" in the cop out way of saying a shrink the pig boondoggle of epic proportions TheKentuckian Jun 2015 #32
By Clint C. Gold - Republicans, name one bill that helps the working man? B Calm Jun 2015 #23
!!! MannyGoldstein Jun 2015 #28
Should be a truth-telling campaign theme for every dem seeking wiggs Jun 2015 #31
I hate to say this but IMO revenue sharing (Nixon) was a pretty good program. However, I jwirr Jun 2015 #30
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