Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Both coal miners and ‘Detroit single mom’ need services

- Kathleen Parker Kathleen Parker Columnist

From Ronald Reagan’s “welfare queen” to Donald Trump’s “Detroit single mom,” the unmarried mother remains a constant fascinatio­n to Republican­s wielding budget-cutting scalpels.

Whereas Reagan was propagatin­g a stereotype of the fraudulent abuser of public largesse when he popularize­d the term in 1976, framing welfare policy thereafter, Trump’s budget blueprint purportedl­y is aimed at helping single mothers (in Detroit, for some reason) by building a better military.

If you’re having trouble connecting the dots, welcome to the fracas.

The budget, which includes massive cuts to spending in the arts, sciences (including medical research) and diplomacy — mostly in the interest of increasing military spending by $54 billion and subsidizin­g that blasted wall — was designed by asking: Can we ask the single mother in Detroit to pay for this?

This is how White House budget director Mick Mulvaney explained the administra­tion’s calculatio­ns on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”

“One of the questions we asked was, can we really continue to ask a coal miner in West Virginia or a single mom in Detroit to pay for these programs?” Mulvaney queried. “The answer was no. We can ask them to pay for defense, and we will, but we can’t ask them to continue to pay for the Corporatio­n for Public Broadcasti­ng.”

Are there really no single mothers in Detroit listening to NPR’s “Fresh Air”? Or, whose kids watch “Sesame Street”?

The end objective, Mulvaney said, is to keep Trump’s campaign promises while not increasing the budget deficit. Among those promises: Build the wall (delete: I will make Mexico pay for that wall); and beef up national security.

And, of course, the ultimate goal in whittling away programs that serve the poor or protect the environmen­t is to Make America “Great” Again.

Before we parse the meaning of the word “great,” a few facts: The proposed budget, which is really just a collection of bad ideas or suggestion­s, doesn’t stand a chance of congressio­nal approval as is. To pass the Senate, over which Republican­s hold a relatively slim majority (52-48), it would require Democratic support.

Although many Republican­s also oppose some of the more draconian cuts, others want yet more defense spending. Both Mac Thornberry, R-Texas, and John McCain, R-Ariz., chairmen of the House and Senate Armed Services Committees, respective­ly, want $640 billion rather than the measly $603 billion proposed.

Given Trump’s commitment to a military buildup — and the formerly silent Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s recent remarks that military action may be necessary to end North Korea’s nuclear games — investing in defense might not be a bad gamble.

But hope for a cancer cure might be. The National Institutes of Health — the nation’s premier research institutio­n — is threatened with losing about 20 percent of its budget. The budget would eliminate four NASA missions, including the Deep Space Climate Observator­y, which monitors climate change from its position a million miles from Earth. Collect informatio­n that might suggest the need for environmen­tal regulation­s? LOL.

Greatness, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder — and Trump’s idea of both tends toward reactionar­y excessiven­ess unburdened by history’s future judgment. Besides, what do NASA missions have to do with coal miners or single moms?

Not one thing, other than a future for all those fatherless children in Detroit — and the coal miner’s daughter, who probably needs essential social services more than she does that blasted wall.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States