I am inclined to contact my congressman with the following suggestion:
1. Cut a check to each state, county and municipal goverment of an
amount determined by the population and per capita income of the
jurisdiction in question.
2. Let them spend it however they choose.
3. Turn your attention to matters most efficaciously persued by the
central government (war and diplomacy, general income re-distribution,
general macroeconomic policy, guarding the borders, promotion of safety
and probity in commercial transactions that occur accross state lines
and the international frontier, &c.) and leave the more particular
units of government to superintend medical care and education.
IW
I. Woodward
Serials Office
Colgate University Libraries
Case Library and Geyer Center for Information Technology
13 Oak Drive
Hamilton, N.Y. 13346
Ph.: 315-228-7306
Fax: 315-228-7029
-----Original Message-----
From: SERIALST: Serials in Libraries Discussion Forum
[mailto:SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU] On Behalf Of Stevan Harnad
Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2007 12:17 PM
To: SERIALST@LIST.UVM.EDU
Subject: [SERIALST] Bush vetoes LHHS appropriations bill
** Apologies for Cross-Posting **
>>From Peter Suber's Open Access News:
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2007/11/bush-vetoes-lhhs-appropriatio
ns-bill.html
>The headline says it all, but here's some detail from Jennifer Loven
>for
the Associated Press:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2007/11/13/national/w07
4425S75.DTL&type=politics
"President Bush, escalating his budget battle with Congress, on
Tuesday vetoed a spending measure for health and education programs
prized by congressional Democrats....
"The president's action was announced on Air Force One as Bush flew
to New Albany, Ind., on the Ohio River across from Louisville, Ky., for
a speech criticizing the Democratic-led Congress on its budget
priorities.
"In excerpts of his remarks released in advance by the White House,
Bush hammered Democrats for what he called a tax-and-spend
philosophy....
"More than any other spending bill, the $606 billion education and
health measure defines the differences between Bush and majority
Democrats. The House fell three votes short of winning a veto-proof
margin as it sent the measure to Bush.
"Rep. David Obey, the Democratic chairman of the House
Appropriations Committee, pounced immediately on Bush's veto.
"'This is a bipartisan bill supported by over 50 Republicans," Obey
said. "There has been virtually no criticism of its contents. It is
clear the only reason the president vetoed this bill is pure politics."
"Since winning re-election, Bush has sought to cut the labor,
health and education measure below the prior year level. But lawmakers
have rejected the cuts. The budget that Bush presented in February
sought almost $4 billion in cuts to this year's bill.
"Democrats responded by adding $10 billion to Bush's request for
the
2008 bill. Democrats say spending increases for domestic programs are
small compared with Bush's pending war request totaling almost $200
billion...."
Comments from Peter Suber:
* First, don't panic. This has been expected for months and the
fight is not over. Here's a reminder from my November
newsletter:
* "There are two reasons not to despair if President Bush vetoes
the
LHHS appropriations bill later this month. If Congress overrides
the veto, then the OA mandate language will become law. Just
like
that. If Congress fails to override the veto, and modifies the
LHHS appropriation instead, then the OA mandate is likely to
survive intact." (See the rest of the newsletter for details on
both possibilities.)
* Also as expected, Bush vetoed the bill for its high level of
spending, not for its OA provision.
* Second, it's time for US citizens to contact their Congressional
delegations again. This time around, contact your Representative
in the House as well as your two Senators. The message is: vote
yes on an override of the President's veto of the LHHS
appropriations bill. (Note that the LHHS appropriations bill
contains much more than the provision mandating OA at the NIH.)
* The override vote hasn't yet been scheduled. It may come this
week or it may be delayed until after Thanksgiving. But it will
come and it's not too early to contact your Congressional
delegation. For the contact info for your representatives
(phone,
email, fax, local offices), see CongressMerge.
* Please spread the word!
Peter Suber, Open Access News
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2007/11/bush-vetoes-lhhs-appropriatio
ns-bill.html