Pubdate: Fri, 25 Jun 2004 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2004 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: Derrick Z. Jackson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/bush.htm (Bush, George) BUSH'S COMPASSION IS ALL TALK WITH A Washington Post/ABC News poll showing his job approval rating for Iraq and the economy below 50 percent for the fifth straight month, President Bush returned to campaign ploys that softened up voters in the 2000 elections. In a speech this week at a Cincinnati social service center that specializes in prisoner re-entry and alcohol and drug addiction, Bush talked anew about armies of compassion. He was back to pushing faith-based initiatives. He exhumed his education mantra of "challenging the soft bigotry of low expectations. If you've got low expectations, you're going to get lousy results." Bush said, "I wanted you to hear that in your own community here in Cincinnati, you've got heroic figures, heroic people, saving lives on a daily basis," Bush proclaimed. "And these folks need to be supported. They need to be supported at the local level, they need to be supported at the state level, and they need to be supported at the federal level." Bush then left for another affair and received a hero's welcome at a private fund-raiser in the suburbs that garnered $2.5 million for the Republican Party. None of that money was going to support the folks at the social service center. It was going to support the party's agenda of slashing as many social services as it can get away with. If Bush thinks he can turn back the clock to the days of "compassionate conservatism" in order to turn back the tide of the negative poll numbers, he is mistaken. He has had three and a half years to challenge low expectations. He has delivered lousy results. Earlier this month, Bush delivered a speech at a White House conference on faith-based initiatives. The speech was intended to revive interest in a program which stalled in Congress over concern that loosening up the rules for federal dollars to go to religious based organizations for social and educational work dangerously blurs the lines between church and state. Bush bypassed Congress and signed an executive order that allowed him to give away $1.1 billion last year under the initiative. "There's a lot more money available," Bush said. "That's what I hope the conference explains to you: that there is money throughout our government available for faith-based programs. And the idea is to teach you how to access that money, how to make sure the grant-making process is understandable and how to make sure that people in your communities do not fear the bureaucracy interfering with your mission." What Bush did not explain then or in Cincinnati is that while the church may giveth, the state will taketh away much more. His $1.1 billion into the collection plate of religious organizations is an illusion, considering the cuts in social services and education he has already proposed and further cuts he plans to make if he is reelected. The National Priorities Project, the think tank that studies the impact of federal budget policies to the states, has calculated that Bush's budget for 2005, with its massive increases in military spending and its attempt to make tax cuts permanent, would slash $28 billion in grants to states and cities. Bush made a big show in Cincinnati about appearing with an ex-prisoner and unemployed workers who turned their lives around. But he plans to cut many of the things that will help others do the same. According to The Washington Post, Bush's 2005 budget would kill programs for alcohol-abuse reduction, computer training in low-income neighborhoods, family literacy and literacy for prisoners, and severely slash vocational education programs. Adjusted for inflation and population growth, the National Priorities Project says Bush's 2005 budget would cut $2.3 billion in housing assistance, $900 million from justice programs, $1 billion in temporary assistance to needy families and $570 million from vocational education. If Bush is reelected, he plans $2.3 billion of more cuts in 2006, according to a White House memo recently obtained by the Post. The cuts include $1.5 billion in discretionary education funding, $177 million for Head Start, $53 million from a home ownership program, $910 million for veterans affairs, and $122 million for Women, Infants, and Children. The cuts would either significantly reverse or negate election-year increases in several of those programs. In his speech in Cincinnati, Bush used the word "compassion" or "compassionate" eight times. He referred to the human "heart" or "hearts" nine times. He referred to the human "soul" or "souls" seven times. It is getting as tiresome as hearing Bush say that there is a link between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda. He figures if he talks about compassion enough, people will believe he has a heart. He told his audience at the social service center, "You can go from prison to be a boss. You can go from prison to the White House, just so long as you have somebody who's there, willing to take you by the hand, and say, I want to help you help yourself." That somebody will not be Bush. His budget cuts are not the helping hand. They are the prison. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake