When I was very young, I thought for a while I might become an entomologist, that is, someone who studies insects for a living.
Unfortunately, I did not have the math skills for the hard sciences, and so I ended up getting paid to watch politicians instead. There are certain drawbacks to this. Few of them are anywhere near as lovely, say, as a luna moth. Politicians often engage in odder and more unsavory sexual behavior than most insects.
True, the female praying mantis does eat her partner while they are having sex. Most male politicians destroy themselves instead.
But the main difference between bugs and politicians is that most insects engage in more or less rational behavior.
Yes, they may fly into a streetlight by mistake, but generally they look for food and shelter, and try to lay their eggs where the young will have the best chance at survival their parents can give them.
That’s something our kind doesn’t always do these days, especially the subspecies known as the Republican Party. I’ve been studying a colony of these creatures found in the Michigan Legislature, and have made some fascinating discoveries.
First of all, they aren’t very concerned about our survival as a species. Every study shows that this state’s citizens are woefully undereducated. Young adults in Michigan have, on average, less education than those in nearby states.
That’s largely the legacy of the days when you didn’t need a lot of learning to bend metal on the assembly line. You could be ignorant as a box of rocks and still make good money. But those days are gone, and are never coming back.
The jobs of the future will require more education and higher skill sets. If we are ever to attract them, we need a better-educated work force. If our young people are to have any hope of making it, we have to give them the tools to succeed.
So what are our leaders doing?
Cutting what we spend on education. Elementary, high school and university education. They can make do with less, the lawmakers say. Anyway, they can make up the money if they adopt “best practices,” which seems to be Gov. Snyder-speak for “screwing the teachers and the staff out of their benefits.” That would be bad and irrational enough, but the bizarre behavior of the Republicanus parasiticus lawmakers doesn’t stop there. They are determined to make sure that those struggling not only don’t learn well enough, they don’t get fed well enough.
Last week, they voted a lifetime ban on welfare for anyone who had gotten benefits for a total of four years, a ban that will take effect Oct. 1. The lawmakers’ reasoning was that this should be enough time for anyone to find a job.
Conservatives, most of them writing on their blogs, gleefully did handsprings at the thought of the boom being lowered on all these welfare cheats, some of whom were even suspected of being black.
Unfortunately, they are about two decades too late. Yes, there used to be a program called General Assistance, under which able-bodied adults could get welfare money. But that ended long ago.
The people on welfare now are poor families with minor children. Perhaps anyone could find a job in a world where a strong mixed economy included a vibrant public sector complementing and helping the private sector lead us to full employment.
That was the America that existed back in the 1960s. However, there have been precious few jobs available for anyone, even college graduates, over the last four years in Michigan.
So according to the state, 11,162 people will be cut loose without any assistance on Oct. 1. One Sheryl Thompson, the acting deputy director of the Department of Human Services, said she thought virtually all these households could produce “some earned income.” That’s probably true; they could sell drugs, their bodies or their children. Maybe the odd pint of blood here and there.
Actually, what the politicians hope is that these people will just go away and leave the state. They won’t, of course, not most of them.
Together with the unskilled and unemployable coming out of our underfunded schools, they’ll join a large and growing group of desperate citizens with no stake in the present system.
Suddenly, it struck me with the force of revelation.
Our leaders are secret Marxist-Leninists. They have to be. This is just what Marx predicted in “Das Kapital.” The capitalists will throw more and more workers out of work. More and more wealth will be concentrated into fewer and fewer hands.
Finally, with no stake in the system whatsoever, there will be mass and bloody revolt. The capitalists will fight back, but will be overwhelmed, till the day when, and as the bearded one predicted, “the expropriators are expropriated.” How silly of me not to see this.
For years and years, beginning with Franklin D. Roosevelt, rational private businessmen who wanted to stay rich and prosperous realized the way to do so was to see that the workers had a stake in the system.
That’s why socialism and communism failed in this country. But now a secret band of terrorists masked as right-wing Republicans are driving our system to destruction and us to revolution.
Either that, or they are a bunch of cold, stupid, callous and unfeeling bastards who couldn’t care less about us or our children.
And we couldn’t possibly believe that of our elected leaders. ... Could we?
Jack Lessenberry’s email address is bucca@aol.com. This column was originally published in the Detroit Metro Times.
Jack Lessenberry
Op-Ed: New subspecies: GOP parasiticus
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Jack Lessenberry: Keeping the underdog streak alive
When the last census confirmed that Michigan would lose yet another seat in Congress — the fifth since 1980 — the Legislature went to work to make sure a Democrat would be the odd man out.
Continued ... -
Jack Lessenberry: Tax on poor hurts businesses
If you had to sum up the Republican Party's creed in a sentence, it might well be: Raising taxes is a bad idea, no matter what.
Continued ... -
Jack Lessenberry: Joe Schwarz and Congress
You might say Joe Schwarz's decision not to run provides a perfect example of what's wrong with the way we elect congressmen today.
Continued ... -
Jack Lessenberry: Past vs. future
Few may have noticed, but there was a skirmish in the Michigan Senate last week that was likely the opening volley in what promises to be a long war over the state's future.
Continued ... -
Jack Lessenberry: Supreme Court reform
In recent years, when one party has gained control of the court, their justices have set about almost gleefully reversing decisions made by the earlier majority.
Continued ... - Sunday, April 22, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: Deregulation in Mich.
If there are two things Marie Donigan knows, they are Lansing and landscape architecture.
Continued ... - Sunday, April 15, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: Kevorkian and Wallace
The last time I saw Mike Wallace, I had a surreal experience that took me back to my Kennedy-era childhood. This was less than six years ago, when he was still working full-time; after all, he was then a mere 88 years old.
Continued ... - Sunday, April 8, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: Beyond race issue
If you want to understand why so many Detroit politicians refuse to face economic reality, and refused to negotiate some kind of reasonable compromise to avoid a state takeover, don't start by studying what's happening now.
Continued ... - Sunday, April 1, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: Is Snyder only adult in Detroit?
The mystifying question for many outside observers: Why doesn't Gov. Rick Snyder just stop the endless agony and appoint an emergency manager for Detroit?
Continued ... - Sunday, March 25, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: Little reason to trust state's elected officials
Everyone knows that economically speaking, Michigan has been one of the most distressed states in the nation. But what about issues of ethics? Government accountability? Transparent and open campaign finance and lobbying laws? Guess what? We're among the nation's worst.
Continued ... - Sunday, March 18, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: No easy fixes for Detroit
There is now no doubt that the state will soon take effective control of the city of Detroit, one way or another. The city is on the point of financial collapse. ... But when the governor tried to throw the city a lifeline, the reaction of Detroit's elected leaders might seem astounding to any rational person who has been following Detroit's long agony.
Continued ... - Sunday, March 11, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: Kicking the hornet's nest
For the last year, labor unions in Michigan have faced a more unfriendly state government than at any time since the New Deal began. Now, finally, the unions are striking back — in a way that has stunned even some of their supporters.
Continued ... - Sunday, March 4, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: Romney barely gets by in Mich.
Though Mitt Romney hasn't lived in Michigan for nearly half a century, Oakland County saved him from a humiliating primary election defeat at the hands of Rick Santorum, a man who two months ago was almost totally unknown in Michigan.
Continued ... - Sunday, February 26, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: Ahmed in action again
Ismael ("Ish") Ahmed is helping change the social fabric once again. These days, he is working full-time to make it easier for the nearly 400 faculty members and 8,600 students at the University of Michigan-Dearborn to get involved with the community, and in return to help them find the resources they need.
Continued ... - Sunday, February 19, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: Mitt and the Mitten State
Today, presidential candidate Mitt Romney still proclaims his love for "not any cars, American cars," as he said in a Valentine's Day column in the Detroit News. Yet ironically, his position on cars could doom his candidacy, at least in Michigan, where he was born in 1947 to a father who would become head of the former American Motors Co.
Continued ... - Sunday, February 12, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: State's prison problem
Someone once said society needed to decide whether it could afford to lock up those it was mad at, or just those we are legitimately afraid of. What seems bizarre is that given Michigan's financial situation, its leaders seem unwilling to make the rational choice.
Continued ... - Sunday, February 5, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: Overcoming the Morouns
Americans are justifiably outraged whenever a lawmaker is caught taking bribes or misusing public funds. But what do you suppose the voters' reaction would be if it were discovered that one very rich family was trying to buy off the Legislature solely for their own financial gain? What if that family spent millions on what amounted to legalized bribes to successfully block a project that virtually every corporation in the state agreed was essential to Michigan's economic future? We are talking about the family of Manuel J. "Matty" Moroun, the 84-year-old billionaire who owns the aging Ambassador Bridge.
Continued ... - Sunday, January 29, 2012
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Jack Lessenberry: Health care here, abroad
For nine months of each year, Dr. Richard Keidan is an elite physician in an upscale Detroit suburb, a surgeon who specializes in removing cancer. But every three months or so, he flies across the globe to Nepal, lands in Katmandu, and then trudges into the interior.
Continued ... - Sunday, January 22, 2012
- Jack Lessenberry: Moroun and 'justice'
- Sunday, January 15, 2012
- Jack Lessenberry: Durant's drive for Senate
- Sunday, January 8, 2012
- Jack Lessenberry: Michigan's primary
- Sunday, January 1, 2012
- Jack Lessenberry: Last white mayor of Detroit
- Sunday, December 25, 2011
- Jack Lessenberry: Detroit light rail out
- Sunday, December 18, 2011
- Jack Lessenberry: Council won't sacrifice
- Sunday, December 11, 2011
- Jack Lessenberry: Detroit and emergency manager
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Jack Lessenberry: Keeping the underdog streak alive


