Letters from an American - June 18, 2024
Episode Date: June 19, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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June 18, 2024. First, a follow-up to last night's letter on foreign affairs. Russian
President Vladimir Putin visited North Korea today for a meeting with leader Kim Jong-un,
who greeted his visitor personally as he got off the plane. Putin is looking for more weapons for his war on Ukraine.
U.S. National Security Spokesman John Kirby expressed concern about
the deepening relationship between these two countries.
At home, news broke on Saturday that Paul Pressler,
a major leader of the Southern Baptist Convention and a key Republican activist,
died on June 7th at age 94. In 1967, Pressler, a Texas judge, and Paige Patterson, a seminary
student, met in New Orleans to plan a takeover of the Southern Baptists, the largest Protestant
denomination in the U.S., to rid it of liberals, purging those who believed
in abortion rights, women's rights, and gay rights. By 1979, their candidate was elected
head of the organization, and in the 1980s, Southern Baptists, who then numbered about 15
million people, were active in politics and were staunch supporters of the Republican Party.
In Robert Downen's obituary of Pressler for the Texas Tribune, he notes that as Pressler's
influence in the Republican Party grew, he also allegedly groped, solicited, or raped at least
six men, including one who said he was 14 when Pressler first sexually abused him. Pressler
denied the allegations, but he and the Southern Baptist Convention settled a lawsuit brought by
that accuser just last December. A 2019 investigation by the Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express
News inspired by that lawsuit found more than 400 Southern Baptist church leaders or volunteers
had been charged with sex crimes since 2000. In March 2021, the hugely popular leader Beth Moore,
herself a survivor of sexual assault, left the church, saying,
You have betrayed your women. That May, Russell Moore, no relation to Ms. Moore, left the church leadership
and then, the following month, left the church itself over its handling of sexual abuse
allegations and racism. A 2022 report on the church and sex abuse was so damning that Russell
Moore wrote, I was wrong to call sexual abuse in the Southern Baptist Convention a crisis.
Crisis is too small a word. It is an apocalypse. The investigation, he said,
uncovers a reality far more evil and systematic than I imagined it could be.
The patriarchal model of society embraced by the Republican Party in the 1980s
enabled the sorts of abuse uncovered in the Southern Baptist Convention.
But Pressler's death suggests that the era might be ending.
Today, Robert Morris, the pastor of Texas megachurch Gateway Church,
resigned after news broke on Friday that a woman has accused him of sexually abusing her
for several years in the 1980s, beginning when she was 12.
The Reagan Republican model started from the proposition that the best way to serve the public good
was to slash taxes and regulations, because that would enable the very wealthy to accumulate capital
that they would then invest more efficiently in the economy, making it grow faster than it ever could when government investments
warped markets. Theoretically, this would help everyone. Former President Trump and MAGA Republicans
are still advancing that plan. Trump has promised to cut taxes yet again if he is re-elected,
and has suggested replacing them with tariffs, which are essentially taxes levied on imported goods and then passed on to the consumer.
Meanwhile, the Heritage Foundation, which is the major organization behind Project 2025, has called for raising the retirement age for Social Security benefits because of future shortfalls in the program's financing. But in 2024, the media is noting ahead of time that Trump's vow to abolish the income tax
and replace it with higher tariffs would raise taxes for a typical American family by $5,000
while raising the incomes of the wealthiest Americans. And while the Heritage Foundation dismisses out of hand
the idea of raising taxes,
the Biden administration has noted that we are on the cusp
of a generational opportunity
to reorient the US tax system.
Yesterday, National Economic Council Deputy Director,
Daniel Hornung, used the Trump tax cuts to skewer the larger
argument that tax cuts help everyone. He pointed out that the 2017 Trump tax cuts failed on their
own terms. Proponents of those cuts said they would benefit mainly ordinary Americans. Instead,
the law gave those in the top 1% a tax cut more than 50 times higher than the cut that fell to middle-income households.
Meanwhile, corporations used their tax savings on stock buybacks, dividends, and executive pay.
No wage gains trickled down to the bottom 90% of workers.
Furthermore, the proponents of the Trump tax cuts said they would double or
triple the economic growth rate. Instead, real GDP and fixed investment stated about the same
rate as they had been before the tax cuts. Similarly, those behind the law said it would
increase revenues and pay for itself. Instead, revenues fell and the deficit increased.
Hornung notes that Republicans want to continue this system, but the Biden administration wants
to scrap it in favor of a system that would be more fair, promoting economic opportunity and work
and eliminating preferences for wealth, and that would raise enough revenue to fund critical national priorities
like Social Security. The administration would like to see higher taxes on the less than 5%
of American households with an income of more than $400,000 a year and on corporations.
In addition, it is calling for using the tax code to support middle-class families and those in need, including by restoring the expanded child tax credit, which cut child poverty nearly in half in 2021.
Yesterday, officials from the Treasury Department said they were cracking down on the ability of businesses and the wealthy to manipulate the value of their assets to lower their taxes.
Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo estimated that the crackdown should yield about $50 billion
in the next decade. The struggle to resurrect a government that works for ordinary people,
rather than concentrating power and wealth in the hands of a few, was on display in President Biden's
announcement today that, in the absence of congressional legislation, he is trying to
streamline the process of applying for permanent residency for certain undocumented spouses and
children of U.S. citizens, allowing them to apply for legal permanent residency without leaving the
country. Two weeks ago, Biden announced executive actions
to bar undocumented immigrants from claiming asylum when the seven-day average of undocumented
crossings is above 2,500 people. At the same time the administration is trying to stop undocumented
immigration, it is also trying to make getting permanent residency easier for people who are already here.
Currently, in order to apply for legal residency, an undocumented person has to leave the United
States, leaving jobs and family, and to hope for a chance to come back in. Now, people who have
lived in the U.S. for at least 10 years and are legally married to a U.S. citizen can apply without leaving first.
So can those who were brought here as children who have earned a degree at an accredited U.S.
institution of higher learning in the United States and who have received a job offer from
a U.S. employer in a field related to their degree. This rule will affect about 500,000 spouses of U.S. citizens and about 50,000 non-citizen children under the age of 21 whose parent is married to a U.S. citizen.
It will affect 50,000 to 100,000 DREAMers.
We're a nation of immigrants, Biden said as he announced the order.
That's who we are.
Biden said as he announced the order, that's who we are. This is your world.