I've always thought Joe Biden, Democrat Senator from Delaware, stood out as unusually pompous and full of himself, even in the U.S. Senate, and with less reason than almost anyone this side of Lindsey Graham. Apparently, Biden at it again. He attracted the attention of blogger Jeff Matthews:
Sunday, August 20, 2006
Weekend Edition: Say it Ainât So, Fighting Joe
Joe Bidenâs color picture jumped out at readers from the pages of this weekâs New York Times.
Wearing a starched, striped, open-necked shirt beneath a crisp grey suit, his longish graying hair catching the breeze, the Senior Senator from Delaware looked passionate, raw, and inflamed with rage and indignation.
Precisely what is it that had gotten the 34-year Senate veteran and ex-Presidential candidate so indignant?
The failure of the Bush administrationâs post-war policy in Iraq? No.
The state-sponsored holocaust cartoon exhibit now on display in a country (Iran) whose leader maintains the holocaust is a âmythâ? No.
Child pornography, perhaps? No, sadly.
Not even the price of gasoline was on the Senator-who-would-be Presidentâs mind.
What was on the Senatorâs mindâwhat had him really steamingâwas Wal-Mart.
Returning to Des Moines (the scene of his infamous âI started thinking as I was coming over hereâ¦â speech in which he went on to plagiarize the speech of a British politician; a speech which existed, unfortunately for Joe and his soon-to-be-abandoned Presidential campaign, on a video handily provided to the media by the Dukakis campaign) Biden took to a podium and ranted for a reported 15 minutes against one of the greatest economic success stories in American history:
Biden summed up his problem with the largest non-government employer in the nation as follows, and I am not making this up:
âMy problem with Wal-Mart is that I don't see any indication that they care about the fate of middle-class people. They talk about paying them $10 an hour. That's true. How can you live a middle-class life on that?â
Now, I donât know where in the Constitution it is written that retailers must provide a âmiddle-classâ life for their employees. I donât imagine the woman who vacuums Bidenâs nice Senate office every night is being paid a âmiddle-classâ wage. Nor, I would bet, is the guy who starched Bidenâs nice, striped, this-will-look-good-on-camera shirt at the dry cleaners getting a âmiddle-classâ wage.
But that vacuum lady and that dry-cleaning guy donât concern Biden precisely because they are not employed by a company that has thus far been unsuccessfully targeted for organizing by Big Labor.
And Big Labor wants to unionize Wal-Mart big-time, which isâletâs be honestâthe real agenda here.
Personally, I couldnât care less if Wal-Mart employees decide to unionize or donât decide to unionize. Having met Sam Walton and toured any number of Wal-Mart stores with senior Wal-Mart managers and junior Wal-Mart managers and just plain Wal-Mart associates made rich through "Mister Sam's" generous stock grants over the years, I have a hard time believing people with that kind of strong, proud culture will throw in its lot with the work-rules crowd. But anything is possible.
I just think when a guy whoâs claim to fame is that heâs been in the U.S. Senate for 34 years decides to pick on the most successful retailer ever created, it bears some looking into.
For starters, Biden is being cute when he says the folks at Wal-Mart âtalk aboutâ paying $10 an hour. They donât talk about itâWal-Mart actually does pay ten bucks an hour.
And ten bucks an hour is, for the record, double the minimum wage.
Second, Wal-Mart did not exactly act like the British Navy when it came to hiring the 1.8 million individuals who now work there worldwide. (The Brits, in the early decades of their naval history, used press gangs to ârecruitâ seamen for their ships by, among other techniques, getting poor sods unconscious-drunk onshore and carrying them offshore before they came to.)
In fact, a recently opened Wal-Mart superstore in one of the most anti-Wal-Mart locationsâNorthern Californiaâhad 11,000 applicants seeking 400 of those lousy, non-middle-class-enabling $10-an-hour jobs that Senator Joe finds so problematic.
continued below...
Sunday, August 20, 2006
Weekend Edition: Say it Ainât So, Fighting Joe
Joe Bidenâs color picture jumped out at readers from the pages of this weekâs New York Times.
Wearing a starched, striped, open-necked shirt beneath a crisp grey suit, his longish graying hair catching the breeze, the Senior Senator from Delaware looked passionate, raw, and inflamed with rage and indignation.
Precisely what is it that had gotten the 34-year Senate veteran and ex-Presidential candidate so indignant?
The failure of the Bush administrationâs post-war policy in Iraq? No.
The state-sponsored holocaust cartoon exhibit now on display in a country (Iran) whose leader maintains the holocaust is a âmythâ? No.
Child pornography, perhaps? No, sadly.
Not even the price of gasoline was on the Senator-who-would-be Presidentâs mind.
What was on the Senatorâs mindâwhat had him really steamingâwas Wal-Mart.
Returning to Des Moines (the scene of his infamous âI started thinking as I was coming over hereâ¦â speech in which he went on to plagiarize the speech of a British politician; a speech which existed, unfortunately for Joe and his soon-to-be-abandoned Presidential campaign, on a video handily provided to the media by the Dukakis campaign) Biden took to a podium and ranted for a reported 15 minutes against one of the greatest economic success stories in American history:
Biden summed up his problem with the largest non-government employer in the nation as follows, and I am not making this up:
âMy problem with Wal-Mart is that I don't see any indication that they care about the fate of middle-class people. They talk about paying them $10 an hour. That's true. How can you live a middle-class life on that?â
Now, I donât know where in the Constitution it is written that retailers must provide a âmiddle-classâ life for their employees. I donât imagine the woman who vacuums Bidenâs nice Senate office every night is being paid a âmiddle-classâ wage. Nor, I would bet, is the guy who starched Bidenâs nice, striped, this-will-look-good-on-camera shirt at the dry cleaners getting a âmiddle-classâ wage.
But that vacuum lady and that dry-cleaning guy donât concern Biden precisely because they are not employed by a company that has thus far been unsuccessfully targeted for organizing by Big Labor.
And Big Labor wants to unionize Wal-Mart big-time, which isâletâs be honestâthe real agenda here.
Personally, I couldnât care less if Wal-Mart employees decide to unionize or donât decide to unionize. Having met Sam Walton and toured any number of Wal-Mart stores with senior Wal-Mart managers and junior Wal-Mart managers and just plain Wal-Mart associates made rich through "Mister Sam's" generous stock grants over the years, I have a hard time believing people with that kind of strong, proud culture will throw in its lot with the work-rules crowd. But anything is possible.
I just think when a guy whoâs claim to fame is that heâs been in the U.S. Senate for 34 years decides to pick on the most successful retailer ever created, it bears some looking into.
For starters, Biden is being cute when he says the folks at Wal-Mart âtalk aboutâ paying $10 an hour. They donât talk about itâWal-Mart actually does pay ten bucks an hour.
And ten bucks an hour is, for the record, double the minimum wage.
Second, Wal-Mart did not exactly act like the British Navy when it came to hiring the 1.8 million individuals who now work there worldwide. (The Brits, in the early decades of their naval history, used press gangs to ârecruitâ seamen for their ships by, among other techniques, getting poor sods unconscious-drunk onshore and carrying them offshore before they came to.)
In fact, a recently opened Wal-Mart superstore in one of the most anti-Wal-Mart locationsâNorthern Californiaâhad 11,000 applicants seeking 400 of those lousy, non-middle-class-enabling $10-an-hour jobs that Senator Joe finds so problematic.
continued below...