January 3, 2021

"In July, Joe Biden released a seven-hundred-and-seventy-five-billion-dollar plan with the tongue-twisting title 'Mobilizing American Talent and Heart to Create a 21st Century Caregiving and Education Workforce.'"

"Biden’s plan aims to expand child care and services for the elderly and the disabled, and elevate the status and pay of caregivers as well. But those goals will remain aspirational without a Democratic majority in the Senate, which is why [Schanchline] Nanje and a dozen other Family Friendly Action canvassers have been knocking on a hundred doors a day in the suburbs north of Atlanta. Their work is financed by the Women Effect Action Fund, a group that promotes economic gender equality and women’s rights. Lisa Guide, the fund’s co-founder, told me that the organization was targeting the Georgia races to show both voters and elected officials the enormous impact that access to child care, as well as services for the elderly and disabled, have on women’s personal and professional lives. 'We’re in Georgia to make sure Georgia voters know which Senate candidates are going to help them through our national care crisis—and who aren’t,' Guide said. 'And we want elected officials and policymakers to understand that voters really care about these issues so they end up rising up the ladder for both Democrats and Republicans.'" 


That made me think about Obama's resistance to concentrating on healthcare jobs, which I blogged (in September 2011) under the heading "Obama's Infrastructure Stimulus — designed to build masculine pride"
Here's a fascinating passage from Ron Suskind's new book "Confidence Men: Wall Street, Washington, and the Education of a President" (pp. 18-19)(boldface added). Obama and his advisers are plotting campaign strategy in August 2007 and the subject turned to the problem of jobs for 10 million low- to moderately skilled male workers. What "sunrise" could the government subsize and stimulate. The advisers hit on health care:
That was where the jobs would be: nurse’s aides, companions to infirm seniors, hospital orderlies. The group bandied about ideas for how to channel job-seeking men into this growth industry. A need in one area filling a need in another. Interlocking problems, interlocking solutions. The Holy Grail of systemic change.

But Obama shook his head.

“Look, these are guys,” he said. “A lot of them see health care, being nurse’s aides, as women’s work. They need to do something that fits with how they define themselves as men.” ...
As the room chewed over the non-PC phrase “women’s work,” trying to square the senator’s point with their analytical models, [Alan] Krueger—who was chief economist at the Department of Labor in the mid-1990s at the tender age of thirty-four—sat there silently, thinking that in all his years of studying men and muscle, he had never used that term. But Obama was right. Krueger wondered how his latest research on happiness and well-being might take into account what Obama had put his finger on: that work is identity, that men like to build, to have something to show for their sweat and toil.

“Infrastructure,” he blurted out. “Rebuilding infrastructure.”

Obama nodded and smiled, seeing it instantly. “Now we’re talking.... Okay, let’s think about how that would work as a real centerpiece.... Don’t even get me started about potholed highways and collapsing bridges,” Obama said....
And just like that, a policy to repair the nation’s infrastructure was born. The federal government, in partnership with the private sector, would call upon the underemployed men of America to rebuild the country, and in doing so restore their pride
Obama wanted to rebuild masculine pride!

But what happened? Why didn't the original stimulus, in early 2009, rebuild America and America's men? I seem to remember some pushback. There was this NYT op-ed in December 2008, by Linda Hirshman:
Mr. Obama compared his infrastructure plan to the Eisenhower-era construction of the Interstate System of highways. It brings back the Eisenhower era in a less appealing way as well: there are almost no women on this road to recovery....

The bulk of the stimulus program will provide jobs for men, because building projects generate jobs in construction, where women make up only 9 percent of the work force....

Fortunately, jobs for women can be created by concentrating on professions that build the most important infrastructure — human capital. In 2007, women were 83 percent of social workers, 94 percent of child care workers, 74 percent of education, training and library workers (including 98 percent of preschool and kindergarten teachers and 92 percent of teachers’ assistants)....
And then what happened? Did Obama ever openly express his enthusiasm for masculine jobs? The terminology became "shovel-ready jobs." He couldn't say "manly jobs" or "men's work." Not only did Obama abandon his dream of lifting up men, we didn't even get the construction work done.

And now here he is, last week, posing by a bridge that's — what? — falling down and getting accused of using the bridge as a "prop."

Oh! The masculinity!

68 comments:

Rusty said...

So. IOWs more makework legislation to garner democrat votes. Some friend of the Biden family is going to get rich off of this.

Retail Lawyer said...

I recall Obama saying he knew there were "shovel ready" projects in all 50 states, only to later state that he was wrong on this point, while giggling. Of course not! A project is not "shovel ready" until many lawsuits have worked there way through the system, which takes years. The Alaska pipeline required Federal legislation to stop lawsuits.

How could a supposed lawyer not know this? Its an entire legal specialty, popular in law schools. How could a self-declared "student of history" not know this?

320Busdriver said...

I read Confidence Men, it’s an enlightening reveal of Obama’s failure to reform health care in America.

What did you expect from a tenderfoot Senator?

Temujin said...

Yes, I'm sure millions of Americans, fresh from watching the last 10 or so years of their kids being turned into genderless, whiny, angry little screaming creatures, will think that sending their kids into the arms of the State at an even younger age will be a good thing.

And as for seniors, well, my mom just passed in a Michigan nursing home just before Christmas. For the past 9 months we were allowed to 'see' her only through a window, while we talked to each other on the phone. And living across the country, that was not easy. She died alone, while we were not able (allowed?) to speak to her at all over the last 5 days. In Michigan, you see, the Governor decreed that even when dying, they cannot create separate isolated rooms for a family member or two to visit with their dying loved one.

The State- in this case- Governor Whitmer- knows nothing about compassion except how to spell and speak the word. They don't actually know the meaning. (unlike my State of Florida where Governor DeSantis does actually get it.)

No- I see zero positive in anyone's life, young or old, being in the care of the State.

jaydub said...

Obama was focused on "stimulating" construction unions, not repairing infrastructure. Biden is focused on unionizing service industries, not improving health care or education. The New Yorker is focused on providing the Dems with a Dem senate so that they can do real damage. The country would be better served if The New Yorker quit the gaslighting and if Slow Joe stuck to sniffing little girls' hair.

rhhardin said...

Apparently the planning is women's work now.

rhhardin said...

They'll still need men to do the engineering but they won't get paid well for it.

Not Sure said...

Nothing says "Family Friendly Action" like entrusting infants and toddlers to the tender ministrations of the state.

Eleanor said...

Opening up jobs to women was supposed to give women more choices, but it really didn't. The cost of having a family rose to meet the expectation that two people would be leaving the house to earn a living. A stay-at-home parent is now something many families can't afford to have. Most women don't leave the home everyday to go to an exciting career, and many women and some men would choose to be a parent at home raisimg the children if the second income wasn't needed to pay the bills. As in most things, the question to ask is "Cui bono?" If a parent stays at home and raises the kids, there's no income from that parent to tax. If the parent goes to work, the government gets to tax the income that parent makes, and the income of the person the family pays to provide child care. If all of the women in this country exercised the choice to stay home and raise their own children, the government's tax coffers would take an enormous hit. Any money the government spends to keep both parents in the workforce benefits the government. To believe the government is being sensitive to the needs of families when our congress votes money for child or elder care is to be gullible.

Paul Zrimsek said...

The days when Democrats saw the growing share of national income spent on healthcare as a problem seem very long ago now.

Tommy Duncan said...

It's interesting that the progressives no longer believe it is necessary to show any results from spending a trillion dollars. Of course, in fairness, a complete lack of transparency eliminates much of the need for accountability.

boatbuilder said...

How ironic that while these corrupt bozo eggheads purport to know how to “create” jobs, the guy they despise actually put more people to work.
And of course they learned absolutely nothing.

Fernandinande said...

Obama wanted to rebuild masculine pride!

Well, someone, but apparently not O'bummer, made that claim

"Women Hold 76% of All Health Care Jobs, Gaining in Higher-Paying Occupations

Women have driven 80% of the overall growth in the booming health care field since the turn of the century."

How can we correct that systemic sexism?

mockturtle said...

Nursing assistants are overworked and underpaid. That is a fact. Nursing homes are horribly expensive. Also a fact. A quick investigation will reveal that nursing home chains are very top-heavy regarding salaries. I found that the executives of a nursing home chain in WA, where my husband was a patient for several months, were based in Hawaii, living large while their low-level employees did all the heavy lifting--in the literal sense.

320Busdriver said...

Temujin, Sorry for your loss and the horrible way MI injured your family. God bless.

Fernandinande said...

Create a 21st Century Caregiving and Education Workforce

"Educatrix Jill" might be enthusiastic about that.

"But throwing more money at poorly performing schools has not moved the needle on performance. During the last 40 years, the federal government has spent $1.8 trillion on education, and spending per pupil in the U.S. has tripled in real terms. Government at all levels spent an average of $149,000 on the 13-year education of a high school senior who graduated in 2009, compared to $50,000 (in 2009 dollars) for a 1970 graduate." (and results were slightly better in 1970, see fig 2)

Owen said...

Temujin: sorry for your loss. Thanks for the typically insightful comment.

Eleanor: excellent point about the incentive of the State to monetize every activity by forcing it into the marketplace. Result is something of a trap, both individually and structurally. How do we reverse it or escape it except through collapse?

Breezy said...

My parent’s caregiver was awesome. We often tipped her with generous gifts and cash to express our immense gratitude. She didn’t have to share these with the company she worked for. Win-win. Do a great job, reap the rewards.

Butkus51 said...

Seems to me that many of the "older people" around me have minority caregivers. Ive seen them in action. Not a pretty sight.

Breezy said...

Temujin, my Condolences on your loss...

Aggie said...

Call me biased, but when I read through that quickly, at first I thought it said that Joe Biden was proposing to expand child care for the elderly.

Jokah Macpherson said...

Despite being a saint of the left, Obama privately has pretty conventional, non-woke views of gender (there’s plenty of other evidence out there as well). One of the few things I respect about him.

ColoComment said...

Color me a skeptic, but wouldn't this just be another "Teach for America," or "CCC," or "Peace Corps," or any other "I'm here to help you" federal program without only vague goals, and designed with no methods of measuring success (or failure)?
IOW, another, in the words of Reagan, "eternal life" program that would simply grow the federal bureaucrat payroll needed to administer it, and subsidize more federal political and financial federal-dependence among the population?

This is the core difference between the political philosophies: one wants a collective We the People to be benefit-dependent on the stick/carrot whims of the government, the other wants the individuals who comprise We the People, and each of them/us, to choose and strive for a personal path to "happiness."

ColoComment said...

*with only vague goals* (switched from a negative formulation to a positive one -- always, always, should double check when I do that!)

Meade said...

320Busdriver said...

Temujin, Sorry for your loss and the horrible way MI injured your family. God bless.”

Amen.

madAsHell said...

Yeah......Obama never said that.

Obama doesn’t even know which end of the shovel moves the dirt.

Wince said...

Krueger wondered how his latest research on happiness and well-being might take into account what Obama had put his finger on: that work is identity, that men like to build, to have something to show for their sweat and toil.

Our best minds in their respective fields?

Butkus51 said...

What happened to all the bank teller jobs?

MadTownGuy said...

"Biden’s plan aims to expand child care and services for the elderly and the disabled, and elevate the status and pay of caregivers as well."

SEIU President Henry’s Statement on Biden’s 21st Century Caregiving and Education Workforce Plan

In Joe Biden’s America, we care for each other - our loved ones and those who care for them. With his impressive caregiving and education workforce plan, Joe Biden made history by prioritizing America’s caregivers, predominantly Black and brown women, for the value they provide in our families’ daily lives and in making our economy run. Valuing care and prioritizing the vital relief that America’s working families need is something President Trump does not care about.

“By investing in caregiving as essential social infrastructure, and making caregiving jobs good union jobs, Joe Biden will lead our country into a more inclusive economic recovery that puts families first and allows them to do their jobs with the comfort that their loved ones--children, parents, grandparents and family members with disabilities--have the care they need.
"

narciso said...

ah susskind, what part of that book did he make up as with 'reality based community' the money changer who langley's officials couldn't turn, (they had a lazy interrogator, glen carle, who wrote a memoir about his failures) etc,

Sam L. said...

Well, DANG! This its the first thing I've read that Obama did and I think he was right!
Toooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo late for me to change my mind on the big O, though.

Sebastian said...

"expand child care and services for the elderly and the disabled"

I know we are well into the post-New Deal progressive era, etc. etc., but still: where in the Constitution does it say that this is a task of the federal government?

Fernandinande said...

Joe Biden made history by prioritizing America’s caregivers, predominantly Black and brown women,

Race and Ethnicity
"Whites makeup the majority of the U.S. workforce ["among the 30 identified health occupations"] (64.4 percent) compared to Hispanics (16.1 percent), Blacks or African Americans (11.6 percent), Asians (5.3 percent), and individuals reporting Multiple and Other races (1.8 percent)."

Kate said...

When I had an ER overnight a few months ago almost all of my nurses were young men. They were excellent -- competent and confident. Maybe Obama's initiative worked in spite of him.

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

Democratical ideas - lies. Grift to make insiders rich.

Leave the rest of us worse off.

Lurker21 said...

Of course it's free money for the base and the unions. What does this do to the idea that government interference will bring health care costs down?

This is a different Obama from what critics suppose him to be. He's articulate and not indifferent to the needs of blue-collar working-class men.

And it's the same Obama the critics have in mind. He's not great on the follow through and follow up. It gets in the way of golf too much.

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

New name - same old garbage.

Solandra.

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

When democrats and hollywood elites think they know what is best. It's the opposite.

Big Mike said...

They'll still need men to do the engineering but they won't get paid well for it.

@rhhardin, well, they can hire a woman-owned engineering firm, such as FIGG, which designed a truly innovative pedestrian bridge across a major highway into the Florida International University. It only killed six people, including the single person standing on top of it when it collapsed.

(I’m only being a little sarcastic — before the bridge collapsed its design really was regarded as innovative. To quote Wikipedia, the bridge spans used a novel concrete truss design invented for this project... )

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

Give unions power = removing money from union employee pockets to serve the democrat machine.

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

By investing in caregiving as essential social infrastructure, and making caregiving jobs good union jobs, Joe Biden will lead our country into a more inclusive economic recovery


Unionizing. There's your grift angle.

Big Mike said...

@Temujin, please accept my condolences as well.

As for Meade’s spouse, I wonder whether she’ll ever overcome her long-time biases to grasp that 21st century Democrats are heartless, soulless creatures, who care nothing for anyone who isn’t them.

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

This is how Nancy and Joe see you guys.

The only thing missing is the union pick-pocket.

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

building an army of unionized cup holders.

Hammond X. Gritzkofe said...

YOUR Government - picking winners and losers.

With YOUR money.

And the power of YOUR Government over YOUR property, liberty, and life.

ga6 said...

Progressive/Democrat party honeypot, nothing more.
"Come and get it boys and girls, there is plenty for everyone"

Wait until they unveil "infrastructure two, the return of the shovel"

followed by "Graduate School for Everyone"

MayBee said...

Temujin, I'm so sorry. You are right, Michigan s a mess right now and separating old people from those they love is the cruelest sort of governance.

As MadTownGuy pointed out, this is SEIU all the way.

John henry said...

Butkus 51 asks what happened to all the bank teller jobs:

The number of tellers in the United States increased from approximately 300,000 in 1970 to approximately 600,000 in 2010. Counter-intuitively, a contributing factor may be the introduction of automated teller machines. ATMs let a branch operate with fewer tellers, making it cheaper for banks to open more branches. This likely resulted in more tellers being hired to handle non-automated tasks, but further automation and online banking may reverse this increase.

Note the word "may" in that last line. It "may" not reverse the increase too.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bank_teller

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

Union forcing - is forcing everyone to give to the democrat party.

Every democrat proposal is a way for democrat party elites to gather more power and fill more coffers for The Party.

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

Temujin

So very sorry for your loss. So cruel.

Gov Whitmer(D-fascist) must GO.

I'm Not Sure said...

"No- I see zero positive in anyone's life, young or old, being in the care of the State."

Forced to be in the care of the people who run the post office and the DMV would be a bad thing? Who'da thunk it?

Michael K said...

Temujin, my Condolences on your loss...

I skim comments and was sorry to see this

LA_Bob said...

Temujin,

How very unfortunate and sad. No good time to lose a parent, but Christmas seems like an especially bad time. And the circumstances sound atrocious.

LA_Bob said...

"I seem to remember some pushback."

So, Obama, who famously called his grandmother a "typical white person" was a victim of identity politics???? Oh, the irony!

Darrell said...

Temujin,
No words.

JaimeRoberto said...

We pay a lot for my parents' caregiver. She earns it, but she doesn't need to have her wages raised.

Skippy Tisdale said...

Joe Biden made history by prioritizing America’s caregivers, predominantly Black and brown women,

Race and Ethnicity
"Whites makeup the majority of the U.S. workforce ["among the 30 identified health occupations"] (64.4 percent) compared to Hispanics (16.1 percent), Blacks or African Americans (11.6 percent), Asians (5.3 percent), and individuals reporting Multiple and Other races (1.8 percent)."


Forget it, he's rolling.

Jupiter said...

Who needs a family, when we've got the Democratic Party? Right, Julia?

MountainMan said...

And to complete the ideas from the excellent comments from ColoComment and MadTownGuy above: And once these new care workers become faithful union members and make their generous "contribution" each month from their paycheck to the union coffers a lot of this money will miraculously wind up in Democrat party campaign funds. Which is the whole intent in the first place. Just like the Federal Student Loan program has poured billions into our colleges and universities, allowing them to expand beyond all reason the administrative staff, keeping everyone engaged in busy work for the DNC, ensuring that more and more of our youth get their full Marxist indoctrination, and resulting in even more money flowing into the DNC, while leaving our poorly educated, but fully indoctrinated young adults holding the debt they cannot repay - and more willing to vote for the candidate and party that promises to cancel it for them. What a brilliant scam.

Joe Smith said...

'"They need to do something that fits with how they define themselves as men.” ...'

Said bathhouse Barry without a hint of irony.

Isn't the real goal to make all of these jobs union?

Assistant Village Idiot said...

I like how they describe "government subsidies" as access. When words don't mean what they mean, they're lying.

Bunkypotatohead said...

The feds shelled out over a trillion dollars last summer just to have everyone sit around doing nothing.
If Joe wants to get people to actually do something, he's gonna have to up the ante. Maybe $2T to get them to dig a hole. $3T if he wants them to fill it back up again.

n.n said...

Sex and sexism. Gender and genderism is so yesterday.

That said, ironically, a progressive missive from the party from Atlanta that exercise liberal license to indulge diversity, places Americans second, and third, and left every child behind. #HateLovesAbortion

n.n said...

Emigration reform. Mitigate progressive prices. Clear the Green blight. Close Planned Parent/hoods. Diversity (i.e. color judgments) breeds adversity. Stop the social justice adventures (e.g. wars without borders, transnational terrorism, deals with fungible cash and reordered claims). Refundable credits and fill in the missing links with public smoothing functions (e.g. welfare).

Caligula said...

There are more than a few small towns where practically all the remaining economic activity is driven by the Medicaid and Medicare funding that keeps the local hospital, nursing home and assorted medical-services industry running. And what little remains is primarily supported by the spending of those whose jobs ultimately are funded by these programs.

If it works for them why can't it work for us? Can't we all just live off government-funded programs (or the trickle-down from these)?

Kevin said...

Mobilizing American Talent and Heart to Create a 21st Century Caregiving and Education Workforce

If Joe Biden can't read that accurately off a teleprompter, I don't think the America people should have to pay for it.

It can be a new kind of veto for the 21st century.

Kevin said...

For the past 9 months we were allowed to 'see' her only through a window, while we talked to each other on the phone.

We're turning our elderly into prisoners while we're putting our prisoners back on the street.

Michelle Dulak Thomson said...

I remain flummoxed by the "gender" politics of this. Women are bearing the brunt of caring for children and elderly parents, stet. (Though in Ye Olde Dayes, there used to be this quaint notion that women cared for their babies because they loved them, and their aged parentals ditto.) We have therefore substituted other people, who do the work for money, for ourselves, who once did it for love.

But wait! The people now doing the work that we won't do ourselves are also mostly women. Maybe 30 or 40 years ago, the "solution" to that (non-)problem would have been to coax men into the "caring professions"; but now the (non-)problem is an opportunity: We have all these women (mysteriously all "Black and brown," but let that pass) doing essential work, so let's pay them lots of money and raise the "dignity" of their profession. That this simultaneously lowers the "dignity" of those who used to do the same work, without pay, and will continue to do it, is of no consequence whatsoever.

So: Now we have a large number of people, mostly women, paid to care for other people, where before we had exactly the same thing, except that before they were working for their own families, for love, and now they are working for other families, for moola. This purports to be an improvement. Perhaps it is, in the sense that it feeds a lot more warm bodies to the SEIU and makes "housewife"/""homemaker" look even dowdier a title than it was before.

There used to be "dignity" in raising your own children, in giving a warm and welcoming home to your own mother; but now there can't be "dignity" unless you get a paycheck for it, and it really helps if it's a strictly contractual arrangement. There used to be a movement to "pay" women for care of their own children, but we're past that now; that idea made some people almost suspect that women caring for their own children had something "natural" about it. So, much better if the caregiver and the family have nothing between them but cash.

Similarly, there was a time when the "cure" for overrepresentation of women in "the caring professions" was to get more men into them. Now, it seems, the idea is rather to keep all the "caring professions" as female as possible, and then accuse men of not belonging to them. You no longer see calls for more men in nursing and childcare and elder care; instead you see complaints that these female-dominated spheres haven't enough money or recognition. That they will stay female-dominated is now a given.