It Takes A Hypocrite
Jul 23rd, 2005 at 10:51 am by Susie
Will recommends the latest from my fave Daily News columnist Ronnie Polaneczky.
Ronnie deconstructs Little Ricky’s new book, “It Takes A Family”:
Here’s what Santorum wrote about giving financial aid to poor single moms:
“The classic example of the failure of liberal social and economic policy is the Great Society welfare programs… . Aid to Families With Dependent Children (AFDC), as welfare was known until 1996, put government in the role of family breadwinner.”
Clearly, Rick has a problem with paying moms to have babies, and frankly, I do too.
But here’s what he wrote regarding his demand that government increase the child credit and tax deduction for parents with kids: “The government actually provides less help the more children you have. The opposite should be true, and I am working on some amendments to fix this inequity for large families. (OK, I admit that with six kids of my own at home, I’m biased; but the tax code really has it in for big families.)”
What I suspect he’s really saying: An out-of-work mom with more kids than she can afford doesn’t deserve the government’s help. But a middle-class senator with more kids than he can afford sure does!
Where he sometimes gets help instead: Santorum told the New York Times that his parents help him out financially. “They’re by no means wealthy - they’re two retired VA [Veterans Administration] employees - but they’ll send a check every now and then. They realize things are a little tighter for us.”
Except that he makes $162,000 a year. I’ll bet a welfare mom of six kids could live very well on that, so why is a 47-year-old man hitting up his elderly parents for cash? Or asking for tax breaks?
But at least his folks have the money to lend him. That’s because both his parents receive pensions. Why? Santorum grew up in a two-career family - a kind of family he deplores in his book as being obsessed with giving their kids “things” instead of time!
“Children of two parents who are working don’t need more things. They need more us!” he writes in his book.
But how much of his time is he giving his own kids? I’m not sure Santorum includes his own self in that “us.” His might be a one-career marriage, but the guy works six days a week and drives a hellish daily commute through D.C. traffic to Leesburg, Va. - a three-to-four-hour round-trip.
Why Leesburg? Because, he told the New York Times, Leesburg is as close to Washington as he could afford a home big enough for his family. I grew up in a huge family - there were 11 of us crammed into three bedrooms at one point - so I can’t help wondering, just how big does the Santorum home need to be? Or is his big, $757,000 house one of those unnecessary “things” Santorum feels compelled to give his kids, instead of time, which he’s wasting on that long commute?
There’s more.







Every state has its share of idiots, but it’s hard to beat Beastman Santorum. And of course Pennsylvania is the home of the World Champion Tag-Team of Idiocy: Beastman and Magic Bullet Spector.
What’s bigger, their hypocrisy or idiocy?
“The government actually provides less help the more children you have. The opposite should be true, and I am working on some amendments to fix this inequity for large families.”
Ricky’s twisted take on Clinton’s “I feel your pain.”