February arrives with a reminder that life takes turns that don’t fit into the mold our minds have constructed for the world:
An uprising in Egypt suddenly changes the Middle East power equation and forces us to recalibrate our investment of blood and money in the region.
Here at home, state courts keep overturning the essence of health care reform, racing ahead of GOP Congressional efforts to repeal it.
And winter storms across the country wreck damaged local government budgets with new debt piling as high as the sleet and snow that have to be taken away.
The agents of such unexpected stress, varied as they are, don’t wait for political agendas to focus attention on problems that must be faced, ready or not.
Only a supreme optimist would see in all this a reflection of the bromide that the Chinese word for crisis is the same as opportunity, but there are elements of hope in all of them.
The upheaval that shakes our strongest ally–and client–in the Middle East forces us to rethink what we have been doing there for a decade. Are our policies in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq built on sand? (Decades ago, we supported the Shah in Iran and ended up with a hostile regime now going nuclear.) Are there better ways to invest in our own security there?
The piñata that the Obama White House pushed through Congress is being whacked from all sides and, from the debris, there could emerge a less convoluted, simpler health care system. Ezra Klein of the Washington Post, a keen student of the subject, speculates on a possible overturn of the act followed by a Democratic expansion of existing programs that could sidestep the obstacles of a Senate supermajority and legal challenges:
“Think something like opening Medicare to all Americans over age 45, raising Medicaid up to 300 percent of the poverty line, opening S-CHIP to all children, and paying for the necessary subsidies and spending with a surtax on the wealthy (which is how the House originally wanted to fund health-care reform)…