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European Friends Write: "Are You Americans
Crazy?"
By Bernard Weiner Co-Editor, The Crisis Papers
September 23, 2008
Dear Wolfgang and Jacqueline:
Yes, I know that you and other European friends are, as you put it,
"totally confused" by what's happening here in the U.S. right now.
Welcome to the club. I wish I could answer all your questions about
America's current political/economic crisis with definitive
certainty. But the situation is moving real fast, with one disaster
after another, and with politicians flip-flopping all over the
place.
As a result, it's difficult to know precisely what's going on, but
I'll do the best I can. Here are my responses to your italicized
questions about McCain, Obama, the financial crisis and bailout, and
electoral corruption:
1. BEYOND THE "CRAZY" FACTOR
"Bush, with his policies and wars, has nearly wrecked the U.S.
Constitution and economy and America's moral standing abroad. We
don't understand why your John McCain, so closely associated with
the Bush policies that brought these disasters upon your country and
the world, should be nearly even in the polls with Obama. Have you
guys gone crazy?"
Short answer: Everyone goes "crazy" for awhile now and again.
European history is also replete with such examples. In the American
TV age, celebrity trumps experience: We feel we "know" these
candidates, since we've seen them on the big screen or had them in
our living-rooms nearly every night. In recent years, don't forget,
we elected a Grade-B movie actor as president (Ronald Reagan). We
elected a professional wrestler and a professional bodybuilder as
governors (Jesse Ventura, Arnold Schwarzenegger). We elected a
song-and-dance man a U.S. Senator (George Murphy). By and large,
those experiments didn't turn out well and did great damage to the
body politic, but the fascination with celebrity is still there.
As to why McCain is nearly even with Obama in the polls, part of the
explanation is that racism is alive and well in the U.S. A healthy
chunk of the electorate, maybe 10% (and much higher in some states,
especially in the South), simply will not vote for a black man.
Sometimes, they're quite open about their reason for not supporting
Obama; mostly they hide their racism by citing other supposed
rationales: "elitist," "not one of us," "doesn't share our values,"
etc.
Then there's the mask element. McCain, for purposes of gaining the
presidency, saw that Obama's change&hope mantra had captured the
mood of the public. So, since his own issues weren't catching on,
McCain is now Mr. Change, has re-donned the mask of "maverick
reformer," and is running against the disreputable Republican record
of the past eight years.
McCain apparently is hoping that voters will forget he was a major
ultra-conservative part of that record -- he voted for Bush policies
90% of the time, for example, including approval of torture as state
policy. But that chameleon trick seems to fool a good many voters.
Plus, he added the younger, attractive Sarah Palin to the ticket and
she joined him in the charade about "reform" and "change," saying
she and McCain "will shake things up in Washington." But she's
silent about the extreme, rightwing nature of the "change" she has
in mind.
As many wise men have said, you can't go wrong underestimating the
intelligence of the American voter. On the other hand, the more the
public sees and hears the one-note Alaska governor, and learns more
about her lack of qualifications and about the abuse-of-power way
she governs, the less attractive she looks as a VP and potential
president.
2. FREE-MARKET SOCIALISM
"America in general, and your Republican party in particular, is
big on free-market capitalism, keeping the government out of the
hair of business. Now the Republican government, supported also by
Democrats, is making a 180-degree turn and urging regulation of
corporations, and using billions in tax dollars to prop up failing
big businesses, even going so far as to buy huge shares of these
corporations. What the hell is happening? To us in Europe, who have
seen similar alliances between government and business turn into
authoritarian control, we can't understand why the U.S. citizens are
not revolting."
The corporate elites who control the political system here just want
to make profits. Most of the time, they do this best when they keep
government at arms'-length from them. But in times of crisis, they
go eagerly to Washington for help.
In short, in good times they're capitalists, in bad times socialists
-- but only for the rich. Middle-class and poor folks recently got
the foot of a burdensome new bankruptcy law placed on their necks.
But the upper classes are provided privileged ways to avoid going
under. It is ever thus, but it's gone to extreme lengths in the
organized looting system for the wealthy arranged by the CheneyBush
Administration.
What's been almost laughable is watching McCain, who has been a
deregulationist all his political life, on Monday talking about the
necessity for not letting government get involved in bailing out
failing businesses, and on Tuesday he's proposing that the
government start regulating these banks and corporations and get
into the private business of selling insurance and mortgages. From
deregulator to proponent of nationalizing giant corporations --
that's how fast the economic-disaster quicksand sucked McCain into
the vortex.
And Obama came along quickly as well, even though he has important
caveats of opposition. Though the Democrats are plugging for ways to
aid the middle-class in this economic bailout, neither party or
candidate wants to risk being held responsible for a full-scale
financial meltdown and collapse of the U.S. economy. So, at least
for the moment, everyone's theoretically on board.
"Too big to be allowed to fail"
The rationale for the federal bailout plan is that these companies
are too huge, too intertwined in so many areas of the economy, to
risk them going under. It's like the Italian government saying that
the Mafia is too big and thus too important to the Italian economy
(read: jobs, contribution$) to let them fail, so we'll just prop
them up, look the other way while the looting and violence takes
place, and roll along on our merry way.
Yes, of course, these corporations are huge, sprawling, multi-headed
behemoths, but the politicians never want to examine how they got to
the point of untouchability. How many times have we seen how
deregulating industry has resulted in economic and/or social
disaster? Anybody remember Enron? The S&L collapse of the '80s (in
which a compromised McCain was right in the middle, by the way)? And
now Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae? And Lehman Brothers? And AIG? And
Morgan Stanley? Et al.
The ghost of the 1930s Great Depression is hovering over the present
crisis. Indeed, so fast is the house of cards tumbling down, with
more major corporations expected to follow, that the politicians,
regardless of party, are falling all over themselves to create an
institutional feather cushion to catch these failing enterprises as
they crash toward insolvency. These are socialism-like measures, as
was true in FDR's New Deal days as well, designed to forestall
another Great Depression and maybe even revolution. Except these
socialist-seeming solutions are not designed to aid the bulk of the
population, the middle-class and poor, but to provide aid and
sustenance to the wealthy titans of industry. The rest of us will be
expected to pay the bill, probably more than a trillion dollars when
all is said and done, since the plan also may include bailing out
troubled foreign banks who dived into the giant profit-making
machine in the U.S. (This massive federal bailout is being
considered at the same time when the cost for America's current wars
in Afghanistan and Iraq is approaching the trillion-dollar mark.)
The proposed federal bailout of the failing corporations is the
ultimate crime caper, well understood by those who have read Naomi
Klein's "The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism." Few
in their right mind would agree to any of this in normal times,
especially expressing a willingness to trust this same President and
Administration who have proven themselves reckless, incompetent,
secretive, lying power-mongers. But under leaked provisons of the
plan, Congress would turn over virtually full control of the
trillion-plus dollars for this new program to the Executive Branch
(via the Treasury Secretary), with no outside oversight permitted,
not by Congress and not by the courts. Here's the wording in the
original plan: "Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the
authority of this Act are non-reviewable and committed to agency
discretion, and
may not be reviewed by any court of law or any administrative
agency."
Given the massive effects on the body/social politic, it really
doesn't matter if the use of "shock-doctrine" tactics happens as a
conscious elitist plot to foment the crisis or follows a genuine
crisis that, willy nilly, provides the plutocrats with their
opportunity to use the catastrophe to their own economic and power
benefit. The result is the same: Ordinary citizens, especially in
the middle-class, take it in the neck -- and wallet -- and
constitutional government is damaged badly.
The inevitable fallout from greed
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson told an anxious public the other
day that things should get better now that the government is dealing
with the "heart of the matter." He seems to think the "heart of the
matter" has to do with moving cash around to keep the house of cards
propped up, at least in the public mind.
But the "heart of the matter" has to do with the promulgation of
greed as the operating principle in American economic (and social
and political) life. It's been that way openly for the past 30
years, at least since Reagan's presidency. We profess shock, shock!, when after a few years that principle leads inexorably
to disaster. When those crises develop, invariably the elites
arrange themselves massive bailouts, the corporate executives suffer
nary a wit, the taxpayers (and their children and grandchildren) are
expected to meekly pony up, and then, there being no accountability
for bad management, these ethically-challenged magnates feel free to
go out and do the same thing again until the next major crisis.
In fact, the moral lesson many CEOs might derive from this
experience is: If you're going to engage in high-stakes
over-leveraging and gambling on derivatives, don't do it in a
small-scale way. Make your corporations so very huge and so
important to the system that nobody will want to risk upsetting the
social/financial apple cart. So be sure to put at risk as much
investor-money as you possibly can and that way, if something goes
wrong (and inevitably it will), you'll get bailed out by the
government. Small scams will get you nothing and might even lead to
you getting arrested; but humongous unwise schemes, the bigger the
better, will give you a free ride at taxpayers' expense. Which
mostly means by us small-fry.
It IS crazy. And angering. And not just to liberals; many
conservatives also are horrified by the ramifications of the
governmental bailout. (As I write this, it's still not clear if and
when the much-amended bailout plan might be voted on and whether it
will pass in anything close to its original outline.)
3. OBAMA CAN'T/WON'T DO IT ALL
"Will Obama really make a difference? Can he? Didn't Bush and
Cheney and their cronies mess things up so badly that nobody will be
able to do much?"
Short answer: Yes, even if Obama wanted to institute major changes,
he would have to face the unenviable task of trying to undo all the
damage done by this Administration. To do so successfully might take
a decade or two, especially because HardRightists have been placed
into key positions in the bureaucracy, judiciary, and mass-media
outlets. Even if McCain loses, Obama will face a constant, nasty
battle to get anything decent done. (And if the Democrats in
November don't pick up enough seats in the Senate to block
Republican filibusters, the job will be even more difficult.)
Many progressives/liberals have chosen to believe that Obama is one
of them and is willing, indeed eager, to shake up the system in a
radical way. Don't count on it. I am enthusiastically working for
and donating money to his campaign, but I have lowered my
expectations. Obama is a centrist with some liberal leanings, but
beholden to many of the same elitist forces that dominate most
power-centers in this country. And his foreign-policy views, while
more cautious and realistic, rest on the dangerous exceptionalist
premise that the U.S. should be the military policeman in the world.
Obama certainly is bright, thoughtful, and full of good ideas, but
the best we can expect would be something like Bill Clinton. Given
how far right the country has moved in the past several decades --
the center is now regarded as "left" -- we on the progressive end of
the spectrum will have to spend a lot of time and effort pressuring
a President Obama to do what's right, given the other forces
operating on him. I continue to believe that Obama has within him
the possibility of being a dynamic, transformational president, but
we shouldn't expect him to be a progressive superman. That's not who
he is.
4. THE ROLE OF POLITICAL PARTIES
"Is there any kind of party loyalty and discipline in your
presidential elections? Or do voters in America make their decision
purely on personal, rather than policy, matters."
Short answers: No and yes. Americans have a disconnect when voting
for president. What the parties stand for hardly matters anymore.
How the candidates have voted and behaved in the past tends not to
count for all that much either. Sad to say, what seems of most
importance is biography and how "comfortable" citizens feel with a
candidate rather than with the issues and party. Voting from this
perspective makes no rational, or even political, sense --
especially since citizens are often voting against their own
economic and social interests. Which helps explain why there's such
"buyer-remorse" several years later when they see what they got and
their rational mind kicks in.
5. THE CORRUPT ELECTION SYSTEM
"Your election systems seem so easily corruptible. Has nothing
been done to change that?"
Short answer: Not much. A few states have reacted to the unreliable,
easily-hackable touch-screen computers by going to optical-scanning
machines that leave a paper record. But about one-third of the
voting public in November will still cast ballots on touch-screen
machines, many in key battleground states. The more pressing scandal
is that vote-tabulation for all forms of voting remains outsourced
to Republican-supporting corporations using secret software. Those
voting totals, it has been publicly demonstrated, can be altered by
a technician or hacker in less than a minute, leaving no indication
of tampering. (The puzzling additional scandal is that the
Democratic Party has shown no interest in publicizing these
vulnerabilities, and the corporate media is complicit as well by its
silence.)
In short, Americans have no real certainty that their votes have
been, or will be in November, accurately recorded. Rove and his
minions are trying to keep the polling-gap between the two
candidates to just a few percentage points so that whatever illegal
manipulations take place will not be so noticeable. In addition,
hundreds of thousands of likely Democratic voters are being purged
from the voting lists in key states, or are being victimized by GOP
scams of one sort or another, especially with regard to absentee
ballots. Once again, in a close election, electoral theft is a real
possibility, as happened in the past two presidential contests,
judging from the available evidence.
Well, Jacqueline and Wolfgang, let's stop there and deal with your
other questions at another time. I wish you good luck in your own
home countries, as they suffer "tsunami"-like effects on their
economies and political structures because of what's happening here
in the States. Good luck and stay in touch.
All best, Bernie.
Copyright 2008, by Bernard Weiner
Bernard Weiner, Ph.D., has taught
government & international relations at universities in California and
Washington, worked as a writer/editor at the San Francisco Chronicle for two
decades, and currently serves as co-editor of The Crisis Papers (www.crisispapers.org).
To comment: crisispapers@comcast.net .
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