Saying ‘No Deal’ to This New Deal
The marriage of American capitalism and democracy has always been a Pamela Anderson and Tommy Lee affair-stormy and erratic since its hasty wedding. But during the debate over a Wall Street bailout this week, we watched that matrimonial knot unwind into a tangled tale of terror.
As a financial crisis became a political panic, capitalism murdered democracy (ironically, while pursuing a vaguely socialist bailout). Only, unlike a typical horror story, the dead body wasn't hidden, it was dumped in the nation's public square.
The fiasco started, like most, with unreasonable demands. Under threat of financial meltdown, capitalism's corporate lobbyists asked our democracy to forsake its usual deliberations and hand over $700 billion of taxpayer money in less than a week.
Many were surprised when democracy responded with such valiant defiance. As television screens split between the floors of the stock exchange and the House of Representatives, lawmakers initially voted with their constituents and against the bailout.
That's when this husband-and-wife argument escalated into a grisly crime of passion.
CNN's Ali Velshi frothed that "the banks and the companies don't care about the intricacies" of democratic deliberations. A CEO angrily told CNN that "the money is being held hostage to the political process"-as if government resources are rightfully Wall Street's. And as the Dow tanked, the Chamber of Commerce threatened retribution against recalcitrant lawmakers.
The final deathblow came from TINA, shorthand for "There Is No Alternative"-the motto that Margaret Thatcher used to peddle her corporatism, and that Washington and Wall Street used to promote theirs.
Whether it was a Barclays Capital executive telling reporters "there is no choice" or Rep. Joe Crowley, D-N.Y., insisting that "this needs to be done and it needs to be done right away," responsibly democratic prescriptions were pulverized by capitalism's deranged mantra of inevitability and urgency. To even mention, as economist Dean Baker did, that the taxpayer giveaway could exacerbate the crisis was to risk flogging by columnists like Tom Friedman. The sycophantic flat-earther vilified bailout opponents (i.e., most Americans) as mentally incapacitated deadbeats who "can't balance their own checkbooks."
By the time the fight hit Congress' upper chamber, senatorial morticians were embalming democracy's corpse. Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., permitted consideration of just one alternative, and he rigged parliamentary procedure to guarantee its defeat.
Yet, if capitalism took democracy's life through a perverse legislative process, then it robbed its grave with the bailout bill's substance.
American democracy is defined by vesting government power in systems and rules, not in individuals and whims. We have been, as John Adams wrote, "an empire of laws, and not of men"-until now.
Instead of responding to this meltdown by updating regulatory institutions or investing in job-creating infrastructure, the bailout proposes giving one unelected appointee-the treasury secretary-complete authority to dole out $700 billion to bank executives, with little oversight. And here's the scary part: That lurch toward dictatorship was motivated not just by crony corruption, but also by a deeper ideological shift.
We now face market forces uninhibited by democratic governance-Chinese dictators and Saudi princes can move trillions of dollars without so much as a press release. This bailout, marketed as a speed enhancer, is an aggressive attempt to discard democracy's checks and balances and pantomime that kind of autocracy.
While our political culture still required a public sales job (thus, the fear-mongering), the bill's czarism aims to permanently euthanize democracy in the name of improving our capitalism's global agility. In that sense, this week's spousal killing wasn't random. It was the beginning of a systematic assault on our Constitution and a radical departure from Franklin Roosevelt's original covenant-a dangerous "new deal" we must say "no deal" to
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20 Comments so far
Show AllDavid Sirota said it all. Our democracy is "DEAD!"
Thanks Obama! Wow, when you said "change" You really meant it!
Yeah like shake the change out of your pockets.
Well, there is one obvious thing we can do. Look up which way your own reps voted on this, and if they supported it, vote for anyone and anything opposing them. I'm disgusted that all 5 of WV's voted for it. I think we need to see to it that ALL the Cpngressmen and women who voted Yes are ripped from their seats in November, no matter their stance on other issues.
"...while pursuing a vaguely socialist bailout)"
Folks, we need to stop calling this socialism. Really. It ain't. The right does enough to demonize the word socialism. We do not need to help.
I agree.
So when's "The Uprising" going to start - There's not a handful of people in the US who are fearless enough to go against the elected mob. We have the kind of government that we voted for and will continue to vote for. We deserve what we have. Unfortunately, the dead in Iraq and other US battle zones are victims without a vote.
America is borrowing money from China and oil from Saudi Arabia. So when will America be forced to pay up? Sooner or later? Borrowing can't go on thinking nothing's wrong !
Thanks Obama! Wow, when you said "change" You really meant it!
There is no respect left in this quarter for "law and order".
-- EKATON --
First of all, it's gonna be at least $1.5-2 trillion - stop pretending the liars and thieves are telling the truth for once in their criminal lives. Hell, the "tax cuts" already raise the total to $850 billion. (Funny, isn't it? They tack on another $8000 apiece per taxpayer, then kick him back a few peanuts to shut him up. Brilliant!)
Second, let's remember this isn't the first "bailout" this year, it's just the first one where they let us pretend that we had a say-so - nearly $3 trillion already to Fannie, Freddie, AIG, Big Auto, foreign banks, money-markets etc with zero input and/or approval from We The People.
Third - I don't know about anyone else, but this one finally broke me. I'm going to the dark side, the greedy side, the ruthless side. I'm gonna lie, cheat, steal - whatever it takes to accumulate more money than I could spend in, say, 5 lifetimes of super-excess. Gonna get me a flag pin, a bible, a position over at J.P.Morgan WaMu Chase Citi Wachovia and a copy of "Pyramid Schemes For Dummies."
Greed f**king rocks!!!
The Government Bails Out Problems They Caused…
(Or at least allowed to happen!)
The economic woes of this country have many contributors...
1. Huge jumps in unemployment, deregulation, refusal of the Bush Administration to police the industry,
2. Unscrupulous mortgage brokers who sold ARM’s and balloon mortgages that were too big for some people to afford... once interest rates started to climb.
3. Property tax increases on rapidly increasing property values.
4. Huge property insurance increases after the hurricanes.
5. The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999
6. The credit card legislation of 2003 / 2004 that doubled and tripled the payments of millions of people with large credit card balances.... THAT was the domino that started the cascade for most people!
Congress is now attempting to put a bandaid on a compound fracture.
Suggested solution: We urge you to freeze foreclosures, and use the “bailout” money to create an agency to buy delinquent mortgages and negotiate mortgages the people CAN afford, even if they are 40 year fixed-rate mortgages! Vacant and foreclosed properties are driving ALL of our values down, while also diminishing the tax base of the communities around the country.
provoice - St. Petersburg, FL
Too late, ezeflyer, its a done deal.
I wonder who gets the NEXT trillion tax dollars.
-- EKATON --
oh shit
The bailout can wait a bit until we put the issue up for a referendum on the Nov. 4 ballot.
Meantime we can study the different solutions.
Don't fall for conservative scare tactics.
Socialism may not have to overthrow capitalism. Capital may end up gorging itself into a diabetic coma.
We have lost our sovereignty to those princes and dictators and to a criminal
class of robber barons here at home that, despite all their patriotic posturing,
don't give a rat's ass about the American people.
Remember the words of Woody Guthrie in the "Ballad of Pretty Boy Floyd": As through this world I've rambled I've met some funny men...Some will rob you with a six gun and some with a fountain pen.
If the speculators can push the oil price up to $146/barrel, then it was undoubtedly they who helped the market plunge 800 points. They are holding us hostage. We need to do the right thing: NO BAILOUT.
Then we must elect Barack Obama.
JaneM
you mean the same Barack Obama who voted FOR the bailout, then convinced House members who had previously voted NO to vote YES, ensuring its passage, THAT Barack Obama, or another one I haven't heard of?
Sorry, Jane, but you're too late.
As for Obama...I'm not sure I even want to hear his reason for voting the bailout. I'm just too disgusted.
Time to dig up the yard and plant a vegetable garden...
David Sirota has finally written an article I can completely agree with! Hot Dog!!
He pegged CNN's Ali Velshi for the shill he is and others.