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Herbert Hoover Lives
The abyss is widening. Of the 30 companies in the Dow Jones industrial index, 22 have announced job cuts since October. Unemployment is up in all 50 states, with layoffs at both high-tech companies (Microsoft) and low (Caterpillar). The December job loss in retailing is the worst since at least 1939. The new-home sales rate has fallen to its all-time low since record-keeping began in 1963.
What are Americans still buying? Big Macs, Campbell’s soup, Hershey’s chocolate and Spam — the four food groups of the apocalypse.
The crisis is at least as grave as the one that confronted us — and, for a time, united us — after 9/11. Which is why the antics among Republicans on Capitol Hill seem so surreal. These are the same politicians who only yesterday smeared the patriotism of any dissenters from Bush’s “war on terror.” Where is their own patriotism now that economic terror is inflicting far more harm on their constituents than Saddam Hussein’s nonexistent W.M.D.?
The House stimulus bill is an inevitably imperfect hodgepodge-in-progress. Obama’s next move, a new plan to prevent the collapse of America’s banks, may prove more problematic still, especially given the subpar record of the new Treasury secretary, Timothy Geithner, in warding off calamity while at the New York Fed. No one should expect the Republicans to give the new president carte blanche, fall blindly into lock step or be “post-partisan.” (Though that’s exactly what the G.O.P. demanded of Democrats with Bush: You were either with him or with the terrorists.)
But you might think that a loyal opposition would want to pitch in and play a serious role at a time of national peril. Not by singing “Kumbaya” but by collaborating on possible solutions and advancing a policy debate that many Americans’ lives depend on. As Raymond Moley, of F.D.R.’s brain trust, said of the cross-party effort at the harrowing start of that presidency in March 1933, Hoover and Roosevelt acolytes “had forgotten to be Republicans or Democrats” as they urgently tried to rescue their country.
The current G.O.P. acts as if it — and we — have all the time in the world. It kept hoping in vain that the fast-waning Blago sideshow would somehow impale Obama or Rahm Emanuel. It has come perilously close to wishing aloud that a terrorist attack will materialize to discredit Obama’s reversals of Bush policy on torture, military tribunals and Gitmo. The party’s sole consistent ambition is to play petty politics to gum up the works.
If anything, the Republican Congressional leadership seems to be emulating John McCain’s September stunt of “suspending” his campaign to “fix” the Wall Street meltdown. For all his bluster, McCain in the end had no fixes to offer and sat like a pet rock at the White House meeting on the crisis before capitulating to the bailout. His imitators likewise posture in public about their determination to take action, then do nothing while more and more Americans cry for help.
The problem is not that House Republicans gave the stimulus bill zero votes last week. That’s transitory political symbolism, and it had no effect on the outcome. Some of the naysayers will vote for the revised final bill anyway (and claim, Kerry-style, that they were against it before they were for it). The more disturbing problem is that the party has zero leaders and zero ideas. It is as AWOL in this disaster as the Bush administration was during Katrina.
If the country wasn’t suffering, the Republicans’ behavior would be a laugh riot. The House minority leader, John Boehner, from the economic wasteland of Ohio, declared on “Meet the Press” last Sunday that the G.O.P. didn’t want to be “the party of ‘No’ ” but “the party of better ideas, better solutions.” And what are those ideas, exactly? He said he’ll get back to us “over the coming months.”
His deputy, the Virginia congressman Eric Cantor, has followed the same script, claiming that the G.O.P. will not be “the party of ‘No’ ” but will someday offer unspecified “solutions and alternatives.” Not to be left out, the party’s great white hope, Sarah Palin, unveiled a new political action committee last week with a Web site also promising “fresh ideas.” But as the liberal blogger Markos Moulitsas Zúniga observed, the site invites visitors to make donations and read Palin hagiography while offering no links to any ideas, fresh or otherwise.
For its own contribution to this intellectual void, the Republican National Committee convened last week under a new banner, “Republican for a Reason.” Perhaps that unidentified reason will be determined by a panel of judges on a TV reality show. It had better be brilliant given that only five states (with 20 total electoral votes) now lean red in party affiliation, according to Gallup. At this rate the G.O.P. will be in Alf Landon territory by 2012.
The Republicans do have one idea, of course, but it’s hardly fresh: more and bigger tax cuts, particularly for business and the well-off. That’s the sum of their “alternative” stimulus plan. Obama has tried to accommodate this panacea, perhaps to a fault. Mainstream economists in both parties believe that tax cuts in the stimulus package will deliver far less bang for the buck than, say, infrastructure spending. The tax-cut stimulus embraced a year ago by the G.O.P. induced next-to-no consumer spending as Americans merely banked the savings or paid down debt.
We also now know conclusively that the larger Bush tax cuts, besides running up record deficits and exacerbating income inequality, were also at best a placebo on our road to ruin. In a January survey of economists, including former McCain advisers like Douglas Holtz-Eakin and Mark Zandi, The Washington Post determined that the job growth the Bush administration kept bragging about (“52 straight months!”) was a mirage inflated by the housing bubble. Job growth — about 2 percent — was in fact the most tepid of any eight-year period “since data collection began seven decades ago.” Gross domestic product grew at a slower pace than in any eight years since the Truman administration.
But even if tax cuts alone could jump-start a recovery, they couldn’t do the heavy lifting that Obama has promised and the country desperately needs: a down payment on a new economy to replace our dilapidated 20th-century model and bring back long-term growth. The Republicans don’t acknowledge the need for this transformation, or debate it in good conscience, preferring instead to hyperventilate over the contraceptives in a small family-planning program since removed from the stimulus bill. All it takes is the specter of condoms for the party of Vitter, Foley and Craig to go gaga.
The Republicans’ other preoccupation remains Rush Limbaugh, who is by default becoming their de facto leader. While most Americans are fearing fear itself, G.O.P. politicians are tripping over themselves in morbid terror of Rush.
These pratfalls commenced after Obama casually told some Republican congressmen (correctly) that they won’t “get things done” if they take their orders from Limbaugh. That’s all the stimulus the big man needed to go on a new bender of self-aggrandizement. He boasted that Obama is “more frightened” of him than he is of the Republican leaders in the House or Senate. He said of the new president, “I hope he fails.”
Obama no doubt finds Limbaugh’s grandiosity more amusing than frightening, but G.O.P. politicians are shaking like Jell-O. When asked by Andrea Mitchell of NBC News on Wednesday if he shared Limbaugh’s hope that Obama fails, Eric Cantor spun like a top before running off, as it happened, to appear on Limbaugh’s radio show. Mike Pence of Indiana, No. 3 in the Republican House leadership, similarly squirmed when asked if he agreed with Limbaugh. Though the Republicans’ official, poll-driven line is that they want Obama to succeed, they’d rather abandon that disingenuous nicety than cross Rush.
Most pathetic of all was Phil Gingrey, a right-wing Republican congressman from Georgia, who mildly criticized both Limbaugh and Sean Hannity to Politico because they “stand back and throw bricks” while lawmakers labor in the trenches. So many called Gingrey’s office to complain that the poor congressman begged Limbaugh to bring him on air to publicly recant on Wednesday. As Gingrey abjectly apologized to talk radio’s commandant for his “stupid comments” and “foot-in-mouth disease,” he sounded like the inmate in a B-prison-movie cowering before the warden after a failed jailbreak.
“It’s up to me to hijack the Obama honeymoon,” Limbaugh soon gloated, “and I’ve done it.” In his dreams. He has hijacked what’s left of the Republican Party; the Obama honeymoon remains intact. The nightmare is that we have so irrelevant, clownish and childish an opposition party at a moment when America is in an all-hands-on-deck emergency that’s as trying as war. To paraphrase a dictum that has been variously attributed to two of our most storied leaders in times of great challenge, Thomas Paine and George Patton, the Republicans should either lead, follow or get out of the grown-ups’ way.
- Posted in


58 Comments so far
Show All"Where is their own patriotism now that economic terror is inflicting far more harm on their constituents than Saddam Hussein’s nonexistent W.M.D.?"
Precisely what I've been saying these past 7 years.
All the pensions which were stolen must surely be more frightening for our elders than some bogeyman in a cave somewhere.
Meanwhile, bush walks down to the local pub: The Phantom Arms
The republicans have gone from dangerous to the keystone cops. But then, they have done as much damage as they could get away with, and now they have nothing else to do that can hurt us much more. Now they are really only there to remind us all of how we got where we are now.
The fact that they are all afraid of Limbaugh is just laughable. How much more pathetic can they be? A drug addled, overweight, prescription borrowing dirtbag who can't keep a wife to save his own ass is their leader? So much for "family values". But then, the party of Larry Craig isn't known for that, now are they? They are more known for telling everyone ELSE how to live while they go picking up strangers in men's rooms in airports and trying to pick up underage paiges in congress. Oh, and giving the ultra rich tax cuts.
So now they are taking their marching orders from a radio talk show host. Pretty pathetic. Especially when you consider that he is a known liar, a drug addict, a convicted felon, and proves every day that he doesn't give a damn about what happens to this country. God, how pathetic.
Sioux Rose
WJM: Good observations. Two adjunct thoughts come to my mind. First, we see here how POWERFUL media is as a shaping device. If the right wing had not put this hatemonger onto SO many stations, providing a "safe network" through which all those feeling anger could relate, he would not have the influence he has. With an operating "Fairness Doctrine," there would be voices in media that effectively disabled this purveyor of hate (who obviously hates himself).
I would like to relate a personal event that took place when I was in fifth grade, because I came face to face with a "Limbaugh." Even at the tender age of 10, there was a female in the fifth grade who had incredible power to turn children against children. I was always a natural mystic, and on recess would wander off to the far reaches of the school property, mostly to contemplate. This girl told the principal that I was smoking with the "bad boys" and instead of anyone asking me if it was true, the entire fifth grade was punished, no one was allowed out at recess, I became a pariah on accusation alone, and this girl went on to intimidate all through junior high school and high school.
Another female who I deeply admire, beautiful, an accomplished gymnast, kind and humble, invited many peers to her 14th birthday party. The female related in the 5th grade episode had enough clout to make sure VERY FEW attended. Having had the chance to observe this girl's "operations," I saw the way fear functions as a control device. No one wanted to incur her wrath, so few dared to challenge her "authority." Like some kind of tribal leader, she seemed to preside over who was "allowed" to date whomever.
Later on I learned that her father had been convicted in some kind of local political corruption, so some might argue that this type of behavior ran in the genes. I think it's learned. My point is, there is a type of individual so scathing in their own level of envy of others, that they think NOTHING of throwing out lies, calumny, and attacks. This gives them power, but as we see with Rush, he cannot live with himself. Somewhere in whatever remnant of a soul that remains he sees the reflection of that fat disgusting human version of Jabba the Hut that probably has to pay women to have any sex at all with him.
All forms of spirituality teach unity, learning to put aside our differences in pursuit of objectives greater than self-interest. Those that instead divide and conquer using all forms of poisonous content do an ENORMOUS disservice to humanity. That people listen to him is a shame. I suspect that they have such disappointment for the content of their own lives, that Rush gives them a false sense of feeling better than someone else, "superior" to the ones he picks on. The Bible says it is a sin to grant false witness. 98.6% of hate radio does just that... and to the extent our air waves remain contaminated, a dangerous percentage of individuals become intellectually corrupted. It is a MISUSE of the AIR element, and one that is not without repurcussions, as the quality of American life is rapidly coming to resemble the sewer of the contents being spewed. Enough persons fortified by higher intentions can stem the tide... and it is SO important that we do so.
So what happened to that bully, Sioux Rose? Does she continue to bend others to her will now that she's an adult?
It's hard to stand up to a bully. But I did so once - to a co-worker who was also a woman - and although it was a harrowing experience and I didn't exactly win that battle, I was better off in the long run because she didn't try to intimidate me after that. Not when there are easier prey out there.
Sioux Rose
I stood up to her, but what amazed me was her POWER and I'm telling you she's cut from the same cosmic cloth as a Rush Limbaugh.
I did attend my 10th, 20th and 30th HS reunions and no one had seen hide nor hair of her. She was not a pretty female, and I would imagine that worked against her added to the gravity of the years, the aging process and so forth. A just fate in her instance! Ugliness was definitely hers on the inside!
You personalize things way too much and depend way too much on superstition to 'explain' very down-to-earth phenomena and behavior.
Sioux Rose
Or you're afraid to see outside your paradigm.
We're fucked.
We wouldn't have been having a Herbert Hoover in the White House these last 8 years if the voters hadn't been dumb enough and if Nader hadn't put him in there. My daughter who used to be doing just fine in the late 90s and even got married found herself at a total loss after her husband in addition to her brother lost their lives in Fallujah and her work outsourced 5 times these last 8 years. I even had to dip into my retirement savings just to help her finish paying the mortgage and take care of her two children. Today, her salary is only 55% of what she used to make 8 years ago !
So can you prove to us that we'd still be stuck in Iraq had Al Gore been president in the last 8 years or that we'd be stuck with the massive job layoffs that escalated these last 8 years alone? And what would Nader have done differently ? You sir have no respect for the plight of the working class and our troops.
You're not alone. A lot of young men and women who wanted to serve didn't antipate that they would be dragged into this kind of a mess. If Al Gore had been president, we would not have gone into Iraq. In fact, if Al Gore had been president, 9/11 would have been prevented. Don't expect the Naderites on this forum to honor your children as they never had to serve or go through job cuts, wage cuts, injuries due to lack of labor safety standards or poor training, etc ...
Naderites, i.e. progressives, do honor your children, not as soldiers but as human beings. Progressives never served in the armed forces because we understand the racket that it is. Those who contribute in good faith are supposed to walk out when the racket goes too far.
Job/wage cuts? Progressives don't believe in "jobs". We believe in universal rights to ownership of production. On the job safety becomes the responsibility of the individual as does almost everything else.
Why do people join organizations? To be a part of something bigger? How about something better, instead of something bigger?
I'm often mistaken as a Nader hater but I'm not really that but the staunch defending of the guy without getting to the core of what's really wrong with our society and system only makes matters worse. Nader couldn't possibly change America's self-reliant yankee individualist ideology on a federal level. He'd have to start local, spread it around to more local areas in his state, and then get a united front on the state level and spread it around to other states before he could hit it on the federal level. I would have voted for Nader but knowing that the system is stacked against him unless we could first reform Congress, I voted Obama. Yes, I know Obama has flaws and I'm sure that there will be things he'll do that I won't like but he hasn't done so bad so far and is trying to level out the playing field. As for Nader, he needs to also help others who want to share his ideas run for and win local offices so that someday he will be honored and not be forgotten. Right now, I have yet to see any actual major accomplishment of Ralph Nader since 1980 other than the typical throw money at an organization which hasn't produced any viable results. Maybe in a decade or two we can have a Ralph Nader running the country to give us the major reforms needed but we're going to inevitably have to build that support starting with local elections from the bottom up or it will be just like the last 28 years.
"Don't expect the Naderites on this forum to honor your children as they never had to serve or go through job cuts, wage cuts, injuries due to lack of labor safety standards or poor training, etc ..."
Are you God? Is that how you know what all "Naderites" have and haven't gone through, or whom they do or do not honor? What's it like, being omniscient?
Keep putting your faith in the Democratic party -- or the Republican party, for that matter! You'll get the same either way. The former is just "nicer" about screwing you for their corporate masters' sake.
Marlene Davis,
The whole Iraq war and especially Fallujah is a war crime. Your daughter's husband and brother were murdered while murdering because of the lies of Mr. Bush et al.
You ought to be very angry at the Bush Republican party, and the Democrats who have supported Bush.
Get your facts straight.
BTW. Your daughter would have received 250,000 dollars as a death benefit, and DIC payments and medical benefits for life from the government for her military husband. She will receive money for her childrens' college educations, plus their medical benefits until 18. What happened to that money and benefits? Maybe she is telling you a story or maybe you are telling us a story.
"Your daughter would have received 250,000 dollars as a death benefit, and DIC payments and medical benefits for life from the government for her military husband. She will receive money for her childrens' college educations, plus their medical benefits until 18. What happened to that money and benefits? Maybe she is telling you a story or maybe you are telling us a story."
Benefits don't come as "easy" as you claim. You have no respect for the troops and are an obvious RACIST. Call me a liar if you wish but you know nothing about the way the military pay actually works.
Rich wrote:
"The crisis is at least as grave as the one that confronted us — and, for a time, united us — after 9/11."
That could be the understatement of the year. The Bush Depression is several orders of magnitude a greater threat than the perpetrators of 9/11 ever were. The greatest threat they posed was the possibility that they would be used as an excuse for something like the Iraq War. The Bush Depression threatens to make paupers out of most of us as it brings a frightening future into focus -- tens of millions living in dilapidated hovels, getting by on junk food as they sit like zombies in front of computer screens, too sedated and confused to ever take to the streets to demand a responsive government.
seems most folks miss the possibility that the guy in the cave put this together..i do not think it was the boy george pulling the strings!!
ken
If you mean Cheney, of course I agree that he was pulling the strings. But Bush had the authority and put his stamp of approval on it, and so his name will be associated with it. Cheney will just walk away, literally and figuratively, unless somehow Obama is pressured into holding Cheney legally accountable.
All the comments above are very good. Marlene Davis, you should share your tragic story with the country; it is a distillation of what this country has been dragged through, courtesy of the GOP.
Frank Rich is so dead-on with his remarks; I got a laugh out of his "four food groups of the apocalypse" line. He and I must have been channelling the same muse; on my blog, magnoliadrive (http://magnoliadrive.blogspot.com), I covered many of his same points, coming to essentially the same conclusions. The Republicans have no clue what to do, but they are afraid that Obama will succeed and their party will go the way of the Whigs. As Dick Cheney would say, "So?"
I loved that line too along with Dowd's "corporate welfare queens."
Thank you Frank Rich for these much needed comments. Columnist David Brooks tried hypocritically yesterday to debase the efforts of the administration and to suggest that the Democratic social programs promised in the election campaign be postponed indefinitely. It really amazes me that Republicans can muster the gaul after eight years of ignoring the needs of the country and destroying the world's fianancial system with their get-rich-quick disaster, to offer critisim and advise to the Democrats. One thing we can depend on from them is their continued effort to regain power by whatever means works.
To an extent, you are correct. To another one you are not. You are correct that the democrats didn't stand up to the republicans, but you forget that the republicans had a majority for years in both houses of congress, and the white house for the last 8. The democrats could have done whatever they wanted, but in the end it was the republicans who held the power, and thus the decision making.
The real problme we have in this country is that money makes all decisions. It then tells those who supposedly have power what to do and how to couch it in some words that seems to explain things. Unfortunately, money makes BAD decisions 90% of the time, and doesn't see them when it does. It's only cause it it's own furtherance, and it will do just that to the point of suicide. And so money decided that the profits they would get from outsourcing everything was worth killing off their market. Where they thought the money for those profits would be coming from is proof that money doesn't know it's ass from a hole in the ground.And so now the entire thing comes crashing down, while 400 people in this country saw their billions double, and the rest of us are out on the street.
It's now time to take it all back and fix what they screwed up. But prepare for a fight, because these people are still so eaten up with their own greed that they don't see any problems. And they won't give up what they took so long to steal easily. It's going to take a lot of work, and a lot of fighting to undo this mess, and it won't be fixed any time soon. It took the greed and actions of these people over a half a century to do this much damage, it may take that long to fix it all.
Notice how someone always tries to spread the blame for Republican screw-ups onto the Democrats. This is very much the dominant paradigm, propagated by the corporate media and echoed by voices across the political spectrum.
Curiously, it doesn't seem to work the other way around. When Democrats screw up, it's the Democrats fault, period. I think this is an example of the rightward bias of our political discourse.
I'm for retiring this stale meme and letting the Repubs take the blame for their own screw-ups for a change.
Dave has it correct. Washington is the District of Criminals and the the dem orats are just as bad as the Greedy Oil Party! Folks, can't you see that if you hire a crooked attorney it doesn't matter what party he belongs to?
"The screw-ups of the last 8 years were completely bipartisan." True. But what about the screwups in the 8 years prior to that? Media consolidation, repealing of Glass-Steagall, tax-breaks for the rich, that all happened under Clinton. And pointing that out makes me a "Republican apologist", right?
Anyone who thinks the "two party system" offers real choice is clinging pathetically to a myth whose end is near. People are waking up. The REAL change will be when we do away with the duopoly, and consciously confront the fact that we never took Eisenhower's warning about the military-industrial complex seriously. Until we do, we'll continue to pay the price. God willing, enough of us will wake up in time.
Sioux Rose
MANINW: Well-said, and I totally concur.
One thing I like about the democrats is that they're not like the lock-step, fascist repugs. Dems have a much wider range of thinking. Of course this means they don't always get there shit together.
Up until 2006, the dems didn't have any majority at all, and after that, until this last electioin, they did not hold a veto proof majority. Having a simple majority doesn't mean much when it comes down to getting things passed.
As to Afghanistan, I agree that we don't have any real business being there. As to the banks, I agree that giving them money (eswpecially without any overishgt or accountability) is useless. You want a real answer? Give US the money, we'll pay off our mortgages and bills, the banks will get the money and we will be left WITH our houses and families instead of out on the street. But of course, the banks are the ones who pull the strings, ultimately, and we don't.
Are the democrats guilt free? Of course not. Especially some of them, Pelosi topping that list. She, as speaker of the house, had a serious obligation to make sure that congress did it's job, but she defaulted in doing so. And Ried didn't help things by being such a complete wimp as a senate majority leader, either. Both of them bear a great deal of responsibility for the mess we're in right now.
But in reality, it was W and his idiot tax breaks for his constituency, those who already had more than they will ever need. And Phil Gramm for the undoing of the regulations that kept the financial sector working and people relatively honest. And for his sorry butt to call people "whiners" is just plain inexcuseable. It shows just how little regard the republicans have for people who aren't already billionaires.
In truth, it was the republicans who declared war on the middle class and the country, over 30 years ago. The dems didn't see it, and didn't want to admit it, regardless of how many of us DID see it and tried to tell them. We the people have been losing ground for over 30 years, while the rich just keep getting more and more and doing less and less with it. By the time the last several elections took place, both parties were just as corrupted as possible, but the republicans took and still do take the cake. They live by greed and don't care who they hurt or even if they bring down the whole country, as long as they get theirs.
So I still do and will continue to see the republicans as the worst of the worst, until the democrats prove without a doubt that they are just as bad if not worse. I know when war has been declared on me, and I will wait and see how bad the democrats are about it. But in reality, I doubt they can be any worse.
What's forgotten is that the Bushies always ruled from a minority position even though they won congressional majorities in 2002 and 2004 by constantly playing "Look! terrorist alert!"
What we saw in the Palin rallies was the celebration of the hatred of reason. Whya re the Republicans afraid of Limbaugh? Precisely because they're acquainted with the power, not just of irrationality, but of anti-rational. An irrational person may be harmless; one who is committed to anti-rationality is dangerous.
The population of the planet increases at three people per second.
Resources are running out.
It's time to pay the bill.
And what have we got in the White House and the Cabinet and Congress?
More of the same, that's what. Timid corporate lackies unwilling to sacrifice a moment of profit to solve any problems.
Obama keeps hiring lobbyists for the cabinet, all the while condemning lobbyists.
And the beat goes on, la di da di dee. La di Da di DA.
Charles Schumer said the other day that they would continue to reach out to the Republicans and give them concessions even when they dont have to-as they did last week(despite all the republicans voting no).
Its hard to say which is worse, the audacity of the Republicans or the lack of spine/false face of the Democrats.
That Rich can say Caterpillar is low tech shows just how ignorant of the real world, real economy, and technology involved in manufacturing, these political and financial type of people are.
Some pages from Caterpillar:
http://www.cat.com/cda/layout?m=106566&x=7
http://www.cat.com/cda/layout?m=106505&x=7
http://www.cat.com/cda/layout?m=106507&x=7
(It's Caterpillar technology that makes it possible for the Israelies to destroy so many Palestinian houses and run over people.)
Once the facilities and the people who know how to run them are gone it will take many decades to recover manufacturing capability -- while all the while other countries pull ahead and increase their technological sophistication.
When the financial con games don't work anymore, if we don't have the ability to generate real wealth and real product we become just another poor and primitive third-world nation. Already we lack the capability of making most of what we consume. This monopoly game they play is like the original one -- phony money and some chips of wood on a piece of printed cardboard. Even our 'glorious' weapons systems will fail -- already in the rape of Iraq we ran out of bullets and had to buy some from the Israelis.
The government and media are living in a fantasy world. If the world finally gets tired of supporting the US empire and the genocide it inflicts on credit, all it will have to do is stop shipping goods and the military will fall apart. (Not that maybe that would be such a bad thing, of course, but the rest of the US would go down the pipes too.)
Archie Bunker's wish came true in 2001.
"Mister we can use a man like Herbert Hoover again". (From the All In the Family theme song). Careful what you wish for Archie and Edith!
If Archie Bunker were alive today, I think he would have voted Bush twice but Obama in 2008. Archie Bunker could have really cared less about the social issues as long as the economic goods were delivered to him. Unfortunately, unlike the Great Depression Era, there is no public unity or today's labor unions would be less into money and management and more into team work and pure labor pride.
Most of the time, the Great Depression is taught in schools and presented on the media as something that just "happened"--like a hurricane or earthquake. However there were fundamental flaws in the capitalist system that made the Great Depression inevitable. And those flaws still exist today.
In addition to the issues raised in this article, I would like to add another. Many historical economists agree that there were serious, hidden, and ignored problems in the economy in the twenties--well before the crash of '29. One of the most important--and one that is all to evident today--was the declining real purchasing power of the working class. Even though businesses and CEOs were making record amounts of money, little of the benefits went to labor. Ordinary people could not then buy the ever increasing glut of consumer goods. Wealth disparity in American society reached levels that weren't exceeded until the present day.
And of course there was the prevalent preaching that unrestrained capitalism would cure all. And if you weren't in a rising boat---well, you just were too lazy or incompetent to get in on the gravy!
Add to that a media filled with fluff reporting and a "bread and circuses" entertainment for the masses--well, the 1920's are looking alot like American in the first decade of the 21st century!
We in the US now reap the results of an educational system that cannot be adequately described with the word "failure".
And almost every one of us, including the politicians mindlessly grabbing at straws, is a product of that education.
If people don't learn how to live in accord with nature, to take charge of their own health, to make their way without falling into greed, without trampling others or the planet, then there is no chance of real success. No man can call himself wealthy when all around him others are suffering and struggling. No amount of money can insulate anyone from this world; all must, as long as we breathe, live in this world.
All the problems of the world are human problems. The economic disaster has many of its roots in greed. Greed is evidence of an empty inner life and small, limited consciousness. When a man values only the baubles he can see or has an unquenchable thirst for power, he is setting himself up for failure and disappointment; and if he gains power and influence, he brings that failure to the world even as he accumulates material wealth. It is a loss for everyone.
Expansion of consciousness is a significant remedy. That expansion will not be achieved by amassing more information about the world's troubles. It is an inner experience easily attainable by closing the eyes and transcending the boundaries of thought, allowing the mind to attain boundless awareness. The inner life of any man or woman is the source of peace, balance, and wisdom.
www.tm.org
www.stressfreeschools.org
I tend to think of Limbaugh as a sociological equivalent of a sore that can only self-lance. He is getting close. Unfortunately the contageon on the body politic will also need to detoxify. The irony is that denial only works as a strategy as long as one can deny that there is denial. Give it a few months.
The honeymoon for the Obama admin is something more akin to an old marriage thats been around for a long, long time. Rather than a honeymoon, I have my eye on supporting the marriage and a reaffirmation of vows some years down the road.
It is wonderful to see an elder of the family in residence at the WH. I hold this woman in my heart with deep respect and am grateful for the precedent being set. That more than makes up for the 'bum rush'.
Frank,
"While most Americans are fearing fear itself..."
Don't forget the Repubs gift of the great idea of color-coded "terror alerts" for "Homeland Security."
Remember those? "Red," "Orange," "Yellow," had to substitute colors for supposed terror levels!
And most Americans swallowed that BS!
Agreed, incompetence was brought to new depths with the BushCo administration and its minions who continue to serve in Congress.
Today in Dubuque it's blue skies, so that's today's color!
Sorry... the blame needs to be spread around a little more. The GOP may be despicable, but the Dems are caught up in their own little game of carving up their golden goose position by give aways to their major supporters and continuing the tradition of "compromise" that has no reciprocal from the GOP EVER!
Frank Rich writes:
"What are Americans still buying? Big Macs, Campbell’s soup, Hershey’s chocolate and Spam — the four food groups of the apocalypse."
To the extent his rhetorical question is accurately answered, I think this says a helluva lot about USAns.
I can accept the Big Macs---if you're still working and don't have time to cook, while remember that Reagan asserted that ketchup (in school lunch programs which still existed then!) is a "vegetable."
Also, I think chocolate is often demonized while it is a good source of iron if it has not been adulterated in an envelope that lists two dozen other ingredients.
But what gets me are the two canned goods. I was raised on Campbell's soups (as it turned out this was because my mother never learned to cook soups but I didn't realize it at the time!). Today they are crap and way overpriced. (Apologies to Andy Warhol but ultimately he aggrandized the wrong American icon...) The can probably cost more to produce than the so-called "food" inside.
Finally, SPAM. Not to be anachronistic or anything, but why do you think we call it that? I wouldn't feed that sawdust to my guard dog unless I were trying to teach him the smell of the feces of pig.
We are fast approaching the time when we are all (except Bush's rich cronies, et al) going to have to get back to basics, like learning to cook. Potatoes and lentils are a good place to start.
One can also learn to embrace that hunger pang in the midriff: It is a good point of reference and it strongly suggests that you will never look like or think like or pontificate like Rush Limbaugh.
-30-
Hey... you're talking about my favorite camping breakfast there... fried spam and potatoes and scrambled eggs.
Let them eat Ramen!
It's the conservatives stupid!!
...and they're not all Republicans.
In my travels in the American Midwest, I to my dismay realized that there is a strong fascist streak in what is so endearlingly termed the American heartland. And that fascist streak was pretty strong, as far as I could discern.
This is something no mainstream politician ever tackled - when Obama made his remark during his campaign about - more or less - "all they've got is their guns and their bibles" - I thought that maybe he had indeed grasped it, though. Let's see whether he has.
The rise and popularity of Limbaugh and his ilk shames America, IMHO. Because whatever I happen to hear or read about the comments of that scum, I simply wonder every time: "Why did they ever fight the Nazis? And why are they still proud of it and keep referring to it all the time? They've got tons of that very same scum right in their middle and they do nothing, really nothing about them."
Get in some Germans if you can't manage to deal with them and ostracize them! Most modern Germans don't put up with filth like that, and they are far more aggressive about it than Americans are.
Ironically, thanks to American-inspired anti-fascist reeducation. Which unfortunately never took place inside America!
(No, I am not German, just for the record.)
Yes, that's true. On a bright spot though, my district gave Obama that 1 out of 5 electoral votes in the state. It's going to take some trust building out here in the Midwest but trust me, we liberal-minded folks even in the Midwest won't let the conservative bullies thump us forever.
The Repelican party, this nation's monument to greed, stupidity, corruption and aggressive behavior, is incapable of doing anything different from what it has been doing since 1968, and especially since 2000. It is now wholly owned by fanatical religious water walkers and the blue suited human vacuum cleaners intent on sucking up the last few dollars Americans possess. This is their Divine Mission. Rush Limbaugh, the obese, drug addicted Herman Goring of American crypto-fascism, tells his audiences "When I hear the word Obama, I reach for my gun." There is method in their madness. For in the land of the free and the home of the brave, the oppressed love their oppressors.
Only 5 states leaning Republican?
Based on their constant presence on the news, one would have to conclued that the minority Republicans speak for the majority.
I would change the prison scenario to make Rush the guy with the most power in the prison while Obama is the warden, who has the real power and the votes to back it up.