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Can You Say, Fascism? The Political Consequences of Stagnation
My apologies to T. S. Eliot, but September, not April, is the cruelest month. Before 9/11/2001, there was 9/11/1973, when Gen. Pinochet toppled the Allende government in Chile and ushered in a 17-year reign of terror. More recently, on 9/15/2008, Lehman Brothers went bust and torpedoed the global economy, turning what had been a Wall Street crisis into a near-death experience for the global financial system.
Two years later, the global economy remains very fragile. The signs of recovery that desperate policymakers claimed to have detected late in 2009 and early this year have proven to be mirages. In Europe, four million people are unemployed and the austerity programs imposed on highly indebted countries such as Greece, Spain, Italy, and Ireland will add hundreds of thousands more to the dole. Germany is an exception to the dismal rule.
Although technically the United States isn't in recession, recovery is a distant prospect in the world's biggest economy, which contracted by 2.9 percent in 2009. This is the message of the anemic second-quarter GDP growth rate of 1.6 percent and a real unemployment above the 9.6 percent official rate if one factors in those who have given up looking for work. Firms continue to refrain from investing, banks continue not to lend, and consumers continue to refuse to spend. And the absence of a new stimulus program, as the impact of the $787 billion Washington injected into the economy in 2009 peters out, virtually ensures that the much-feared double-dip recession will become a reality.
That the American consumer does not spend has implications not only for the U.S. economy, but for the global economy. The debt-fuelled spending of Americans was the motor of the pre-crisis globalized economy, and nobody else has stepped in to replace them since the crisis began. Consumer spending in China, fuelled by a government stimulus of $585 billion, has temporarily reversed contractionary trends in that country and East Asia. It has also had some impact in Africa and Latin America. But it has not been strong enough to pull the United States and Europe from stagnation. Moreover, in the absence of a new stimulus package in China, a relapse into low growth, stagnation, or recession is very real in East Asia.
To Cut or to Stimulate
Meanwhile, the debate in western policy circles has divided into two camps. One group sees the threat of government default as a bigger problem than stagnation and refuses to countenance any more stimulus spending. The other thinks stagnation is the greater threat and demands more stimulus to counter it. At the G20 meeting in Toronto in June, the two sides collided. Germany's Angela Merkel advocated tightening, pointing to the threat of a default by Germany's debt-laden satellite economies in southern Europe, particularly Greece. President Obama, on the other hand, facing an intractably high unemployment rate, wanted to continue expansionary policies, though he lacked the political clout to sustain them.
To the pro-spending people, the anti-deficit people don't have much of an argument. At a time when deflation is the big threat, fear of government spending stoking inflation is misplaced. The idea of burdening future generations with debt is odd since the best way to benefit tomorrow's citizens is to ensure that they inherit healthy, growing economies. Deficit spending now is the means to achieve this growth. Moreover, government default is not a real threat for countries that borrow in currencies they control, like the United States, since, as a last option, they can repay their debts simply by having their central bank print more money.
Perhaps the most vocal pro-stimulus advocate is Paul Krugman, the Nobel laureate, who has become the bête noire of many on the right. For Krugman, the problem was that the original stimulus was not big enough. Yet how big is the extra stimulus needed, and what other anti-stagnation measures can the government take? On these questions Krugman betrays some unease, perhaps realizing that traditional Keynesianism has its limits: "Nobody can be sure how well these measures would work, but it's better to try something that might not work than to make excuses while workers suffer." The stark alternative to more aggressive deficit spending is "permanent stagnation and high unemployment," says Krugman.
Krugman may have reason on his side, but reason has taken a backseat to ideology, interests, and politics. Despite high rates of unemployment, the anti-big government, anti-deficit forces have the initiative in three key Western countries: in Britain, where the Conservatives won on a platform of reducing government; in Germany, where the image of spendthrift Greeks and Spaniards financed with loans from hardworking Germans became the powerful horse Merkel's party rode to maintain power; and in the United States.
The Obama Debacle
The anti-deficit perspective has gained ascendancy in the United States despite high unemployment for a number of reasons for this. First of all, the anti-deficit stand appeals to the anti-big government sentiments of the American middle class. Second, Wall Street has opportunistically embraced anti-deficit policies to derail Washington's efforts to regulate it. Big government is the problem, it screams, not the big banks. Third and not to be underestimated is the reemergence of the ideological influence of doctrinaire neoliberals, including those who, as Martin Wolf puts it, "believe a deep slump would purge past excesses, and so lead to healthier economies and societies." Fourth, the anti-spending economics has a mass base, the tea party movement. In contrast, the stimulus position is advocated by progressive intellectuals without a base or whose potential base has become disillusioned with Obama.
Still, the triumph of the hawks was not foreordained. According to Anatole Kaletsky, the economic commentator of the Times of London and someone not exactly sympathetic to the progressive point of view, the ascendancy of the anti-deficit forces stems from a major tactical mistake on the part of Obama coupled with the progressives' failure to offer a convincing narrative for the crisis. The blunder was Obama's taking responsibility for the crisis in a gesture of bipartisanship, in contrast to Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, who "refused to take any blame for the economic hardships." Reagan and Thatcher devoted "the early years of their government to convincing voters that economic disaster was entirely the responsibility of previous left-wing governments, militant unions, and liberal progressive elites."
But even more problematic, says Kaletsky, was the Obama narrative, which was a contradictory one that put the blame on greedy bankers while maintaining that the banks were too big to fail. "With banks recovering from the crisis more profitably and quickly than voters had been led to expect," he argues in his book Capitalism 4.0, "politicians of all parties have been branded by public sentiment as stooges of the very bankers they tried to blame." Indeed, the Democrats' finance reform package that recently passed in Congress can only reinforce this public perception of their being coopted or intimidated by the very people they denounce. It lacks provisions with teeth : a Glass-Steagall type of provision preventing commercial banks from doubling as investment banks; the banning of trading in derivatives, which Warren Buffett called "weapons of mass destruction;" a global financial transactions tax or Tobin Tax; and a strong lid on executive pay, bonuses, and stock options.
For Kaletsky, Obama should have portrayed the economic crisis as one created "by the polarized and oversimplified philosophy of market fundamentalism, not by bankers' and regulators' personality flaws. By offering such a systemic account of the crisis, politicians could capture the public imagination with a post-crisis narrative than the lynching of greedy bankers - and ultimately more dramatic." But with aides like Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and National Economic Council Director Larry Summers, neither of whom had broken completely with neoliberalism, such a systemic account was simply not in the cards.
Toward a Progressive Strategy
The right wing has the momentum now and will probably win big in the U.S. elections in November. They will tie Obama and the Democrats so firmly to the crisis that people will forget it exploded during the reign of market fundamentalist George Bush. But with their primeval market economics, the fiscal hawks and tea partiers are unlikely to provide an alternative to what they have caricatured as Obama's "socialism." Allowing the economy to implode in order to be ideologically correct will invite an even greater repudiation from an economically insecure population.
But progressives should not take comfort from the dead end offered by tea party economics. They should try to understand what has led to the failure of Obama's pallid Keynesianism. Beyond the tactical mistake of taking responsibility for the crisis and the failure to advance an aggressive anti-neoliberal narrative to explain it, the central problem that has plagued Obama and his team is their failure to offer an inspiring alternative to neoliberalism.
The technical elements of a progressive solution to the crisis have been thrashed out by Keynesian and other progressive economists: a much bigger stimulus, tighter regulation of the banks, loose monetary policies, higher taxes on the rich, rebuilding the national infrastructure, an industrial policy promoting green industries, controls on speculative capital flows, controls on outward bound foreign investment, a global currency, and a new global central bank.
The Obama administration has tried to enact some of these measures. But owing to its eagerness for bipartisanship, the ties of some of its prominent people to the economic elites, and the failure of key technocrats like Summers and Geithner to break with the neoliberal paradigm, it failed to present them as elements of a broader program of social reform aimed at democratizing control and management of the economy.
For progressives, the lesson to be derived from the stalling of Obamanomics is that technocratic management is not enough. Keynesian moves must be part of a broader vision and program. This strategy must have three key thrusts: democratic decision-making at all levels of the economy, from the enterprise to macroeconomic planning; second, greater equality in the distribution of wealth and income to make up for lower growth rates dictated by economic and environmental constraints; and third, a more cooperative, as opposed to competitive ethic, in production, distribution, and consumption.
Moreover, such a program cannot simply be dished out from above by a technocratic elite, as has been the fashion in this administration, one of whose greatest mistakes was to allow the mass movement that brought it to power to wither away. The people must be enlisted in the construction of the new economy, and here progressives have a lot to learn from the Tea Party movement that they must inevitably compete against in a life-and-death struggle for grassroots America.
Nature Abhors a Vacuum
Krugman predicts that the likely electoral results in November "will paralyze policy for years to come." But nature abhors a vacuum, and the common failure of both market fundamentalists and technocratic Keynesians so far to address the fears of the unemployed, the about-to-be unemployed, and the vast numbers of economically insecure people will most likely produce social forces that would tackle their fears and problems head-on.
A failure of the left to innovatively fill this space will inevitably spawn a reinvigorated right with fewer apprehensions about state intervention, one that could combine technocratic Keynesian initiatives with a populist but reactionary social and cultural program.There is a term for such a regime: fascist. As Roger Bootle, author of The Trouble with Markets, reminds us, millions of Germans were disillusioned with the free market and capitalism during the Great Depression. But with the failure of the left to provide a viable alternative, they became vulnerable to the rhetoric of a party that, once it came to power, combined Keynesian pump-priming measures that brought unemployment down to 3 percent with a devastating counterrevolutionary social and cultural program.
Fascism in the United States? It's not as far-fetched as you might think.
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132 Comments so far
Show AllIt's already here Waldo and it's called liberal democracy.
I know sometimes it's hard to tell the difference.
The rare occasion has occurred when I find myself in disagreement with you mcoyote. Were fascism in place, you and I would not be posting freely on the web.
Impending? Possibly. Threatening? Defitely.
But regardless of what we call the reality we face now, we all need to do what we can, while we still are able, to forestall catastrophe.
The last time fascism was ascendent, there were no drones. And, still, millions were slaughtered.
The last time fascism was ascendent, the earth wasn't on the brink of environmental collapse, and yet there was utter devastation.
We still have precious time left to do our work.
Fascism is indeed in place, having morphed to adapt to 21st century conditions.
During the 20th century, fascist kingpins found it necessary to silence people like us. During the past 30 years propaganda and brainwashing in the US have been refined to the extent that 98% of the voters fall for the partisan fantasy and will continue to enable fascism no matter how bad things get for them. A few CD posters attempting to place facts in the way of good stories is not much of a threat to the fascist machine.
And, some of the old fashioned sort of oppression is present also. Try crossing back into the US from Canada with any sort of leftist or anarchist literature visible to the customs pigs. Prepare for the full inside-out car-search and questioning by threatening armed thugs if you do.
Oh, what a welcoming town Buffalo is!
sounds like they put you through the ringer.
was the literature visible or did they search you and find it? i am really curious about these stories. i see them as signs of ideological purity tests, and ICE databases that contain columns entitled 'politics', 'known associates', 'literature found on person', etc, etc. I am sure that already exists, but the pretenses to free associate and free speach/press are just that, pretenses.
The treatment accorded by ICE and the TSA are obedience training for adults. The shoe removal enforced by the TSA thugs is so obviously obedience training and it is not challenged. As for the USG obedience training it started in the 50's with the terrorizing of school children nationwide. Mock nuclear attacks were used to terrorize school children with the hiding under the desk drills. This was a nationwide exercise including schools in rural areas which would never be subject to nuclear attack. This was the forerunner to the shoe removal obedience training.
I'd say more than 30yrs.. When Reagan disolved the Air Traffic Controllers Union, that was only a test. If all the AFL-CIO and every other union had walked out the next day in a nationwide strike like France or Greece does, they would have simply pulled back another decade, allthewhile grooming the likes of Rush and Glenn to erode solidarity among the American sheeple.
The bottom line is we failed to standup for each other and are reaping the rewards. Strip-searches at the ariports, and borders. electronic intrusions at every store, mall and your very cell-phone. As I've mentioned before I know electronics. The E-911 and the GPS programming in our Smart-Phones (should be called Smart Leashes) because that's what they are. Calls can be listened to live or recorded. your locatation can be traced to less than a meter. and at any time that little mic in your bocket can be switched on to record any conversation you think may be private.
Welcome to the brave new world, the bosses have been working hard to prepare it since WW1 thru WWII to the present moment people have been manipulated, adjusted propagandised to an amazing degree. America in the lead of course, we have a population of Demon-Sheep that at a word will cue up pickup guns to shoot their own mothers if thats the command given. We fear a little friendly sex, more than we fear killing and maiming our fellow humans.
Be afraid, I am. The house of cards around us has just been knocked down again and the ants are paniced. What really scares me is the seeming lack of leadership, from anyside! Stampeeding cattle are hundreds of times more dangerous than a bull in a china shop.
We are being programmed, but for what to belive red is white, or green? Were being frightened into our homes to hide, from the homeless? we are told over and over to fear each other. We hide at our desks waiting for the next shoe to fall, downing our pills to keep the panic at bay.
Everyday someplace I find myself asking the same question. What socialism? if Obummer was instuting socialism I'd expect a National Health Card in the mail by now, I'd expect to hear the Military overseas being recalled and set to work here fixing our dying infrastructure. I'd expect daily reminders to not forget the homeless, volunteer help our/your elderly parents take them out of the kennels that we put them away in to die, out of sight. I see none of this Socialism, the MSM talk about.
>^^<
very well put
very well put
raydelcamino,
I agree with you.
The corporate M$M is doing their job in keeping the truth from
US citizens. Unfortunately, that's the major source
of *news* most Americans obtain.
Spread the word about CD.
Chelsea
Remarkably, there are still only a handful of people anywhere on the Internet expressing any views that represent a serious threat to the ruling class, and they are routinely harassed and banished. The liberal and progressive sites are largely self-policing, keeping people in line or steering them into harmless and irrelevant directions.
As late as 1941, in his personal diaries, no less than Joseph Goebbels himself was complaining about his inability to get German newspapers to print what he wanted them to. As is the case here, the German media was largely self-policing, the ideas were thoroughly internalized by people and did not need to be imposed from above.
We have the benefit of hindsight with fascism in Europe (by that people really mean Nazi-era Germany) and know how it turned out, or think we do, The average American's understanding of Nazi-era Germany is based on US propaganda used to justify US actions in WWII and its aftermath, and on documentaries that rely heavily of Nazi propaganda films of rallies and marches. This gives people a very distorted view of events there.
Another point - what is with the obsession with the word "fascism?" Is it here yet. is it coming, are we there yet and on and on. People talk as though the word had some magical power, as though it were more important than the reality, as though once we can apply the word to reality then we will have done something significant or important. At the same time people debate endlessly about which words properly apply to which phenomenon, there is a woeful lack of sober-minded appraisal and analysis of the actual conditions in objective material reality, and shocking ignorance of history. There are mindless debates about what liberalism or progressive "really" mean, when we can or can't call "it" fascism and so forth. Many people actually turn to none other than Mussolini to define the word fascism for them.
Once critical mass develops in opposition to the ruling class, once we are saying something that is actually a threat to the ruling class, then you will see more draconian suppression on the Internet.
Of course, "it" will never come for some people. "It" never came for many in Germany until the Soviet tanks rolled in or the USAF and RAF leveled their town - those who were fortunate enough to be "Aryans" and who were willing to comply, although their compliance was no more dramatic or extreme than the compliance we see right here with most people. Yes, there were shortages and young men coming home in boxes, especially after operation Barbarossa, and by then it was far too late to do anything. "It" has already arrived for many people here.
very good and sober analysis.
"Once critical mass develops in opposition to the ruling class, once we are saying something that is actually a threat to the ruling class, then you will see more draconian suppression on the Internet."
that's a very accurate statement. arguably, wikileaks scared the shit out of the establishment, which is why Joe Lieberman immediately moved to create a bill that is essentially an on/off switch for the net.
another area that is a material reality of that statement is animal rights. the sentencing for animal rights activities is off the scale, and is arguably just as bad, or worse, than terrorist acts. indeed, they are conflated. in regards to the internet, all kinds of laws target animals rights activists on the net too. and you have to ask yourself the question "why?" Well, it's obvious. It's because their actions are highly effective, and costly, regardless of our opinions about them.
TwoA----"the mindless debates about what liberalism and progressive mean...or...fascism and so forth"....yes indeed! this is a constant, and to me a superfluous refrain.
....i would love to play the movie SEVEN BEAUTIES to the debaters and then measure how much heart exists to debate.
Proposed: Fascism is more right wing than left wing....how many would decide to give it up and declare life a farce! most i hope...peace
Nazi party leadership at all levels was dominated by highly educated people from upper middle class liberal backgrounds.
While the Communists were eliminated by the German government, liberals and moderates cooperated with the party.
Certainly the industrialists and the military were on board with the regime in Germany, and the Brown Shirts played a critical role especially at the beginning, but it was the bourgeoisie liberal educated people who formed the leadership. That is a disturbing fact that cuts a little too close to the bone for many educated liberals here.
This idea people express - that there is a danger of fascism, therefore we need to vote Democratic - is an absurdity. Most people use the word fascism to mean "bad scary things that I don't like." When they ask "is it coming?" they mean "will it affect upscale educated people like me?"
I agree with mcoyote...
Whatever you want to call it, its here.
First, they don't care what you and I say. Its moot. Words have no bearing on what they do. They already control what the MSM says and have already struck fear into enough people that the "wrong" things aren't spoken by the masses.
They make war at will. They print money at will. A few corporations control the banks, medicine, media and food. They also operate with no oversight, poisoning people, the economy and the environment--at will. You and me, are simply a means to make money off. Warm bodies to to simply run products through--trinkets for our amusement, processed and factory-farmed/frankenfoods to keep us alive, and media to see that we are kept both violent and fearful. We are not human to them in any moral sense. We are human petri dishes for them for exploitation.
Our political process offers no control over them, no choice of an alternative. If someone makes it through, they are rendered ineffective--or in some cases, disposed of. No one represents the majority. Worse, they operate on a global scale, directing their operations electronically--from the highest ground possible:space. They operate with deadly force and ambivalence towards the people afflicted by their greed of money and insane lust for power.
If its not fascism, or a new strain of it, exactly what is it, then? We probably need a new description/term at this point, anyway.
And we're out of time--completely.
Of course, I could be completely off-base.
Have a nice day! :)
Tyranny. Police state. There are lots of words to use. The use of the word "Fascism" comes from US (and ironically, German) government propaganda about WWII. "Fascism" is mostly a fantasy cooked up to make Nazi Germany seem as different from the US as possible.
"Fascism" featured organized irregular paramilitary thugs - that is its defining feature. We don't have that.
Here you are describing Capitalism:
"A few corporations control the banks, medicine, media and food. They also operate with no oversight, poisoning people, the economy and the environment--at will. You and me, are simply a means to make money off. Warm bodies to to simply run products through--trinkets for our amusement, processed and factory-farmed/frankenfoods to keep us alive, and media to see that we are kept both violent and fearful. We are not human to them in any moral sense. We are human petri dishes for them for exploitation."
I've read that Capitalism IS Fascism
Same thing
Here is another plausible definition:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
Are we living in a fascist state? When was the last time you read any good news ?
http://steveosborn.blogspot.com/2010/02/what-is-fascism-really.html
http://steveosborn.blogspot.com/2010/03/our-fairly-subtle-conversion-to-fascism.html
http://steveosborn.blogspot.com/2010/03/kucinich-votes-yes-whats-new.html
Just a simple primer.
I like the term Inverted Totalitarianism, a term coined by Sheldon Wolin. Chris Hedges refers to the term frequently.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
As I tried to explain to a neighbor who is quite active in the local Tea Party: They don't need to take your guns away. They don't need to brutally suppress free speech. There is no need for a violently oppressive central government. They've got us right where they want us. We police ourselves, largely. We work, we follow the laws, we pay our taxes, we consume.
What more of value could be derived from the kinds of state-sponsored violence perpetrated upon their own citizens characteristic of earlier totalitarian regimes? It would be counterproductive. It has been said that under classical totalitarian regimes, economics was subordinate to political concerns, in America politics is subordinate to economic concerns.
Try to convince your average reliable voter-type citizen of the futility of the exercise- how far do you get?
Try to convince your average American that Capitalism must by it's very nature use up too many resources and collapse- how far do you get?
Try to convince even an "educated" American that we are likely on the cusp (or past it) of Peak Oil, and that most importantly there is absolutely no adequate substitute for the cheap oil that has powered the global economy for the last 100 years- they refuse to believe that we won't find some perfect solution to the problem this represents.
Of course the real issue is that change comes whether we want it or not, whether we are prepared for it or not, and the more out of balance a system is the faster it breaks down. Whatever we want to call the System that is currently in place now, it will of necessity change, but there are interests that will do whatever is necessary to maintain Their status quo...
The saying used to go on something like:
"As California goes, so follows the rest of the country."
Nowadays, it's more like:
"As Texas goes, so follows the rest of the country."
Let's just call it neo-fascism.
It has arrived. Like the melting polar ice caps,
democracy as we knew it or thought of making it possible
is melting away. Fast. Real fast.
"Were fascism in place, you and I would not be posting freely on the web."
Sorry, not true. Have you ever thought perhaps you just haven't said any of the wrong things? They don't see any reason to stop you from saying anything because they don't see you as a threat.
But fascism does indeed exists in the US. Maybe if you were Julian Assange you'd see it better.
Perhaps I expressed myself in muddy fashion. What I was saying is that what we have is liberal democracy which is very oppressive.
And...
Not much difference between the two. A matter of style perhaps?
Posting on the web don't mean shit. It's a good place to share and tease out ideas, perhaps commiserate, but it is less than zero threat to the PTB.
"Perhaps I expressed myself in muddy fashion."
Ditto.
Point is NOT that 'posting on the web' is an adequate response to the gathering storm. We need to ORGANIZE an EFFECTIVE, ACTIVE, palpable response. Something that would have a shock and awe effect.
I believe the people attempted to make that response with the election of Obama. It was inadequate and, as per usual, the 'people' were set up from the get go.
The 'left' has not had an adequate response to the Obama betrayal/scam. We haven't been able to use it as a learning experience leading to the birth of authentic revolutionary paradigms.
Our lack of an articulate (and noisy) response has created a vacuum that has opened the door to a whole host of horrors.
Point is, what we have to contend with right now are 'wannabes.' We canot compare our situation to the people in the Warsaw ghetto, the concentration camps, the stadium in Chile or the reservations in our deserts.
For at least a little while, we have more room to do our work. We need to use that time wisely.
Posting freely on the web? What effect has that on our corporate (fascist) masters? We are as insects to them. If one gets particularly annoying, it gets swatted. Otherwise, ignored.
I believe Waldo's point is that things will almost certainly get worse. The only hope is for liberals to arise and take control of the narrative. However, that is but a distant dream. Hunker down. Things will get worse for many. (Sadly and ironically, if we 'hunker down,' it nearly guarantees that demand will stay low. Jobs and the economy will sink. If you can afford to spend on something worthwhile, please do.)
Obama and Pelosi have dictated that Liberals and Progressives will have little to say about anything for at least a decade, if not longer.
And you are right about Waldo's point, however it will get worse no matter what is done now. The trust is gone, the goodwill falling and the democrats held in contempt.
No one is spending nor hiring as these fools have paralysed our economy with their refusal to engage.
Fortunately our brother from Iowa is correct fascism is not here, nor is it coming. But what is coming is a political Tsunami.
And you wouldn't consider this "political tsunami" to be fascist in nature?
Where's Waldo? Suddenly Walden Bello is named "Waldo".
And as for liberals arising "to take control of the narrative," isn't that the problem "Waldo" is addressing? They HAVE control of the narrative, and they've turned that control over to the reactionaries, in Obama's bowing and scraping to the far right as he has groped and strained desperately for "bi-partisanship" since the first day he took office. It's not that he can't learn, it's that he WILL NOT LEARN. He seems to literally believe he can be a "liberal" and the best friend of rightwing corporatists at the same time, that's there's no contradiction involved here.
This is how liberalism has come to be redefined under Obama. It means giving Wall Street anything it wants, and more, and making vague, empty promises to everyone else, those of us whose lives have been totally or nearly destroyed by Wall Street and Obama's corporatist economic advisers. It means furthering the death machine of the Military-Industrial-Technological-Entertainment-Scientific-Media-Intelligence-Corporate Complex that was jump-started under Reagan, cultivated under Clinton, and sent into high gear and careening off the cliff under Bush 43.
This is the new face of what "liberalism" means. So, the liberals already have control of the narrative, and it's indistinguishable from the tea party narrative, however much the latter rant and rave that Obama is a socialist. If they'd drop the racism they'd realize he's one of THEM.
It is obvious that ther are not many serious leftists here, or they would be familiar with Prof. Bello - a good Filipino socialist.
We need real liberials in power, I'm sure if Obummer was handing out real Socialism (free health care cards, real UI payments, SSI one could live on, a few speaches about helping your fellow american, maybe a couple of volunteer orginazations to give people a path)
Nobody'd be complaining!, Rush and Beck'd be laughed out of the room, when they rabble raise on how evil socialism is. Maybe get a proper boot in the ass for sugesting we not help out our neighbors, our elderly, and needy.
Thats an America I'd like to belong to.
>^^<
"[The right wing] will tie Obama and the Democrats so firmly to the crisis that people will forget it exploded during the reign of market fundamentalist George Bush."
The failure by Obama to deal with the fundamental causes of the financial crisis has already led people to forget that the republicans are primarily responsible for this disaster.
". . . the central problem that has plagued Obama and his team is their failure to offer an inspiring alternative to neoliberalism."
Right now, Obama couldn't offer an inspiring alternative to suicide.
q
What it boils down to is; Both the Democratic AND the Republican Parties are responsible for the financial crisis.
I've been trying for some time to say that the parallels between the ascendency of the Tea Partyist extreme right-wing and the Nazi's in 1930's Germany are striking.
These folks started out with a greivance about the economy and now they've become the torch bearers for "Traditional Values" and "patriotism".
These folks have scapegoated Mexicans as the cause of our economic and social problems. For the Nazi's it was the Jews.
These folks have managed to form the military cult. If one doesn't properly worship our troops then they are "Anti-American". Pascifists were attacked and their leaders arrested by the Nazi's.
These folks have created a "hidden enemy" in Muslims and the impression that anybody who disagrees is in cahoots with the enemy. The Nazi's had the Communists.
Ding-dong! Get the door America....Fascism is here and it's sure carrying a lot of baggage. Looks like it's gonna stay for awhile.
Mr. Bello seems another that wishes to apologize for the global financial community that was involved in the meltdown by pretending they were "Victims" of the United States. How pathetic. The golbal financial community were involved in this up to their topknots. The only thing that IS truly global is the greed of the global financial community.
"The debt-fuelled spending of Americans was the motor of the pre-crisis globalized economy"
And here we thought it was because the globalized economy was a result of all these great choices other countries had made (as they kept telling us)
"The right wing has the momentum now and will probably win big in the U.S. elections in November. They will tie Obama and the Democrats so firmly to the crisis that people will forget it exploded during the reign of market fundamentalist George Bush."
They ARE responsible as they made NO moves to repair the damage or to even pay any attention to our economy. Bush drove us into the ditch, its these inept and callow fools that insisted on having a picnic there.
"Krugman may have reason on his side"
Krugman is making a fool of himself.
"The Obama administration has tried to enact some of these measures. But owing to its eagerness for bipartisanship, the ties of some of its prominent people to the economic elites, and the failure of key technocrats like Summers and Geithner to break with the neoliberal paradigm, it failed to present them as elements of a broader program of social reform aimed at democratizing control and management of the economy."
And I thought real comedy was dead! This is more hilarious than Obama's speech the other night.
"Krugman predicts that the likely electoral results in November "will paralyze policy for years to come."
Well he is half right. The republicans are going to be gifted with a democratic ass kicking not seen before. But policy won't be paralyzed for year to come, Obamacare will be removed, the union takeovers of the Auto co.'s will be reversed, etc. The lefts agenda will be consigned to that self same ditch and Obama/Pelosi were the drivers.
The American public senses there are two standards in America — one for our beloved elite , quite another for the supposedly unenlightened, bitter, bible clutching, working poor and jobless Americans. The anger over this hypocrisy surfaces over matters from the trivial to the profound.
Walden Bello may have good intentions, but he fails to mention some very significant aspects of what is happening.
The problem with the so-called "bipartisan" approach is that the partisans are very much two sides of the same coin. There is no real voice for the "left" in Washington. As long as we pretend that democrats woulda, coulda done something different we are being dishonest. The democrats have not failed their constituency. Their constituency is the same as the republican's.
To make matters worse, all of the coinage is put into a slot machine (call it the capitalistic security state apparatus) which depends upon greed and primarily produces war.
There is no mention of the effects of the gas-guzzling, warmongering, economy-depleting, social-oppressing Pentagon and its spy-culture in this article (or indeed in most articles about the economy).
The worst problem for this nation (and subsequently, for the world) is that the vast majority of people who vote and contribute to this apparatus are too insecure, too desperate, or too much in denial (see flag-waving pride) to see what is in their best interest. They would rather eulogize their losses than to stop the bleeding.
Recently, when Obama's spokes-zombie Robert Gibbs criticized what he called the "professional left" (whoever the Hell they are!) because he snidely said they (lefty's Inc.) would not be satisfied until they had "Canadian health care" and "eliminated the Pentagon" it was a rare example of the real dogma which is destroying us all.
a fixed coin that is - a heads I win and tails you lose kind of coin -
NOTHING scares me more than bi-partisanship
The very notion of *bi-partisanship* is Kabuki theatre. It's just a game for the public's eyes.
Both parties are the same rotten MFers.Politicians use bi-partisanship to block progress.
We are already well into fascism as indicated by the power of the oligarchs, corporations, and the military (the OCM), and I see no way of avoiding it. I thought we had a chance with Obama, but that was a naive illusion. Obama has turned out to lack vision and is too much a tool of the OCM.
And, when all of this is combined with the soon-to-come peak oil, the decimation of the ocean ecosystem, and global warming, young people (including my grandchildren) are in for a really rough time. I'm glad I won't be around to see it.
FASCISM, here we come.
Jim Shea
America's foreign policy has been fascist for at least 100 years with the false flag of the Maine in Cuba. Before that, America's domestic policy was fascist with the genocide of the Native Americans. Now we have the false flag of 911 and the Tea party folks wrapping themselves in their Nazi flag, their ignorance and phony patriotism. They wave their Swastica, flags and listen to the disingenuous, rhetoric of idiots like Beck, O'Reilly, Palin eating it up like a bunch of lap dogs led by christian fascists and their whores in the corporate media. Looks like Nazi Germany in the 1930's to me when most of the churches and the German Media condoned what Hitler was doing. Sinclair Lewis was prescient to say the least. And though it has become a cliche it bears repeating: WHEN FASCISM COMES TO AMERICA, IT WILL BE WRAPPED IN THE FLAG AND BE CARRYING THE CROSS.
You'll also see some pro-life signs, and at least one 'die, faggot, die' I betcha. It seems strange to be losing this battle. I hope to awaken any time now...
"They wave their Swastica, flags and listen to the disingenuous, rhetoric of idiots like Beck, O'Reilly, Palin eating it up like a bunch of lap dogs led by christian fascists and their whores in the corporate media."
The rise of the "christian" fascists occurred after 1973, and was a preplanned part of the whole right wing resurgence. But the first blows came in the 1960's, beginning November 22, 1963. In many ways, this is the emerging "Fourth Reich" that the spy novelists fantasized about in the post WW-II era. They wrongly thought it would emerge in South America led by old German SS soldiers, but instead, it targeted the USA itself.
It can be defeated, but we have a real battle on our hands ...
This is an excellent article, one to be passed around to those with an open mind.
Walden Bello is probably the most distinguished scholar in the global justice movement. He has been a big thorn in the side of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
This essay reflects his brilliant mind and his immense clarity of thought.
"Stephen V. Riley"
I disagree with your final sentence.
When Mr. Bello repeated says that Obama failed - he implies that Obama might have pursued a different route. Obama has done what he was selected to do. It is not "brilliant" to continue to pretend Obama is someone other than who he has repeatedly and oppressively shown himself to be.
Also, to try to put the blame on the Bush administration for what was made possible by the Clinton administration through the actions of the same inbred coterie which Obama brought back into the White House hardly reflects an "immense clarity of thought."
Overall, Mr. Bello is trying to move things in the correct direction, but unless he accurately sees the obstacles, he may, however inadvertently, be part of the problem.
"Obama has done what he was selected to do."
Indeed ...
The article seems to imply that fascism will be the result of the current economic situation, I do not believe that. I think we have been on the road to democratic fascism in place of the good old authoritarian fascism for a long time. It seems to me that democratic fascism has a lot of similarities to the age-old fascism. There also seems to be some new twists. Common elements such as elite, nationalists, racism, corporations, imperialism, appear to have slightly different meanings between the old and the new. Is it the same old thing being camouflaged or is it really a new breed? Is the ruling elite in America, an economic class created by opportunity the same or different from the European elite class of the authoritarian fascists or is that just a smoke screen? It appears that the SC solidified American fascism, we the corporations in order to form a more perfect state, a government of the corporations by the corporations for the corporations. I have a feeling that American fascism is going to be a lot worse than the good old authoritarian fascism, and it ain’t got a damn thing to do with democrats, republicans, conservatives, liberals, far right or progressives it has been taken out of their hands. We are just puppets who can play on the stage as long as we do not get in the way.
Awright...Let's give Walden a break here. It doesn't take a great intellect to apply the classical definition of Fascism to what's going on in the USA...and the world as a whole... to recognize that the "Big F" has been here for way more than half a century. It's been pasted over by trivial, ancillary issues like war/peace, civil/women's/gay rights, climate change, energy...etc, etc, etc. But the basic truth remains as it has been since the Romans, and probably before...and it's here today in all its glory! I wonder if there's an "F" gene?
The world has been enslaved by the merger of political and corporate power for millenia. In some sense, we are all slaves to it. Issues like war/rights/climate are merely sub-plots to the greater drama---distractions intended to keep our eyes from the original script, from peeking behind the curtain at the Wizard who's jacking off and getting off on our ignorance and torpor.
We've swallowed the corporate/elitist line for so long now that we've begun to believe it tastes really good. Trouble is, we didn't realize it was laced with fatal myths and falsehoods. Tragically, today, we're unable to imagine or sustain any meaningful alternatives. And here comes the maitre'd with the tab. Uh...Joe. Didn't you say this one was on you?
It's easy being a Fascist. All you have to do is succumb to the media blitz and opinion that your happiness and salvation lies in the hands of "those who know best". If you place your faith and trust in a corporate/government entity (WalMart, the Pentagon, Congress, etc.), and vote your preference from that perspective, you've got at least an introductory pass to the Fascist heaven on earth.
Hope you (we) enjoy the hangover. And the plutocrats are just gonna love you!
Fascists CREATE POVERTY as they USURP the LIFE, LIVELIHOODS AND RESOURCES OF ALL PEOPLES ANYWHERE ON THE PLANET THAT THEY GET THEIR HANDS ON.
The IMF: CREATES POVERTY, DEATH AND DESTRUCTION
The World Bank: CREATES POVERTY, DEATH AND DESTRUCTION
The U.N. (undermine negroes): Complicit in the CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY, AND AFRICANS SPECIFICALLY (especially Africans who claim to represent Africa within the U.N., but have no sincere interest to do so). I say this even as a white woman.
GLOBAL ELITES: CREATE POVERTY, DEATH AND DESTRUCTION through the WORLD BANK, IMF AND U.N.!
Well said.
These are part of an abominable agenda.
All these organizations are heavily subverted by Zionists. Watch "The Empire of the City".