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Published on Thursday, May 19, 2011 by CommonDreams.org
Which Side Are You On? New Language for a New Political Reality
Stop Calling Them Conservative: The search for new language to describe today's political reality
"Everybody pulled his weight, Didn't need no welfare state... Those were the days!"
Those are some of the lyrics from the theme song to the popular 1970s TV sitcom 'All in the Family', considered controversial in its day, about a working-class bigot named Archie Bunker, who sang it at the top of the show with his wife Edith. Archie's nostalgia for pre-1960s America informed much of the show, which satirized small-minded conservativism, paranoid patriotism, contempt for youth culture, and racism.
One of the ironies of Archie Bunker's worldview is that the 1930s, 40s, and 50s weren't nearly as conservative as he remembered them. The same faulty nostalgia drives the so-called conservatives of today's Republican Party and the Tea Party movement, who imagine those decades as a time when hard-working Americans pulled themselves up by their own bootstraps.
It's true that Americans worked hard during these years. But the bootstraps stuff is nonsense. The 30s through 50s were the time of the New Deal, low-cost loans from the Federal Housing Administration, the GI Bill, huge subsidies for defense contractors during the Cold War and other industries that employed millions of people, massive transfer of funding from cities to the burgeoning suburbs, federal projects like interstate highway construction and the space program, generous investment in public schools, record union membership, high tax rates for corporations and the wealthy, good job benefits, and Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, which ensured financial stability in old age and medical crises.
These things softened the trauma of the Great Depression and gave us the greatest period of prosperity in US history. Middle-aged Tea Partiers and Republicans, born in the 1940s through the 1970s, reaped the benefits of the kind of progressive 'big government' and 'socialist' ideas they now condemn. By their own standards, Tea Partiers are practically red diaper babies.
The irony of the Cold War's capitalism vs. communism paradigm is that capitalism in the US and other western countries required generous helpings of socialism to make it work. Conservative politicians like Eisenhower and Nixon seemed to understand this and generally supported the social programs listed above.
Since the Reagan Administration, Republicans, with help from Democrats, have worked to dismantle such programs and policies. Since 2008, the conservative movement has been galvanized by President Barack Obama's victory (although Mr. Obama's actions in office hardly place him on the left), leading to the formation of the Tea Party and igniting the conflict in Wisconsin over Gov. Scott Walker's plan to cut benefits for public-sector employees and abolish collective bargaining rights.
The economic principles of today's GOP and the Tea Party don't come from any period of time within their own memory, so it's difficult to identify what kind of values they're trying to preserve or restore. But if we look further back in American history, to the late 19th century, we can find a match in the Robber Baron Era.
The Robber Baron Era was a period of misery for the millions of Americans who worked in factories before child labor laws, the eight-hour day and 40-hour work week, workplace safety laws (think of the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire), or recognition of collective bargaining rights. It was a time of widespread political corruption, with officeholders in cahoots with the chiefs of monopolies and near-monopolies. Laissez-faire capitalism was mostly unchecked by the power of unions or by government regulation. It ended with a period of widespread labor unrest and the reforms of the Progressive Era (1890s through the 1920s).
William Cronon recounted some further history in a recent New York Times column:
"Republicans in Wisconsin are seeking to reverse civic traditions that for more than a century have been among the most celebrated achievements not just of their state, but of their own party as well.... [W]hile Americans are aware of this progressive tradition, they probably don't know that many of the innovations on behalf of working people were at least as much the work of Republicans as of Democrats.... When Gov. Gaylord A. Nelson, a Democrat, sought to extend collective bargaining rights to municipal workers in 1959, he did so in partnership with a Legislature in which one house was controlled by the Republicans. Both sides believed the normalization of labor-management relations would increase efficiency and avoid crippling strikes like those of the Milwaukee garbage collectors during the 1950s. Later, in 1967, when collective bargaining was extended to state workers for the same reasons, the reform was promoted by a Republican governor, Warren P. Knowles, with a Republican Legislature. The policies that the current governor, Scott Walker, has sought to overturn, in other words, are legacies of his own party." ("Wisconsin's Radical Break," March 21, 2011)
On the evidence of history, calling today's Republican Party and their Tea Party supporters 'conservative' is as absurd as calling supporters of civil rights and racial justice 'reactionary' because they invoke the values of the Reconstruction Era.
Radical Ideology for a New Century
"I like to say I'm more conservative than Goldwater. He just wanted to turn the clock back to when there was no income tax. I want to turn the clock back to when people lived in small villages and took care of each other." -- Pete Seeger
Gov. Scott Walker is not a conservative, nor is Gov. John Kasich of Ohio. Neither are Fox News, Newt Gingrich, Sarah Palin, Rush Limbaugh, or any of their fellow corporate royalists and faux populists.
They are radicals. The GOP and the Tea Party are inspired by a vision that's partly reactionary (revival of Robber Baron Era economics) and partly innovative, with world-changing ideas that would have astounded JP Morgan and John D Rockefeller.
The innovative parts of their agenda include the embrace of globalization and the international power of major corporations through pacts like NAFTA and bodies like the World Bank and IMF; the neocon doctrine of preemptive military aggression; 'public-private partnerships' such as cash-cow contracts for the homeland security industry; huge taxpayer-funded handouts for favored corporate elites, the most obvious of example of which is the TARP bailout that funneled hundreds of billions of dollars to reckless Wall Street firms after the 2008 economic collapse that the latter caused. (Many Tea Partiers, to their credit, opposed the Wall Street bailouts.)
It's worth noting here that such agenda are bipartisan, supported by mainstream Democrats.
One of the top claims of 'conservative' activists is their devotion to the US Constitution and the ideals of our Founding Fathers, which motivated the reading aloud of the Constitution in the US House of Representatives in January when Republicans took over as the majority.
For Republicans and Tea Partiers, the Constitution might as well be written in hieroglyphs. Except for the Second Amendment's right to bear arms, they decline to apply the Constitution to the denial of habeas corpus, warrantless surveillance of US citizens, torture, disregard for international treaties signed by the US, and other abuses that are clearly outlawed.
On the other hand, they enthusiastically defend the Supreme Court's 2010 Citizens United ruling, which upheld 'corporate personhood' and exacerbated the widespread corruption of our election system, even though the Constitution grants no rights to corporations and the Founding Fathers warned against the excessive power of the monied interests. Corporate personhood was enshrined by a series of Supreme Court rulings, beginning with Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad in 1886, which extended the 14th Amendment's equal protect clause to cover corporations. The rulings coincided with the post-Reconstruction passage of the first Jim Crow laws in the South and the beginning of the Robber Baron Era. In effect, legal rights and protections were transferred from black people to corporations.
All of this gives us a clue about the real ideology motivating today's conservative (and many liberal) politicians, media pundits, and activists: corporate power, profit, and privilege.
All other principles are subservient to corporatism. The GOP isn't opposed to socialism when it satisfies corporate lobbies, as the Wall Street bailouts prove.
Consider Gov. Rick Scott of Florida, currently on a mission to overturn the Democrats' health care reform bill. Does Gov. Scott really oppose public spending for health care? In 1997, he was forced to resign as CEO of Columbia/HCA after the company pleaded guilty to 14 felonies and agreed to a $600-plus million fine in the largest fraud settlement in US history, for fraud involving Medicare and other public health programs. For bilking taxpayers out of hundreds of millions, Rick Scott was paid $9.88 million and allowed to keep 10 million shares of stock worth over $350 million.
Republican politicians might be gunning for Medicare and Medicaid, but they're not above making a killing from such programs, on behalf of themselves and the corporations they're connected with via the public service/private business revolving door. The same ideology informs the granting of no-bid contracts, tax breaks and loopholes, and other forms of subsidies to favored firms.
George Lakoff notes that "The wealthy have, to a large extent, amassed that wealth through indirect contributions to them by governments -- governments build roads corporations use, fund schools that train their workers, subsidize their energy costs, do research they capitalize on, subsidize their access to resources, promote trade for them, and on and on."
Dedication to corporate interests overwhelms all other concerns. It turns the conflict between free-market capitalism and socialism into a quaint relic from another century, rather like the conflict between the German princes and the Roman Catholic Church during the Reformation. It makes the free market into a myth for the gullible who believe that locally owned Main Street shops can compete with WalMart or Old McDonald's family farm has a chance against Monsanto.
Conservatism means, or should mean, emphasis on entrepreneurialism (as opposed to corporate capitalism), self-reliant local economies (small businesses and farms, rather than big chain stores and agriconglomerates), economic security for Americans (freedom from destitution because of unemployment, old age, or the cost of medical emergencies), democratic sovereignty (rather than subordination to international trade cabals), observance of the US Constitution and international laws and treaties that the US has signed (Article VI), and deployment of the US armed forces solely for immediate self-defense.
Today's conservative leaders have abandoned these ideas and replaced them with a scheme to manipulate government for a radical redistribution of wealth from the bottom to the top. For these politicians, government is only a threat to America when it benefits working people or the poor or public health or the environment. Big government for big business is perfectly acceptable.
The amassing of wealth and power for the corporate sector has become the major project of the GOP in the 21st century, with the Democratic Party's cooperation.
New Language for a New Paradigm
We need terminology that more accurately describes political tendencies in the US and world in the 21st century, placing the rule of corporate elites and militarism on one side and democracy, human rights and freedoms, and the health of the planet on the other.
The evolution of two-party politics in the US, with politicians from both parties under the influence of corporate lobbies and campaign checks, made it inevitable that both Democrats and Republicans would veer away from their stated principles. Such influence has always been evident, but began to push politicians into extremist territory with the beginning of the Reagan Revolution. (And even Reagan left Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security alone.)
Progressives are as deluded in hoping for a progressive rehabilitation of the Democratic Party as true conservatives are in believing the GOP upholds their values:
"Money's conquest of American politics has therefore rendered impotent the well-worn prescriptions of the left and the right, which now deliver only scapegoats rather than solutions... Today, government can be 'big' in terms of spending while handing all its work over to contractors. In the twentieth century, business and government were adversaries. Today, the wall between the two that may have once existed has become a revolving door and both share common interests." ('One Nation Under Contract: The Outsourcing of American Power and the Future of Foreign Policy' by Allison Stanger, quoted in Harper's)
The traditional spectrum of Republican-conservative on the right and Democrat-liberal at the left, with a gray area for moderates in the middle, belongs in the trash. The 'centrist' gap between the two parties is really an overlap where Republican and Democrat politicians are most enthusiastically loyal to corporate lobbies, with euphemisms like "Republican moderate," "Democratic Leadership Council," "blue dog," and "triangulation" to describe them.
A more accurate spectrum would find most Republicans at the furthest extreme and most of the Democratic Party next to them. This is the side that serves corporate power, profit, and privilege. It embraces the ideology that underpins state capitalism, a condition in which major corporations have grown so powerful that government's chief purpose is to take marching orders from them.
Think of government as a wholly owned subsidiary of General Electric, Exxon Mobil, Halliburton, Monsanto, Wall Street, the insurance and pharmaceutical cartels, and other top industries. (China, which now provides cheap labor for corporations, has shown us that both communism and capitalism can be subsumed into the state capitalist system.)
What's on the other side of the new spectrum? In the US, not much, if we're talking about political clout. Some Democrats like Dennis Kucinich, Greens, environmental and community activists, socialists, unions that haven't placed allegiance to Democratic politicians ahead of their members' needs, even some libertarians and traditional conservatives who recognize that unrestrained corporate power is as much a menace as state power.
The retreat of the Democratic Party from its traditional constituencies has enabled Republicans to move towards even greater fanaticism. When Democrats co-opted the health care mandate idea from Republicans, who had introduced it in the 1990s, they drove the GOP into a frenzy of opposition to reform, further marginalizing single-payer (Medicare For All), the one proposal that would have provided universal medical care and dramatically lowered costs. The health care reform debate turned out to be a factional dispute over which party best served insurance and other medical industries. (For a more thorough description of "liberal disintegration," see Sam Smith's "The death of liberalism and what to do about it" in The Progressive Review, May 9, 2011.)
Progressivism has nearly collapsed as a political force, even though progressives still exist and sometimes get elected. We can begin digging ourselves out of this hole by adopting a new model to replace the Republic/conservative/right vs. Democrat/liberal/left paradigm. We can declare our independence from the bipartisan consensus. We can reject the "active propaganda machinery controlled by the world's largest corporations [that] constantly reassures us that consumerism is the path to happiness, governmental restraint of market excess is the cause of our distress, and economic globalization is both a historical inevitability and a boon to the human species" (David C. Korten, 'When Corporations Rule the World'). .
Doing so will bust open the narrow political debate offered daily in the mainstream media. It will give us a revolutionary chance to reverse the dangerous direction of the US in the 21st century, which now promises decades of perpetual war, undiminished fossil fuel consumption as the climate heats up, privatization of dwindling resources like fresh water, an ever-widening gap between rich and poor, the collapse of financial security for working Americans, concentration of power and wealth among a small number of 'too big to fail' firms, and growing government and corporate intrusion into our private lives.
Call it Corporate America vs. We the People. Globalization vs. Mother Earth. Privatization vs. the Public Good. Wall Street vs. Main Street. Plutocracy vs. Democracy. Which side are you on?
Comments are closed




78 Comments so far
Show AllThis article is full of deceptive misrepresentations wherein we are to forget about democrat complicity and expansion of the corruption. There are too many misrepresentations to bother listing them.
Rubbish.
well ya coulda listed a couple just to prove you actually read the article cause i didn't see any myself
You really don't?
He refers to the reactionaries as "radicals", something with which *real* radicals, e.g. Saul Alinsky, would never have agreed, nor would have tolerated. The author could perhaps have tried to make a case for "radical reactionary", but didn't. He signs up for their terminology.
When we go along with them calling themselves "radicals", and even echo them, we're implicitly agreeing with them that our barring the road to their goal of "all for ourselves and nothing for other people" is a problem that should be solved, since a political radical is someone who goes to the root of a problem. For my part, the only bit of "all for ourselves" that's a problem is how close the buggers are coming to achieving it!
And he refers to the FDR period as having had "socialist" features. That's incorrect, since the sine-qua-non of socialism is popular control of the means of production, aka one's livelihood. The best parts of FDR's "innovations" (Bismarck had already led the way 50 years before) were *social welfare* items. There was no "socialism" in them since control of people's livelihoods remained in the hands of the plutocrats.
And those few (and they really were few) social-welfare improvements pale in comparison to the long-term effects of the truly *terrible* things FDR's regime did to us by stealth - something the author doesn't mention, tho they're extremely germane. Things such as: shifting the income tax onto our backs; creating the world-destroying "consumer society" as a way of saving the US for Capitalism by steering between the Scylla of Godless Communism and the Charybdis of goose-step-Fascism; and creating the "military-industrial complex" as another way of appeasing the hyper-wealthy few by endlessly enriching them at the expense of everyone else.
and they are so well appeased, making a fortune creating a hyper imperialist state that will also help protect profits and access to resources abroad.
Trouble is the capitalists have decided that they don't really want or need decent living standards and education for the US working class. The move is towards chattel employment, no representation, no rights, a model that has been perfected these past few decades in sweatshops worldwide.
In the US they call it an Disney internship, or one of the many other exploitative internships available to you with Corporate US.
Can't even list one?
"full of deceptive misrepresentations wherein we are to forget about democrat complicity"
read the article before commenting on it...
I'll swear some CDers have a keystroke macro that generates the knee-jerk "What about the Democrats?" response automatically.
I think the author was not clear enough in that he did not clearly say we must break the two party systems in order to get our government to heed the voice of the people over that of the money boys. He does say, "since the Reagon administration Republicans, with help from the Democrats, have worked to dismantle such programs and policies." ("big government' and "socialist" ideas.)
This movement of both corporate political parties to the right has caused the mess we are in now. Voters are hampered from voting for what they really want because to vote for any party but the corrupt two, is to 'throw your vote away' and 'spoil the election'. With this mind set, we get only to attempt to figure out which of the corrupt two is the lesser evil. That gives us the situation we have now. Our so called 'representatives' do not heed the advice of their constituents but heed the orders of their contributors---and the wars go on, our economic system collapses, we cut all of our domestic programs and funnel the wealth of the nation into the pockets of the top 2% of the richest people in the nation.
We must break the two party system. Stop voting for the bastards who have killed the middle class and widened the gap between the vastly wealthy (who don't pay taxes) and the rest of us.
"It's worth noting here that such agenda are bipartisan, supported by mainstream Democrats."
The TeaParty is already working on the other side. They have no love for the Corporations taking over America either!
and I don't mean the Koch Bus riders and koolaide drinkers, I mean the ones who started before Koch ever showed up with their dirty money!
>^^<
As I read the article I thought that most of those who post comments on CD will agree with this guy. Then I read the first comment and wondered if I read the same article that he did.
In the section with the title New Language for a New Paradigm, the fifth, sixth, and seventh paragraphs echo what I see on this site about "democrat complicity" nearly every day. And those are not the only ones in that vein.
What more can the author do?
Sheepherder
My thoughts also as I thought this was a very well written article. I agree with you as I too wonder if the first commenter had read the same article as we did.
My guess is that "Birdbrain Alley" is an intern with a big pr firm, getting valuable experience in fixing the focus instead of the problem.
That's what big pr's do.
I felt thesame way. I like the way Scott laid out his case, and I think he depicted what's gone wrong quite aptly.
Birdbrainalley is fairly well known for NOT reading anything but the title. Don't look at this moron's postings as anything but paid shill crap. It's what shills DO.
well i am taken aback by an honest and truthful article about the re-writing of history by the rockefeller school system, that along with their medication and vaccine programs and gmo poisons, have really compromised the health and minds of the sheeple to the extent of justifying the word genocide as a motive.
amerikans don't know much anymore - science, literature, math, politics and nutrition
its refreshing to read some basic truths that seem to confuse and befuddle the sheeple: "A more accurate spectrum would find most Republicans at the furthest extreme and most of the Democratic Party next to them. This is the side that serves corporate power, profit, and privilege. It embraces the ideology that underpins state capitalism, a condition in which major corporations have grown so powerful that government's chief purpose is to take marching orders from them."
or this: "The economic principles of today's GOP and the Tea Party don't come from any period of time within their own memory, so it's difficult to identify what kind of values they're trying to preserve or restore. But if we look further back in American history, to the late 19th century, we can find a match in the Robber Baron Era."
its an irony beyond words to see grotesquely obese illiterate amerikans many of whom are taking a wide variety of daily meds marching or waddling down the street trying to make policy changes so that the rockefellers and the kochheads can get more breaks from a government who has its head up their asses in the first place
some tea party posters i have seen at demonstrations:
"youth in asia will kill your grandmother"
"keep the government out of medicare"
"get a life you morans"
the real truth about the government a the writer states: "Think of government as a wholly owned subsidiary of General Electric, Exxon Mobil, Halliburton, Monsanto, Wall Street, the insurance and pharmaceutical cartels, and other top industries"
You should read some of the local craigslistings down here in NC. One that I have seen more than once was people selling a "chester drawers" when they are trying to sell a chest of drawers. Also a lot of people sail things down here on craigslist, instead of sell them.
And they continue to cut school budgets down here. I guess the goal is total illiteracy not just a partial one.
One should admire the fact that although these people appear to lack your mastery of the English language they have managed to utilize the entreprenurial tool which is the internet to make ends meet.
hey you're the guy who bought the chester drawers aint ya
Your use of the word "sheeple" along with your general disain for the masses is offensive, regressive and completely counterproductive, but it's good for your ego, right?
You're so smart and everyone else is so dumb.
Actually, American political ignorance is a direct function of the destruction of all militant mass organization in the US. Those mass organizations left standing are controlled by the company and are just kabuki opposition.
You focus on the effect (the dumbing down) rather than the cause, totalitarian corporate and intel control of all political organizations that hides behind the appearance of a wealth of individual freedom. Since we can watch any combination of sex acts on the internet, people assume that we must be free, but let people organize and militantly demand an end to the MIC, the War on Terror, DHS and it will become apparent that we are not free at all.
One of the characteristics of a certain subset of "liberals" as opposed to "radicals" is a sneering focus on class differences, as though the great unwashed were responsible for their situation.
It's probably not really intentional, since many of them -and I presume this would be true of you, too- feel extremely embarrassed when it's pointed out to them that most class markers --being able to spell and use grammar conventionally (as in your reverse example), knowing which fork to use when, having a certain kind of I-never-sweat personal grooming-- are artificial and arbitrary, created by the wealthy to show how much "better" they are than the rest of us.
YES! The only flaw is that he doesn't always clarify that the "Republicans" and "Democrats" he decries are the politicians--ordinary people who call themselves Democrats or Republicans may have been misled into support for some of the corpocrat agenda, but largely agree on the problems with it.
He calls for a new language to describe the real distinctions. Here's my proposal--
We are at war, the humans versus the corporations. Right now they are winning, massively. mostly because they control the mass media. And because a right-wing effort to control power in every branch of government, at every level, has been so remarkably successful. But when you consider that the final victory of the corporations means the death of humanity, because we ARE in fact animals who depend on the ecosystems of the only planet we've got--ecosystems under critical assault now--surely if all of humanity, EVEN THE FEW THOUSAND SUPER RICH WHO NOW HAVE ESSENTIALLY ABSOLUTE POWER--are tremendously threatened by this, surely we can win over these machines (which in fact will also "die" if we do, since they exist only in relation to humans--parasitic relations).
The key that can give us easy victory is this: corporations, being legal fictions, can do nothing except through human representatives. We need to understand that they are our real enemy, and that any human who works on their behalf, at the expense of the human good, is a TRAITOR. I don't mean employees. I mean PR agents, corporate lawyers and CEOs. These people don't think of themselves as traitors; they see themselves as "just doing my job" which is protecting the bottom line of one corporation against any threat to it. But when the threat is empoyees wanting a decent wage, communities wanting safe drinking water, or citizens not wanting to shoulder the whole tax burden--then it requires blinders to not see that the traitors' work is an attack on their fellow humans. Blinders are of course popular and ubiquitous. But we can tear them off, by speaking of the battle in these terms, and treating the traitors as such.
And it is a war to the death, because if we win we must terminate corporations entirely. Read the stuff put out by POCLAD about the rules once in place to control corporations in this country and you'll realize--they shrugged out from all those restraints once and they'll do it again. Large corporations must be simply, permanently, illegal.
"Large corporations must be simply, permanently, illegal."
Not exactly, mwildfire.
There's much to be said for economies of scale.
Large corporations simply must be put under the control of the state, which, if it doesn't want to run the corporation itself, might decide to let it be run as a cooperative.
Capitalism is the problem.
Socialism is the solution.
"...big, central 'socialist' State?"
NO Thanks!
No thanks is right!
Maybe simply tearup all the Incorporation papers and make every start from Zero. Don't issue any rit of Incorporation for more than 5 (Five) yrs, All actrions over the previous 5yrs can be used as cause to allow or disallow continuation of their Corporate status. Certin things like Hireing illegal Alliens, or too many H1 visas would automaticly trigger a 2 yr probationary status. If they don't clean up their act, no new Corporation status will be granted.
Maybe make all judges elected officals for not moer than two 4yr tearms, from top to bottom. Also the Congress ans Senate Two 4yr terms only! Nobody rides for free!
>^^<
"Large corporations must be simply, permanently, illegal."
Not exactly, mwildfire.
There's much to be said for economies of scale.
Large corporations simply must be put under the control of the state, which, if it doesn't want to run a corporation itself, might decide to let it be run as a cooperative.
Capitalism is the problem.
Socialism is the solution.
From the article:
".....further marginalizing single-payer (Medicare For All), the one proposal that would have provided universal medical care and dramatically lowered costs."
Oh, oh, watch out. You know who (a certain CD commenter) will be ranting, raving, screaming and shouting as he rips at his breast that NO, No, No, the commenter will scream, another CD columnist (Scott McLarty) doesn't know the difference between universal health care and Medicare for all and single payer, blah, blah, blah. We're all stupid, Scott McLarty is ill informed and he's (the CD commenter) the only smart one on planet earth.
"But if we look further back in American history, to the late 19th century, we can find a match in the Robber Baron Era.
......
It's worth noting here that such agenda are bipartisan, supported by mainstream Democrats."
That's about the most accurate depiction of today's political climate that I've seen lately.
"Call it Corporate America vs. We the People. Globalization vs. Mother Earth. Privatization vs. the Public Good. Wall Street vs. Main Street. Plutocracy vs. Democracy. Which side are you on?"
I hate taking up sides, but if I pressed I'd have to say: We the People, Mother Earth, Public Good, Main Street and Democracy. But it's rare to see any of them respresented by candidates or legislation on any ballot.
I mentioned, several years back (and awhile back, here on CD), that we need a virtually verbatim re-instatement of FDR's "New Deal" agenda, to someone. He said back to me that that is so old-fashioned. I said we've spent the last 30 years re-instating the Robber Baron era of the 1890's, so the New Deal represents a sociological advance of 40 years, over what we have now.
I keep sayin, we need to poison pill the whole dam thing, Any public orginization sold off must stay unionized, said Union having 1/8th interest if the new Private entity!
Yep that'll have'em lining up at the door to buy the Water Works!
>^^<
In a nation wherein 'patriot' has come to describe very radical social Darwinists, and wherein 'socialist' has come to describe someone who supports libraries and public education, we do indeed need to redefine some key words.
We have let the Rabid Right hijack our own language and bitch-slap us with it, as we have let them hijack ~our~ own flag and turn into a symbol of jingoistic madness.
The damage is done, and no amount of arguing is going to convince these folks _ maybe 1/3 of the whole country _ that anything 'Progressive' or 'Leftist' is ~ever~ something they should seriously consider even tolerating, nor embracing.
This dude is correct _ we do need a new terminology. It's the only light that's going to cut through the fog of hatred, fear, emotion and bigotry that that FOX News and Rush Limbaugh have been spewing for so many years already.
Well said.
It's amazing how a public that once viewed Archie Bunker as a "bigot", now views Limbaugh as a "prophet" and "trusted advisor". But what could we reasonably expect once we had elected and re-elected a president who suffered from Alzheimers? I am not sure new terminology is all we need. I think a little "critical thinking" and "logic" is also called for. When accountability and oversight are seen as bad things, I think that demonstrates a far more systemic problem.
But it's not the same public. What we had back when All in the Family was on was a Kennedy era country. One that looked at a problem and said "let's fix it". One that looked at poor people and said "we can help this situation". One that at least TRIED to look at each other as humans and people, not as other dogs to be eaten. Then Reagan came along, and that all changed. It was then cool to blame people when their job left the country. It was acceptable to divide your community along racial and economic lines. Hell, Reagan came out in a public speech and told us all it was our "right" to hate whoever we wanted. The right has played divide and conquer on us for over 30 years, now, and we fell for it hook, like and sinker.
The result is just what you see, a country that is at it's own throat, that is up in arms against things that don't matter, ignoring the entire time those things that really DO. We allow them to divide us over gay marriage, but at the same time, they they are stealing us and our future blind. And their media does it's job very well. The righties have always been very good at propaganda, just not at anything else. They don't have a clue of how to run a country, how to unite a people, how to do anything but steal. They LIVE to steal, and it's far easier to steal from a divided people. That has been their goal for over 3 decades, now, and it's about time the people woke up to it. Most have, some refuse to admit they have been lied to. And they will fight you to the death to stay that stupid too.
WJM:Excellent comments.
It was always about capitalism, but it was capitalism with conscience. Welfare still existed, and people who were having a tough time WERE given help. Today, it's a callous society with millionaires paying their media whores to write slogans that make the confiscation of huge sums the Divine Right of the new self-proclaimed kings. Everyone else be damned! It's become the norm to see people sleeping on the streets, as the bar keeps heading further south, with soon-to-be norms including the closure of libraries, lack of food on supermarket shelves, boarded up repossessed empty homes, and the jobless lined up on street corners like a scene taken straight from "The Grapes of Wrath."
Capital didn't get to call ALL the shots until recently, and the Supreme Court decision aided that corruption considerably. I'd like to see the judges recalled! Starting with their illicit appointment of Bush, the Lesser,to the highest office of the land. Of course Clinton made plenty of policy determinations that greased the skids for today's endless corruption starting with--Nafta, the repeal of Glass-Steagall, media deregulation, and "ending welfare as we know it." These measures top the list. For a rich nation, the abhorent lack of concern for those in need is nothing short of horrific.
WHAT radical left? There is NO radical left in this country, don't spread lies. You wouldn't recognize a real leftist if one showed up and introduced himself to you. Our left is to the right of damn near every European RIGHTIST out there. We have NO left here, period.
Could you please give an example of someone who is so left that they have ruined anything? What policies have they put forward that have ruined things for the left? I'm really confused by this, because I see a total abdication from the left, not going too far. How the hell could they have gone too far when they haven't had an ounce of power in over 30 years? Examples, please.
"How the hell could they have gone too far when they haven't had an ounce of power in over 30 years?"
Hear, hear!!!
That post is dead-on WJM. There are radical leftists but no organized radical left. Heck I'd argue there is no organized left at all with any significance... let alone a radical one.
My Father-in-law makes the claim all the time that everything that's wrong "Is all the fault of the lefties." I am always reminding him a left-wing party has never seen power in North America. He then lists off a bunch of neoliberals or centrists he believes are "lefties". I just shake my head and bite my tongue.
Glitch, Cruz_ctr, Sheepherder, Erroll, et. al --
Let's just all agree that even at CD some people cannot read -- or can't be bothered to read -- before publishing dyspeptic blather.
The writer is a Green Party member who clearly states:
"Progressives are as deluded in hoping for a progressive rehabilitation of the Democratic Party as true conservatives are in believing the GOP upholds their values:"
This is one of the most cogent summaries of our current political malaise that I have encountered-- and needs to be distributed as widely as possible if we are going to resist the corporate slow motion coup d'etat.
The standard political cliches that offer us Paul Ryan & Palin as "conservatives" and Obama as a "liberal"-- as so well articulated by McLarty -- have to be dismissed as obfuscation.
It's also an impeccable case for supporting the Green Party -- or any organization or movement -- dedicated to protecting the biosphere & humanity from corporatism (better known as fascism).
The slow motion coup has been kicked up a gear lately...a veritable smorgasbord of imperial interventions, all meant
To Serve the Muslim Nations.....
fade to Barack Obama accepting peace prize with Twilight Zone theme background
Since I used to work for Charles Strouse, I'll add the song credits for, "Those Were The Days." The author quotes -- "Everybody pulled his weight, Didn't need no welfare state... Those were the days!"-- From All In The Family, sung by Archie (Carroll O'Connor) and Edith Bunker (Jean Stapleton).
Lee Adams: Lyrics
Charles Strouse: Music
i think the term 'neoliberalism' provides a nice opening for critical democratic iterations ...
"China, which now provides cheap labor for corporations, has shown us that both communism and capitalism can be subsumed into the state capitalist system."
It isn't just China, from my experience capitalism seems to drop in quite nicely in any society where there is a large division in wealth and power; which is what China really is, (If the author doesn't want to call the GOP conservatives, I wouldn't be calling "The Party" communists.) Anywhere there are haves and have-nots, whether through tyranny, plutocracy, oligarchy or what have you, capitalism can thrive.
This is important because there is a notion that democracy and capitalism are linked and they simply are not. Democracy is a hindrance to capitalism.
I fully agree with Mr. McLarty's main points.
http://kiely-flashpoint.blogspot.com/
"They are, in short, incompatible and doomed to failure."
I'm inclined to agree. I have a hard time discussing our problems and potential solutions with anyone ideologically bound to the concepts of the capitalist economy, (i.e., money, wealth) whether they be on the "right" or "left" of that ideology.
PS: I checked out the mosquitocloud... good stuff!
Geeeeez!
Here is one obfuscation from this bizarre democrat pr article.
"For republicans and Tea partiers, the constitution might as well be written in hieroglyphs. Except for the second amendment's right to bear arms, they decline to apply the constitution to the denial of Habeas Corpus, warrantless surveillance of U.S. citizens, torture, disregard for international treaties signed by the U.S., and other abuses that are clearly outlawed."
As if the majority of democrats do not support these corruptions.
I also especially loved the ridiculous notion that Dennis Kucinich " has not placed allegiance to democrat politicians above his member's needs.
Twaddle.
If this kind of disingenuous misrepresentation of facts is acceptable to the reader, then you will get what you deserve. More of the same thing you seem to be complaining about.
Apprently you failed to notice that this article was written by the media coordinator of the Green Party, USA.
"pjd412"
No, I most certainly noticed that and that does not bode well.
This article, almost more than any other I have read here, makes me want to just give up.
Things and people (intentionally or unintentionally) are often Not what they seem.
B Alley,
You need to take a course in logic. Explaining the horridness of A does not imply a defense of B.
If I was wanted to explain how violent war is by describing the body-splatting properties of .50 caliber machine gun fire, would you assume that I was arguing that a little .22 caliber M-16 shot to the head was good for someone?
pjd412, I thought for sure you'd object to this:
"Gov. Scott Walker is not a conservative, nor is Gov. John Kasich of Ohio. Neither are Fox News, Newt Gingrich, Sarah Palin, Rush Limbaugh, or any of their fellow corporate royalists and faux populists.
They are radicals."
That's a complaint for another day. But just as my older brother proudly calls himself a "queer". (specifically a "radical anarchist queer") half of any battle is controlling the language.
Eeek!
Birdbrain, you know I love you. But read this sentence again:
"Some Democrats like Dennis Kucinich, Greens, environmental and community activists, socialists, unions that haven't placed allegiance to Democratic politicians ahead of their members' needs, even some libertarians and traditional conservatives who recognize that unrestrained corporate power is as much a menace as state power."
_________________________
I had to slow down and treat this sentence like a "speed bump", but he's clearly saying "UNIONS that haven't placed allegiance to Democratic politicians ahead of their members' needs"-- that qualification is separate and distinct from the Kucinich reference.
I actually dispute that Kucinich is on "the other side of the new spectrum", insofar as, like a chameleon or cuttlefish, it's a characteristic of a partisan Judas goat to display an iridescent "new spectrum" glow to lead strays back to the party's killing floor.
I also find other references, e.g. "unions that haven't placed allegiance to Democratic politicians ahead of their members' needs", problematic. There are fitful, superficial indications that unions are finally pulling their collective head out of the Democratic Party's ass, but it's still an open question.
And of course, you're quite right to note that mainstream Democrats support the corruptions bewailed by McLarty.
But you really are imposing a "Democrat apologist" framework that isn't there. Take a deep breath before you start inserting apostrophes in every word that ends in "s".
The problem is what's quoted isn't a complete sentence--it lists a long set of subjects but lacks a verb and object--so there's no meaning to that sentence. Overall, the whole essay is poorly constructed, needs to be red penciled and returned to the author for a rewrite.