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The Beast Is Starved: Welcome to the Next Great Depression
Since Reagan, Republicans have been on a “starve the beast” campaign – by which they mean eviscerate the government by taking away as much revenue as they can.
Starving the beast has been the biggest bait and switch con game that has ever been perpetrated on the American people. And the most tragic.
"Well, if past is prologue, welcome to the next Great Depression." (photo of mother and children during the Great Depression in Elm Grove, California by Dorothea Lange)
As Paul Krugman pointed out, Republicans offered popular tax cuts so that they could later cut popular government programs “as a necessity.” Oh, we’d love to continue providing low cost, effective medical care under Medicare, but you see, the country just can’t afford it … Of course we can’t. Billionaire hedge fund managers and Wall Street traders pay less in taxes than their secretaries. And most corporations pay little or no taxes.
Starve the Beast was coupled with a clever campaign to make government appear to be a collection of bumbling bureaucrats who wasted tax money for pure pleasure. Long after it became politically impossible to stereotype racial and ethnic groups (with the possible exceptions of Muslims) it was – and is – quite acceptable to characterize government workers as shiftless, lazy and incompetent.
As a result, once the Republicans succeeded in cutting government revenue to the bone and beyond, it became impossible to raise taxes – who wants to give any more of their hard earned money to a bunch of lazy bureaucrats?
Never mind that most big government programs are far more efficient than their private sector equivalents. That’s a mere fact. Can’t let that get in the way of starving the beast.
Bait and switch. Divide and Conquer.
So, after starting with a surplus in 2000, Republicans used two wars, two rounds of tax cuts, and a giant giveaway to big Pharma, to get the country racking up debt like a drunken sailor.
Along comes the Bush recession, and the debt accelerates, and the Republicans declare the debt to be an “emergency” and right on schedule immediately attack popular programs like Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, Student loans –and virtually anything that doesn’t help the uber rich or the corporations suddenly must be cut if we are to stay solvent.
Never mind that cutting Social Security to balance the budget is like attacking the mailman because your car doesn’t work. It has nothing to do with the budget – but again, that’s a mere fact. When you’re drowning the beast, facts don’t matter.
So OK. The beast is drowned. Keynes is dead. Now what?
Well, if past is prologue, welcome to the next Great Depression.
See, the dirty little secret is that we never had a debt “crisis.” We had a jobs crisis.
While Republicans were arguing about the faux “crisis” and the press and Obama joined them, we got a series of disturbing economic signals. Consumer confidence was down, manufacturing was off, May and June’s job numbers were pathetic. In fact, if not for a hiring binge by McDonald’s there would have been a net job loss in May. That’s something to hang your hat on: McDonalds accounted for what little job growth there was. What’s next, America gets saved by an uptick in Wall Mart greeters?
Look. This whole drown the beast strategy has been nothing more than a stealth tactic for instituting an extremist version of a laissez faire, market uber-alles policy designed by and for the Plutocracy.
And to be sure, it’s worked great for them. Today, the richest 1% owns 40% of the nation's wealth, and the top 10% owns nearly 75% of it.
The rest of us? Not so much.
Income and wealth inequality in the US has been increasing rapidly since Reagan, (with a slight break under Clinton). In terms of income inequality, the US now ranks about the same as Ivory Coast, Uganda and Cameroon – countries not exactly noted for being prosperous, equitable and just societies.
News flash for all the debt mongers, Tea Partiers and other assorted ignoramuses. You can’t run a consumer-based economy when the vast majority of consumers don’t have enough money to buy anything. After all, Paris Hilton can only buy so many yachts; Corporate CEOs can only purchase so many jetliners – even with their special jet tax credits; and Wall Street traders can only buy so many Bugattis. But middle and working class Americans need to spend their money on food, lodging, and other necessities.
Here’s the dirty little secret: Republicans want the economy to fail. They want Obama to fail, and they don’t care who gets hurt in the process. They want these things, because the beast is in the bathtub and they can almost taste its demise.
The pieces are in place for the Plutocrats final victory … an industry friendly Supreme Court; a Democratic Party that is either in collusion with the plutocrats, or so cowardly as to be neutered; a press that reports outlandish lies and objective facts as if they were equivalent; and a public that is dazed and confused and convinced the government is their enemy.
But government isn’t the enemy. Laissez faire economic policies are. Every time we’ve tried them, they've produced profound income inequalities and the severe economic downturns that inevitably follow.
With private industry sitting on top of some $2 trillion in profits, exporting jobs, and shutting down plants, only government spending stood between us and an economic Armageddon.
Now, nothing does.
So, congratulations, America. You’ve finally gotten big bad gubmint off your back.
Enjoy the coming Great Depression.
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215 Comments so far
Show AllThe point you raise about the draft is a good one, and it also recalls an ex post facto criticism of the antiwar American left in those days whose effects remain with us now. The resistance to the draft prevailed mainly because middle class kids were put at risk, as you point out, over a prolonged period in an endless conflict no one really understood, least of all Lyndon Johnson, and because the general public concluded that our political and military leadership was lying and lying extensively.
After the draft was abolished, many in the young war/draft resistance leadership dropped their activism and went to law school or to professorships. The left itself splintered into a collection of, at best, loosely affiliated single issue advocacy groups.
Three or four years ago, Harper's published a very powerful photo essay juxtaposing two scenes: a racially, sexually, and ethnically diverse group of graduates at an Ivy League commencement, many having plainly well-to-do parents, and a less diverse group of combat ready soldiers graduating from training at Fort Benning, Georgia, apparently to be sent to Iraq immediately. One glance at their families made it clear that these people did not hold stock portfolios and did not reside in the nation's more comfortable zip codes.
This is a serious issue that the left doesn't seem to want or to know how to face, leaving it to politicians on the radical Republican right to exploit for purposes of further polarization. Our "warrior class" disproportionately tends to come from places and circumstances that hold little interest to the left. As stated, I don't presume to have a remedy for all this splintering and tribalism, especially in a long era of economic decline for more than 90 percent of the people, but I still believe that it hurts the left and progressive politics more than it hurts the right, at least for the foreseeable future.
For a rare sympathetic yet unsentimental treatment of poor mountain whites, see the excellent independent film, Winter's Bone.
The BIG problem is that TeaTHUGlikklans are addicted to Koch ... and other forms of greed ... even though _most_ Teabaggers are NOT rich, by any stretch of the imagination.
They have this illusion that if they work hard, they, too, will someday be worth $Billions.
The only heartening thing to come out of this Debt deal is the howl of protest from those who feel betrayed by it and the calls for Another Political Way. It is now blatantly obvious that Democrats morped into right wing Republicans and are now just as odious.We were warned by Ralph Nader many years ago that the DP stood for the same things as RP. We have only ourselves to blame for trusting the President.....yes the guy who I worked many hours to elect for President then became a traitor to his followers. A vote for him translated to a vote for Republicanism. In the next election I will not vote for him but I do need a third party or a leader to vote for because I do not want to waste my vote. Let us hope someone or some organisation will emerge to fill the vacuum. Right now the best chance I've read is that the Unions should sponsor a Party like the British unions sponsor the Labour Party.
I would appreciate it if those spoiling for a fight would shut up and let the responsible writers contribute ideas to change the system without being verbally flogged and abused.Contrary arguments are fine.
There are alternatives to the current mess we're in. Instant Run-Off Voting would make 3rd and even 4th parties viable...it has the potential of stripping money out of campaigns. Whole cost accounting is something which needs to be factored into the economy. Also we have to understand that those who are touted as "achievers" are mostly making money off the people through wars and pharmaceuticals. A war tax needs to be imposed...a dramatic war tax. All these Big Daddy Warbucks need to be taken out of the system. Attention: They are not John Galt...who is a fictitious character...they are real and parasitic. Counter productive.
The machine does a good job of grinding up the masses and keeping them swinging at each other rather than at the oligarchy who are safely gated away from any changes in the economy...they live outside of nations...Halliburton has its headquarters in Dubai, and yet received trillions in no bid contracts...only one example.
There will be blood...and it is no country for old people...the coming civil war will be fought neighborhood against neighborhood...it will not be so easily defined as North versus South.
A Hopi Elder says about these times:
"You have been telling the people it is the eleventh hour, now you must go back and tell the people, this is the hour, and there are things to be considered. Where are you going? What are you doing? Are you in right relation? Where is your water? Do you know your garden? It is time to speak your truth. There is a river flowing now, very fast. It is so great and swift, there are those who will be afraid. They will hold on to the shore, and they will suffer greatly. The elders say, 'Push off of the shore into the middle of the river, keep your eyes open and your head above water.' And I say, 'See who is in there with you, and celebrate! For at this time in history your are to take nothing personally, least of all yourselves. For the moment that you do, your spiritual journey has come to a halt. Gather yourselves, banish the word struggle from your attitude and your vocabulary. All that you do must be done in a sacred manner and in celebration. We are the ones we've been waiting for.' "
Thank you for that Hopi quote mn2mx. You improved my day 1000%.
The Great Repression
I'm not sure why this kind of crap doesn't inspire "empowerment" alternative ways of thinking. I have been working for years since we started an early "Impact Investment" project (though it wasn't called that at the time) to begin shifting the balance. So here's another idea that we as progressives should take a look at (http://nickelameal.wordpress.com). If the evils of the world control our systems, let's take the systems back. If we captured a voice in the ATM/Credit Card system and had just one nickel transferred to community food education projects with each fast food purchase, we'd generate hundreds of millions of nickels for a voice in advocacy each and every day - thus turning bad food habits into a stream of money for change. By the way, for the Nickel-a-Meal Campaign Against Obesity, we could generate some 125,000,000 for progressive food empowerment projects each and every day of the year. And that would indeed be a way to circumvent the starving of the beast by taking back our systems for our own purposes. Consumers can do it if we learn to think and act outside the bun!
If you want change, you as an individual need to change.
As a start, Turn off your TV - it is making you poor.
The author of this article forgot to include the chapter wherein the "government" sells off all the public assets -- be they parking meters, national parks, whatever -- to "private industry," which of course makes a killing: assets acquired at fire sale price; no investment needed to create assets; continuing income stream.
Meanwhile, the "government," whether it's a municipality, state or federal, is poorer. It's lost assets at a price far below their value, and has striped itself of future revenue, as well as diminishing its asset base.
As I listened today to commentators suggesting ways for (average Joe) me to understand current economic and political events, it occurred to me that I also want access to commentators that are telling me how the mega rich are reacting to the ebb and flow of life and trying to push things with their incredible resources in directions that are most favorable to them. Sort of like tuning in to an All Things Considered aimed at the concerns of the Mega Rich only. Can I get that perspective from reading the Wall Street Journal? Foreign Affairs? Barron's? Where?
Start with Free Speech TV, Democracy Now, Amy Goodman; FAIR, an organization dedicated to truth in the media will also provide good people to read. For sure, the likes of Joe Klunker or Karl Rolledover or Diane Sawitherway...are just liars for the White House, so don't go to ABC, NBC, Times, NYT, or CBS. They just lie and lie and lie so that the messages we get are pure bull.
If you're looking for an economist to listen to to tell the truth??????GOOD LUCK.
For help, see "Capitalism: A Love Story" or "Confessions of an Economic Hitman"