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Iowa: The Meaningless Sideshow Begins
The 2012 presidential race officially begins today with the caucuses in Iowa, and we all know what that means …
Ron Paul, Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum. "The auctioned election process," observes Taibbi, "Is designed to reduce the field to two candidates who will each receive hundreds of millions of dollars apiece from the same pool of donors." (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images; Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Nothing.
The race for the White House is normally an event suffused with drama, sucking eyeballs to the page all over the globe. Just as even the non-British were at least temporarily engaged by last year’s royal wedding, people all over the world are normally fascinated by the presidential race: both dramas arouse the popular imagination as real-life versions of universal children’s fairy tales.
Instead of a tale about which maiden gets to marry the handsome prince, the campaign is an epic story, complete with a gleaming white castle at the end, about the battle to succeed to the king’s throne. Since the presidency is the most powerful office in the world, the tale has appeal for people all over the planet, from jungles to Siberian villages.
It takes an awful lot to rob the presidential race of this elemental appeal. But this year’s race has lost that buzz. In fact, this 2012 race may be the most meaningless national election campaign we’ve ever had. If the presidential race normally captivates the public as a dramatic and angry ideological battle pitting one impassioned half of society against the other, this year’s race feels like something else entirely.
In the wake of the Tea Party, the Occupy movement, and a dozen or more episodes of real rebellion on the streets, in the legislatures of cities and towns, and in state and federal courthouses, this presidential race now feels like a banal bureaucratic sideshow to the real event – the real event being a looming confrontation between huge masses of disaffected citizens on both sides of the aisle, and a corrupt and increasingly ideologically bankrupt political establishment, represented in large part by the two parties dominating this race.
Let’s put it this way. What feels more like a real news story – Newt Gingrich calling Mitt Romney a liar for the ten millionth time, or this sizzling item that just hit the wires by way of the Montana Supreme Court:
HELENA — The Montana Supreme Court restored the state's century-old ban on direct spending by corporations on political candidates or committees in a ruling Friday that interest groups say bucks a high-profile U.S. Supreme Court decision granting political speech rights to corporations…
A group seeking to undo the Citizens United decision lauded the Montana high court, with its co-founder saying it was a "huge victory for democracy."
"With this ruling, the Montana Supreme Court now sets up the first test case for the U.S. Supreme Court to revisit its Citizens United decision, a decision which poses a direct and serious threat to our democracy," John Bonifaz, of Free Speech For People, said in a statement.
Now that is real politics -- real protest, real change. Exactly the opposite of the limp and sterile charade in Iowa. This caucus, let’s face it, marks the beginning of a long, rigidly-controlled, carefully choreographed process that is really designed to do two things: weed out dangerous minority opinions, and award power to the candidate who least offends the public while he goes about his primary job of energetically representing establishment interests.
If that sounds like a glib take on a free election system that allows the public to choose whichever candidate it likes best without any censorship or overt state interference, so be it. But the ugly reality, as Dylan Ratigan continually points out, is that the candidate who raises the most money wins an astonishing 94% of the time in America.
That damning statistic just confirms what everyone who spends any time on the campaign trail knows, which is that the presidential race is not at all about ideas, but entirely about raising money.
The auctioned election process is designed to reduce the field to two candidates who will each receive hundreds of millions of dollars apiece from the same pool of donors. Just take a look at the lists of top donors for Obama and McCain from the last election in 2008.
Obama’s top 20 list included:
- Goldman Sachs ($1,013,091)
- JPMorgan Chase & Co ($808,799)
- Citigroup Inc ($736,771)
- WilmerHale LLP ($550,668)
- Skadden, Arps et al ($543,539)
- UBS AG ($532,674), and...
- Morgan Stanley ($512,232).
McCain’s list, meanwhile, included (drum roll please):
- JPMorgan Chase & Co ($343,505)
- Citigroup Inc ($338,202)
- Morgan Stanley ($271,902)
- Goldman Sachs ($240,295)
- UBS AG ($187,493)
- Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher ($160,346)
- Greenberg Traurig LLP ($147,437), and...
- Lehman Brothers ($126,557).
Obama’s list included all the major banks and bailout recipients, plus a smattering of high-dollar defense lawyers from firms like WilmerHale and Skadden Arps who make their money representing those same banks. McCain’s list included exactly the same banks and a similar list of law firms, the minor difference being that it was Gibson Dunn instead of WilmerHale, etc.
The numbers show remarkable consistency, as Chase, Morgan Stanley, and Citigroup all gave roughly twice or just over twice as much to Obama as they did to McCain, almost perfectly matching the overall donations profile for both candidates: overall, Obama raised just over twice as much ($730 million) as McCain did ($333 million).
Those numbers tell us that both parties rely upon the same core of major donors among the top law firms, the Wall Street companies, and business leaders – basically, the 1%. Those one-percenters always give generously to both parties and both presidential candidates, although they sometimes will hedge their bets significantly when they think one side or the other has a lopsided chance at victory. That’s clearly what happened in 2008, when Wall Street correctly called Obama as a 2-1 (or maybe a 7-3) favorite to beat McCain.
The 1% donors are remarkably tolerant. They’ll give to just about anyone who polls well, provided they fall within certain parameters. What they won’t do is give to anyone who is even a remote threat to make significant structural changes, i.e. a Dennis Kucinich, an Elizabeth Warren, or a Ron Paul (hell will freeze over before Wall Street gives heavily to a candidate in favor of abolishing their piggy bank, the Fed). So basically what that means is that voters are free to choose anyone they want, provided it isn’t Dennis Kucinich, or Ron Paul, or some other such unacceptable personage.
If the voters insist on supporting such a person in defiance of these donors – this might even happen tonight, with a Paul win in Iowa – what you inevitably end up seeing is a monstrous amount of money quickly dumped into the cause of derailing that candidate. This takes overt forms, like giving heavily to his primary opponents, and more covert forms, like manufacturing opinions through donor-subsidized think tanks and the heavy use of lapdog media figures to push establishment complaints.
And what ends up happening there is that the candidate with the big stack of donor money always somehow manages to survive the inevitable scandals and tawdry revelations, while the one who’s depending on checks from grandma and $25 internet donations from college students always winds up mysteriously wiped out.
Thus the guy like George W. Bush, who dodged the draft and lied about his National Guard Service, steams to re-election, while a guy like Howard Dean – really not any kind of real threat to the status quo, whose major crimes were being insufficiently pro-war and finding an alternative source of campaign funding on the net – magically falls off the map and is made a caricature after one loony scream before Iowa.
The reason 2012 feels so empty now is that voters on both sides of the aisle are not just tired of this state of affairs, they are disgusted by it. They want a chance to choose their own leaders and they want full control over policy, not just a partial say. There are a few challenges to this state of affairs within the electoral process – as much as I disagree with Paul about many things, I do think his campaign is a real outlet for these complaints – but everyone knows that in the end, once the primaries are finished, we’re going to be left with one 1%-approved stooge taking on another.
Most likely, it’ll be Mitt Romney versus Barack Obama, meaning the voters’ choices in the midst of a massive global economic crisis brought on in large part by corruption in the financial services industry will be a private equity parasite who has been a lifelong champion of the Gordon Gekko Greed-is-Good ethos (Romney), versus a paper progressive who in 2008 took, by himself, more money from Wall Street than any two previous presidential candidates, and in the four years since has showered Wall Street with bailouts while failing to push even one successful corruption prosecution (Obama).
There are obvious, even significant differences between Obama and someone like Mitt Romney, particularly on social issues, but no matter how Obama markets himself this time around, a choice between these two will not in any way represent a choice between “change” and the status quo. This is a choice between two different versions of the status quo, and everyone knows it.
The real fight against the status quo is coming in places like the Supreme Court of Montana, which with this recent ruling correctly identified the real battle lines in the upcoming political season by boldly rejecting the concept of unlimited corporate campaign spending.
It’s coming in places like the courthouse of federal Judge Jed Rakoff, who recently rejected a dirty settlement deal between the SEC and Citigroup. It’s on the streets in the OWS protests and even in the Tea Party, which in recent years unseated countless Republican party lifer-stooges over their support of the bailouts (like Utah Senator Robert Bennett, who was hounded at a party convention with chants of “TARP, TARP, TARP!”).
This widespread and growing movement against the twin corrupting influences of money on our politics and state patronage on big business is going on everywhere – on the streets, in these courthouses, in the homes of people refusing to move after foreclosure, even in the antitax movements and the campaigns against state pensions.
The only place we can be absolutely sure this battle will not be found is in any national presidential race between Barack Obama and someone like Mitt Romney.
The campaign is still a gigantic ritual and it will still be attended by all the usual pomp and spectacle, but it’s empty. In fact, because it’s really a contest between 1%-approved candidates, it’s worse than empty – it’s obnoxious.
It was always annoying when these two parties and the slavish media that follows their champions around for 18 months pretended that this was a colossal clash of opposites. But now, with the economy in the shape that it’s in thanks in large part to the people financing these elections, that pretense is more than annoying, it’s offensive.
And I imagine that the more they try to play up the drama of these familiar-but-empty campaign rituals, the more irritating to the public it will all become. In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if, before the season is out, the campaign itself will become a hated symbol of the 1% -- with the conventions and the networks’ broadcast tents outside the inevitable "free speech zones" attracting protests the same way the offices of Chase and Bank of America did this fall.
Or maybe not, we’ll see. In any case, the dreary campaign to choose the next imperial administrator -- the One Percent-Off, let's call it -- starts tonight. It’s the same old ritual, but I just don’t think it’s going to fly the same way this time around.
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48 Comments so far
Show AllExactly! Bravo!
Interesting, I've pointed out to all the liberals who've jumped on the trash Ron Paul bandwagon, that this is the eventuality that both the establishment and its partisans want (or for an even truer holy warrior, Santorum). And the sad truth is that a lot of liberal democrats would be fine with a Romney-Obama match up which would allow the game to continue without much soul searching. Obama could pose as the populist and Romney as the businessman, falling back on the classic tropes of each party. Indeed, a self-reinforcing political feedback loop from hell.
It's interesting too that the same publications or websites that contain articles about drones, NDAA, or even declaring the US is lurching into fascism and is on the brink of war will also carry shrill and shallow polemics against even the thought that Ron Paul's candidacy might have an ameliorative affect on the foreign policy debate from now until November 2012 (if the country and the world survives that long).
As a non-white non-American, I find this behaviour by so many American liberals not just confused, but a betrayal of all the people who will suffer the consequences of an exploding and imploding American Empire.
I have deep concerns that democrats were motivated to cast votes for Santorum (via the DNC/ Wasserman Schultz) to offset the votes of anti-war democrats and independents who were going to vote for Ron Paul. His foreign policy suggestions are correct and many of us have had more than enough of this.....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sOO_UyOLxjE
"It's interesting too that the same publications or websites that contain articles about drones, NDAA, or even declaring the US is lurching into fascism and is on the brink of war will also carry shrill and shallow polemics against even the thought that Ron Paul's candidacy might have an ameliorative affect on the foreign policy debate from now until November 2012 (if the country and the world survives that long)."
You've summed it up perfectly. Paul forces them to decide what's most important to them. Even as they celebrate Paul's defeat, they front-page Obama's warmongering. I'm disgusted with them, too. It's becoming more and more clear to me that they have no answers and will take no stances. It's pathetic, really. They're doing Obama's work for him, and they don't even realize what tools they are.
What is a liberal but someone who thinks that the status quo is just fine as long as a "democrat" is in residence at 1600 Penn Ave? Oblahblah will feed his liberal worshipers empty platitudes about how tough times are actually a good thing because they bring us together and make us stronger, and how we must all share in the sacrifice of our sacred cows in order to make things "fair and balanced."
.
Oh bama .... please stroke my hope organ again.
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And really that's all the liberals need .. a little reassurance from Dear Leader followed by a routine dose of reinforcement by the Thom Hartmans and Rachel Maddows and the John Nichols's and the Katrina vandem Shills of the world.
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Liberals are just as complicit in the formation and perpetuation of the American Empire as conservatives.
"times are actually a good thing because they bring us together and make us stronger "
oooo, I'm feeling all tingly inside. Wait here while I put on Black Eyed Peas' (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjXyqcx-mYY) version of Obama's "Yes We Can" speech. Is this what cognitive dissonance feels like?
Ceti -- I agree wholeheartedly. Ron Paul would at least raise some issues outside of the box -- including questions about endless wars, hundreds of military bases across the empire, the banking cartel that runs the USA, the Israeli Lobby that controls Amerikan Middle East foreign policy, etc.
The liberals could still vote for their beloved Obama but at least the debates & policy discussions might be real. Which is exactly why I don't think Ron Paul has much of a chance to emerge from the Repugnant scrum.
I would vote for Ron Paul on the basis that far fewer non-Amerikans would be slaughtered than by Oilybomber, but obviously for some Amerikan liberals that's not such a big deal anyway.
Overall, a fabulous piece by Matt Taibbi. I can barely stand hearing about the fake U.S. Presidential elections, and which plutocrat will represent the oligarchy. Better to waste time watching WWE wrestling -- a far more honest enterprise.
Sing it, Matt!
Thanks for the Ratigan video, btw - 312 views since October, wtf?!
"This caucus, let’s face it, marks the beginning of a long, rigidly-controlled, carefully choreographed process that is really designed to do two things: weed out dangerous minority opinions, and award power to the candidate who least offends the public while he goes about his primary job of energetically representing establishment interests."
excellent observation, the electoral process is essential to create the appearance that the people have a voice. sheldin wolin called it 'managed democracy' (managed democracy and superpower equals inverted totalitarianism) in the book 'democarcy inc'.
the msm media is constantly reenforcing this meme (minority opinions must be marginalized, don't offend elite interests).
case in point, tonight i've been following the iowa returns on cnn live. at one point wolf blitzer was speaking to the correspondant (dana ??) covering the returns from the ron paul campaign headquarters.
she was interviewing an active US soldier (served 2 tours in iraq) about why he was supporting paul. the soldier, who had a large tattoo of the world trade towers falling on his neck. dressed in military fatigues, he explained that r paul's foreign policy,bring the troops home now, was the best possible american foreign policy and that as a soldier who had only served in the military during a time of war (i don't know what he expected), he was looking forward to working in a 'peace' army. at this point something really strange happened, the soldier said - "israel is capable of ...." and his face froze on the television screen as wolf blitzer said - sorry we seem to be experiencing technical difficulties. he immediately directed attention to another screen and began another interview w/ another correspondent somewhere in iowa.
interesting, the only technical difficulties experienced in 3 hours of coverage occurred the moment one of the caucus goers mentioned the word 'israel' in the context of iran. hmmm must be a coincidence.
yes the media and the actors that play on the stage are very meticulously choreographed (somebody at cnn lost their job tonight for letting that soldier w/in 10 feet of the mike and the reporter). the sad part is, even when the actors misread their lines or step out of the production line accidentally for a second, the american people are incapable of seeing it. the public has been so transfixed by the illusion of elections (created by and for wealthy interests) and freedom, and tv culture, that they will accept anything - as long as the advertisements are touching, funny and mildly dramatic.
...peace...
Great comments.
The reporter was Dana Bash.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dana_Bash
"at this point something really strange happened, the soldier said - "israel is capable of ...." and his face froze on the television screen as wolf blitzer said - sorry we seem to be experiencing technical difficulties"
Wolf used to work for AIPAC. He used to edit their monthly magazine. It looks like he's pretty good at editing uncomfortable comments too.
I remember the same thing happening to Dennis Kucinich during the debates when he ran for president. CNN seems to have technical difficulties when it's convenient for them.
"Iowa: The Meaningless Sideshow Begins"
______________________
And yet, for every observant meta-commentary like this one, in the months to come there will be a dozen earnest "inside politics" alternatives filling up the CD home page every day: virtual Team Coverage of the Meaningless Sideshow.
Go figure.
That's exactly on point. All the liberal websites are devoting enormous amounts of time and resources on these Republican primaries.
Minor correction: The Meaningless Show Begins.
"This caucus, let’s face it, marks the beginning of a long, rigidly-controlled, carefully choreographed process that is really designed to do two things: weed out dangerous minority opinions, and award power to the candidate who least offends the public while he goes about his primary job of energetically representing establishment interests."
Very well stated!
PROG: That insight, added to the very REAL FIGURES, i.e money numbers necessary for running an effective campaign or winning the election (in 94% of cases spending the most means you do win) should quiet the chorus on C.D. that always reinforces the LIE that it's the voters' fault... who they end up with.
"the LIE that it's the voters' fault... who they end up with." Good point. The same can be said for education. How can children be wholly educated within the confines of mainstream public schools, which is a monstrous brain washing machine?
With a population raised on TV and public schooling, it's not surprising that the great majority is so malleable. American education begins when a child is a mere 5 year old, sometimes younger. The children spend 9 months a year - that's 6 hours a day, 5 days a week, for at least 12 years, for a total of around 13,000 hours - locked up within the walls of a school building and its necessary repression. Given all these hours of schooling, why are so many of them unable to read and comprehend? Why is it so difficult for them to solve problems? Haven't they learned to walk in quiet lines? obey the teacher? do the "work? remain in their seats? know the right answers? Often teachers keep the blinds down so the children aren't "distracted" from their schooling by events on the outside - the sky, a bird on the wing. Brief periods of outdoor exercise is permitted within a chainlink fenced area. A bell or buzzer alerts them when it's time to return to the inside. Many schools even look like prisons.
After a hard day at school, the children return home to watch tv or play video games. And yet some wonder why civilization is headed towards doom. We're at our desks, with pens and keyboards, waiting for the teacher to tell us what to do next.
RVR: I hope I'm not picking up a libertarian anti-public school meme here?
No one, for the most part, talks about all the factors that shape a child's life and capacity to learn (as well as his or her interest IN learning). As if the net result should fall into the teachers' laps!
I'm sure that the statistics exposing over-all low school district scores ensue from the following:
1. Overworked parents who don't have time to really help with the homework
2. Parents who read no books themselves, and thus do not role-model in a way that supports a good part of the learning process
3. Media pushing ideas like "have fun," or "have this," (as in Satori's ticket purchased through access to the local mall or Wallmart), rather than self-discipline or self-development as personal ideals
4. Poor quality food
5. Too much sugar in children's diets leading to their incapacity to remain still and concentrate (although I'd prefer that classes were taught outside, open to the natural world, or what's left of it)
6. Broken homes
A. Single parent families
B. One parent impacted by the War on Drugs (and not home)
7. Basic economics putting huge pressures on families. How many millions are homeless now? How many more millions are struggling to meet mortgage payments on homes worth less than their price at purchase?
8. The cultural tendency to worship macho heroes and look down on nerd/book worms
9.The disproportionate monetary support that goes to affluent communities (due to their property taxes) versus poor communities
10. The dulling effect of the behavioral drugs more and more kids are being placed on.
OTHER
As I've related before, when we see the following, held to the same accountability standards as teachers, then maybe we, as a society, would be onto something:
1. Judges (and their case rulings)
2. The Military (and all the wars it's lost, added to all the billions it's also managed to lose)
3. Bankers--and the implosion of much of the global economy
4. Congress & the Pres: for saying one thing, and doing another
Etc.
While helping a little 5 year old write his 9s correctly, and insisting that he could do a better job it he really tried, the little guy replied to me, " I can't Ms.__. I have a tough life." And he certainly does.
Siouxrose, All of your points are well taken. While I am all for public education, from K all the way through higher ed - 100% socially and politically progressive - I believe our current system has it all wrong, or most of it. Based on an outmoded and mistaken presumption that children are unable to learn unless by reward and/or coercion and that to be truly educated they must live 1/3 of their young lives within what many students themselves feel are prison-like (repressive) circumstances, it's no wonder that public schools are turning out so many people who can't think logically (or deeply) and who certainly can't organize their thoughts into meaningful action. (a run-on sentence to be proud of!) Our schools are based on a 19th century Prussian model, intended to turn out:
"1) Obedient soldiers to the army; 2) Obedient workers for mines, factories, and farms; 3) Well-subordinated civil servants, trained in their function; 4) Well-subordinated clerks for industry; 5) Citizens who thought alike on most issues; 6) National uniformity in thought, word, and deed." John Taylor Gatto, New York Teacher of the Year, 1991.
Your keen observation did pick up the libertarian overtones. Libertarians love Gatto. I'm not so sure he loves them. Still, according to Gatto, public schools, given the appropriate and necessary resources, both financial and human, could be doing a far better job. He did a better job, even within the crappy system, just by using his head and the fully available and documented research on learning. I'm cynical enough to believe that what we accept as "education" is an intentional mind washing, dumbing down process.
BTW, how much time have you spent in an elementary school environment, day in day out, same old sluggish routine?
Auction! It's right on target!
Nothing you've related do I disagree with. I am sensitive to the topic of public ed because a few people on C.D. see in its current flaws, the plausible reason to dismantle it. In its place they would build charter schools or encourage home-schooling, as if the loss of public education, as a basic tenet of our society, would ever come back again. Plus the arguments that knock public ed feed all too smoothly into the privatizers' agendas.
Now as to the boredom, regimentation, and obedience training, they fit in with the increasing encroachment of what I term "Mars rules" values permeating our entire culture. Whereas food is intended to nourish and nurture, today, it's largely the product of chemicals and barbaric animal-raising practices. People are rendered fat and dull.
Once, not long ago, teenagers made love to music that filled the soul with romantic magic. Today, it's the hustle, bustle, and misogynistic bombast of rap and its degraded lyrical cousins.
Sports, like baseball, carried an innocence; but now, sports resemble the Roman Arena and function as the psychological segue into militarism.
CEOS made 40X what their laborers did, whereas now the sky's the limit, and many make hundreds of times the salaries of workers.
Then, too, not that long ago, the Press was honest, and guided the populace in fact-finding stories that dug deep to expose wrong-doing. Now the press serves as the chief enabler of war, environmental catastrophic indifference, and fiscal graft at such high levels as to make the very heavens shake in bewilderment.
I have chosen to respond to your post with these examples to show that the entire fabric of our culture has been adulterated in recent years. Some blame Ronald Reagan, and certainly the influence of Raw Capital over policies, domestic and foreign, is real, indeed. It is this worship of capital that sees so many college students (I think I read something in the order of 40%!) pursuing "finance," rather than careers in education, medicine, science, etc.
This worship of GREED, the power of money, rather than the ideal of service, the CALL to make the world a better place due to one's dedicated contribution, is all but lost. In most arenas of our lives, iti s money that determines the metrics and calls the shots. No more humane or idealistic rationale need apply. And it is THAT attitude that is helping to turn public education into another "efficient machine."
Public schools have been an all too obvious recipient of the moral bankruptcy of our times. I can't recall which CD author said it, but the premise went along the lines of:
"If government is found to be failing in certain areas, do we just throw government away... or direct our efforts towards fixing it?"
The SAME analogy holds for public schools. Those who argue against public ed (for all the symptoms you've accurately raised), enhance the disease and insure that the cure will never find its way back to The People. Now, maybe they don't realize the long-term ramifications of their cheering for the demise of public schools, but then again, maybe they do.
Plantation System, anyone?
" That pretense is more than annoying it is offensive ". What is really offensive, is that all of our Presidential elections since JFK, have been selections, stolen by the 1%. What the so called democratic elections are, are really kleptocratic elections by the 1%. A theft of democracy from the 99%; of the American people.
What makes you think the elections prior to 1960 weren't also "selections"?
If we were able to elect a real government that would look to the needs of the people, the 1%er's would crash the economy hard. Then say, look what you foolish people have done to yourselves.
Good article Matt.
I'm also interested in how that money translates into votes.
For example how did Santorum get such a surge in popularity?
7 minutes and 40 seconds into the December 15, 2011 Fox debate the moderator tells Santorum that while others have surged in the polls he has failed to do so.
At that point "Real Clear Politics" had Santorum polling an average of 6% in Iowa, see
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2012/president/ia/iowa_republican_presidential_primary-1588.html
His performance during the debate seemed average, yet in the subsequent 19 days he climbed to a pre-election polling average of 16% and then almost won the election with 25% (came in a very close second).
Did his Campaign ads create this surge in popularity for Santorum? He only raised 10 cents on the dollar of funding that Ron Paul got in Q3 of 2011 and 4 cents on the dollar that Romney raised in donations, see: http://www.opensecrets.org/pres12/index.php
Not likely the explanation?
Then perhaps unlimited corporate PAC ads influenced voters in his direction. Is there any way to monitor that? Any links to amazing ads that can explain his meteoric rise?
I'm starting to think there were no campaign ads to explain Santorum's meteoric rise.
Alexander Cockburn explains that his rise matches that of Huckabee 4 years ago in the same state:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/01/04/former-%E2%80%9Cdumbest-member-of-congress%E2%80%9D-scorches-romney/
Romney did not get any more votes than he did in 2008! The guy who came in third in Iowa in 2008 went on to win the national primaries (John McCain).
The exit polls suggest that Republican women went for Santorum and Romney over Paul:
http://www.cnn.com/election/2012/primaries/epolls/ia
The anti-war Ron Paul won the Iowa caucus amongst Republican men and Republican women went for the guy voted "dumbest member of congress"!
I believe the Church did it's magic over the Christmas holidays and propelled Santorum from 6% to 16%.
There are also reports that the RNC was twisting arms and doing a "whisper campaign" in favor of Santorum on the day of the election which explains the rise from 16% to 25%:
http://www.godlikeproductions.com/forum1/message1744620/pg1
http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/01/04/santorum-thats-latin-for-asshole/
The end of this article says it all.
Is Matt trying to imply that this is just an other reality show? Dancing with the stars? American idol?
Yes, except that the varnished establishment man Romney got only 25% of the vote and The Santorum and Ronpaul, both extremists and liabilities for corporate power got 46%. This hardly seems like good stage management. People are angry, they don't know what they want, but they are angry. The only person who is happy is varnished establishment man Obama, Iowa, indeed the whole Republican lineup, looks like that fat envelope holding a contract renewal for him. But we will see just how angry people are, interesting things do happen.
Mr. Paul wants to re-instate the gold standard. I have written his campaign headquarters the following. How many cents of each dollar in circulation is covered by the dollar value of the current holding of gold by the USA? I never got an answer. I suspect that it is less than ten cents. Can anyone here tell me?
I can't, but it's a heck of a good question that I hope one of our resident smarts has an answer for.
I do not believe that an answer is possible is because we have never really audited or know for certain how much gold is held in reserve and the Fed discontinued publishing the M-3.
http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h6/discm3.htm
There is no way of knowing since the Feds will not allow an audit of Fort Knox and the other places (West Point & NY Fed) where our gold is allegedly stored.
............If you're interested in issues related to gold, you might want to look at http://www.gata.org/ on occasion to keep up with what's happening in the U.S. and around the globe.
Matt Taibbi is correct that the Presidential election is a sideshow.
But unfortunately, like so many other Progressives, he fails to acknowledge
one of the 2 biggest issues facing our planet - Peak Oil and resources.
The price of oil again went over $100 per barrel with the saber-rattling in
the Straits of Hormuz.
The US has still not seriously faced its auto/oil addiction and done anything
seriously about it. As soon as the economy begins to perk up again it will
bump against increased oil prices which the Corporate Media always say are
"unexpected".
Erstwhile "progressives" like Matt Taibbi will always claim the price of oil is due
to "speculators" even though we have had prices over $3 per gallon for over a year.
There is a way to get out of this spiral as the US did during WW II - increase gas taxes, actually run Green public transit and instead of "cash for clunkers"
give cash for public transit passes for turning in cars.
From 1941 to 1945 the US increased intercity Rail by 4X, intercity buses by 4X,
likewise for local transit in order to save gas, rubber, and metals for the war effort.
We could do the same thing and run the transit we have as the prime way to get around and cut oil usage and by 20% in a year.
Taibbi writes:
"... the presidential race is not at all about ideas, but entirely about raising money."
A bit too hasty, this statement.
It is primarily about an agenda, namely, about neo-liberal economic policies (the so-called free market and the growth economy as golden cows), neo-conservative foreign policy, maintaining and building Empire (the military bases all over the world, endless war, the armament industry, the militarization of the police, and the glorification of all things military), and generalized Ayn Randism on the home front (briefly put, the active undoing of the common good).
It is precisely to maintain and push this agenda that such large sums of money are poured into the political process by those very few who benefit from said agenda. The money serves to drown out any voice that might oppose the agenda.
OIKOS: On the money!
Right, the very people whose main goal is the marginalization of Ron Paul. I am not a Ron Paul supporter. I don't think I could ever vote for him (but maybe). Yet, I find myself rooting for him (which, I know, is a waste of time) because he is the only candidate in the entire field who ever says anything worth listening to and that a citizen can actually believe he might try to follow it through with some action.
The galling thing about this turn of events, a 3rd place show for Paul, is where on earth did Rick Santorum come from? How on earth does he, in a matter of a few days and a final weekend, go from single digits in the polls to essentially finishing in a dead heat for 1st place with 25% of the vote tally. Something like this cannot be possible. It doesn't just smell, it reeks. We have some nerve to be calling out Russia for vote count irregularities. This whole process is just a sick spectacle, complete garbage. We do not have a democracy anymore. We have a rigged system. Rigged by a power elite who will stop at nothing to maintain their power agenda.
Rick Santorum was simply a reflection of the Evangelical vote. Not that surprising as Bachmann and Perry were as good as out.
Ron Paul may be mouthing a few things you agree with, but believe me, he is no one you would be comfortable with.
The political theatrics known as the presidential race may indeed be meaningless in at least one sense of the word, but they do perform a diversionary function not unlike "American Idol" or some other reality television show: in addition to making sure that nothing changes (see my first posting above), they are meant to give off the appearance of a democratic process.
"everyone knows that in the end, once the primaries are finished, we’re going to be left with one 1%-approved stooge taking on another."
Mitt and Barack, yes. If by accident Gingrich got it, I can't see how you put him in the Mitt catagory. It should be evident even to the blind that the republican establishment, the bi-coastal elite and the media dog's they run hate the poor little sod. Those in the Manhattan-Beltway corridor detest him.
this entire work requires one believe that, once in office, one is free to act as one chooses, even if in favor of donors over voters...
no, office holders are not free to act as they choose...
that is when the real control begins...
the control of the electoral process, which is enhanced by denial of same, simply reduces the amount required afterward...
again, we return to the Kennedy assassination (George Bush, Sr., was THERE)...
this person was elected, no? what happened afterward?
oh, yeah...gunned down in broad daylight while riding next to his lovely wife on camera in front of hundreds of witnesses...
how's that voting thing working for ya?
if you don't think killing a president brings a Congress into line, you don't think...
Matt does his job by keeping the focus, and controversy, limited to the financial...
if the conversation ever turned to government by extortion, which, of course, is what we have, the comments change...
why would one be willing to engage a financial criminal, but not a murderous one?
because the financial angle supports the voter as king, while the murder angle reveals the voter as worthless but as profit fodder?
money is not the problem in politics...
politics is not even real...
it is polytricks...
murder and extortion and resource theft are real, and politics enables acceptance...unavoidably so...
as Don Corleone says: 'I'll make him an offer he can't refuse...'
yes, Iowa is meaningless, as are the official trappings of government, and votes...
pinstripes and violin cases have never really gone out of style, and voting will never counter...
strip these killers of their power by bringing the system down on Spetember 22, 2012...
One is only free to act as one chooses when one has overcome the fear of death. It is also a good idea to have a VP who is even less acceptable to the powers.
ha ha! overcome the fear of death...
yes, well said...
thank you!
I don`t know why everyone is against Ro n Paul. All of the other canidates are just business as usual. Paul is the only canidate who offers real change. We have been sold out by both parties for the last 40 years. All the canidates are for a never ending war on terror, featuring our sons and daughters, as fodder for slaughter. All will continue thier relationship with corporate sponsers, at the further expense of the American public. Ron Paul is the only canidate who is not on the take. Personally I am sick and tired of seeing America being sold off to the highest bidder. The only canidate who will truly change the status quo, is Paul.