Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
- In Blind Poll, Republicans Choose Progressive Budget Solutions Over Their Own Party's
- Not Guilty By Virtue of Videotape, Which, Unlike the Police, Doesn't Lie
- The 'Land of 10,000 Lakes' Is Running Dry
- Manning: Before Wikileaks, Leaked Docs Offered to NYT, WaPo
- Bob Woodward Embodies US Political Culture in a Single Outburst
- Yoga Wlll Turn Kids Into Godless Sun-Worshipping Pagans, Lawsuit Charges
- A Better Plan Than 'Endless Growth': Enough Is Enough
- The 'Land of 10,000 Lakes' Is Running Dry
- Big Winner in Italian Election? The Five Star Movement
- In Blind Poll, Republicans Choose Progressive Budget Solutions Over Their Own Party's
Popular content
Today's Top News
A Very Sick Country
So.
It looks now like the regressive majority on the Supreme Court is poised to overturn Barack Obama’s signature legislative achievement, his health care bill.
(Getty image)
That is so fitting.
More than that, it is also a reminder of just how sick this country truly is. Imagine that the lab returned the results from your battery of blood work tests, and all the indicators were screaming out “Danger!” and “Broken!”. That’s us, baby. Get this patient to the ER!
What a total disaster.
The first indicator of how unhealthy we are as a country – literally and figuratively – is the fact that we still don’t have universal health care here in the wealthiest place on Earth. It’s been more than century since the welfare state – a system in which the national government assumes responsibility, as an agent of the national will, for guaranteeing certain benefits and protections to its citizenry – was invented, and, unlike every other developed country in the world, the richest one still doesn’t come close to having universal care for our public, including millions of children. It’s a crime – there’s no other word for it – of astonishing proportions . But it gets worse. We pay more than half-again per capita above the cost of the next most expensive system in the world, and still one-sixth of our population remains completely uninsured, with many more poorly insured. Nice.
By the way, it’s worth noting that the guy who originally launched the welfare state was none other than the regressive and aggressive old Prussian chancellor himself, Otto von Bismarck. Golly, I don’t mean to be critical or anything, but you know you’re hurting when your country’s politics are to the right of the “blood and iron” father of the German Empire. Just saying...
I’ll hold my gauze-packed nose in a vise-grip and give Obama a little bit of credit for addressing the issue. But the way he went about it constitutes the original sin that will have brought us to the place of almost complete disaster after the rump Court finishes its ideological hijack. To begin with, Obama looked at the existing disaster of regressive health care policy – the joys of commercializing and profitizing the public’s need for medicine – and then decided to promulgate the next most conservative option he could come up with, one which commercializes and profitizes medicine even more. He could have gone for single payer – that is, Medicare for all – which is only the system employed by just about every other developed country in the world, all of whom, naturally, are more highly ranked by the World Health Organization on delivery of health care. Yes, yes, I know. All the Obama apologists out there say this was politically impossible. Maybe that’s true. But maybe it’s not. The presidency is all about persuasion. If the punk Bush could sell the insane Iraq war, which in fact he did to an originally skeptical public, perhaps Obama could have talked sense to America about health care, and moved people enough to force action out of Congress. Or, short of that, he might at least have demanded that the public option be part of the legislation, the next best choice.
What he did instead was to pretend to care about a public option, in order to keep stupid liberals on board, while he cut a secret deal with the parasitic insurance industry guaranteeing their profits and promising there would be no public option in the bill. That isn’t reckless surmise. Tom Daschle, Obama’s political mentor and health care point man, wrote that the president did just that. Then he adopted a model for his plan that was so conservative it had originally been put forth by the Heritage Foundation, was a plank in Bob Dole’s 1996 presidential campaign, and had already been implemented by Mitt Romney (who, in case you hadn’t heard, is a Republican – though he can be whatever you need him to be, as long as you make him president) in Massachusetts, in addition to being blessed by that bastion of progressivism, the insurance industry. Hey, what’s that old line about reposing with canines...?
Obama compounded his sell-out to the one percent by not selling his legislation to the ninety-nine percent. Polls show that most Americans don’t understand the legislation – today, three years after the extended sausage-making process that produced it – and most favor repeal. What’s astonishing about that latter fact is that, even though the bill is deeply flawed, it provides pretty much nothing but good news for American citizens. Opposing it – unless you’re opposed to the 99 percent getting a fair shake (hmmm?, who could those opponents be?) or you’re just dead-set on seeing this president fail (hmmm? again) – is like opposing free chocolate sundaes or bonus checks from your employer. When you can’t sell Christmas to a six year-old, maybe you should get out of the Santa business, eh?
Obama appears to have also been the last person in America to understand the vicious nature of today’s so-called conservatives. Generally, I think his incompetence as president is overstated. Too often, it’s the excuse suckered liberals give themselves for the cognitive dissonance they experience when they look at how corporate and conservative and militant and statist their hero’s actual policies are. But health care may be a case where this is an accurate portrait. I suspect he was actually dumb enough – as if he, like Sarah Palin, had simply not been paying the remotest attention to the government shutdowns, the impeachment of Clinton, the 2000 election, the Swiftboating of John Kerry and Max Cleland, and the rest of American history these last thirty years – to believe that he could find some moderate Republicans, compromise with them and get their vote. And I also think he is the most inept owner of the bully pulpit since George III. All during the year (year!) of legislating health care, this administration completely ceded the high ground, low ground, and everything in-between ground to the bellowing, foaming-at-the-mouth, blatantly lying (remember death panels?), corporate-sponsored, Koch Brothers-funded, Tea Party idiot right. And all during this last year they’ve done exactly the same thing while the four or six or ten Republican presidential candidates running at any given time have trashed the bill relentlessly, with nary a counter peep from Barack and his communications wizards. Gee, is it shocking under those conditions that the American public doesn’t understand the bill, or that they oppose it? Is it such a leap to imagine that such public sentiments have given license (as if they needed it) to the same five hacks-in-black-robes who gave us Bush v. Gore and Citizens United to legislate from the bench as the most activist court in perhaps all of American history and strike down the legislation wholesale?
Which brings us to even deeper maladies being suffered by the body politic. This debacle demonstrates in full the degree to which the American political system is completely broken. But, alas, not in the way people think, which leads to the possibility (and, given the events of the last thirty years, the likelihood) that in the coming years we will simply compound our problems in response to these indicators, by simply going further in the direction of our systemic carnage, rather than running as fast as we can the other way. There are four main issues here, and none of them are peripheral or symptomatic – each of these go to the core dysfunctionality of the American political system. They are: the American presidential system, its electoral system, the extensive use of judicial review, and the kleptocratic ownership of the state.
Americans revere their Constitution, but they mostly don’t know why. Just like we grow up Catholics or Mets fans or anti-communists, we just by-and-large think what we’re told to think and do what we’re told to do, never stopping to ask the big Why? questions. As a political scientist, I do admire certain feats of engineering embodied in the Constitution, and the clever solutions these provided to otherwise intractable problems at the time of the Founders. And as a citizen, I admire parts of the document – such as the Bill of Rights – very much, especially given the era from which they emerged.
However, one of the handful of most salient ideas of the Constitution is a bad one, as has becomes increasingly evident in our time for anyone who cares to look. This is the notion of separation of powers, along with the twin concept of checks and balances. I suspect most Americans don’t even realize that you don’t have to structure your political regime this way in order to have a democracy, and in fact, most democracies don’t. They use a parliamentary system instead, rather than our model, which is referred to as a presidential system. What’s the difference? Well, in a parliamentary system, you have one singular government responsible for governing. The executive function (prime minister and cabinet) emerges directly out of the legislative function (parliament) to which it is permanently fused, and, meanwhile, there typically is no judiciary with the power to speak to legislative matters. That means, quite simply, that the undivided government governs, unimpeded by anything other than the criticisms of the media and the opposition, and how its work plays with public opinion. It gets things done – none of the divided government plaguing the American system so badly today – and if the public approves, it gets another term. If not, it doesn’t.
It’s a simple straightforward concept that fully embodies the notion of responsible government, thus permitting accountability and, ultimately, real functioning democracy. Contrast that with the American system. Is there anybody in the US who isn’t unhappy with the current government? Maybe that one guy in Nebraska, but he’s been off his meds for years now. Or the woman in Florida with the sixty-seven cats. Otherwise, though, the remaining three hundred million of us are pretty much sickened by Washington. So what do we do? Well, throw the bums out, of course, and replace them with some new bums. But think about what that would mean today. We would be replacing a Republican House with a Democratic one, a Democratic Senate (with an insufficiently large enough majority to do anything) with a Republican Senate of the same gridlocked structure, and a right-wing Democratic president with a Republican president. Wow! That’d be a relief, eh?! What a difference that would make! What a prescription for boldly launching the future!
We are, of course, a million miles away from shredding the worshiped Constitution (and a change of this magnitude to such a core item would indeed represent something of a shred, starting with Articles One, Two and Three), and even further from possibly imagining that foreign people – let alone those squishy European bastards who inconveniently live healthier, happier and longer lives – could teach us anything about anything. But, that said – since we’re just talking among friends here – one of the greatest gifts we could give ourselves at this point would be a parliamentary system and the gift of responsible government. Then, when we’re not happy with any particular government we’ve got, we can make a change at the ballot box which might actually result in a genuine change of direction.
Assuming, that is, that there is an alternative to be chosen. If, on the other hand, you have an electoral system like ours, you can have parliamentary government and yet may still be left with only two parties to pick from. Worse still, on fundamental issues like foreign policy and the distribution of wealth in the society, the parties may be identical enough (or just owned enough) so as to offer no real choice at all. Hello! Can you say “America 2012”? There are a lot of systemic reasons for this duopoly we’ve produced in American politics, but the chief one is our use of the winner-take-all district model electoral system – which will tend to produce two dominant parties over the long-haul wherever it is employed – instead of a proportional representation system, which does not. Again, god forbid Americans should learn anything from anyone else, but if we did stoop that low, we might want to think about revising our electoral system (which would not require Constitutional amendment). It would do us a world of good, not only by giving us multiple and genuine choices at the ballot box, but also by injecting alternative ideas into our poverty-stricken political discourse.
Meanwhile, if we return to the separation of powers problem again for a moment, we encounter another severe problem which is a natural artifact of that system. If you’re going to have separate branches of government, each with the capacity to check and balance against each other, that means your judiciary pretty much needs to have the power known as judicial review in order to be a meaningful player in that contest. This term refers to the capacity to strike down legislation produced by the other two branches. Again, this is – especially to the degree with which it is practiced here – a fairly peculiarly American idea. In most other democracies, parliament rules. Period, full stop. Not here.
Does judicial review makes sense? I can see two domains where it does, though often (like now) only in a theoretical sense: civil rights and civil liberties. Stupid and angry politicians, often reacting to the stupid and angry sentiments of the public, almost never fail to relieve minorities of their rights and deny individuals the human rights (little things like due process, and so on) they are otherwise entitled to possess. All too often, in short, it’s just plain politically popular to be mean and bigoted and ‘legally’ violent, and democratically elected governments will readily oblige a lathered up public (when politicians aren’t in fact whipping up voters themselves – remember McCarthyism? the war on drugs? gay marriage?). Who will stop them from doing this? Theoretically (meaning, only if they happen to be so disposed – just the opposite of our condition today with the regressive majority on the Supreme Court), courts populated by justice-seeking and principle-protecting judges will do so, judges who also happen to be insulated from the public wrath by lifetime terms. They can afford to stand on lofty principles when the political branches are assembled into a lynch party. There is definite wisdom to this concept, though no guarantees. Do you see Justice Scalia, for example, slapping down Congress for depriving African Americans or women of their Constitutionally-guaranteed rights? I rest my case.
Apart from those two areas, however, I would argue that the very notion of judicial review is a disaster, because it is profoundly undemocratic. That was perhaps never more evident than it is now, as the rump majority of this extremely activist Court is preparing to fully legislate from the bench – in full contradiction of their own fervently argued ‘principles’ of federalism and judicial restraint from previous cases no less – by overturning not just the individual mandate part of Obama’s bill, but all of it. And apparently – judging from Scalia’s comments – they’ll be doing so without even reading the legislation, and certainly without understanding it. I see little difference between such a governing structure and the essence of monarchy. In both cases you have political decision-makers who have not been chosen by the public, serving life terms, making legislative decisions in secret, unaccountable and nonreplacable, making policy on high and dictating it to the masses without fear of consequence. What possible relationship does that bear to anything one could plausibly label as democracy? The question answers itself. It also therefore reminds us that the third major political malady infecting our system is the expanded and profoundly undemocratic notion of judicial review.
Notwithstanding these structural handicaps, the American political system has nevertheless been moderately successful at negotiating the rocky shoals of policy-making over the last two-plus centuries. There have been, to be sure, some glaring inadequacies and the occasional near-fatal meltdown. But people ultimately vote with their feet, and something chronically broken would ultimately be unlikely to have seen that many candles on its birthday cake. In that same two hundred year-plus time period, for example, the French have had five republics (along with several iterations of empires and monarchies). But after one false start (the Articles of Confederation), the American regime has remained more or less intact for more than twenty decades, though it is manifestly broken today. Calling the federal government dysfunctional would be an act of charity.
But there is one last peril that threatens American democracy today, to a degree not seen for at least a century, and to the extent that the term democracy itself becomes a rather dubious appellation for the system we live under. Let’s just be honest, shall we? – if for no other reason than the refreshing novelty of doing so: Fundamentally, the representatives in our ‘representative government’ don’t represent you and me. They represent the one percent. You can play all the games you want about how campaigns are funded, and spin all the tall tales you need to about how money ‘only’ buys access, not Congressional votes, but the real system of pay-to-play is transparently obvious to anyone willing to risk even a sidelong glance at the emperor’s new clothes. It’s just that simple and just that broken. The only place American representative democracy exists anymore today is in eighth-grade civics textbooks.
General governance mechanics are important, as I’ve noted at some length above, and there are campaign finance systems that are way better than others at promoting true democratic representation, to be sure. But at the bottom of the pile of political engineering problems lies human nature. If we allow greed to control our public sphere, we will wind up with a government representing the one percent and not the ninety-nine percent. Indeed, it will be a government very much intentionally governing at the expense of the ninety-nine percent. We will wind up with a political system that is completely dysfunctional, except for purposes of the wholesale transfer of wealth upwards. We will wind up with policies in every domain – from national security to tobacco policy to guns, prisons and taxes and far beyond – that reflects the needs of the special monied interests over the public interest. And we will end up with a health care system whose purpose is not to provide health, but rather to enrich insurance and pharmaceutical corporations.
Hey, what the hell am I doing, saying “We will...”? Strike that.
We have.
Welcome to America, 2012.
Here’s to your good health.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...



45 Comments so far
Show AllGreat insight, David, as usual.
I was just reading this at CounterPunch, hoping CD would republish this excellent DMG essay. And wow! I click onto CD and it was just added. I do love his critique of the USA's political system. I even think this is one essay of his that would be welcomed by most citizens.
USAn's are "told what to do and think", Black professor, and philosopher Cornel West has defined what POTUS Obomanable is doing to USAn's and I quote West," Obama is nig**rizing Americans" which he defines as Americans will not protest and/or demonstrate against the abuse, theft[FORCED CONTRIBUTION, withholding taxes] by taxing labor to fund the Pentagon/ USG protection racket scheme of protecting the worldwide assets of the CORPORATIST COMMUFASCIST Welfare Kings, by taxing labor. The Welfare Kings do not even pay for their own protection. Even Al Capone had more integrity, Al would not provide protection to those that wouldn't pay for it.. Wall St., Wash., DC is the Axis of Evil a criminal conspiracy.
Terrific article - thank you DMG
An immensely complementary speech by Vandana Shiva delivered in Germany last year, opens by saying that the wall that needs to come down is now the wall of delusion, and addresses how utterly unreliable GDP and money are as reflection of the economy. Please watch this
Definition of growth: If you produce what you consume for family you are excluded from the growth metric - (read: billions of people, nature, water, air...). The lie of 'growth' ending poverty....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lOQzD6aEay4&feature=related
Growth is taking place - food is successfully made into a commodity - lots of growth - measured in the flow of money. Where is the growth - only by destroying free societies.
DMG does have good insight but he has a scotoma where Obama is concerned. Newsflash: Obama is part of the machine, entirely co-opted. We knew this when he took Wall Street money the first time around and nothing he has done has indicated that his loyalties lie anywhere else but with his bank account. He can talk a good populist moment but his actions, as always, speak the loudest.
Save yourself. Go with the 99% And Obama is not part of that.
@MollyJ ~ From Prof DMG's previous couple of essays, I suspect that he is well aware of what you point out, and on board with the 99% .
Ameranglo, I always feel like he stops just short of saying Obama's a fake, a pretender even though his own deductive process leads him there. This is what I mean:
"I’ll hold my gauze-packed nose in a vise-grip and give Obama a little bit of credit for addressing the issue. "
"Obama appears to have also been the last person in America to understand the vicious nature of today’s so-called conservatives." This is apologist talk for naive, not co-opted.
"But health care may be a case where this is an accurate portrait. I suspect he was actually dumb enough – as if he, like Sarah Palin, had simply not been paying the remotest attention to the government shutdowns, the impeachment of Clinton, the 2000 election, the Swiftboating of John Kerry and Max Cleland, and the rest of American history these last thirty years – to believe that he could find some moderate Republicans, compromise with them and get their vote." President as dumb.
" And I also think he is the most inept owner of the bully pulpit since George III. All during the year (year!) of legislating health care, this administration completely ceded the high ground, low ground, and everything in-between ground to the bellowing, foaming-at-the-mouth, blatantly lying (remember death panels?), corporate-sponsored, Koch Brothers-funded, Tea Party idiot right. And all during this last year they’ve done exactly the same thing while the four or six or ten Republican presidential candidates running at any given time have trashed the bill relentlessly, with nary a counter peep from Barack and his communications wizards." So we have more of Obama as inept.
Lets be honest. He had the smarts to get into Harvard. He's not a dummy. He's not a baby kitten being consumed by Republican tigers. He's a shill. The problem is NOT that he's for us, he just doesn't know how to advocate for us. the problem is that he is NOT for us and things are going just as they are supposed to. The agenda of the corporations is being nicely tended to. Barack is fond of the _power_ so he tries to give just _enough_ to the little people that they'll vote for him again. Kind of like so we can _pretend_ there's a two party system.
This what Chris Hedges means when he talks about a slow rolling coup de etat.
Well-stated, MollyJ.
I suppose I would think so, because I have a similar reaction.
There's a lot to like in DMG's screed, but I agree that his obvious dissatisfaction with, and criticism of, Obama hews to the perception that Obama is fundamentally well-meaning or sincere.
To make a sports analogy, where Obama is concerned DMG reminds me of a die-hard fan watching a football game or boxing match, and agonizing from easy chair or bar stool over every move the quarterback or boxer he's rooting for makes.
He (DMG) feels real mingled anguish and exasperation-- physically waving his arms or unconsciously shadow-boxing as he watches, lamenting the performance and choice of play or strategy by which the athlete seems to be setting himself up to fail.
But despite his profound cynicism and bitterness, and knowledge of the game, he curiously accepts the contest at face value, i.e. that it's honest, aboveboard, and legitimate.
FWIW, this is reminiscent of a mind-set beautifully expressed in a brief but potent "Onion" sports article:
"Wrestling Fan's Comments Alternate Between Admitting It's Fake, Forgetting It's Fake"
_________________
* http://www.theonion.com/articles/wrestling-fans-comments-alternate-between-admittin,16916/
Thank you for a positive comment from a respected poster.
BTW, in Hedges _Empire of Illusion_ he exactly uses wrestling as an elaborate analogy that plays out the gaming of the people. Probably his most difficult book to read for me but extremely clear eyed.
@ Molly J & Obedient Servant: I'm not equipped to argue with either of you, who are better informed and experienced in US politics than I - however I do enjoy DMG's essays and in this one he is not debating what Obama is, isn't or may be - his main topic is the system. Extracting from his phrasing what you surmise to his view of or apologies for, Obama may not be accurate.
From his essay published here in December 2011 a couple of paras. which do not seem to me to imply hidden apologies for Prez O.
"From a Better world's In Birth Maybe by DMG (December 2011) ~~
On the other hand, now that Obama is ramping up the Big Lie machine once again, many of those people will get just what they deserve. What was that line Bush mumbled about fooling me twice? I’m astonished to see progressives gearing up to be abused a second time by Obama – who is all of a sudden sounding like a progressive again – like they’ve walked right out of a Stockholm Syndrome field manual or something. Are we talking about the same guy here? The one who put the actual bandits who wrecked the economy in his cabinet? The one who has not prosecuted a single Wall Street bankster? The one who bailed those thieves out, but has done nothing remotely serious for the unemployed and homeowners? The one who pretends to fold in every negotiation with Republicans? The one whose staff regularly disses progressives?
That guy? Hey, liberal idiots. I have a question for you. Do you really think this bastard is going to become FDR in his second term? Do you really think he’s going to seriously slash military funding in order to save Medicare? Do you really think he’s going to rescind his deal with the insurance industry in order to provide genuine public health care access? Do you really think he’s going to replace Timothy Geithner with Paul Krugman or Joseph Stiglitz? I mean, this is a guy so beholden to Wall Street that he pretended not to have the courage to nominate Elizabeth Warren to the new consumer affairs position she invented. Are you really going to be wooed by him again? If so, if you’re so easily abused by your political class, you might as well line up to be Newt’s fourth wife for all the street smarts you’re displaying.
Ameranglo, it's just like OS says; he get's close and he backs off.
But it is a huge psychological leap to acknowledge that your form of government is not functioning,is off the rails. And I think that's his struggle. Been there. I think all of us--including Chris Hedges--keep looking for some way for the fix to come from within the system. A flicker of hope survives. But if you read Chris Hedges' essay posted here today you can see that the weather forecast is not good.
Everyone has a right to travel the path as they will. But for those of that acknowledge that the two party system is dead--it's a duopoly--that Obama is just a purplish shade of red, but more red than blue--whatever-- the whole idea of vote for Obama for freedom just is a total gag me experience. This is the constitutional lawyer who expanded war, didn't shut Guantanamo Bay, and signed the NDAA, and called Bradley Manning "guilty"--whoops, no trial yet but just a formality--and has broken new territority in extra-judicial killing. If you vote for Obama you will most certainly get more of what you have had and it won't be a good thing. An elaborate form of re-arranging the deck chairs on the Titantic.
It's hard. It's all hard.
I don't understand where you get the idea I would vote for Obama because I like this essay. ! I have no intention of voting for Obama. I respect Chris Hedges, but his writing depresses me - sorry!
I agree on your chosen vote but many look at the same set of facts and decide to vote for him anyhow.
Chris Hedges is hard for a lot of people to take. I think he's like the doctor that paints your bad diagnosis pretty plainly so you can make the decisions you need to make. they are a little hard to appreciate up front.
I agree with you Molly J. In fact, I haven't yet finished reading "Empire...". Partly because I've never watched or cared to watch pro wrestling, it's taken me a while to see the relevance of Hedges' analysis.
Regarding Obama, it's hard to escape the trap of wishful thinking that imprisons so many American progressives. By hiding behind the structural flaws in our government that DMG describes so trenchantly, Obama manages to perpetuate the fiction that he's really one of us and that, if he could only circumvent the obstructionism of the right, the dysfunctionality of Congress, our tragically politicized courts, and so on, he'd surely do the right thing.
I think DMG stops just short because he knows as many know that a republican elected to just about any office is demonstrably or will be demonstrably worse than o. Thus us poor voters who still insist upon voting are just trying to keep the least worst of the worse and evil from office. I myself will be looking once again to a 3rd party, which one I am not sure right now but nothing repub or dem.
Extremely 'relevant' DMG. I can't wait until the 'two' parties and the five black ringwraith turds commanding the scotus collude in having only family members replace the dead current members of members of congress and the now presiding scotus justices to which they inherit those positions when those fuckers die. I am not forgetting either that with the almost nonexistent turnover rate of most of congress(except on rare occasions) that this is already practically a done deal, like father/mother like son/daughter, or has not many people been noticing the family seats in congress? But as DMG says that is just about what has happened to this wonderful fucked up 2 party dimocracy this country is repressed under even since it inception as the founding fathers, as charitable as they seem, still created a masterpiece that protected the even then 1% while ostensibly protecting the rest of the citizens. I just wish a some viable plan could be made to end this folly of a 'two party' government. It only replicates the idea of one's own sports team of US & THEM, and it is very OK to hate and attack the other them an its supporters. ABSOLUTE BALDERDASH!!!! I think I could go with a parliamentary system, at least it would make for rearend ronnie reagan's trashing of the fairness doctrine and repression of different views and ideas which could or would be heard again.
If you look carefully at the Constitution, at the writings of the Founding Fathers, you will note that they never wanted the majority of the American to have the vote. The design was that only "white males of means" (owners of income producing property) would be allowed to vote. And then only for the House and President. The Senate was to be the preserve of the States, who would appoint those they wanted as Senators. So the design is really for an economic aristocracy to run things. Democracy as a concept was utter opposed by the Founding Fathers.
Thank you for this informative and thought-provoking essay Prof DMG.
"The only place American representative democracy exists anymore today is in eighth-grade civics textbooks." - I've not had the benefit of a US education, but understand the implication. From what I've seen here during the past 8 years, I guess you are exactly right.
"I’ll hold my gauze-packed nose in a vise-grip and give Obama a little bit of credit for addressing the issue"
Is he joking? Do Not Feed The Elite Ego, if you want the people to keep what is theirs.
"the worshiped Constitution"
Constitution worship is a means to distract from what really deserves our reverence: nature, humanity, and the people's potential, including our ability to steward the society infinitely better than elites. Constitution worship is like deity worship, to avoid nature, to avoid truth. Reverence toward something is obviously a need of human nature. Now, we on the far left are very enthusiastic about the great responsibility that is embodied in our radicalism, because over here our careful attention to the needs of human nature brings us radical results, radically good results, the radical best, by far, by expansive lengths, the sheer best of benefits for all people. Reverence toward the constitution - no, absolutely not. Reverence toward mythological deities (e.g. "holy trinity")- you must be joking. Reverence toward nature and human nature, and the human capacity for compassion, logic and ethics? YES! What about the predators/parasites of nature? Reverence for them too? We recognize that nature does not need them. What about the human ego? We recognize that nature does not need it.
But given our ethical capacity, we recognize all good things as needed. And that good things need NOT be hopelessly tangled with bad things, like the liberals pretend. The constitution may partially, reluctantly support nature and human nature, but we're not interested in something that's only part good, because we know we can have all good. We don't expect much from the constitution because it was concocted by slave-holding elites. We don't expect much from organized religion because that is in almost perfect defiance of nature. We do expect a lot from ourselves, because the people's potential is amazing. We're learning to leverage our inherent power, by sorting the good together into a sphere of good (which naturally includes our physical health), and sorting the bad out into a sphere of bad (including elite exploitation of our illnesses), keeping good/bad separate so we can have clarity, and quick reflexes, to easily leverage our power, the people's power, far superior to elite power, to defend the sphere of good, instantaneously. Great strategy - organic, natural! Everyone can embrace it, wholeheartedly.
They teach civics in 8th grade??
He failed to specify "a 1970s-era, 8th-grade civics textbook".
That would seem to be the most recent edition available to reference.
Democracy is lying on the gurney suffering a fatal heart attack as medics burst through the hospital doors. Two doctors are running along side the patient arguing about what to do. So strong is their disagreement, the patient nearly dies. Arriving at the Triage desk, the surly man in charge takes one look at the patient and declares there's nothing can be done for him, he has no insurance. The two doctors shake hands, ask the Triage man to come along, and go out for a drink. The patient dies. The End.
"We would be replacing a Republican House with a Democratic one, a Democratic Senate (with an insufficiently large enough majority to do anything) with a Republican Senate of the same gridlocked structure, and a right-wing Democratic president with a Republican president. Wow! That’d be a relief, eh?! What a difference that would make! What a prescription for boldly launching the future!"
What's the other option? We had a democratic president and congress for a short while....what did they accomplish? I say let's all flip flop like the politicians do. We can at least keep them off balance and without any guarantee of a lifetime career in politics. And perhaps while they are off balance maybe something might get done by accident.
It's time we had the carrot instead of the politicians dangling it in front of us.
DMG also writes as if he never heard of the "log rolling" we learned in US History, trading votes and favors to acheive enough votes for your important legislation. You trade a dam, or airport or an appointment for a vote, Congress is always for sale but it seems impossible or so they have the apologists believe, that the Dems cannot bargain a single vote from the Repugs, even though the Repugs are forever snagging Dimo votes.
Is DMG claiming this OilyBomber care is not to enrich insurance and pharma? Some polls at the very beginning of the debate indicated a majority of USAans wished for Single Payer ( Medicare for all). DMG fails to mention Executive Orders which are extremely fascistic. OilyBomber killed as DMG stated both single payer and the public option. If you were able to remove corruption from politics, the process would be acceptable, but today with Programable electronic voting machines, and all pervasive MSM propaganda, there is no hope for democracy. Extremely rarely do dictatorships restructure themselves into democracies.
"But there is one last peril that threatens American democracy today, to a degree not seen for at least a century, and to the extent that the term democracy itself becomes a rather dubious appellation for the system we live under."...
american democracy died with the security state assassinations of malcolm x, martin luther king, john and robert kennedy. period.
Gosh...if parliamentary democracy is so good, how come 40 percent of the voters in Canada get to determine that country's policies about everything?
Whether we have a presidential system or a parliamentary system like in England and other European countries, it would not matter because the 1% will buy them.
The form of government doesn't matter as much as equality. Equal societies need very little government.
http://inequality.org/
"Equal societies need very little government." I would add that such a society MUST have a culture that provides for economic and political equality while having powerful mechanisms also within the culture to deter attempts to make the society otherwise--for that is the only way "very little government" can ensure an "equal society."
In countries with a strong labor movement (majority of workers are unionized) there is a "counterforce" to the 1% of those countries. For example German workers (referred to as "stakeholders") have seats on the board of directors of German corporations. So they get "their share of the pie". Here in the USA labor unions in private enterprise are almost extinct. Only 8% of the people working in private enterprise have union representation. There is a lot higher percentage of people working in public service that are unionized, but the Republicans are working very hard to destroy the unions there in their attempt to return America to the 19th Century. This is why most of the economic gains since 1980 have gone to the top 10% of the US population. Why the US has the largest gap between rich and poor of any developed country. For many Americans it is as bad now as during the Great Depression of the 1930's. And if the Republicans hold the House and gain the Senate, you can be sure the next four years won't be any better...
Democratic Party? The same thing applies in Australia and the U K with reference to the "Labor Party". What "Democratic/Labor Party?" they no longer (if they ever did) exist.There isn't a single Democratic country in existence in this world.
By its name a Democracy would be where the people have an input into the actual governance of their nation, not a token effort at elections. This doesn't have to be a say in the day to day workings of a nation but definitely an informed input on all major issues. e.g making war on others, caring for your own and other people. etc., recalling incompetent, disobedient, and recalcitrant representatives.
Oh there would be shortcomings given the abysmal standard of education and intelligence of the proletariat. Back to the idealistic "Benevolent Dictatorship." where, unfortunately, the benevolence remains as a fleeting, imaginary, concept,
but the Dictatorship doesn't. I give up.
I didn't find much merit in this piece by Green at all. In spite of elaborations on the theoretical checks and balances between the intended 3 branches of government, this piece reads like a tirade against The Supreme Court for not (hopefully) validating this excuse for health-care which is more accurately defined as an insurance company windfall by astute minds. I still hear Green subliminally cheering for the D team while pointing out the flaws he sees more stridently demonstrated on the right side of the political aisle.
Thank you Siouxrose. My sentiments exactly.
The nefarious supremes would be doing us all a favor by sqelching this egregious peace of health legislation which enriches the pharmaceutical cartels, the health insurance cartels, and the hospital associations run by Harvard MBAs.
Parliamentary democracy: The parliamentary democracies seem not to have fared better than our form of government when faced with the the neoliberal capitalist monster.
From Truthdig:
"A nation that does not care for its sick and infirm is a nation that does not deserve to exist. A nation that actively profits from the pain and suffering of those sick and infirm deserves to burn in Hell. A nation that throws those sick and infirm to the wolves is so far beneath contempt as to beggar description."
The country is sick, very sick and part of the reason is the continuance of malignant policies and ideology of certain past president who was less than intelligent, in fact who was disastrously incompetent. The people, already reeling from te braindead disease known as Republicanism voted this fool in twice so that he was able to seriously injure and perhaps fatally destroy the American way of life, the freedom from oppression that today is rampant in Judicial and government actions.
I am getting rather weary of screeds against the SCOTUS based upon their ruling on the "insurance bail-out plan". Though I am far from being a fan of their conservative ideals and many of their recent rulings, they are not the problem on this issue. The problem is the corporate shill Obama and his blinded apologists who keep insisting he had no choice but to back this stinking turkey of a plan because he was so put upon by the nasty, mean Rs. BS! he had a majority in the Congress and sold out to his rich backers, arrested those in favor of single payer, met in secret with pharmaceutical reps and sold the American people down the river for the money to fund his reelection campaign. He is a corporate shill and a creep; and those who say he must continue in office because he is the "lesser of two evils" need to keep in mind that the lesser is still evil!
What a fuss about a totally disfunctional health-care system. It is so easy to fix. Socialise it Swedish style, or in the British style of 1945. Public health is as important a strategic service to the communnity as is the military, so use the NDAA to line up the opponents of univeral "socialised" medicine as terrorists threatening the well-being of the USA. Then lock them up offshore and throw away the key.
This Supreme Court is the legacy of Reagan and the Bushes. See, it really does matter whether Tweedledum or Tweedledee gets control of the White House.
And yes, our electoral system wires in two parties, and makes third-party initiatives hopeless and counterproductive.
Yes, our Constitution pretty much wires in this electoral system and leads to paralysis, but seeing some of the legislation that's been passed and signed and not struck down by the Court lately, maybe a more streamlined lawmaking machine is not necessarily what we need.
So, what then can be done? Well, we could just daydream about changing the whole system. Shredding and rewriting the Constitution. Green admits "we're a million miles" from this. So why's he wasting time on it? Forget it. Ain't gonna happen.
What is possible is to organize outside the electoral structure, and act upon and within the electoral structure to change its outcomes. It's been done before. It's being done now. It just isn't being done very effectively by the Left.
No need to tear down the old system. Build a new one around it, and use the new one to make the old one do what you want.
Sound like a pipedream? Okay, it is one. It's just one that's a whole lot closer to being realistic than any others I've heard about. You know, revolution, third party, deep structural reform... things that sound great, and are actually absolutely guaranteed to be impossible.
We need to think outside the box. The box is not the problem. The problem is that we allow the box to control us, instead of the other way around.
Coherence, unity, and effective action on the Left may be a tall order, but it is at least within the realm of the possible.
I would say that doctors are pretty divided on this issue the same as consumers. But generally doctors know that the system cannot continue as it is because it is not working. You may enjoy going to the the website Physicians for a National Health Program. They have information that could be helpful to you. Primary care doctors I would say are most impacted by the dysfunctionality of the current system but all doctors are impacted.
As a nurse for more than 30 years I would say that initially doctors held a lot of power in health care but I would say that the biggest locus of power in health care now is the insurance industry and big pharma. Big hospitals are big corporations (increasingly) and there desires are those of big corporations everywhere and their interests are very different from small town community hospitals who struggle mightily in this environment. The AMA is a considerable lobbying power, representing doctors, but my primary care doc DH has never belonged to the AMA and never considered that they represent him.
You're making some sweeping generalizations that miss a lot of subtlety.
Back in 2009 the New England Journal of Medicine did a study that revealed that 63% of docs favored the public option. Not sure where you are pulling your number from.
http://www.medpagetoday.com/PublicHealthPolicy/HealthPolicy/15962
I am a physician who left private practice last year because I was sick of seeing patients lose their health care or having to choose between paying for food or for medicine. I am now working in public health and am trying to become versed and active in the public forum through groups like PNHP and Medicare for all.
I have to tell you: there are a lot of physicians who would love nothing more than to get the profit motive out of medicine, to get rid of insurance companies and to focus on providing quality health care for everyone. Are they the majority of physicians? When asked, the majority will probably say yes, but frankly, there is also a mentality of, "if everyone else is getting rich, I'd be stupid not to,"-- thus, profit from pain.
I've found that the roadblocks are monumental: 1. Legislative access and inaction: trying to get audience with local members of legislature, much less convincing them to do something is next to impossible if you don't have a full time lobbyist.
2. Insurance road blocks: Insurance tied to employment, tied to health status, tied to location and utilization-- all these things make it difficult for patients and physicians to try to find a plan that works-- for all the choices we seem to have, it really comes down to what your employer offers and what you can afford out of pocket. Then of course, there's the task of trying to get companies to pay for care.
3. Profit motive: let's face it, people like to make money. The pressure to ride the gravy train is very high, especially in our consumption oriented culture. Greed is a cancer, but for every greedy doctor, there are 3-4 that aren't: they are just trying to make their way through the labyrinthine maze that health care has become.
4. Education: Physicians frankly have nothing to complain about, but the biggest complaint that most physicians in my generation (I've only been practicing for about 15 years) have is medical school loans-- I will likely be paying my loans off well into my 60s. That used to be out of the ordinary, but as anyone who has gone to college can attest, that is becoming more and more the norm for everyone. So, low cost, merit based education becomes a necessity, not just for physicians, but for everyone.
5. Patient expectation: People expect miracles from their doctors-- either searching for the "cure" or convinced that what they've been given is dangerous or wrong (hence 60% of all prescriptions written go unfilled). And the doctors who practice bad medicine and get away with it don't help at all. If physicians were better at policing themselves, then public trust may be higher.
I submit to you, though, that the generation of doctors coming to work now are different then their forebears. The young residents and new physicians that I've had the pleasure to train and interact are smart, politically savvy and realistic. Most of them seem to be focused on trying to find a way to cut costs, deliver quality health care and increase access. What they need now is help from everyone else. Just like any social change, unity of purpose must overshadow difference of opinion and background.
Can it happen? I think, yes, but getting there won't be pretty.
Sorry for the ramble. Peace and long life, and so on...
Very well stated LRM, I appreciate your astute observations and concur whole heartedly.
I thank you for adding your input as a physician. I agree with all the points you have made.
I have read articles, I bet you this is one of the best for this time. "We are all peoples' scholars" and yet when the real such props-up we shall not be shy to truly, but objectively credit him/her. Very fine to write objectively, with qualified flare of neutrality and yet a sole added: conscience at work too!
Green, I just love this paper and you know what?, you are setting 2012 right for it would shock if "they" don't see it! Rightly, the Supreme Court sits in-between choices: ones that are technical, and ones that they will be questioned after this life - hereafter, should the other dimension be ignored! "Bush versus Gore": could any lesson be framed and learned about results - long or short-term? It could mean the burden of correction and moral - presumably what change is for!
Another point to raise in comparison or analogies with US Supreme Court and Monarchies, if pushed to extreme would tell more about "Middle-East" varieties than say "West European" varieties.
Further, it is wonderful to get to follow interpretation of paradoxes of "Judicial Reviews" and failures to understand and come clean out fixing minority cases relevant to values held about 'civil rights' and 'civil liberties' - somewhat closely tied-up. It opens a way to take also political rights infringements to task, with election shortfall in Florida: partly part of components in Bush versus Gore; and till today according to fears about some states law in the heat of ongoing and forthcoming elections, which seek to deprive "certain" minorities of political rights to cast their votes.
In the end, many surely agree with the author about thesis of core holes in what they address as American politics....very important for scholarly insights and discourses of political scientists: (i) the Presidential System; (ii) the Electoral System, (iii) the Extensive use of Judicial Review: its burdensome character for the Supreme Court and Constitutional Amendment functions; (iv) the "Kleptocratic" ownership of the State: irony of the 99% versus the 1% wake-up calls seeking how to address.
About (i), I remember an article sometime ago under Obama's first term with clear arguments abstracting one of the proof instances: "it is not the President but the Presidency". Similarly, for (iv) those not only going with their "feet" are able to recall discourses about dangers of the "Deep State" as the product of kleptocracy driven by internal aspects of the 1%, able to put democracy to disrepute hence loss of faith by citizens and external onlookers or evaluators.
another great piece by dmg, and as usual - typical over the years - people judge his stance on barackstar by one essay, rather than on the collection of his writings.
and a hey to you dmg, why didn't your latest register in my email???
Sorry, it's not the 1% vs the 99%. There is the 1 %, then there are regular Republicans 46% deaf, dumb, blind followers, and delusional; then there are the 43% somewhat less deaf, dumb, bind followers, Democrats, who think Obama is mostly OK.
That leaves 10% who might have some clue about what might be necessary to insure some future for the human race. Some of these folks don't spend time talking to their imaginary "daddy" in the sky, and some would support a just society. ??? 5% vs 95% ???
Seems would make sense to invest short in the human race, but until then bribery pays well enough.