No right is more precious in a free country than that of having a voice in the election of those who make the laws under which, as good citizens, we must live. Other rights, even the most basic, are illusory if the right to vote is undermined.
- US Supreme Court

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Bush's Third Term

The Wall Street Journal:

We're beginning to understand why Barack Obama keeps protesting so vigorously against the prospect of "George Bush's third term." Maybe he's worried that someone will notice that he's the candidate who's running for it.

Most Presidential candidates adapt their message after they win their party nomination, but Mr. Obama isn't merely "running to the center." He's fleeing from many of his primary positions so markedly and so rapidly that he's embracing a sizable chunk of President Bush's policy. Who would have thought that a Democrat would rehabilitate the much-maligned Bush agenda?

A really excellent essay at The Confluence:

Right now this country is controlled by an elite ruling class. This class consists of life-time and charter members. The life-time members are the wealthy, the rich and shameless. They own or control the corporations and most of the wealth. Some of them aren’t even Americans. The charter members are the politicians and media.

...

You don’t really think the Village hates the Clintons because they are redneck hillbillies, do you? Bill and Hillary are both Ivy League educated lawyers, smart and sophisticated. They are hated because they are loyal to us, not the corporatists. That’s why the Democratic leadership wants to purge them from the party and discredit Bill’s legacy.
And a really excellent essay by Anglachel (whose essays are always excellent):
Not only does the Party leadership and large swaths of the Stevensonian elite firmly believe that the Truman rank-and-file have nowhere else to go in a political sense, they have also abandoned any substantive commitment to socio-economic movement for this class. They no longer care to provide there voters anywhere else to go economically or culturally. The Truman wing is seen as an electoral dead end, and no more effort should be expended on their behalf.
Now that Hillary and her "you are not invisible to me" is out of the race, we are now officially invisible again.

It isn't even just outsourcing, job loss, or stagnant wages. The privatization of risk - as described in books such as The Great Risk Shift: The New Economic Insecurity and The Decline Of The American Dream by Jacob S. Hacker - is what really scares me.

This issue is IMO the biggest reason the working class went for Hillary. It isn't just that things aren't getting any better. They're finding ways to take back the things we already won, like the idea that if things go really, really wrong, the government will provide a basic safety net.

Or like basic job protections. Right now, to get a job at many places, you have to waive your rights under the law. One common waiver is waiving your right to take legal action against a workplace that violates safety laws. Or laws protecting against discrimination, or overtime and fair pay laws, etc. Typically, you have to agree to arbitration. They don't have to arbitrate - they can still prosecute you - but you can't prosecute them, no matter what they do. The worst part is that they reserve the power to choose (and they pay) the mediators.

If it keeps going this way, we'll all end up serfs.

Who carries the risk - individuals or the government - is what the New Deal is and was all about. Remember that the New Deal came into being during the Great Depression. It is the idea that government should not let people fall into the hole and die. It is the idea that government can and should create an environment where nobody starves - and where nobody dies when they could live for want of a doctor.

And, thanks to the New Deal, life in America was good in the 1950s and 1960s. People growing up then remember them as The Wonder Years for a reason - prosperity was not only present but spread out so that far more people enjoyed the benefits of the affluence.

Now the Democratic party wants to give it all back. And they're the ones we thought were on our side.

Remember that the sweatshop is what capitalism looked like before social action.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

No sweatshops for the creative class. The creative class is afraid of being outsourced to India and China. The Party wants to protect them. The rich are GOP, the poor are rejected by everyone. The Party of the creative class.