Tuesday, October 12, 2010

As E. J. Dionne Jr. reminds us (yet again!), it's all about the money

>


by Ken

I've told you before about my friend Jim Dawson's Back Row Reviews website ("The Movie Guide That Knows Where It Sits"), the only place I know to turn for movie reviews of any usefulness whatsoever. Of course even better are those occasional e-mails in which Jim passes along a hot tip of a picture genuinely worth seeing. With depressing frequency, though, they turn out to be accompanied by a warning that the picture in question is going to be depressing.

Great! That's just what I need! To slap down my $13 (I think that's what I paid for the last movie I saw) to be depressed! Thanks a heap, motion-picture industry.

I bring this up by way of explanation for why I probably won't get around to reading those books of Thom Hartmann's, Unequal Protection: How Corporations Became "People" -- and How You Can Fight Back (2004) and Threshold: The Crisis of Western Culture (2009), which Howie has been so enthusiastic about. I don't have the slightest doubt that they're every bit as good as Howie says they are, but I find this whole subject of the near-complete takeover of our electoral system by Big Money ineffably depressing, since I can't help thinking deep down that there isn't a bloody thing we can do about it.

I think we all know that even though we've got some rich people on our side, including people like George Soros who put their money where their mouths are (don't ask me who I mean by "people like George Soros"; I'm just sure there must be somebody), we can never begin to compete with the the Right's dual sources of nearly infinite cash reserves:

* super-rich Righties who give stupdendous amounts out of sheer ideological crackpottery, and

* super-rich Righties who give stupendous sums as an investment on which they expect equally generous financial return.

Of course the categories are by no means mutually exclusive. It's altogether possible to be an ideological zealot who makes that zealotry pay in the most tangible way. Like, say, the billionaire Koch brothers. In the end this is probably why I didn't add anything to what Howie wrote about the billionaire Koch brothers, fascinated though I was by Jane Mayer's gripping New Yorker exploration ("Covert Operations") of their financial reach, through such institutions as the lobbying organization Americans for Prosperity and the Mercatus Center think tank. It's just too depressing.

So I'm relieved that Howie is less squeamish, and am generally happy to cede this beat to him. And I'm not surprised either that the Washington Post's seemingly unflappable E. J. Dionne Jr. is able to keep returning to the subject of the Money Fortress and bash his head against it some more, as he did again yesterday in a column called "Shadowy players in a new class war."

"The 2010 election is turning into a class war," he began. "The wealthy and the powerful started it."

Here I am, having just written about the traditional much-loved right-wing trick of screaming "Class warfare" as a way of diverting discussion from the very real class warfare the Right loves to wage -- again, as a matter of both cuckoo ideology and hard-nosed financial self-interest.

It's a subject that's usually taboo in the infotainment news media, and is generally rigorously shunned by in-the-know Villagers except to point out that the occasional scraggly Democrat is once again attempting to wage --

"Class warfare!"

I was startled to find the Post's arch-Village financial columnist Steven Pearlstein devoting an entire column to "The costs of rising economic inequality," writing crazy stuff -- for a standard-issue Villager -- like:
Political candidates may not be talking about income inequality during this election, but it is the unspoken issue that underlies all the others. Without a sense of shared prosperity, there can be no prosperity. And given the realities of global capitalism, with its booms and busts and winner-take-all dynamic, that will require more government involvement in the economy, not less.

Of course E. J. Dionne is about as far as you can get from a standard-issue Villager. And the 2010 electoral class war, he writes, is "a strange development."
President Obama, after all, has been working overtime to save capitalism. Wall Street is doing just fine, and the rich are getting richer again. The financial reform bill passed by Congress was moderate, not radical.

Nonetheless, corporations and affluent individuals are pouring tens of millions of dollars into attack ads aimed almost exclusively at Democrats. One of the biggest political players, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, accepts money from foreign sources.

The chamber piously insists that none of the cash from abroad is going into its ad campaigns. But without full disclosure, there's no way of knowing if that's true or simply an accounting trick. [Here E.J. is characteristically being too kind. How often is it necessary to point out that cash is totally fungible? Every dollar devoted to one use frees up a dollar to devote to a different one, so it's lying bullshit for the chamber to claim that so-and-so's bucks didn't go to such-and-such.] And the chamber is just one of many groups engaged in an election-year spending spree.

This extraordinary state of affairs was facilitated by the U.S. Supreme Court's scandalous Citizens United decision, which swept away decades of restrictions on corporate spending to influence elections. The Republicans' success in blocking legislation that would at least have required the big spenders to disclose the sources of their money means voters have to operate in the dark.

Ah yes, Citizens United. Eventually any discussion of how money buys elections has to come around to Citizens United. Rather incredibly, I know bona fide progessives, with hands-on experience of the campaign finance world, who argued from various vantage points that the decision wouldn't have as damaging effect as the worst worry worts were worrying, and for a long while it was pointed out that the donors who had these new doors opened to them seemed to be treading gently. I don't know anybody who says either of those things now, and I think what we're seeing so far is still mere prelude, sort of a tune-up for the presidential sweepstakes in 2012.
The "logic" behind Citizens United is that third-party spending can't possibly be corrupting. The five-justice majority declared that "this Court now concludes that independent expenditures, including those made by corporations, do not give rise to corruption or the appearance of corruption. That speakers may have influence over or access to elected officials does not mean that those officials are corrupt. And the appearance of influence or access will not cause the electorate to lose faith in this democracy."

You can decide what's more stunning about this statement, its naivete or its arrogance. [Emphasis added. Sorry, I couldn't resist. Isn't that fantastic?]

If one side in the debate can overwhelm the political system with clandestine cash, which is what's happening, is there any doubt that the side in question will buy itself a lot of influence? If that's not corruption, what exactly is it?

And how can five justices, who purport not to be political, sweep aside what elected officials themselves long ago concluded on the subject and claim to know what will or will not "cause the electorate to lose faith in this democracy"? Could anything undermine trust in the system more than secret contributions to shadowy groups spending the money on nasty ads? The good news is that the class war is bringing a certain clarity to politics. It is also another piece of evidence for the radicalism of the current brand of conservatism. This, in turn, is forcing Democrats to defend a proposition they have been committed to since the days of Franklin Roosevelt but are often too timid to proclaim: that government has a legitimate and necessary role in making economic rules to protect individuals from abuse. [Sorry, once again I couldn't help myself.]

And E. J. comes up with an "entertaining and educational" for instance: "watch[ing] Republican Senate candidates in Connecticut, West Virginia, Alaska and Kentucky grapple with the impact of their bad-mouthing minimum-wage laws."
Conservative academics have warred against the minimum wage ever since FDR declared the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 perhaps "the most far-reaching program, the most far-sighted program for the benefit of workers that has ever been adopted here or in any other country."

These critics have never gained traction because most people think it's simple justice that those who work for a living be treated with a modicum of respect. Many voters who express skepticism about government in the abstract nonetheless favor laws that give a fighting chance to individuals with weaker bargaining positions in the marketplace.

The minimum-wage battle underscores the difference between 2010-style conservatism and the conservatism of Dwight Eisenhower or even Ronald Reagan. The 2010 right actually imagines a return to the times prior to the New Deal and Teddy Roosevelt's Square Deal, the heady days before there were laws on wages and hours, environmental concerns and undue economic concentration.

Our deceptively slick, Clark Kent-ishly bespectacled columnist understands that the Class War of 2010 isn't just something the country doesn't need now, but is something that's "irrational in any case."
Practically no one, least of all Obama, is questioning the basics of the market system or proposing anything more than somewhat tighter economic regulations -- after the biggest financial collapse since the Great Depression -- and rather modest tax increases on the wealthy.

But even these steps are apparently too much for those financing all the television ads, which should lead voters to ask themselves: Who is paying for this? What do they really want? And who gave them the right to buy an election? [Oops, one last time.]

"Who gave them the right to buy an election?" Indeed. It's tempting to answer: John Roberts, Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, Anthony Kennedy, and Sammy Alito. But in reality they just piled it on, made it easier, more efficient, harder to fight.

As with the other freedoms protected by the First Amendment, one of the cornerstones of the American republic, the theory is that the best answer to free speech is more free speech. But the whole system goes kaput once money is adjudged officially indistinguishable from speech.

I'm sure Justices Roberts, Scalia, Thomas, and Alito wouldn't have it any other way. Aand Justice Kennedy, as he so often is, seems happy enough to go along.
#

Labels: , , , , , , ,

3 Comments:

At 12:17 AM, Blogger Spocko said...

, the theory is that the best answer to free speech is more free speech. But the whole system goes kaput once money is adjudged officially indistinguishable from speech.


I think that it's time to revisit that comment. You are right. If I can buy more speech than you I can pretty much drown out other's speech.

I'm pretty depressed about the whole thing too. One thing that I don't see anyone doing is using the Citizens United ruling to set up one company against another.
It will be just a matter of time.

 
At 12:09 PM, Blogger KenInNY said...

Interesting thought, S, companies as "people" going after each other. But as creepy U.S. Chamber of Commerce honcho Thomas Donohue regular shows, when it comes to building a protective shield for U.S. corporate power, it's usually possible to get the kiddies to play nice together, and to pony up lotsa dough to back it up.

Sigh.

Ken

 
At 9:54 PM, Anonymous me said...

set up one company against another

Pretty soon we'll have corporate armies warring against each other. Nice. Blackwater of course will be king of the hill at first, but pretty soon General Electric will kick the crap out of them. Then Lockheed will get into it, and Boeing. Various software companies will sell services to all sides.

It'll be just like the old days - we serfs will fight and die for the glory and power (i.e., money) of whichever noble owns the land we live on.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home