By which title I mean to say that Paul Krugman, Nobel laureate in Economics, has been right all along about where the disastrous policies of deregulation, privatization and large tax cuts for the rich and multinational corporations would lead our Nation’s economy. Yet no one listened to him while the Republicans looted the Treasury and Wall Street gambled insanely on real estate and mortgage backed derivatives. No one listened to him while banking executives milked billions in salary and bonuses from the suckers, the rubes, etc.
And he’s still right — no one in Washington is treating the worldwide economic crisis with sufficient gravity and seriousness it deserves. Not the Republicans, not the Blue Dog Democrats, not a media controlled by conservative interests and (in the case of television seriously out of touch with the financial concerns of ordinary Americans) and not even our Post Partisan President.
A not-so-funny thing happened on the way to economic recovery. Over the last two weeks, what should have been a deadly serious debate about how to save an economy in desperate straits turned, instead, into hackneyed political theater, with Republicans spouting all the old clichés about wasteful government spending and the wonders of tax cuts. […]
Somehow, Washington has lost any sense of what’s at stake — of the reality that we may well be falling into an economic abyss, and that if we do, it will be very hard to get out again. […]
It’s no wonder, then, that most economic forecasts warn that in the absence of government action we’re headed for a deep, prolonged slump. Some private analysts predict double-digit unemployment. The Congressional Budget Office is slightly more sanguine, but its director, nonetheless, recently warned that “absent a change in fiscal policy … the shortfall in the nation’s output relative to potential levels will be the largest — in duration and depth — since the Depression of the 1930s.” […]
We’re already closer to outright deflation than at any point since the Great Depression. In particular, the private sector is experiencing widespread wage cuts for the first time since the 1930s, and there will be much more of that if the economy continues to weaken.
In short, despite an overwhelming defeat at the polls the Republicans are still controlling the message machine that is our corporate media. And the message they are pushing is one that has been tried. It was tried and now our economy is on life support. What is more, the current politicians in control of the GOP are all to willing to pull the plug. Even sadder, far too many Democratic members of Congress, out of fear of being labeled “liberal” or “socialist” (or whatever) by Limbaugh’s legions of ditto heads are following their lead. Democrats won the election because Republican policies created the mess we are in, but too many of these Congressional Democrats lack the courage of their convictions, or never had any convictions to begin with.
It’s as if we were still living in the times when physicians believed that bleeding their patients was the best way to cure disease despite all evidence to the contrary. They were convinced bleeding eliminated noxious humors from the body when all it did was hasten the death of the individuals under their care. In short their beliefs were dead wrong. Yet many of them continued to scoff at the germ theory of disease for many decades, even when germ theory was proven to provide positive outcomes for patients under the care of more “progressive” doctors. Like today’s Republicans, they couldn’t or wouldn’t abandon the failed theories and practices they had employed their entire medical careers, and in which they had a complete if unfounded faith. Unable to accept change and new ideas, they continued to do harm to, and even hasten the death, their patients, in the name of that misguided faith.
It’s past time for President Obama to stop playing nice with the insane collection of clowns, grifters, war profiteers, racists and faith based ideologues (and that’s not only a reference to Christian fundamentalists) we euphemistically refer to as the Republican Party. Just as in the case of those old doctors who kept bleeding their patients long after Louis Pasteur proved the disease was caused by germs, we know from experience that conservative methods of governance don’t work. We have all the evidence we need from history, both recent and not so recent. But will the President listen to Krugman and those of us who have been sounding alarm bells that seeking cooperation from radically wrong right wingers is a deeply flawed political strategy, or is it already too late?
I’ll give Krugman the last word here. God knows he deserves it.
So what should Mr. Obama do? Count me among those who think that the president made a big mistake in his initial approach, that his attempts to transcend partisanship ended up empowering politicians who take their marching orders from Rush Limbaugh. What matters now, however, is what he does next.
It’s time for Mr. Obama to go on the offensive. Above all, he must not shy away from pointing out that those who stand in the way of his plan, in the name of a discredited economic philosophy, are putting the nation’s future at risk. The American economy is on the edge of catastrophe, and much of the Republican Party is trying to push it over that edge.
i hope you saw Mr K bbitch slap buchanan on morning joe!! just delicious. smacked him with a beautiful reminder of nixon!!
the man is just wonderful.
Krugman is dead-on right about the economics of the situtation. Unfortunately the public that supported Obama is still behind the curve on what constitutes effective solutions. A part of the problem is what passes for economics education in this country–a curriculum that seems geared only to innoculating young minds against the evils of communism and its weaker twin socialism. A part of the problem is the hang-over of Reagan’s success as a communicator, demonizing government anything.
Obama is working the politics of a situation in which there are still a lot of Blue Dogs sniffing up the pachyderms. To play them requires a little rope-a-dope, which served him well in the campaign. Most of the Blue Dogs are nervous nellies, scared that actually doing what needs to be done will cause them to lose in 2010. Obama has yet to convince them that the situation of their constituents is so grave that not doing what needs to be done is what will cause them to lose. They have not grasped what Obama meant in his inaugural address about the popular ground having shifted under their feet.
We progressives are now in a position that we must start putting the pressure on the Blue Dogs and the Republicans, moderate or otherwise, who represent us. They must start feeling the political risk of doing too little or doing nothing. The current problem is that the Republican leadership still thinks they can message their way out of taking responsibility for a failure in Congress; that they can obstruct without the public penalizing them. Fairly rapidly they must be taught the folly of that approach.
Pete Sessions (R-TX) provided an opening with his talking about the tactics of the Taliban. We must hop on this as following the tactics of the Texas Taliban. Because what Sessions is advocating is a form of economic terrorism–destroying the economy in order to cause Obama to fail politically.
It is time that progressives start covering Obama’s back instead of continuing in their cynicism about government.
It is time for us to push back against these fuckers so that Congress can maneuver to get done what we need to get done. Hit the Republicans hard and the Blue Dogs will scramble back into the Democratic Party.
Northeasterners will have to take on Snowe, Collins and Gregg (Lieberman is a lost cause). Californians will have to take on their local wingnut Congresscritters. Midwesterners will have to put the screws on Voinovich, Lugar, and shut up the Mike Pences of the region. Southerners like myself will have to tell Heath Shuler and Jim Cooper about the facts of life; you no longer can play both sides of the fence. Texans can, well kick butt like Molly Ivins and Jim Hightower. And we can all sing the Dixie Chicks “Not gonna play nice” as we do it.
Time to stop carping about Obama and his appointees (including Gregg) and start fighting for our agenda against those who really oppose it–the obstructionist Republicans. And that means a whole lot of persuasion of those who like Obama’s bipartisanship but have not yet seen who has been the vicious partisans over the last thirty-six years (since Jesse Helms became Senator NO). Over over the past 16 years (the Gingrich “revolution” better known as the “contract on America”. That’s the partisanship that has led us into this disaster. It is now payback time.
“It’s time for Mr. Obama to go on the offensive.”
Guess Krugman hadn’t yet seen Obama’s pep rally with Dems last night (carried live on CSPAN). He didn’t just go on the offensive; he burned a whole right through Republican BS.
Now, with today’s jobs report providing more wind at his back, he’s made effective use of the presidential bully pulpit to take control once again of the narrative. Sure, Republicans will whine that he’s not being bi-partisan, but they were whining about that already. Keep bringing it directly to the people, Mr. President. You’ve got the megaphone.
Didn’t Obama do what you’ve asked in his speeches yesterday? He even used the word, “catastrophe” and called out obstructionists who promote “failed policies.” Maybe he needs to claim some free air-time on the broadcast networks — messing with prime-time tv shows — and talk directly to the citizens. What could he say to satisfy you and shame the Repubs into behaving like grown-ups? Maybe he should make the case that Senate rules need to be changed in emergencies?!
The problem isn’t Obama. It’s the media who have put three times as many crazy Repubs on the airwaves than they have reasonable Dems. (I’ve just read about this on blogs; I haven’t been watching.) It’s Reid saying he doesn’t have the votes to pass the Stimulus Bill, then saying he does, then saying he doesn’t. All this fiddling while Rome burns is very frustrating and irritating. But this is the way it plays until enough Repubs cross the aisle or Reid smashes the 60 vote blockade… When is a majority not a majority? Apparently, when it needs to be.
They should make the GOP do a real filibuster. Make them stand up there and read from the telephone book.
They. They. They.
We should make Republicans be afraid to do a filibuster, afraid to obstruct.
They are the friggin’ minority. We need to start whipping them around the ears like Democrats have been for the past 30 years. It wasn’t the press whipping that made the Democrats spineless; it was the public pressure from home.
It’s time to move from cynicism back to anger.
We have been calling senators and congressional members, to little effect. Until Reid stands up and says no more Mr. Bendover the GOP caucus in the Senate will control the agenda.
How do you know it’s little effect? There really hasn’t been a test vote yet.
Mr. Reid will say no more Mr. Bendover when he is forced to by his caucus.
Also, with Republicans controlling the air war, the ground war is all we’ve got. Wave after wave of phone calls.
We’re currently losing the ground war according to slinkerwink’s entry @ kos:
The Rush DittoHeads Are Tying Up The Phone Lines To Congress!
Well get some troops on the horn.
It’s simple:
We are all going down the shitter together without much we can do about it. Total disaster. Sorry. Now, heading into that disaster, do you want temporary jobs, nice roads and good schools and greener governmen? Or do you want the same disaster, but with none of that to show for it?
The idea that a 2% difference in some tax rate is going to stop this hurricane is fucking stupid.
The Repubs can’t be so stupid as to really believe that tax cuts alone are going to fix all the problems.
My only conclusion is that the Repubs do not care about whether or not the country survives as long as they can cause President Obama to fail.
You got that one right.
What is there to say? I am just depressed. And angry.
Depressed about the fact that for some inexplicable reason so many believed that it was possible for the Republicans to actually work in good faith for the sake of the country. Disappointed that at the most critical juncture in my lifetime that President Obama, in a fools errand of chasing imaginary wisps of non-existent bipartisanship, let loose of the reigns of his bully pulpit long enough to let the Republicans and their cronies in the media steer this whole process into a deep ravine from which it appears almost impossible for us to extricate ourselves. Angry that our representatives, in spite of the resounding call for a change in direction in November, still insist on acting as if this is some kind of fucking board game and we are nothing more than pieces which they are using to play the game.
It is seeming more and more likely that we are all soon going to understand very well the consequences of this asinine and outright maniacal charade that is being played out on Capitol Hill. There is going to be plenty of time for huge swaths of this country to take their pitchforks and torches and march to Washington. Because we are going to have nothing but time on our hands here very shortly. Time to ponder just how royally fucked we have been by our government, the corporations and the financial system and how the quality of life which has exemplified the American experience for generations will very soon be nothing more than words in a history book.
History?? Who knows? We’ll all be fucking dead.
Bad Money: Reckless Finance, Failed Politics, and the Global Crisis of American Capitalism by Kevin Phillips.
Phillps is very pessimistic about our chances for recovery and our ability to shrink the FIRE sector. He maintains that this is a historical tendency in Anglo-Dutch-American capitalism and when the shit finally hit the fan, all major political parties lacked the will and the leadership to make the hard choices, shrink FIRE as a % of GDP and retrench.
We may have the leadership in Obama, but do we have the will?