Monday, July 16, 2012

Conservatism Unplugged





America's Future Under Obama
When the world is laid waste, and its celebrants are cinders, And its clothes ashes; When it is once again a dead rock; like the rock that encircles it; Its dust open to the poisonous wind; When we have wrought what we've wrought, and done what we've done, and there is no one left to look back in sorrow or anger: Ah, then, what a song will never be sung! 
In this election, we’re not having an argument that pits capitalism against socialism. We are trying to decide what kind of capitalism we want. It is a debate as American as Alexander Hamilton, Andrew Jackson and Henry Clay — which is to say that we have always done this. In light of the rise of inequality and the financial mess we're going through, it’s a discussion we very much need to have NOW. 
Mitt Romney
The back-and-forth about Bain Capital, Mitt Romney’s old company, is part of something larger. So is the inquest into the implications of multi-billion-dollar trading losses at JPMorgan Chase. Capitalism can produce wonders. It is also capable of self-destruction, and it can leave a lot of wounded people behind. The trick is to get the most out of what capitalism does well, while containing or preventing the problems it can cause. 

To describe this grand debate is not to deny that President Obama’s campaign has some, shall we say, narrower motives in going after Bain. Obama’s lieutenants need to undermine Romney’s claim that his experience in the private equity business makes him just the guy to get our economy back on track.

The Bain conversation has already been instructive. Romney’s friends no less than his foes have had to face the fact that Bain’s purpose was never about job-creation. Its goal was to generate large returns to Bain’s partners and investors. It did that, which is why Romney is wealthy.

Romney will focus on the positive side of his business dealings that did create jobs. He will tell about the companies Bain helped bring to life, among them Staples, Sports Authority and Domino’s.

That’s fair enough. But having made an issue of Bain on the plus side, he also has to answer for the pain and suffering — or, as defenders of capitalism like myself call it, the “creative destruction” — that some of Bain’s deals left in their wake.

The Destruction Caused By Capitalism
This leads naturally to the question of how creative the destruction wrought by our current brand of capitalism actually is. Since the dawn of the leveraged buyout era three decades ago, many friends of capitalism have questioned whether loading companies with debt as part of these deals is good for companies and for the economy as a whole.

Does this approach cause unnecessary suffering among the employees of the companies in question and the communities that often lose plants and jobs as a result? Sucking pension and health funds dry to aggrandize investors seems less like a creative act than a betrayal of workers who made bargains with their employers in good faith.


More generally, while some of the innovations in the financial sphere have been beneficial to growth, it’s far from clear that this is true of all or even most of them. Some of them helped cause the downturn we are still trying to escape and created incentives for the dangerous risk-taking that led to JPMorgan’s troubles. And there’s little doubt that our new financial system has transferred wealth from other sectors of the economy to the people at the top of the financial business.

Vice President Biden’s speech last week in Youngstown, Ohio, drew wide attention for its criticism of Romney as someone who just doesn’t “get it.” But when Biden moved beyond Romney, he offered an energetic broadside against the new world of finance, and he picked the right venue to make his case: a noble blue-collar town that has been battered by the winds of globalization and economic change. I almost hated to say that, but Please, bare with me here.


“You know the difference between having an economy that makes things that the rest of the world wants, and having an economy that is based on financialization of every product,” Biden told his listeners. “You know the difference between an economy that’s built on making things rather than on collateralized debt, creative credit-default swaps, financial instruments like subprime mortgages. That’s not how you build an economy.”

Romney, by contrast, is wary of dismantling any of these nifty new Wall Street inventions, which is one reason why any conservative would wants to repeal the Dodd-Frank financial reforms.

We need to have this great national argument. To borrow a term pioneered by Germany’s Christian Democrats, we can try to build a social market. Or we can have an anti-social market. An election is the right venue for deciding which one it will be.

Everything we thought was true was not true. Everything we thought was right was wrong. The leaders whom we idolized were madmen, Mass murderers, whose crimes were helped along. 
                     

We were the volunteers for this economic genocide, the dupes who gave out leaflets for the devil, for whom obscene dictatorships were good and our own democracies were evil. Obama is the organizers of the poor, for who's numbers are swelling, the builder of immoral unions, the champion of unconstitutionality, sacrificing society only to serve his mortal yearning for significance. We were blind in service to our passions. We were deaf in service to our need. Now I will drive the truth straight through our hearts that we might die at peace with what we did, and for our crime against liberty, Forgiveness denied.



                                                      Published with Blogger-droid v2.0.6

2 comments:

  1. Well,I have no Cross to Bear Here. I was not one of the many idiots who voted for this autrosity turned monstrosity of what is a slow genocide of a different kind...creating poor people out of the middle class and middle class out of the not so wealthy but financially healthy enough to be considered the poorer rich or not so monetarily endowed millionaires. I saw the idiocracy long before it even hit and opted out of this conieving shit. a Con-Man Supported by Every-One a Camouflage of a Politician (Who Choose To Be) Used to Pull Down This Great Land. Slippery Trickery of Political Fuckery.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Interesting blog and well thought out. But I think most of America is distracted by the smoke-screen that we call the Democrat and Republican political parties. Both parties preach what it's constituency wants to hear and both parties carry out their own agendas once elected.
    What most Americans don't realize, is that both parties true agendas are often intermingled with one another, not for the betterment of the American people but to our detriment.

    Yes. The political parties are a smoke-screen. They are designed to keep Americans like you and me distracted and distanced from the truth about our government and its' politicians agend as a whole.
    They would have supporters of both parties bickering back and forth with one another about failed policies and incompetent politicians, while they squander billions, and draft and enact laws that are an afront to the Constitution and our civil liberties.


    ReplyDelete