Monday, February 21, 2011

The Last Major Hurdle

Harvey Wasserman and Bob Fitrakis have a good article, "Fighting the 5 Fascisms in Wisconsin and Ohio" posted on Common Dreams today.
As defined by its inventor, Benito Mussolini, fascism is "corporate control of the state." There are ways to beat around the Bush -- Paul Krugman has recently written about "oligarchy" -- but it's time to end all illusions and call what we now confront by its true name.

The fights in Wisconsin, Ohio, and in numerous other states are about saving the last shreds of American democracy...
Below I will quote the 5 basic realities the authors list and provide my own take on each one. Of course, as usual, I urge you to read the article in its entirety.
1) The bulwark of modern democracy is the trade union. This has been true since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. All social programs can trace their roots to union activism, as can the protection of our civil liberties.
I certainly agree with Point #1. Almost every progressive bit of legislation passed over the past century began as an initiative of one or more unions.
2) The material essence of fascism is the extreme separation of rich and poor, a massive transfer of wealth from those on the bottom to those on the top.
I'm not sure how ANY thinking person could say that this type of separation is not happening in the US today. Almost every bill before the Congress in the past several years -- regardless of how progressive it might seem at the outset -- always contains provisions that seek to shift ever more wealth and power up the food chain.

For one example, look at health care reform. The centerpiece is forcing Americans to purchase private health insurance while NOT including any provisions to rein in the costs of that mandated insurance. Sure, coverage might be a scant bit better, but you can be sure we will pay through the nose to receive those meager upgrades at a rate far exceeding inflation.
3) The crisis crippling states everywhere is directly related to the massive destruction of social resources by war. Since the end of the New Deal and World War II, the American elite has engineered the biggest dump of material wealth by military means in human history.
Can you imagine how much better off the American public would be today were it not for the waste of trillions of dollars fighting imperialistic wars? Not only would it save boatloads of moolah, but think of the hundreds of thousands of lives that have been negatively impacted by our militaristic follies!
4) Mussolini also made it clear that corporate control of the media is essential to fascist rule. Whoever would seize power first took the radio stations, then the television stations. Now the internet is under attack. The free flow of information is fascism's ultimate enemy.
The vaunted mainstream media has become some sort of sick joke. They spend vastly more time and resources seeking to prop up governmental propaganda than reporting facts. This recent development only underscores that the mainstream media only is as liberal as the conservative mega corporations that own them.
5) It is no accident that the "job loving" union-hating governors of Wisconsin and Ohio (along with Florida) have rejected billions in federal funds for re-building passenger rail service that would create thousands of jobs.
Green jobs could revolutionize this nation's economy. It would repair our faltering infrastructure and help to make Planet Earth a more hospital place to live. Yet, for all the talk in Washington about job creation, neither the Republicans NOR the Democrats seem all that interested in moving in a green direction. Instead of focusing on the bona fide long-term benefits, the major political discussion focuses on the potential for short-term costs to the bottom lines of corporate power players.

I will admit, however, than one line in this article is a bit troubling to me, possibly not for the obvious reason.
For the hard-right, this is about busting unions, the last organized force standing in the way of total corporate control of the United States by the rich and richer...
The inference here is that the conservatives want to crush the last independent campaign finance resource. If labor unions can be dismantled, then all viable political candidates will only be able to turn to the elite class to fund their campaigns.

My problem with this point is that labor steadfastly refuses to back third party or independent candidacies. Every two years they pour all their time, money and muscle into Democratic candidates who, once elected, turn around to crap all over the unions that supported them. As long as organized labor remains mired in this rut, there is no chance whatsoever for a populist party representing the vast majority to gain any momentum.

4 comments:

  1. The vast majority of the public do not know the actual numbers on the disparity of wealth in the US. When polled, they always guess the poor have far more of the pie than they have. Ignorance is a major problem in this class war we're facing; if people don't figure it out, we may lose the war by not even realizing which team we're really on, until it's too late.

    I may have shared this with you before, but it's mindblowing, though it is a lot of numbers and graphs. Read especially the part, about 1/3 the way down called "Do americans know their country's wealth distribution?" The part about how Americans' "ideal" wealth distribution compares to reality is interesting.

    http://sociology.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html

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  2. I have another comment. Something I've said before.

    This quoted article, and you quite often, reduce this to a right/left thing, by inference a Republican/Democrat thing.

    But clearly the Democrats are as elitist and fascist as the Republicans. This is the another aspect of ignorance that needs to be overthrown.

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  3. Brandon,
    I think you've misread me. I agree that the Dems are just as guilty as the GOP. Some of the worst stuff to come down the line in the past 25 years or so happened under Clinton.

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  4. "labor steadfastly refuses to back third party or independent candidacies. Every two years they pour all their time, money and muscle into Democratic candidates who, once elected, turn around to crap all over the unions that supported them."

    I couldn't agree with this last statement more. I cannot for the life of me figure out why so many so-called progressives can't see through the charade that the Democratic Party has been for most of the last century. This is one of the primary reasons, in my opinion, why organized labor/union membership has taken such a huge hit over the last generation. Why would anyone join a union if all it does is throw money at corrupt politicians who in turn crap all over them? Might as well simply vote for Republicans and hope they're telling the truth about wealth trickling down.

    They weren't of course. We really need to figure out how to re-organize the working class and do it quick or I'm afraid they will have won.

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