RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment
Politics
Economic Inequality, Not Race, Will Likely Seal the Next Election Print
Monday, 08 September 2014 07:10

Kotkin writes: "Yet in reality, race will not define the 2014 election, or likely those that follow. Instead the real defining issue-class-does not fit so easily into the current political calculus."

 (photo: Joe Raedle/Getty)
(photo: Joe Raedle/Getty)


Economic Inequality, Not Race, Will Likely Seal the Next Election

By Joel Kotkin, The Daily Beast

08 September 14

 

Race is always a hot button topic in the U.S., but rising and rampant economic inequality will likely be the issue that propels people to the voting booth.

ecent events in Ferguson, Missouri and along the U.S.-Mexico border may seem to suggest that race has returned as the signature issue in American politics. We can see this already in the pages of mainstream media, with increased calls for reparations for African-Americans, and expanded amnesties for the undocumented. Increasingly, any opposition to Obama’s policies is blamed on deep-seated white racism.

Yet in reality, race will not define the 2014 election, or likely those that follow. Instead the real defining issue—class—does not fit so easily into the current political calculus. In terms of racial justice, we have made real progress since the ’60s, when even successful educated minorities were discriminated against and the brightest minority students were often discouraged from attending college. Today an African-American holds the highest office in the land, and African Americans also fill the offices of U.S. attorney general and national security advisor. This makes the notion that race thwarts success increasingly outdated.

But at the same time that formal racial barriers have been demolished, the class divide continues to grow steeper than in at any time in the nation’s recent history. Today America’s class structure is increasingly ossified, and this affects not only minorities, who are hit disproportionately, but also many whites, who constitute more than 40 percent of the nation’s poor. Upward mobility has stalled under both Bush and Obama, not only for minorities but for vast swaths of working class and middle class Americans. Increasingly, it’s not the color of one’s skin that determines one’s place in society, but access to education and capital, often the inherited variety.

Worries about upward mobility have been mounting for a generation, and according to Pew, only one-third of Americans currently believe the next generation will do better than them. Indeed, in some surveys pessimism about the next generation stands at an all-time high.

But race is not the main determinant in looking to the future. The greatest dismay, in fact, is felt among working class and middle class whites, who are generally much more pessimistic about the future for themselves than are either African-Americans or Hispanics.

This pessimism—for all the discussion on campuses about “white privilege”—is even more deeply seated among young whites. According to a poll conducted by the left-leaning advocacy group Demos, only 12 percent of whites 18 to 34 believe they will do better than their parents, compared to 31 percent for African-Americans and 36 percent among young Hispanics.

This suggests that the issue of restoring upward mobility has more widespread resonance than a more narrow race-based approach. The political party that best addresses this concern will be in the strongest position to dominate the political landscape not only in 2014, but well beyond.

The problem for the Democrats in this regard: the record of the last six years. President Obama has presided over an economy that, even when healing, has done little to improve the economic conditions of most Americans. The incomes of middle class Americans have remained stagnant, or shrunk, even as we have seen record corporate profits, a soaring stock market, and huge run ups in elite property markets.

This failure may explain why some Democrats and progressives feel tempted to go back to race-related issues—as well as social concerns such as gay and abortion rights—to stir their political base. The president’s suggestion of executive action on immigration would be in part to “galvanize” support among Latinos, many of whom can relate personally to the dilemma faced by the undocumented.

The stirring of resentment among African-Americans has become the critical component of race-based Democratic strategy. The president’s embrace of hoary racial warlord Reverend Al Sharpton, a well-known charlatan and occasional anti-semite, as his “go to guy” demonstrates the administration’s willingness to use the tragedy of the Ferguson shooting case to rally African-American voters for the off-year election.

These tactics may have some political efficacy, but it’s doubtful that ’60s progressive bromides of race-based politics or calls for redistribution can seriously address inequality or poverty. Certainly the idea that greater dependence on government handouts—the main social focus of modern progressives—has not aided minority uplift or promoted upward mobility. The Great Society may have reduced poverty initially, but in the past decade poverty rates have risen to the highest level since the ’60s.

If anything, under the most progressive-dominated regime since at least the New Deal, things have gotten even worse. African-American youth unemployment is now twice that of whites while according to the Urban League, the black middle class, once rapidly expanding, has essentially lost the gains made over the past 30 years.

In the same vein, Hispanic income also has declined relative to whites. Latino poverty rates now stand at 28 percent. The administration’s leniency that permits impoverished kids to flock here from Central America may make moral or political sense, but its actual impact on communities could prove problematical.

Indeed one has to question the viability of new mass immigration of poor, poorly educated kids at a time when poverty among Latino children already here has risen since 2007, according to the American Community Survey, from 27.5 percent to 33.7 percent in 2012, an increase of 1.7 million. Given their own economic problems, and the vital need to improve their educational performance one has to wonder whether African-Americans or even many Latinos, as opposed to the activist base, actually would welcome a fresh infusion of impoverished refugee children from Central America into the country. A recent Pew survey found that not only half of all whites, but nearly two-fifths of African Americans and roughly a third of Hispanics approved of increased deportations of the undocumented.

Some Latino and African-American Democrats have already departed from the party line on immigration. Texas Rep. Henry Cuellar, a moderate border district Democrat, has called “the border incursion” “Obama’s Katrina moment” and he is co-sponsoring legislation with Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas to speed up the deportation process for kids detained at the border.

Perhaps even more serious are divisions among Democrats on key economic and regulatory issues. In California, for example, Latino Democrats, particularly from the hard hit interior, have revolted against their party’s “cap and trade” policies, which will lead to ever higher energy costs, and threaten industries that tend to employ working class Latinos. Similarly some unions in the interior, notably the Teamsters and Laborers, have taken strong positions favoring energy development, notably the Keystone pipeline, in sharp opposition to the president’s core supporters.

And then there’s the reality that blue states—with all the usual progressive policies—suffer the widest gap between the classes. Indeed, notes demographer Wendell Cox, New York City now has an income distribution that approaches that of South Africa under apartheid.

Similarly a recent Brookings report found the greatest income disparity in such bastions of progressivism as San Francisco, Miami, Boston, Washington D.C., New York, Oakland, Chicago and Los Angeles. Oddly enough, minorities seem to do better, relative to whites, in states that have had more conservative governance, in part because they also tend to have lower costs of living.

This disconnect between progressive aims and reality stems from the shift in the Left’s class and geographic base. Once dependent on industrial and construction workers, many of them unionized, the party increasingly depends for support from green activists, urban land speculators, and “creative class” workers in expensive regions where regulatory constraints tend to discourage industrial and housing growth. In contrast many red state metros such as Houston, Oklahoma City, Salt Lake, and Dallas-Ft. Worth tend to produce more higher paid, blue collar growth.

Given these realities, perhaps progressives need to move away from symbolic issues, such as reparations and racial name-calling, and instead directly address middle class and working class concerns. Yet this creates a potential for internecine conflict with other key party constituencies, which seem more interest in suppressing middle class aspirations than fulfilling them.

It should be clear by now that regulatory and tax regimes imposed in blue states tend to stunt middle and working opportunities, with the worst effects on minorities and working class whites. Blue-state progressive can whine about race, inequality, and poverty with the best of them, but they would contribute far more if they started to address these issues with something other than well-rehearsed indignation and rhetoric.

But while progressive attempts to address the class divide have been less than successful, can the Republicans fill the breach? Already working class whites are arguably the GOP’s strongest base and Republicans should be able to exploit class resentment toward the increasingly gentrified Democratic leadership. Yet to date, they have shown a remarkable inability to do so, in part due to the ideological constraints and racial baggage of the increasingly Southern-oriented GOP.

Republicans, particularly those closest to Wall Street, also seem to have a problem even admitting the existence of the class issue. Conservatives economists repeatedly downplay ever greater insecurity about jobs, the affordability of decent housing and generally lower net worths for all but the highly affluent. Convinced that any discussion about these issues constitutes unseemly “class warfare,” the right’s intellectual leadership seems incapable of addressing these concerns.

What would a policy that addresses inequality look like? Some steps would offend some Republicans, such as restarting a modern version of the Depression era Works Progress Administration. Instead of a stimulus directed at government workers and crony-capitalists, as Obama employed in 2009, a program that brought young people into the work force would help them gain needed practical skills while repairing our increasingly woeful infrastructure.

Other reforms would include a major overhaul of the tax system, particularly equalizing capital gains and income taxes. Whatever the benefits we may have seen from lower capital gains rates in the past, the current, incredibly unequal recovery undermines the legitimacy of this approach. Rather than stir investment and create middle income jobs, capital gains have become a ruse for the rich to get even richer, largely through asset inflation. Companies, notes a new Harvard Business Review study, have used the low interest bonanza and access to cheap money to boost profits, not by expanding employment but by buying back their own stock.

Ultimately, the best way to address class concerns, as well as those of minorities, would be to spark strong economic growth, particularly in the energy, manufacturing, and construction sectors, which tend to offer higher wage employment for them. Both Latinos and African-American made their biggest economic strides when the economy was booming under Presidents Reagan and Clinton, both of whom have been criticized for “trickle down” policies.

A growth agenda is a winning one for the party that embraces and effectively advocates it. A recent analysis (PDF) of public opinion by the Global Strategy Group found that although roughly half of Americans believe inequality per se is a major issue, more than three-quarters believe that faster economic growth should be the main priority.

In the old Democratic Party, from Truman to Clinton, this approach would be an easy sell. A policy that encouraged building new water facilities, expanding domestic energy , manufacturing and construction, particularly single family homes, would have widespread appeal to working and middle class voters. But a growth agenda likely would face much opposition from the president’s green gentry base, who seem perfectly content with an economy that rewards insiders, venture capitalists, and companies that employ few people, largely the best educated and positioned.

Republicans could seize the momentum here, but to do so would require shedding some ideological baggage, as well standing up to some of their more ruthless backers on Wall Street and the corporate community. Similar a return to a more traditional growth oriented liberalism would help hard pressed Democrats, particularly in red states, who desperately need to recapture some of their traditional working class backers. It will be here, in the nexus of policy and class, not racial posturing, the political future of the country may well be determined.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
McCain Rips Obama's Failure to Bomb Stonehenge Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Sunday, 07 September 2014 13:28

Borowitz writes: "Senator John McCain (R-Ariz.) blasted President Obama on Saturday for failing to bomb Stonehenge while in the United Kingdom for the NATO summit."

 (photo: Charles Dharapak/AP)
(photo: Charles Dharapak/AP)


McCain Rips Obama's Failure to Bomb Stonehenge

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

07 September 14

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."

enator John McCain (R-Ariz.) blasted President Obama on Saturday for failing to bomb Stonehenge while in the United Kingdom for the NATO summit.

“This is a time when it’s important to send our enemies the message that the United States is strong,” McCain told Fox News. “I can think of no better way to do that than by blowing Stonehenge off the map.”

McCain said that he was “astounded” by Obama’s reluctance to order airstrikes on the ancient monument. “He had a clean shot at Stonehenge, and he blinked,” he said.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
NFL Still Not Ready for Openly Gay Player Print
Sunday, 07 September 2014 13:12

Newberry writes: "If history is any guide, Michael Sam should be getting ready for his first NFL game. Instead, he's stuck on the practice squad with the Dallas Cowboys."

Dallas Cowboys practice squad player defensive end Michael Sam speaking to reporters in Irving, Texas. (photo: AP/LM Otero)
Dallas Cowboys practice squad player defensive end Michael Sam speaking to reporters in Irving, Texas. (photo: AP/LM Otero)


NFL Still Not Ready for Openly Gay Player

By Paul Newberry, Associated Press

07 September 14

 

f history is any guide, Michael Sam should be getting ready for his first NFL game.

Instead, he's stuck on the practice squad with the Dallas Cowboys.

The league, it would seem, isn't quite ready for its first openly gay player.

We're not talking about his teammates, either.

There was never any indication that Sam was a distraction in the St. Louis locker room, as so many had predicted. In fact, the only tempest was a regrettable ESPN report on Sam's showering habits — which the network later apologized for — but still drew a pointed retort from Rams star Chris Long: "Dear ESPN. Everyone but you is over it."

Well, not everyone.

While players don't seem to have a problem with Sam, we can't say the same about the guys running the teams.

We were told Sam would be treated like any other player. That didn't happen from draft day to cut day.

Sam was selected much lower than he should've been, so we'll hold off on congratulating the supposedly progressive Rams for taking him with the 249th out of 256 selections. He played well enough in the preseason to warrant a shot on a 53-man roster, whether it be in St. Louis or somewhere else. At the very least, the delay in signing him to the Cowboys' junior varsity — reportedly at the behest of league officials — showed that he's not being treated as just another player, especially one with such an impressive college resume.

Sam was the defensive player of the year in the mighty Southeastern Conference, which had always been a sure path to the NFL.

Until now.

Consider this:

— Before Sam, The Associated Press awarded its defensive player of the year award to 16 players over a 17-year span beginning in 1996 (Georgia's David Pollack was a two-time winner).

— Of those previous winners, 11 were selected in the first round of the NFL draft, the highest being LSU's Glenn Dorsey, who went No. 5 in 2007, and Tennessee's Eric Berry, also taken fifth in 2008.

— Fifteen of those players made the team their rookie season, the only exception being Carolina's Deon Grant, who was on injured reserve his first year. All but two of the 15 (Leonard Little with St. Louis in 1997, Nick Fairley with Detroit in 2010) started at least one game as a rookie; five of them started all 16. Grant returned in his second year to start every game, as well.

— Beyond all those first-round picks, three of the SEC's defensive honorees were selected in the second, two went in the third, and Florida's Alex Brown — a fourth-round pick and No. 104 overall in 2001 — had been the lowest selection from that group.

Sam, in other words, was drafted 145 places lower than any of the previous winners of the AP award, which made it much easier for the Rams to let him go even though he had three sacks and 11 tackles during the preseason — including a team-high six tackles in his final exhibition game.

Of course, there are legitimate questions about Sam's skills.

He's a little too slow to be an outside linebacker, not quite big enough to be a defensive end — one of those dreaded "tweeners" who might have trouble settling on a position. He had some poor workouts leading up to the draft, so it's only natural that his stock dropped a bit from the original projections that he would go somewhere between the third and fifth rounds. And we'll even cut the Rams some slack, since defensive end is one of their deepest positions and maybe there really wasn't any room for Sam.

But it's beyond comprehension that no one else could've used him, or that it took four days from the time he was cut, after most teams had long since stocked up their practice squads, to land a second chance with the Cowboys.

Buffalo Bills lineman Eric Wood might have summed it up best on Twitter, blaming the ESPN report for scaring off any team that might've been interested in signing Sam after he was cut by the Rams.

"No one wants the distraction," Woods wrote.

According to NBC's Peter King and ESPN's Stephen A. Smith, the NFL was so concerned that it called several teams, trying to prod someone into adding Sam to a practice squad. The Cowboys, desperate to improve their pass rush, finally stepped up to keep the league from a total public-relations nightmare.

Owner Jerry Jones stressed that Sam wasn't ready to play in the league anytime soon.

At least he's got a shot, which Sam certainly earned.

"He's relentless as a worker. He's relentless as a pass rusher," Jones said. "He is going to have to make up for a little speed. He's going to have to make up for size, but how many times have we seen that? That's what makes football."

The players, meanwhile, shrugged off Sam's arrival.

"It's not a big deal," Cowboys running back DeMarco Murray said. "If he's here to help us win, treat him like any other guy. Doesn't matter."

If only everyone felt that way.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS | Sidestepping Ukraine's 'N-Word' for Nazi Print
Sunday, 07 September 2014 12:41

Parry writes: "The New York Times, in its ceaseless anti-Russian bias over the Ukraine crisis, now wants everyone to use the 'I-word' - for 'invasion' - when describing Russia’s interference in Ukraine despite the flimsy supporting evidence for the charge presented by Kiev and NATO."

Far-right group 'Right Sector' train in Independence Square in central Kiev, January 25, 2014. (Reuters/David Mdzinarishvili)
Far-right group 'Right Sector' train in Independence Square in central Kiev, January 25, 2014. (Reuters/David Mdzinarishvili)


Sidestepping Ukraine's 'N-Word' for Nazi

By Robert Parry, Consortium News

07 September 14

 

he New York Times, in its ceaseless anti-Russian bias over the Ukraine crisis, now wants everyone to use the “I-word” – for “invasion” – when describing Russia’s interference in Ukraine despite the flimsy supporting evidence for the charge presented by Kiev and NATO.

The evidence, including commercial satellite photos lacking coordinates, was so unpersuasive that former U.S. intelligence analysts compared the case to the Iraq-WMD deception of last decade. Yet, while ignoring concerns about the quality of the proof, the Times ran a front-page story on Friday mocking Western political leaders, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Barack Obama, for not uttering the “I-word.”

The Times’ article by Andrew Higgins essentially baited Merkel and Obama to adopt the most hyperbolic phrasing on the crisis or risk being denounced as weak. The Times couched its criticism of their “circumspect” language – or what it called “terminological fudges” – as a victory for Russian President Vladimir Putin.

But the Times and other U.S. mainstream news outlets have engaged in their own “terminological fudges” regarding Ukraine’s “N-word” – for Nazi – by hiding or burying the fact that the Kiev regime has knowingly deployed neo-Nazi militias to wage bloody street fighting against ethnic Russians in eastern Ukraine.

This grim reality has become one of the most sensitive facts that U.S. State Department propaganda and MSM coverage have sought to keep from the American people who surely would recoil at the notion of siding with modern-day Nazis. Yet, to fully understand the role of these neo-Nazi extremists, Americans would need a translator for the circumlocutions used by the Times and other U.S. news outlets.

Typically, in the U.S. press, Ukraine’s neo-Nazis are called “nationalists,” a term with a rather patriotic and positive ring to it. Left out is the fact that these “nationalists” carry Nazi banners and trace their ideological lineage back to Adolf Hitler’s Ukrainian auxiliary, the Galician SS, and to Nazi collaborator Stepan Bandera, whose paramilitary forces slaughtered thousands upon thousands of Poles and Jews.

Other MSM references to the Nazis are even more obscure. For instance, the neo-Nazi militias are sometimes called “volunteer” brigades, which makes them sound like the Boy Scouts or the Rotary Club. But usually there is just the simple omission of the Nazi “N-word.”

On Thursday, the Times published a contentious article critical of Putin’s plan for resolving the Ukraine crisis while also noting that the peace talks faced obstacles from elements of both sides: “Moscow does not fully control the separatists; nor is it clear that Kiev can automatically rein in the armed militias it has unleashed alongside its military in the east.”

Filtered out of that sentence was the “N-word.” The reason that those “armed militias” might resist peace is because they consist of neo-Nazi ideologues who want a racially pure Ukraine. They are not reasonable people who favor living with ethnically diverse neighbors

Ukraine’s militias include openly neo-Nazi battalions such as the Azov brigade, which flies the “wolfangel” banner that was favored by the Nazi SS. Azov leaders espouse theories of racial supremacy deeming ethnic Russians to be “Untermenschen” or subhumans.

Sidestepping the N-word

But the Times sidesteps the Nazi “N-word” because otherwise readers might start doubting the “white hat/black hat” narrative that the Times has spun since the beginning of the crisis last winter. Usually whenever Ukraine’s neo-Nazis are mentioned, it is the context of the Times dismissing their presence as a myth or as simply “Russian propaganda.”

Other times, the reality is buried so deep in articles that very few readers will get that far. For instance, an Aug. 10 Times article by Andrew E. Kramer mentioned the emerging neo-Nazi paramilitary role in the final three paragraphs of a long story on another topic.

Given how extraordinary it is that armed Nazi storm troopers are being unleashed on a European population for the first time since World War II, you might have thought that the Times missed the lede. But the placement of this juicy tidbit fit with the newspaper’s profoundly unprofessional treatment of the Ukraine crisis throughout.

You had to get to the third-to-the-last paragraph to learn: “The fighting for Donetsk has taken on a lethal pattern: The regular army bombards separatist positions from afar, followed by chaotic, violent assaults by some of the half-dozen or so paramilitary groups surrounding Donetsk who are willing to plunge into urban combat.”

Then, the next-to-the-last paragraph told you: “Officials in Kiev say the militias and the army coordinate their actions, but the militias, which count about 7,000 fighters, are angry and, at times, uncontrollable. One known as Azov, which took over the village of Marinka, flies a neo-Nazi symbol resembling a Swastika as its flag.” [See Consortiumnews.com’s “NYT Discovers Ukraine’s Neo-Nazis at War.”]

The conservative London Telegraph provided more details about the Azov battalion in an article by correspondent Tom Parfitt, who wrote: “In Marinka, on the western outskirts [of Donetsk], the [Azov] battalion was sent forward ahead of tanks and armoured vehicles of the Ukrainian army’s 51st Mechanised Brigade. …

“But Kiev’s use of volunteer paramilitaries to stamp out the Russian-backed Donetsk and Luhansk ‘people’s republics’, proclaimed in eastern Ukraine in March, should send a shiver down Europe’s spine. Recently formed battalions such as Donbas, Dnipro and Azov, with several thousand men under their command, are officially under the control of the interior ministry but their financing is murky, their training inadequate and their ideology often alarming. The Azov men use the neo-Nazi Wolfsangel (Wolf’s Hook) symbol on their banner and members of the battalion are openly white supremacists, or anti-Semites.”

In interviews, some of the fighters questioned the Holocaust, expressed admiration for Adolf Hitler and acknowledged that they are indeed Nazis, a fact known by Kiev authorities, the Telegraph reported.

Andriy Biletsky, the Azov commander, “is also head of an extremist Ukrainian group called the Social National Assembly,” according to the Telegraph article which quoted a recent commentary by Biletsky as declaring: “The historic mission of our nation in this critical moment is to lead the White Races of the world in a final crusade for their survival. A crusade against the Semite-led Untermenschen.” [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Ignoring Ukraine’s Neo-Nazi Storm Troopers.”]

Russian Claims ‘Essentially True’

Recently at the port city of Mariupol, Foreign Policy’s reporter Alec Luhn also encountered the neo-Nazis of the Azov and other Ukrainian government militias. He wrote: “Blue and yellow Ukrainian flags fly over Mariupol’s burned-out city administration building and at military checkpoints around the city, but at a sport school near a huge metallurgical plant, another symbol is just as prominent: the wolfsangel (‘wolf trap’) symbol that was widely used in the Third Reich and has been adopted by neo-Nazi groups. …

“Pro-Russian forces have said they are fighting against Ukrainian nationalists and ‘fascists’ in the conflict, and in the case of Azov and other battalions, these claims are essentially true.”

But this inconvenient truth is not something that the U.S. State Department and the mainstream U.S. press want you to know. Instead they have spun a false narrative that blames the entire Ukraine crisis on Russia’s President Putin and his diabolical design to reclaim countries to his west for a revival of the Soviet Union.

The actual reality was that Putin wanted to maintain the status quo in Ukraine by supporting elected President Viktor Yanukovych. It was the West that stirred up trouble in Ukraine with neocon U.S. officials like Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and Sen. John McCain actively supporting a coup – spearheaded by neo-Nazi street fighters – that overthrew Yanukovych on Feb. 22.

After the coup, in recognition of the crucial role played by the neo-Nazis, they were given several ministries and their militias were later incorporated into the Ukrainian military for the offensive into eastern Ukraine to crush the uprising of ethnic Russians who had supported Yanukovych and favored closer economic ties to Russia. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Ukraine’s ‘Dr. Strangelove’ Reality.”]

But that more nuanced narrative – recognizing the complicated reality of Ukraine’s history and politics – would destroy the white hat/black hat storyline favored by the New York Times and the MSM, making the coup regime in Kiev the “good guys” and making Putin and the ethnic Russians the “bad guys.”

To protect that narrative, everyone has to go silent on Ukraine’s “N-word.”


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
Bob McDonnell Isn't the Only Politician Taking Bribes Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=7118"><span class="small">Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Sunday, 07 September 2014 07:57

Gibson writes: 'Why is it legal for corporations and the wealthy to buy politicians? And what can we do to correct a system that's become nakedly corrupt?'

Bob McDonnell, the former governor of Virginia. (photo: Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)
Bob McDonnell, the former governor of Virginia. (photo: Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call)


Bob McDonnell Isn't the Only Politician Taking Bribes

By Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News

07 September 14

 

ow can our elected officials represent their constituents when they’re given millions to represent someone else? Why is it legal for corporations and the wealthy to buy politicians? And what can we do to correct a system that’s become nakedly corrupt?

Bob McDonnell, former governor of Virginia, and his wife are now facing years in jail after being convicted of accepting over $177,000 in bribes from a business executive who was provided greater access to government as a result of his gifts. The closeness that the first family had to their sponsor reached the point where Gov. McDonnell would casually text Star Scientific executive Jonnie R. Williams Sr., a dietary supplement magnate, for a $20,000 loan, which Williams happily provided. McDonnell later returned the favor by emailing an aide to talk about "Anatabloc issues" (a product of Williams’ company) minutes after getting an entirely separate $50,000 loan from Williams. But McDonnell is just the most recent example in a long string of cravenly greedy and self-centered politicians.

Wisconsin governor Scott Walker, who is running for his third election in four years, has become a symbol of corruption in the Midwest. In 2011, mining company Gogebic Taconite (GTac) proposed an open-pit mine in Northern Wisconsin’s Penokee Hills that would be four-and-a-half miles long, half a mile wide, and 1,000 feet deep. The bill that would have allowed the mine required an extensive rewrite of Wisconsin’s mining regulations. Indigenous communities like the Anishinaabe Nation, who inhabit the land that would be mined, were intentionally left out of the negotiation process when the bill was making its way through committee hearings, which is a violation of international treaty rights. The state’s mining regulations were finally rewritten in 2013.

New documents have now revealed that Gov. Walker was himself encouraging corporations and large donors to support his recall election by donating to the Wisconsin Club for Growth, an outside group that was run by one of Walker’s campaign advisers. One of those corporate donors was GTac, which donated $700,000 to the Club for Growth. The Club for Growth then distributed those funds to pro-Walker groups. Walker cruised to victory in the recall, and is now actively soliciting more corporate donations for his 2014 re-election, and is likely to try running for president in 2016 if he wins. The process is simple – a company wants a new bill that will increase their profits, and they donate to the guy who signs the bills, who then signs the bill after the check clears.

In another clear example of bribery, Gov. Walker gave Ashley Furniture a $6 million tax break that allowed the Wisconsin-based company to fire half of its in-state workforce. Ashley Furniture’s executives then donated a combined $20,000 to Walker’s re-election campaign. Walker’s “Open For Business” signs at Wisconsin state borders evidently have a hidden meaning – for the right price, businesses can have access to anything in Wisconsin.

Not to be outdone, former House Majority Leader Eric Cantor just secured a vice chairman gig at investment bank Moelis, allowing him to pocket over $3 million. Cantor has never once held any prior position in managing investments and has no experience in the financial sector. However, he was Wall Street’s #1 favored member of the U.S. House of Representatives while he was in office, according to OpenSecrets.org.

In the last election cycle alone, Wall Street donated $1.8 million to Cantor’s campaign. And throughout Cantor’s political career, he received over $8.9 million from the financial sector. Unsurprisingly, Cantor was an outspoken opponent of any new taxes or regulations on big banks. Elizabeth Warren called out Cantor for taking the job, calling it evidence that members of Congress vote based on how it will affect their future career hopes and personal wealth, rather than voting on what’s best for constituents.

But the bribing of politicians isn’t just limited to one party – Chicago mayor Rahm Emanuel, former chief of staff for President Obama, is openly rewarding campaign donors with public money. Rahm’s top campaign contributor in the last campaign cycle was the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, to whom he later gave a $100 million tax break roughly a year later. It was recently discovered that Rahm cut Chicago retirees’ pensions by over $300 million to add to a slush fund meant exclusively for corporate subsidies, which ultimately went to campaign contributors.

Rahm has since dedicated hundreds of millions of dollars in Tax-Increment Financing (TIF) to privately-owned Depaul University for a new football stadium, and to the Marriott hotel chain, who used it for an exclusive new hotel in Chicago’s South Loop. TIF money is normally meant for public schools, yet Rahm Emanuel gave out TIF money elsewhere while shuttering over 50 public schools during his tenure as mayor.

It’s clear that money has corrupted our political process. But this is precisely because we’ve allowed corporations to have the same constitutional rights as actual human beings, and their money to be considered the same thing as free speech. By definition, this means that if you have more money, you have more speech. And if you have no money, you effectively have no political speech. This is why politicians like Bob McDonnell, Scott Walker, Eric Cantor, and Rahm Emanuel do favors for their top donors and ignore the people’s calls for more investments in education, healthcare, and transportation.

This Monday, the U.S. Senate is voting on SJR-19, a proposed constitutional amendment to overturn the Citizens United and McCutcheon Supreme Court decisions that removed limits on campaign spending. However, this amendment is little more than election-year bluster, as SJR-19 leaves corporate constitutional rights and the concept of money as free speech entirely intact. The measure is supported exclusively by Democrats, who are trying their best to appeal to America’s populist nature to keep their jobs this November. Even if SJR-19 were to pass, Americans would soon see a continuation of corporations and big money donors currying the favor of Congress as a result of the gaping loopholes in the resolution, and Democrats would then simply point the finger at Republicans, saying they tried to do something, but the Republicans wouldn’t let them.

Americans are just as tired of finger-pointing and half-measures as they are of bribery disguised as campaign support. If we want to stop the cycle of corruption, we have to amend our Constitution to state explicitly that corporations aren’t people, and that money is not speech. If we can accomplish this, we can start to see actual representative government in America.



Carl Gibson, 27, is co-founder of US Uncut, a nonviolent grassroots movement that mobilized thousands to protest corporate tax dodging and budget cuts in the months leading up to Occupy Wall Street. Carl and other US Uncut activists are featured in the documentary We're Not Broke, which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. Carl is also the author of How to Oust a Congressman, an instructional manual on getting rid of corrupt members of Congress and state legislatures based on his experience in the 2012 elections in New Hampshire. He lives in Sacramento, California.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
<< Start < Prev 2721 2722 2723 2724 2725 2726 2727 2728 2729 2730 Next > End >>

Page 2729 of 3432

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN