Thursday, May 15. 2008
Jonathan Tilove: Obama's Is an Appalachia Problem, Not a Whites Problem.
Actually, Tilove blames/credits it to the Scots-Irish, whom James Webb
lionized in his pre-Senate book, Born Fighting: How the Scots-Irish
Shaped America. But as a person who puts more stock in history and
culture than genes, I'd say Appalachia's isolated economy and culture --
which significantly in America includes long isolation from black people --
have more to do with it. The bottom line is that it was Clinton, rather
than Obama, who captured the Lynndie [Abu Ghraib] England vote. Big
fucking deal.
West Virginia was part of the pre-Civil War anti-slavery south.
I remember long ago reading about a prominent southern anti-slavery
polemicist, Hinton Helper, whose critique of slavery was fundamentally
racist: the institution of slavery brought black people to America,
so opposing slavery was a way to attack black people. Counting Helper
as an abolitionist is a lot like taking Charles Lindbergh as a WWII
pacifist. Appalachia isn't as principled as Helper, and as such it
isn't as racist -- although they didn't give Sen. Robert Byrd any
sweat back when he was in the KKK.
Didn't expect to make a post today. I'm in a motel in Terre Haute,
IN, but they have wireless internet and my new Dell Inpsiron laptop
with Ubuntu Linux pre-installed picked up their network painlessly.
First time I ever had a computer working on wireless, so I'm thrilled.
But don't have time to natter on -- was thinking about my possibly
Scots-Irish paternal descent (which we never discussed, and certainly
didn't bestow me or my father with any fighting genes) and my Ozark
(virtual Appalachia) maternal descent. Maybe later. As it happens,
I'm driving to the Arkansas Ozarks today. Gotta get going.
Wednesday, May 14. 2008
My 16th Jazz Consumer Guide column is up on the Village Voice
website
now -- presumably also on the streets of New York City. I evidently
misread the message about no cuts, as it got hacked up quite a bit,
although mostly within my guidelines. (Exception: only one of three
Harry Allen albums made it through. Also note that Nannette Natal's
name was misspelled Natali.)
Still away from home, getting ready to leave Detroit and head back
towards Kansas. Planning a few stops with relatives along the way, so
I don't know when I'll get back. I'm likely to be offline the next
few days. Don't have time to write much now, or do my usual cyclical
cleanup. Also unable to send out my usual email notice to the many
jazz publicists who help me out. Hope they read about it here.
Josh Marshall: Upcountry.
Subtitle this one "What's the Matter With West Virginia?" Marshall
argues that Clinton has consistently beat Obama by 2-to-1 margins
throughout Appalachia, from New York through Mississippi (not that
the Appalachian mountains actually reach Mississippi). This provides
a caveat against more simplistic explanations that whites, rural
voters, and older voters favor Clinton (although all combine in
Appalachia). West Virginia is an interesting case for the Democrats
precisely because it used to be such a stronghold. It isn't now, and
not just because Bush learned to say "clean coal" with a straight
face. Don't have time to figure out why, but a big part of it is
that Democrats have mostly come to realize that rural poverty isn't
very fertile ground either for votes (there's less of it all the
time, mostly because of population shifts -- certainly not because
folks are escaping poverty) or for contributions (which should be
obvious enough). We'll see proof of that soon enough, as Clinton's
people try to hype her win there, and most likely will get little
or no value out of it.
Tuesday, May 13. 2008
Andrew Leonard: The Peak Oil Culture Wars.
Starts out from Paul Krugman's NY Times column on oil prices, specifically
Krugman's note on how the conservatives are the ones atypically blaming
speculators for the high prices. Then he goes on to make a point that is,
I think, the linchpin to why modern American conservatism fails:
Partisan conservatives pooh-pooh peak oil (and human-caused climate
change) because they think that to concede that these challenges are
real and must be confronted is to acknowledge that greed is not always
good, and that free market capitalism must be restrained, or at least
tinkered with substantially. Peak oil and climate change are fronts in
the culture wars, and to some conservatives, watching the price of oil
rise as the Arctic ice melts, it might feel like being in Germany at
the close of World War II, with the Russians advancing on one front
while U.S.-led forces come from the other. The propositions that cheap
oil is running out and the world is getting hotter -- as a result of
our own activities -- threaten a whole way of life. The very idea that
dirty Gaia-worshipping hippies might be right is absolute
anathema.
Of course, it's more than anathema. The central principle of modern
American conservatism is that we all benefit when the rich get richer.
This could be by trickle down, or it could simply be due to the superior
moral model the rich provide -- and in any case the real trick to the
equation is figuring out just who doesn't get included in that We. But
in order for that logic to work at all, you have to assume that growth
approaches infinity -- after all, the rich may have to get an awful
lot richer before enough trickles down so that their servants become
rich as well. Resource limits have the nasty effect of a positive sum
game into zero sum or worse. In zero sum, one can win only at someone
else's expense: hence rich and poor must inevitably struggle. And when
they struggle, the outcome can easily sum up to less than zero. (This
is a good part of the reason no one wins at war.)
Of the two great issues, oil depletion worries me much more than
global warming. The latter is likely to take its toll indiscriminately,
not least because climate is not something that can be owned. Oil, on
the other hand, is something valuable that can be fought over. One big
problem with conservatives is that they like to fight; moreover, they
have no scruples about using force to deprive others of a resource
(except, of course, when they themselves get mugged by a commoner).
But oil also provides a clearer opportunity to reject conservatism
and its two handmaidens: inequity and war. Or to put it equivalently:
if we choose to reject inequity and war, we will necessarily reject
conservatism.
If I had to bet, I'd bet against it, because I've only rarely seen
lessons learned anyway but the hard way. Still, in a resource-starved,
environmentally-stressed world, the options are hoarding and war on
the one side, sharing on the other. Politically, that boils down to
conservatism and democratic reform.
Monday, May 12. 2008
Still on the road, just stable and connected enough I can file this
brief note. Should be back home by the end of the week, unless more bad
things happen between now and then. Village Voice is again due to publish
Jazz CG this week. Haven't heard otherwise, but also haven't heard any
layout details. I've been pondering its future, given that the Voice's
music editor wants to make it online only. That's probably still worth
doing, although a compromise occurs to me: publish a short precis in
the paper (400-800 words, whatever fits easily in their format) which
then refers to the website for the full column. I haven't proposed that
yet, but most likely will. Thanks to those readers who wrote in with
their comments. I've been hard pressed to respond individually given
the logistics here.
Haven't really been doing jazz prospecting either, but late in the
week I negotiated a compromise with myself and decided to start doing
some exceptionally brief notes with provisional grades just to have
something to show and tell. Didn't get much done. Didn't even get out
of the ECM's at the front of the case. Will try to continue in this
mode as I travel this week, and promise to get to work when I get
back.
Evan Parker/The Transatlantic Art Ensemble: Boustrophedon
(2008, ECM): Large group, like those of Parker's other ECM efforts, in
what sounds a bit like a revival of Globe Unity Orchestra, or maybe Barry
Guy's LJCO -- Guy is present here, part of the European side of the
Transatlantic Art Ensemble. The Americans are led by Roscoe Mitchell,
whose large group efforts are also relevant here. Long and scattered,
often ornery, the sax noise limited to alto and soprano, with clarinet
and flute, trumpet (Corey Wilkes), strings (violin, viola, cello, two
basses). Craig Taborn has interesting moments in piano. Not coherent
enough for a tour de force, but several interesting diversions.
[B+(***)]
Jacob Young: Sideways (2006 [2008], ECM): Norwegian
guitarist -- American father explains the unusual name. Previous album,
Evening Falls, was an elegant HM. This one follows suit, probably
the same quintet, with Mathias Eick on trumpet and Vidar Johansen on
tenor sax/bass clarinet. Seems a little more subdued.
[B+(*)]
Ketil Bjørnstad/Terje Rypdal: Life in Leipzig (2005
[2008], ECM): Norwegian pianist, b. 1952, not sure how many records,
but at least a dozen since 1990, some recordings since 1973; also has
written 20-some books, mostly novels. Guitarist Rypdal is better known,
a major figure at ECM since 1970; trends toward fusion, although he
can also wax lyrical, and has produced a good deal of aural wallpaper.
Duets, reprising several pieces from The Sea, a 1994 album by
a quartet of the same name, a superset. Rypdal's riffs dominate the
sound here in one of his more robust performances. The piano mostly
adds rhythm, a fair trade.
[B+(**)]
Jon Balke: Book of Velocities (2006 [2008], ECM):
Norwegian pianist, has 6 previous albums on ECM and Emarcy with
groups Oslo 13, Magnetic North Orchestra, and Batagraf. This one
is solo piano, 19 pieces organized into 3 Chapters and an Epilogue.
Played this several times and haven't connected with it yet. Some
parts are unusual sonically, and the spacing and ordering can be
interesting given enough attention.
[B]
Marilyn Mazur/Jan Garbarek: Elixir (2005 [2008],
ECM): Finished cover shows Mazur's name above title in white, with
Garbarek's below white title in black -- a little more pecking order
than my credit suggests. I'm not familiar with Mazur's previous work.
I was under the impression that she's a vocalist, but there are no
vocals here, and sources agree that she is primarily a percussionist,
with other credits including vocalist, pianist, and dancer. She plays
a wide range of percussion instruments -- the list starts with marimba
and ends with various metal utensils. Her pieces are varied miniatures,
some solo, most accompanied by Garbarek's tenor sax, soprano sax, or
flute -- spare, elegant, often flat out gorgeous. The one record I've
played in the last two weeks Laura complimented then asked me who it
was. Not the first time that's happened with Garbarek. In fact, it's
happened so often I had to laugh before telling her.
[A-]
Marilyn Crispell: Vignettes (2007 [2008], ECM):
One of the major jazz pianists of our times, working mostly on the
avant-garde, including a long run with Anthony Braxton's Quartet
and numerous independent albums on obscure labels until ECM urged
her to slow down and develop a quieter, more meditative side. I
found her last ECM album, The Storyteller, nothing short
of enchanting. This one is harder to gauge, for the obvious reason
that it's solo, and as such requires too much attention span. No
swing or boogie, and little noise; deliberately fragmentary, with
long, chamberish lines, artfully plotted.
[B+(**)]
Marcin Wasilewski Trio: January (2007 [2008],
ECM): Piano trio. Group drew first notice as three-fourths of
Tomasz Stanko's "young Polish quartet." Beyond three albums with
Stanko, and a couple with Manu Katché, this is the trio's second
album on their own. Top line of the album also names bassist
Slawomir Kurkiewicz and drummer Michal Miskiewicz. First song
is followed by a stretch of five covers: Gary Peacock, Ennio
Morricone, Prince, Stanko, Carla Bley. The covers sustain the
melodicism, but what really carries the album is its measured
logic and attention to detail.
[B+(***)]
Eri Yamamoto: Duologue (2008, AUM Fidelity):
Pianist, from Japan, in NY since 1995, notably working with superbassist
William Parker. Has a previous fine piano trio on AUM Fidelity, and
evidently has a batch of three more 2007 albums on Jane Street that
I haven't heard (haven't heard of the label either). Don't have info
on this, but I gather these are duets, matching her piano with drums
(Federico Ughi or Hamid Drake), bass (Parker), or sax (Daniel Carter).
Each of the pieces are interesting, and they don't seem to scatter
excessively, as this format is wont to do. Drake and Parker are
especially worth focusing on.
[B+(***)] [June 24]
No final grades/notes this week on records put back for further
listening the first time around.
PS: Did finally hear back from the Voice. Looks like Jazz CG
is a go this week. Even better, I hear they somehow managed to squeeze
it all in.
Sunday, May 11. 2008
WarInContext: News & Views Roundup: May 11.
Today's news seems milder than yesterday's: Hizbollah is backing out of
their West Beirut seizures cutting the government some slack; something
of a truce in Sadr City; an evolving relationship between US Jews and
Israel. Someone's still taunting the liberal interventionists to save
Burma the hard way. Frank Rich sees a clear road to victory for Obama,
and Bill McKibben offers civilization one more chance.
The sudden shifts of the Siniora and Maliki governments, one day
lurching aggression against militias that are more independent than
oppositional (to said governments, but more clearly anathema to the
US), the next day backing into wary truces, just goes to show how
spasmodically the US is pulling their strings. (Helena Cobban
reports
that the US response to the intra-Iraqi ceasefire was to bomb Sadr
City.) The Bush regime may be the last holdout on earth in their
steadfast belief that force settles things. (Even Israel, which
happily indulges, doesn't seem to harbor any faith about the
results -- as much as anything else they do it to keep the ball
moving.)
Peter S. Goodman: The Dollar: Shrinkable but (So Far) Unsinkable.
More of the usual about the shrinking dollar and its increasing
detachment from the norms of financial integrity.
Come what may -- a financial crisis here, a military misadventure
there -- Americans could count on money sloshing up thick on their
shores. Virtually limitless demand for American government bonds has
supported the dollar's value, and kept domestic interest rates
down. Americans have been emboldened to spend in blissful disregard of
their debts, secure that foreigners would always supply finance. And
that devil-may-care spending has in turn fueled economic growth around
the world.
Which is one of several reasons the world continues to indulge us.
Another is that the US government (especially but not exclusively the
Bush regime) serves generously as a flagship for the capitalist class
worldwide, a class which retains substantial influence in many states,
enough so they prefer not to embarrass their benefactor. Still, the
rationalization can get out of hand:
But many economists say that chatter about the demise of the dollar
is overblown. The United States, despite its problems, has been a
remarkably solid place to put money, making it singularly able to
attract savings, they point out. The dollar is likely to continue to
shed value, and the American economy will grow far slower than India's
and China's, they acknowledge. Yet the dollar, they argue, remains one
of the few entities that seem to have fundamental staying power in an
age of risk and obsolescence. The size of the United States military
alone reinforces confidence that America will endure to honor its
debts.
How do you make sense of the last line? The military is the largest
single drain on the US economy. It has some Keynesian value in pumping
money through the system, creating jobs and cash flow, but it doesn't
actually produce anything of note, and it's largely financed on credit,
which immediately weakens the dollar. One thing it does generate is a
lot of risk -- unexpected costs, liabilities, and ill will. No other
nation at present wastes so much resource. Few throughout history have
come close, and decay and/or destruction have followed those that have.
Why this should vouchsafe US credit is hard to imagine.
Saturday, May 10. 2008
WarInContext: News & Views Roundup: May 10.
This whole cluster of article links makes me exceptionally nervous.
One thing the Bush administration has worked hard at has been to draw
its nominal opponents into open armed conflict. Hamas, for instance,
had established a longstanding unilateral truce with Israel, entering
the legitimate political process in the Palestinian territories, but
over a year of forced isolation and armed attacks, both by Israel and
by the US-backed PLO, eventually succeeded in forcing Hamas's hand --
although Hamas's consequent seizure of Gaza may not have been exactly
what Bush (or more specifically, Elliott Abrams) intended. The same
thing has happened with Hizbollah in Lebanon, again backfiring with
the seizure of West Beirut. In Iraq the US continues to prod the Sadr
militia toward open rebellion, as happened in Basra and Kut, and may
well happen in Baghdad (Sadr City). Hizbollah and the Sadrists carry
the extra burden of association with Iran, so it is worrisome as ever
that this is happening at the same time as rumors are floating that
the US will attack "training camps" in Iran. The bit about Negroponte
tightening the US grip in Pakistan shows the same aggressiveness and
presumption. The piece on "The loathsome smearing of Israel's critics"
is just icing on the cake. (The only piece I'm inclined to dismiss out
of hand is the one about invading Burma.)
The Rami Khouri piece is especially notable. You should recall that
Egypt had a recent round of food riots, exposing the frail legitimacy
of a regime that we often take for granted. Maybe the petro-emirates
of the Persian Gulf are making out like bandits given record petroleum
prices, but much of the Middle East is very fragile, and US belligerence
only stresses them worse.
Not included in this list is a piece I read in the New York Times
which suggested that Olmert should invade Gaza to unite the Israelis
and distract from his pending indictments. One thing this all goes to
show is that even in its waning, lame duck months, the Bush regime is
very dangerous.
Tony Karon: Israel is 60, Zionism is Dead, What Now?.
Long piece, essential reading. Karon argues that the Zionist rationale
behind Israel has collapsed with the waning of anti-semitism worldwide,
the choice of two-thirds of the world's Jews not to live in Israel,
including some 750,000 Israelis who have (re)joined the diaspora.
Israel may be an intractable historical fact, but the Zionist
ideology that spurred its creation and shaped its identity and sense
of national purpose has collapsed -- not under pressure from without,
but having rotted from within. It is Jews, not Jihadists, that have
consigned Zionism to the dustbin of history.
Make sure you read the long quote from Rami Khouri at the end.
Thursday, May 8. 2008
I think this quote comes from Time, but I found it quoted
at Talking Points Memo, referring to Mark Penn's inability to grasp
the basic rules of Democratic Party primaries:
And yet the strategy remained the same, with the [Clinton] campaign
making its bet on big-state victories. Even now, it can seem as if
they don't get it. Both Bill and Hillary have noted plaintively that
if Democrats had the same winner-take-all rules as Republicans, she'd
be the nominee.
Guess she should have run as a Republican.
By the way, Matt Taibbi's
latest
piece on Clinton is pretty generous to her, although the Victor
Juhasz illustration makes its point savagely. For whatever it's worth,
I've been bashing elites and celebrating low-brow culture since I was
in my mid-teens. But I find it disturbing when competency and common
sense pragmatism get bundled up as elite traits -- not least because
real elites these days have so little of either.
Tuesday, May 6. 2008
Andrew Leonard: Hillary Clinton throws economists off the bus.
There's something perversely satisfying when any politician deigns to
attack the economics profession, even when said politician is dead
wrong. After all, it's not as if economists never screw up. But this
does follow an already disturbing trend: even when Clinton manages to
come up with a relatively sound policy on an issue, she backs it up
with bad instincts and misunderstandings, leaving us with no confidence
that she'll follow through or avoid numerous pitfalls. Leonard walks
through the "gas tax holiday" issue carefully and tenaciously. Bottom
line is that gas prices and especially gas taxes are already too low,
even if they have been pumped up through speculation; that speculation
is a distinct problem from the oil market and should be addressed on
its own terms, in the more general case; and that even with reasonable
fixes bigger problems are in store.
Perhaps you won't win a primary battle in Indiana by telling voters
that "during my presidency, you can expect to pay more for
gasoline than you do now, because that is the only way we can
truly break free from our addiction to oil," just as you weren't going
to win a primary battle in Ohio by lecturing voters on the benefits of
free trade. But by blaming "elite opinion" for not being on the side
of ordinary Americans, Clinton is dismissing everyone who says the
current status quo can't be sustained, that sacrifices will have to be
made, and that the era of cheap oil is over.
One thing that should be added here is that even Obama's commitment
to "truth" comes up short here.
Josh Marshall: Clinton to put gravity under scrutiny.
Report here is that Clinton intends to break up OPEC, using some
combination of antitrust laws and the WTO. While I'd be as happy
to see her turn into a new Ida Tarbell as I would to see her lead
a revival of Jeanette Rankin's pacifism, her talk still reeks of
opportunism. Marshall writes:
Hillary is certainly not the first candidate to bash the oil
producing states or oil companies around election time. And the polls
seem to show it's working for her. But I'm concerned about the
widening gap between reality and her campaign trail statements. First
with the pledge to obliterate Iran if they attack Israel, then the
rebellion against economists and now this.
Andrew Leonard: Now, Paul Krugman throws economists off the bus.
Thought I'd follow up Leonard's post yesterday with Paul Krugman's
reaction, but there wasn't one yesterday, and Leonard sums up today's
response nicely. Krugman doesn't support the gas tax holiday scam,
but he also refuses to budge an inch toward Obama because of Clinton's
gaffe. Krugman seems to favor Clinton over Obama because he'd rather
see a Democrat push hard on populist themes than soft peddle them,
even if the Democrat has no credibility and a busload of interests
that promise to derail any possible change. For one thing, a clear
rhetorical stance would make it easier to push legislation through in
the wake of a Democratic landslide, as happened in the first 100 days
of FDR and LBJ. On the other hand, I think the next administration is
going to have its hands full well past 100 days, and will be judged
more on how they react to new crises than what their opening play is.
Alex Koppelman: Quote of the Day.
Speaking of Clinton, she's just picked up this ringing endorsement
from Bill Kristol:
She's running a right-wing campaign. She's running the classic
Republican race against her opponent, running on toughness and
use-of-force issues, the campaign that the elder George Bush ran
against Michael Dukakis, that the younger George Bush waged in 2000
and then again against John Kerry, and that Ronald Reagan -- "The Bear
in the Forest" -- ran against Jimmy Carter and Walter F. Mondale. And
she's doing it with much the same
symbols. [ . . . ] She is hated on all the right
fronts. The snots and the snark-mongers now all despise her, along
with the trendies, the glitzies; the food, drama, and lifestyle
critics, the beautiful people (and those who would join them), the
Style sections of all the big papers; the slick magazines; the
above-it-all pundits, who have looked down for years on the
Republicans and on the poor fools who elect them, and now sneer even
harder at her.
So add Kristol to her growing list of admirers on the far right,
starting with Richard Mellon Scaife and Bill O'Reilly. The basic
problem with this demonology is that Kristol remains a moron. He
also wrote:
It is a truism that liberals think people are formed by exterior
forces around them and are helpless before them, while conservatives
think individuals make their own destiny. Liberals love victims and
want them to stay helpless, so they can help them, with government
programs; while conservatives love those who refuse to be victims, and
get up off the canvas and fight.
Just look at Kristol, who came from nowhere to make himself the
leading intellect of the neocon right? Well, not exactly nowhere --
his father got there first, paved the way, and handed it to him on
a silver platter. I don't know about liberals, but leftists recognize
that external forces molded them -- it's almost a commonplace that
books by leftists start with a personal introduction on how one came
to view the world. Conservatives take the opposite tack, assuming
they represent God given truth even when all they ever try to do is
to represent the inherited interests of their class.
But their fawning recognition of Clinton does seem to be heartfelt.
They recognize that her willingness to say and do anything to grasp
hold of power is a worldview, not to mention conceit, that they share.
Monday, May 5. 2008
Spent the whole week in the Detroit metro area, away from the
comforts of home. Able to function somewhat with a new notebook
computer, but it's been hard to focus, especially on music --
brought three travel cases of CDs with me, but don't have the
reference notes, and have just been playing them for impressions,
not writing as I go. So no jazz prospecting this week. Probably
none next week either, as this week looks like more of the same.
No Jazz Consumer Guide either. Just heard from music editor
Rob Harvilla that the space crunch is getting even worse, so he's
postponed my full page piece until next week, May 14 issue. This
is pretty much out of my hands: when I promised the postponed
piece would run this week I was just repeating what I had been
told at the time. I doubt that it's Harvilla's fault either --
maybe you could say that he's the one making priority choices
between bad options, but by its very nature Jazz CG is both big
(making it awkward to fit) and untimely (few of the records are
very recent releases and none have much in the way of buzz).
Harvilla raised another question which I would like to throw
out for comment, particularly from publicists who have some feel
for the importance of Jazz CG remaining in the Voice. Harvilla
suggested running Jazz CG online-only, offering to pay me the
same as I've been getting for the print column. The print paper
has virtually no visibility outside of NYC, so I imagine that
most people only see the online version. (I often never see the
print version myself.) One advantage of going strictly online
might be that it could come out more frequently, with a shorter
lead time, and possibly longer (e.g., more Honorable Mentions).
On the other hand, I wonder how long they'd pay me print rates.
So I'm not sure what to say. Don't get much feedback from these
posts, but I would appreciate comments on this. Thanks.
Sunday, May 4. 2008
Didn't manage to see the New York Times today. No big loss for me,
but I'm reminded that I've been packing parts of the April 20 issue,
figuring I'd quote some and comment on others. The big article two
weeks ago was "Behind Analysts, Pentagon's Hidden Hand: Courting
Ex-Officers Tied to Military Contractors." I didn't actually read
the piece. I realized five years ago that the networks' parade of
generals were team players, retired from active service but grateful
recipients of lavish pensions and lucrative second careers in the
Defense racket, and that their "inside sources" were mere propaganda
ministries. Moreover, I was hardly alone in noticing this. Still,
when Laura started reading me quotes, I asked her to mark a few for
a blog post. Here goes.
At the Pentagon, members of Ms. Clarke's staff marveled at the way
the analysts seamlessly incorporated material from talking points and
briefings as if it was their own.
"You could see that they were messaging," Mr. Krueger said. "You
could see they were taking verbatim what the secretary was saying or
what the technical specialists were saying. And they were saying it
over and over and over." Some days, he added, "We were able to click
on every single station and every one of our folks were up there
delivering our message. You'd look at them and say, 'This is
working.'"
[ . . . ]
One trip participant, General Nash of ABC, said some briefings were
so clearly "artificial" that he joked to another group member that they
were on "the George Romney memorial trip to Iraq," a reference to
Mr. Romney's infamous claim that American officials had "brainwashed"
him into supporting the Vietnam War during a tour there in 1965, while
he was governor of Michigan.
[ . . . ]
Back in Washington, Pentagon officials kept a nervous eye on how
the trip translated on the airwaves. Uncomfortable facts had bubbled
up during the trip. One briefer, for example, mentioned that the Army
was resorting to packing inadequately armored Humvees with sandbags
and Kevlar blankets. Descriptions of the Iraqi security forces were
withering. "They can't shoot, but then again, they don't," one officer
told them, according to one participant's notes.
"I saw immediately in 2003 that things were going south," General
Vallely, one of the Fox analysts on the trip, recalled in an interview
with The Times.
The Pentagon, though, need not have worried.
"You can't believe the progress," General Vallely told Alan Colmes of
Fox News upon his return. He predicted the insurgency would be "down to
a few numbers" within months.
"We could not be more excited, more pleased," Mr. Cowan told Greta
Van Susteren of Fox News. There was barely a word about armor
shortages or corrupt Iraqi security forces.
[ . . . ]
Inside the Pentagon and at the White House, the trip was viewed as
a masterpiece in the management of perceptions, not least because it
gave fuel to complaints that "mainstream" journalists were ignoring
the good news in Iraq.
[ . . . ]
They also understood the financial relationship between the
networks and their analysts. Many analysts were being paid by the
"hit," the number of times they appeared on TV. The more an analyst
could boast of fresh inside information from high-level Pentagon
"sources," the more hits he could expect. The more hits, the greater
his potential influence in the military marketplace, where several
analysts prominently advertised their network roles.
"They have taken lobbying and the search for contracts to a far
higher level," Mr. Krueger said. "This has been highly honed."
Mr. Di Rita, though, said it never occurred to him that analysts
might use their access to curry favor. Nor, he said, did the Pentagon
try to exploit this dynamic. "That's not something that ever crossed
my mind," he said. In any event, he argued, the analysts and the
networks were the ones responsible for any ethical complications. "We
assume they know where the lines are," he said.
[ . . . ]
Like several other analysts, Mr. Eads said he had at times held his
tongue on television for fear that "some four-star could call up and
say, 'Kill that contract.'" For example, he believed Pentagon
officials misled the analysts about the progress of Iraq's security
forces. "I know a snow job when I see one," he said. He did not share
this on TV.
[ . . . ]
Mr. Bevelacqua, then a Fox analyst, was among those invited to a
briefing in early 2003 about Iraq's purported stockpiles of illicit
weapons. He recalled asking the briefer whether the United States had
"smoking gun" proof.
"We don't have any hard evidence," Mr. Bevelacqua recalled the
briefer replying. He said he and other analysts were alarmed by this
concession. "We are looking at ourselves saying, 'What are we
doing?'"
[ . . . ]
Mr. Maginnis said he concluded that the analysts were being
"manipulated" to convey a false sense of certainty about the evidence
of the weapons. Yet he and Mr. Bevelacqua and the other analysts who
attended the briefing did not share any misgivings with the American
public.
[ . . . ]
Some e-email messages between the Pentagon and the analysts reveal
an implicit trade of privileged access for favorable coverage. Robert
H. Scales Jr., a retired Army general and analyst for Fox News and
National Public Radio whose consulting company advises several
military firms on weapons and tactics used in Iraq, wanted the
Pentagon to approve high-level briefings for him inside Iraq in
2006.
"Recall the stuff I did after my last visit," he wrote. "I will do
the same this time."
[ . . . ]
In interviews, several analysts reacted with dismay when told they
were described as reliable "surrogates" in Pentagon documents.
[ . . . ]
On Aug. 3, 2005, 14 marines died in Iraq. That day, Mr. Cowan, who
said he had grown increasingly uncomfortable with the "twisted version
of reality" being pushed on analysts in briefings, called the Pentagon
to give "a heads-up" that some of his comments on Fox "may not all be
friendly." Pentagon records show, Mr. Rumsfeld's senior aides quickly
arranged a private briefing for him, yet when he told Bill O'Reilly
that the United States was "not on a good glide path right now" in
Iraq, the repercussions were swift.
Mr. Cowan said he was "precipitously fired from the analysts group"
for this appearance. The Pentagon, he wrote in an e-mail message,
"simply didn't like the fact that I wasn't carrying their water." The
next day James T. Conway, then director of operations for the Joint
Chiefs, presided over another conference call with analysts. He urged
them, a transcript shows, not to let the marines' deaths further erode
support for the war.
"The strategic target remains our population," General Conway
said. "We can lose people day in and day out, but they're never going
to beat our military. What they can and will do if they can is strip
away our support. And you guys can help us not let that happen."
[ . . . ]
On Friday, April 14, with what came to be called the "Generals'
Revolt" dominating headlines, Mr. Rumsfeld instructed aides to summon
military analysts to a meeting with him early the next week, records
show. [ . . . ]
On Tuesday, April 18, some 17 analysts assembled at the Pentagon
with Mr. Rumsfeld and General Pace, then the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs.
A transcript of that session, never before disclosed, shows a
shared determination to marginalize war critics and revive public
support for the war.
"I'm an old intel guy," said one analyst. (The transcript omits
speakers' names.) "And I can sum all of this up, unfortunately, with
one word. That is Psyops. Now most people may hear that and they
think, 'Oh my God, they're trying to brainwash.'"
"What are you, some kind of a nut?" Mr. Rumsfeld cut in, drawing
laughter. "You don't believe in the Constitution?"
There was little discussion about the actual criticism pouring
forth from Mr. Rumsfeld's former generals. Analysts argued that
opposition to the war was rooted in perceptions fed by the news media,
not reality. The administration's overall war strategy, they counseled,
was "brilliant" and "very successful."
"Frankly," one participant said, "from a military point of view,
the penalty, 2,400 brave Americans whom we lost, 3,000 in an hour and
15 minutes, is relative."
An analyst said at another point: "This is a wider war. And whether
we have democracy in Iraq or not, it doesn't mean a tinker's damn if
we end up with the result we want, which is a regime over there that's
not a threat to us."
[ . . . ]
Much of the session was devoted to ways that Mr. Rumsfeld could
reverse the "political tide." One analyst urged Mr. Rumsfeld to "just
crush these people," and assured him that "most of the gentlemen at
the table" would enthusiastically support him if he did.
"You are the leader," the analyst told Mr. Rumsfeld. "You are our
guy."
At another point, an analyst made a suggestion: "In one of your
speeches you ought to say, 'Everybody stop for a minute and imagine an
Iraq ruled by Zarqawi,' And then you just go down the list and say,
'All right, we've got oil money, sovereignty, access to the geographic
center of gravity of the Middle East, blah, blah, blah.' If you can
just paint a mental picture for Joe America to say, 'Oh my God, I
can't imagine a world like that."
[ . . . ]
The meeting ended and Mr. Rumsfeld, appearing pleased and relaxed,
took the entire group into a small study and showed off treasured
keepsakes from his life, several analysts
recalled. [ . . . ]
Days later, Mr. Rumsfeld wrote a memorandum distilling their
collective guidance into bullet points. Two were underlined.
"Focus on the Global War on Terror -- not simply Iraq. The wider
war -- the long war."
"Link Iraq to Iran. Iran is the concern. If we fail in Iraq or
Afghanistan, it will help Iran."
But if Mr. Rumsfeld found the session instructive, at least one
participant, General Nash, the ABC analyst, was repulsed.
"I walked away from that session having total disrespect for my
fellow commentators, with perhaps one or two exceptions," he said.
[ . . . ]
Some networks publish biographies on their Web sites that describe
their analysts' military backgrounds and, in some cases, give at least
limited information about their business ties. But many analysts also
said the networks asked few questions about their outside business
interests, the nature of their work or the potential for that work to
create conflicts of interest. "None of that ever happened," said
Mr. Allard, an NBC analyst until 2006.
"The worst conflict of interest was no interest."
Plenty of things to note here, but I was especially struck by the
scapegoating of Iran -- a card the military, Bush, and everyone in
between have replayed whenever the need for a scapegoat arose, which
is to say repeatedly.
Same issue has a Jad Mouawad piece on oil called "The Big Thirst."
A couple of quotes here show big problems that could be recognized
with only a tiny bit of intelligence.
"This is the market signaling there is a problem," said Jan Stuart,
global oil economist at UBS, "that there is a growing difficulty to
meet demand with new supplies."
Today's tensions are only likely to get worse in coming
years. Consider a few numbers: The planet's population is expected to
grow by 50 percent to nine billion by sometime in the middle of the
century. The number of cars and trucks is projected to double in 30
years -- to more than two billion -- as developing nations rapidly
modernize. And twice as many passenger jetliners, more than 36,000,
will in all likelihood be crisscrossing the skies in 20 years.
All of that will require a lot more oil -- enough that global oil
consumption will jump by some 35 percent by the year 2030, according
to the International Energy Agency, a leading global energy forecaster
for the United Statews and other developed nations. For producers it
will mean somehow finding and pumping an additional 11 billion barrels
of oil every year.
And that's only 22 years away, a heartbeat for the petroleum
industry, where the pace of finding and tapping new supplies is
measured in decades. [ . . . ]
The problem is that no one can say for sure where all this oil is
going to come from.
Let alone draw the obvious inference, which is that if the oil
isn't forthcoming, the demand for it -- all those extra people, cars,
and development -- is also thrown into question.
But the quote that first tripped my alarm was further down:
A small band of skeptics view today's record prices as evidence
that oil supplies have peaked -- that half the globe's oil supply has
already been used up. But most experts believe that there are still
enough oil reserves, both discovered and undiscovered, to last at least
through the middle of the century.
The problem is that in many corners of the world, geopolitics, more
than geology, has removed much of those reserves from the reach of
independent oil companies.
"There are plenty of resources in the globe," Rex Tillerson, the
chairman of Exxon, recently told an investor conference. The
difficulty, he said, was "just continuing to have access to all of the
opportunities."
Over the past century, the world burned through a trillion barrels
of oil. Another 1.2 trillion barrels of known conventional oil
reserves wait to be tapped, according to BP, one of the world's
biggest oil companies. It sounds like a lot. But given the current
rate of growth in demand, a trillion of those barrels will be used up
in less than 30 years.
First thing here is that even the concessions -- from BP at least,
if not necessarily from diehard Exxon -- sound like rousing confirmation
of the Peak Oil model. One trillion down, 1.2 trillion to go, that's
pretty close to half pumped, especially given that it gets progressively
harder -- more expensive, most critically in terms of energy -- to get
at the last barrels in every oil field. Nor does it really matter if
the time frame for getting down to this last 10% of unpumped oil is 30,
40, or 60 years. Within the natural lifetimes of people already born
our world is going to change substantially.
In fairness, Mouawad adds the following escape clause:
What then? Many analysts estimate another trillion barrels of
yet-to-be-found oil remains, but in remote places like the Arctic
Ocean where it will be expensive to extract, or in countries that
might restrict access.
Note that the analysts have dropped from "most" to "many," and
the costs are hopping. There have been some deep sea finds recently,
but they are paltry compared to the discoveries that were common in
the 1960s-1970s, and they are expensive and risky. The political
cases are hardly any cheaper, especially if Bush's efforts to open
up Iraq to western oil exploration are any indication.
What about the United States? The country has shown little
willingness to address its energy needs in a rational way. James
Schlesinger, the nation' first energy secretary in the 1970s, once said
the United States was capable of only two approaches to its energy
policy: "complacency or crsis."
The United States is the only major industrialized nation to see its
oil consumption surge since the oil shocks of the 1970s and
1980s. This can partly be explained by the fact that the United
States has some of the lowest gasoline prices in the world, the least
fuel-efficient cars on the roads, the lowest energy taxes, and the
longest daily commutes of any industrialized nation. The result: about
a quarter of the world's oil goes to the United States every day, and
of that, more than half goes to its cars and trucks.
[ . . . ]
"The country has been living beyond its means," said Vaclav Smil, a
prominent energy expert at the University of Manitoba. "The situation
is dire. We need to do relative sacrifices. But people don't realize
how dire the situation is."
Of course they don't. Americans survived the scares of 1973 and 1979
and came out thinking they're immune. They bought into Reagan's "morning
in America" flattery, and now they think it can never be otherwise. This
is a nation built on cheap land and cheap oil, so happy go lucky even
WWII was just a party. We're so conceited we still refer to ourselves
as the world's sole superpower -- a hyperpower even. How can such a run
of dumb luck ever run out?
Then, same issue, there's an op-ed by Clinton economist Martin Neil
Baily (currently at Brookings) called "Don't Blame the War for the
Economy." Several people have said this recently, including Dean Baker,
who argues that the numbers from the subprime mortgage crisis simply
swamp out the nominal Iraq war expenses. That's true as far as it goes,
but only if you assume there are no hidden connections. One of those
connections is George W. Bush, whose 2004 election depended on putting
up some plausible indication of economic growth to counter his fiasco
in Iraq -- itself intimately connected to Bush's quest for power, and
failed by the same ideological blinders and reckless disregard that
drove the housing bubble through the subprime jungle.
Baily, on the other hand, doesn't even understand that the critical
economic problem now is financial, not the relatively simple (albeit
intractable) problem of oil prices. He writes:
I am no fan of the war in Iraq, but it simply has not been a major
contributor to the financial crisis and the impending recession. The
high price of oil is largely the result of strong demand, notably from
China and India, pressing against a limited supply. The global oil
supply is growing more slowly than it could because of politics and
policies in many places -- Russia, Mexico, Nigeria and Venezuela as
well as the Middle East. [ . . . ] Absent the war,
Iraqi oil production under Saddam Hussein might have been somewhat
higher, but not by enough to affect the American economy. Iraqi oil
production has been very volatile and has experienced a downward trend
since the late 1970s, despite its vast potential.
Get that? High oil prices are the result of politics, but not of
American politics, even though the strapped suppliers have complex
and mostly unsavory experience with US policies, and the voracious
consumers are precisely the developing nations with the poorest
record of following the dictates of the Washington Consensus on
how developing nations should be governed -- nations which also
benefit from US offshoring, and which in turn prop up US deficits.
Before you let war off the hook for the economy, take a good look
at how America's penchant for war and empire affects everything.
Here's another example of Baily's confusion:
Is government borrowing to blame? Chronic budget deficits are
harmful because they increase interest rates, crowd out domestic
investment, and increase the trade deficit. So, in principle, budget
deficits should actually have curbed the housing boom, not fueled
it.
In practice, budget deficits did not result in high interest rates
because of the huge flows of foreign capital into the American
economy. The lack of discipline in the federal budget in recent years
is deplorable and we will pay for that,especially as we face the costs
of an aging population. The failure to pay for the war is part of this
policy mistake, but only a part and not a big cause of today's
problems.
Economics is a science? Sounds like we're being scammed by the world,
willingly so. Mostly because it makes Bush look less worse than he's
actually been -- a delusion we'll pay dearly for.
One good op-ed for a change, Alexandra Fuller on "Recovering From
Wyoming's Energy Bender":
For example, oil and gas companies are exempt from provisions of
the Clean Water Act that require construction activities to reduce
polluted runoff as well as from provisions of the Safe Drinking Water
Act that regulate underground injection of chemicals. The industry is
also generously permitted to drill on critical wildlife winter range
(close to 90 percent of all their requests to drill on winter range
have been granted). Oil rigs are drilling for natural gas on the banks
of the New Fork River (the headwaters of the Colorado) and in the
foothills of the Wyoming Range. Well sites in many parts of the
southern Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem are so closely spaced that,
with roads, gas pipelines and compressor stations, the development is
continuous.
Saturday, May 3. 2008
Not clear whether Steve Fraser's TomDispatch essay
The
Great Silence is an excerpt from his new Wall Street book
or an advance from a future book on "The Two Gilded Ages." But it's
worth quoting at some length. The two gilded ages theme also has a
prominent place in Paul Krugman's The Conscience of a Liberal.
The most obvious connection is the similar degree of economic inequity,
especially in contrast to the middle class-oriented period coming out
of the New Deal.
Here's a set of quotes, highlights from the essay:
Reagan's America was gilded by design. In 1981, when the New Rich
and the New Right paraded in their sumptuous threads in Washington to
celebrate at the new president's inaugural ball, it was called a
"bacchanalia of the haves." Diana Vreeland, style guru (as well as
Nancy Reagan confidante), was stylishly blunt: "Everything is power
and money and how to use them both . . . We mustn't be
afraid of snobbism and luxury."
That's when the division of wealth and income began polarizing so
that, by every measure, the country has now exceeded the extremes of
inequality achieved during the first Gilded Age; nor are our elites
any more embarrassed by their Mammon-worship than were members of the
"leisure class" excoriated a century ago by that take-no-prisoners
social critic of American capitalism Thorstein Veblen.
Back then, it was about masquerading as European nobility at lavish
balls in elegant hotels like New York's Waldorf-Astoria, locked down
to forestall any unpleasantness from the street (where ordinary folk
were in a surly mood trying to survive the savage depression of the
1890s). Today's "leisure class" is holed up in gated communities or
houseoleums as gargantuan as the imported castles of their Gilded Age
forerunners, ready to fly off -- should the natives grow restless --
to private islands aboard their private jets.
The Free Market as Melodrama
As in those days, there is today no end to ideological
justifications for an inequality so pervasive that no one can really
ignore it entirely. In 1890, reformer Jacob Riis published his book
How the Other Half Lives. Some were moved by his vivid descriptions of
destitution. In the late nineteenth century, however, the preferred
way of dismissing that discomfiting reality was to put the blame on a
culture of dependency supposedly prevalent among "the lower orders,"
particularly, of course, among those of certain complexions and ethnic
origins; and the logical way to cure that dependency, so the claim
went, was to eliminate publicly funded "outdoor relief."
How reminiscent of the "welfare to work" policies cooked up by the
Clinton administration, an exchange of one form of dependency --
welfare -- for another -- low-wage labor. Poverty, once turned into
the cultural and moral problem of the impoverished, exculpated Gilded
Age economics in both the nineteenth and twenty-first centuries (and
proved profitable besides).
Missing Utopias and Dystopias
What's left of mainstream populism exists on life-support in some
attic of the Democratic Party. Even the language of our second Gilded
Age is hollowed out. In a society saturated in Christian sanctimony,
would anyone today describe "mankind crucified on a cross of gold" as
William Jennings Bryan once did, or let loose against "Mammon
worship," condemn aristocratic "parasites," or excommunicate "vampire
speculators" and the "devilfish" of Wall Street? If nineteenth century
evangelical preachers once pronounced anathema on capitalist greed,
twenty-first century televangelists deify it. Tempers have cooled,
leaving God, like many Americans, with only part-time employment.
The Great Silence
Perhaps the answer is simple and basic: The first Gilded Age rested
on industrialization; the second on de-industrialization. In our time,
a new system of dis-accumulation looted American industry, liquidating
its assets to reward speculation in "fictitious capital." After all,
the rate of investment in new plant, technology, and research and
development all declined during the 1980s. For a quarter-century, the
fastest growing part of the economy has been the finance, insurance,
and real estate (FIRE) sector.
De-industrialization has set off an avalanche whose impact is still
being felt in the economy, in the country's political culture, and in
everyday life. It laid the industrial working class and the labor
movement low, killing it twice over. This, more than anything else,
may account for the great silence of the second Gilded Age, when
measured, at least, against the raucous noise of the first. Labor was
mortally wounded by direct assault, beginning with President Reagan's
decision in 1981 to fire all the striking air traffic controllers. His
draconian act licensed American business to launch its own all-out
attack on the right to organize, which continues to this day.
[ . . . ]
Dis-accumulating capitalism also undermined the political gravitas
of poverty. In the first Gilded Age, poverty was a function of
exploitation; in the second, of exclusion or marginalization. When we
think about poverty, what comes to mind is welfare and race. The first
gilded age visualized instead coal miners, child labor, tenement
workshops, and the shantytowns that clustered around the steel mills
of Aliquippa and Homestead.
Poverty arising out of exploitation ignited widespread moral
revulsion and a robust political assault on the power of the
exploiters. The perpetrators of the poverty of exclusion of our own
time have been trickier to identify. In his 1962 book The Other
America, Michael Harrington noted the invisibility of
poverty. That was half a century ago and misery still lives in the
shadows. Helped along by an ingrained racism, poverty in the second
Gilded Age was politically neutered . . . or worse.
The Myth of Democratic Capitalism
Our corporate elite are much more adept than their Gilded Age
predecessors were at playing the democracy game. The old "leisure
class" was distinctly averse to politics. If they needed a tariff or
tax break, they called up their kept Senator. When mortally challenged
by the Populists and William Jennings Bryan in 1896, they did get
involved; but, by and large, they didn't muck about in mass party
politics which they saw as too full of uncontrollable ethnic machines,
angry farmers, and the like. They relied instead on the Federal
judiciary, business-friendly Presidents, constitutional lawyers, and
public and private militias to protect their interests.
Beginning in the 1970s, our age's business elite became acutely
politically-minded and impressively well-organized, penetrating deeply
all the pores of party and electoral democracy. They've gone so far as
to craft strategic alliances with elements of what their nineteenth
century predecessors -- who might have blanched at the prospect --
would have termed the hoi polloi. Calls to dismantle the federal
bureaucracy now carry a certain populist panache, while huffing and
puffing about family values has -- so far -- proven a cheap date for a
gilded elite that otherwise generally couldn't care less.
[ . . . ]
"Shareholder democracy" and the "ownership society" are admittedly
more public relations slogans than anything tangible. Nonetheless, you
can't ignore the fact that, during the second Gilded Age, half of all
American families became investors in the stock market. Dentists and
engineers, mid-level bureaucrats and college professors, storekeepers
and medical technicians -- people, that is, from the broad spectrum of
middle class life who once would have viewed the New York Stock
Exchange with a mixture of awe, trepidation, and genuine distaste, and
warily kept their distance -- now jumped head first into the
marketplace carrying with them all their febrile hopes for social
elevation.
As Wall Street suddenly seemed more welcoming, fears about
strangulating monopolies died. Dwindling middle-class resistance to
big business accounts for the withering away of the old anti-trust
movement, a telling development in the evolution of our age's
particular form of "big-box" capitalism. Once, that movement had not
only expressed the frustrated ambitions of smaller businessmen, but of
all those who felt victimized by monopoly power. It embodied not just
the idea of breaking up the trusts, but of competing with or replacing
them with public enterprises.
Long before the Reagan counter-revolution defanged the whole
regulatory apparatus, however, the "anti-trust" movement was over and
done with. Its absence from the political landscape during the second
Gilded Age marks the demise of an older middle-class world of local
producers, merchants, and their customers who were once bound together
by the ties of commerce and the folk truths of small town
Protestantism.
The End of the Age of Acquiescence?
However, the wheel turns. The capitalism of the Second Gilded Age
now faces a systemic crisis and, under the pressure of impending
disaster, may be headed back to the future. Old-fashioned poverty is
making a comeback. Arguably, the global economy, including its
American branch, is increasingly a sweatshop economy. There is no
denying that brute fact in Thailand, China, Vietnam, Central America,
Bangladesh, and dozens of other countries and regions that serve as
platforms for primitive accumulation. Hundreds of millions of peasants
have become proletarians virtually overnight.
Here at home, something analogous has been happening, but with an
ironic difference and bearing within it a new historic
opportunity. One might call it the unhorsing of the middle class.
[ . . . ]
Anger and resentment, however, do not by themselves comprise a
visionary alternative. Nor is the Democratic Party, however restive, a
likely vehicle of social democratic aspirations. Much more will have
to happen outside the precincts of electoral politics by way of mass
movement building to translate these smoke signals of resistance into
something more muscular and enduring. Moreover, nasty competition over
diminishing economic opportunities can just as easily inflame
simmering racial and ethnic antagonisms.
Nonetheless, the current break-down of the financial system is
portentous. It threatens a general economic implosion more serious
than anyone has witnessed for many decades. Depression, if that is
what it turns out to be, together with the agonies of a misbegotten
and lost war no one believes in any longer, could undermine whatever
is left of the threadbare credibility of our Gilded Age elite.
Legitimacy is a precious possession; once lost it's not easily
retrieved. Today, the myth of the "ownership society" confronts the
reality of the "foreclosure society." The great silence of the second
Gilded Age may give way to the great noise of the first.
Friday, May 2. 2008
Donald T Critchlow: The Conservative Ascendency: How the GOP Right
Made Political History (2007, Harvard University Press)
Another general history of the conservative political movement in
the US, starting after WWII. One thing I found is that the history
seems quaint until 1968, despite widespread anticommunist hysteria
and plenty of hawkish saber rattling. That's really because the first
political character who sounds like the modern right is George Wallace.
Nixon and Agnew, especially through their speechwriter Pat Buchanan,
tried to pick up Wallace's voice, and thereby his votes, and that was
what finally gave the Republican right it's shot at mass support.
(p. 13):
Right-wing opponents of the New Deal were overwhelmed by what they
saw as the New Deal revolution, but they offered no programmatic
alternative to modern liberalism. [Irving] Babbitt, [Albert J] Nock,
[Ralph Adams] Cram, and the Southern Agrarians were reactionaries,
eloquent in their criticisms of democratic culture, pristine in their
condescension toward the masses, and confirmed in their elitism. They
offered little alternative to the industrialism or mass democracy that
they so vehemently derided. They held little faith in the future, the
dynamic quality of capitalism, or the character of the American
people. At heart, they remained pessimists. The success of New Deal
liberalism in the 1930s deepened this sense of defeatism and confirmed
their expectation that the advance of the collectivist state was
inevitable. By the war's end, New Deal liberalism stood indomitable, a
Gulliver untied, able to ignore its Lilliputian critics.
(pp. 14-15):
[Friedrich] Hayek, an Austrian-born economist, gained world-wide
fame for his book The Road to Serfdom, which appeared in 1944
while he was a professor at the London School of Economics. First
published in England by Routledge, The Road to Serfdom became a
best seller. Believing that England was poised to nationalize its
industries, Hayek intended the book to reach a large audience of
educated men and women who would be warned about the dangers that
centralized planning posed to liberty. The point of the book was that
private ownership in a society was essential to freedom and
democracy. Socialism, in any guise, would lead to a totalitarian
state, even if it was brought about by democratic means. He believed
that free-market capitalism was essential to the maintenance of
democracy. In a socialist economy, he warned, the individual would
become little more than the means for realizing the schemes of a
planner. He argued that socialism was inimical to liberty because it
devalued individual rights, personal freedom, and economic choice.
Hayek believed that individualism lay at the core of Western
civilization, as demonstrated in the Hebrew conception that all men
and women were equal in the eyes of God, the Christian conception of
Christ's love for all, and the Roman belief in equality before the
law. In his view, the government could play an essential role in
maximizing individual liberty. Thus the belief that government should
not interfere in society or set rules and regulations was
misguided. Still, he maintained, a liberty-maximizing society should
make "the best possible use of the forces of competition as a means of
coordinating human efforts . . . It is based on the conviction that
where effective competition can be created, it is the better way of
guiding individual efforts that any other." In making this argument,
Hayek disclaimed any role as defender of the status quo. The
fundamental principle of a society that preserves liberty should be to
make best "use . . . possible of the spontaneous forces of society"
and resort "as little as possible to coercion." This principle was
capable of infinite variation, and Hayek stressed "the difference
between deliberately creating a system within which competition will
work as beneficially as possible and passively accepting institutions
as they are."
(p. 19):
In 1953 Russell Kirk, a young instructor in the history of
civilization at Michigan State University, published The
Conservative Mind. Kirk had taken a leave from Michigan State to
complete his doctorate at St. Andrews University in Scotland. While in
Scotland, Kirk wrote his doctoral dissertation, "The Conservatives'
Rout." Acquired by Henry Regnery, a small conservative publishing house
in Chicago, the dissertation renamed The Conservative Mind
gained immediate national acclaim. In the book, Kirk defined a
conservative as a person who is convinced that "civilized society
requires orders and classes, believes that man has an evil nature and
therefore must control his will and appetite," and accepts that
"tradition provides a check on man's anarchic impulse, and maintains a
belief in a divine intent that rules society as well as conscience."
Before the publication of the book, members of the American Right had
rejected the label conservative because they saw themselves as
vigorous defenders of the nineteenth-century liberal tradition of
individual rights, property rights, and distrust of centralized
government. Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal had usurped this
liberal tradition and redefined it to mean the regulation of
capitalism by centralized government, state welfare, and social
equality.
The Conservative Mind offered a sweeping account of the
conservative tradition, which Kirk found rooted in the "moral
imagination" of Edmund Burke and his defense of tradition, order, and
"permanent things." He believed that conservatives had been routed by
"a world that damns tradition, exalts equality, and welcomes changes"
and a "world smudged by industrialism; standardized by the masses,
consolidated by government." He refused to condense the conservative
tradition into "a few pretentious phrases," but outlined the canons of
conservatism as a belief in a transcendent order, affection for "the
proliferating variety and mystery of human existence," a conviction
that civilized society requires orders and classes, a faith that
"man's anarchic impulse" needs to be checked, and "recognition that
change may not be salutary reform."
(pp. 48-49):
Meanwhile, a highly reluctant Goldwater gave the go-ahead for a
book to be written in his name outlining the conservative philosophy,
although he made it clear in a private meeting with Manion in early
November 1959 that he had no wish to run for president. In fact,
Goldwater continued to publicly promote Richard Nixon for the 1960
nomination. Nonetheless, Manion proceeded with the arrangement for
Brent Bozell, Jr., to ghost-write under Goldwater's name. Unable to
receive an advance contract for an unfinished manuscript, Manion
decided to publish and distribute the book through his newly formed
nonprofit company, Victor Publishing. Batches of the manuscript were
sent to Manion and Goldwater's political operative Stephen Shadegg in
Arizona for review as soon as pages rolled off Bozell's typewriter. As
astounding as this sounds, it remains unclear whether Goldwater read
any of the manuscript, but when the book appeared in March 1960 it
became an instant best seller.
In what was many Americans' first introduction to the topic, The
Conscience of a Conservative defined conservatism as a philosophy
that upheld "the dignity of the individual human being" and was "at
odds with dictators who rule by terror, and equally those gentler
collectivists who ask our permission to play God with the human race."
The book gave much attention to the necessity of winning the Cold War
against the Soviet Union. It warned, contrary to the liberal
perspective, that winning the Cold War was not simply a matter of
domestic reform at home and foreign aid abroad. It called for an
aggressive foreign policy that began with American military
superiority. The Conscience of a Conservative declared that
"the Communists' aim is to conquer the world," even though few in the
West seemed willing to believe this "central political fact of our
time."
(p. 85):
Sensing the first cracks in the liberal regime, George Wallace left
the Democratic party to exploit working-class white resentment toward
African Americans, rising crime rates, growing welfare rolls,
inner-city riots, and the war dragging on in Southeast Asia. Running
on the American Independent ticket, he appealed to less-educated white
voters, who shouted with rollicking enthusiasm at his attacks on
pointy-headed intellectuals, government bureaucrats, black militants,
hippies, welfare mothers, and "bearded anarchists." Despite Wallace's
popularity among poor and lower-middle class whites in the North and
the South, few right-wing leaders rallied to his campaign, with the
exception of John Schmitz, a southern California community college
instructor and John Birch Society member. Most Republican
conservatives refused to support Wallace, even though he called for
law and order and expressed open disdain for welfare and opposed
court-ordered busing. For all of his conservative rhetoric, the GOP
Right did not see Wallace as a conservative at all. Rather,
right-wingers viewed him as a typical New Deal southerner who welcomed
federal monies for public works and welfare in his state, while
demanding that the federal government recuse itself from enforcing
civil rights laws concerning voting rights and integration of public
places.
(p. 90):
In reality, however, Nixon was above all an opportunist. He was an
anti-Communist and a cold warrior, but his outlook proved to be
remarkably flexible. As an avid reader of English history, Nixon saw
himself as a Disraeli, the nineteenth-century conservative prime
minister who had undertaken liberal reforms as necessary steps for the
survival of the Tory party. Nixon had entered the Republican party as
a "Moderate Republican," eager to disassociate the party from the
isolationism of Robert Taft. He wanted to transform the GOP into the
party of internationalism. Nixon's views on domestic policy were
determined by what he thought could garner political strength. As vice
president under Eisenhower, he had played a pivotal role in pushing
through the Civil Rights Act of 1957, the most important such
legislation enacted since Reconstruction. Nixon believed that the GOP
could regain the African-American vote that had been lost to Franklin
Roosevelt in the 1930s. But following the 1960 election, when blacks
overwhelmingly voted for Nixon's rival, John F. Kennedy, Nixon
retreated from a strong civil rights stance, and during the 1968
election he criticized forced busing to integrate schools.
(p. 105):
Just as neoconservatives were voicing their disaffection,
conservative think tanks emerged to provide technical expertise to the
GOP. The Goldwater campaign and the Nixon regime taught conservatives
that they needed specific policy proposals to combat the hegemony of
liberalism in the policy arena and to present a case to voters (and
Republican party leaders) that there were real alternatives to the
status quo. Policy entrepreneurs such as William Baroody, Edwin
Feulner, and Paul Weyrich began to institutionalize conservatism
through research institutes, fellowship and student-training programs,
and new publications. They brought to these endeavors a single goal:
to erect countervailing sources of power to undermine the liberal
establishment. The Left had the prestigious Brookings Institution and
the liberal academy to influence policy makers and public opinion, and
conservatives wanted to create their own sources for what Washington
insiders called "policy innovation." To this end, they expanded
established moderate-conservative research institutes such as the
American Enterprise Institute and launched the Heritage
Foundation. Drawing support from philanthropies such as the Scaife
Fund, the John M. Olin Foundation, and the Bradley Foundation, as well
as from wealthy conservative benefactors such as Joseph Coors, these
research institutes emerged as vital centers for conservative policy
innovation.
The development of think tanks marked an important shift in the
history of conservatism and would have important implications for the
shaping of the GOP Right in subsequent years. A kind of "managerial
conservatism" arose that reoriented conservative thinking on actual
governance toward a more ready acceptance of the exertion of federal
government power acting within the broad principles of
conservatism. Neoconservativism was not welcomed in some right-wing
circles, but it imparted energy and expertise to the conservative
movement in the 1980s.
(pp. 113-114):
Many neoconservatives remained in the Democratic party, even though
they supported Richard Nixon in 1972. [Norman] Podhoretz joined
Democrats like Senator Henry Jackson, Hubert Humphrey, journalists Max
Kampelman, Ben Wattenberg, international relations professor Jeane
Kirkpatrick and her husband, Evron Kirkpatrick, and Daniel Moynihan to
form the Coalition for a Democratic Majority with the intention of
taking back the Democratic party from the McGovernite wing. This group
was openly critical of the "New Class" of radicals who held
antibourgeois values and had captured the Democratic party in
1972. Jeane Kirkpatrick spoke for the coalition when she declared in
Commentary in February 1973 that "an embattled revolutionary
elite united under the banner of George McGovern" had transformed
liberalism into an "ideology of the privileged." She maintained that
McGovernites were upper-middle-class feminists, high-income
homosexuals, and college-educated whites who despised blue-collar
ethnic workers, white southerners, and traditional American values. As
a consequence, she observed, conservatism had become the "position of
the less privileged." Conservatives, she suggested, upheld traditional
values of hard work, family, and patriotism. From this perspective it
was a short step to Republicanism. [ . . . ]
The issue that caused the greatest divide between McGovernite
liberals and neoconservatives was foreign policy and how to deal with
Communist nations. Anti-Communism united Podhoretz and Kristol
intellectually. Both men believed that many on the McGovern left
misunderstood the imperial nature of Communism and overestimated the
good intentions of Soviet Leadership. Both agreed on the need to fight
for democracy in the world, and it was this belief that became a
defining characteristic of what became known as "neoconservatism."
(p. 128):
[President Gerald] Ford's centrist policies created a political
vacuum on the Right that was quickly filled by a groundswell of
grassroots activism. From this activism emerged the New Right -- a
term coined by the longtime activist Paul Weyrich. The media
identified the leaders of the New Right as Richard Viguerie, Howard
Phillips, Paul Weyrich, and Terry Dolan, but these people were
certainly not new conservatives. Phyllis Schlafly's involvement in
conservative Republican politics and anti-Communism went back to the
1950s, before other leaders of the New Right had become politically
active. Viguerie, Phillips, and Weyrich were children of the 1960s who
became involved in right-wing politics through Young Americans for
Freedom. By 1978 the National Conservative Political Action Committee
(NCPAC), founded by three young conservatives -- Charlie Black, Roger
Stone, and Terry Dolan (the chairman) -- became the largest
conservative political action committee in the country, distributing
more than $1.2 million in cash and in-kind contributions to political
campaigns in its first five years.
The New Right's ability to tap into grassroots discontent over
social and moral issues such as abortion, prayer in school, and the
ERA caught both liberals and the Republican establishment
off-guard. These New Right activists challenged the status quo and the
power structure in both parties. They saw themselves as radicals who
wanted to overthrow entrenched elites and professional experts. Paul
Weyrich later declared, "We are radicals who want to change the
existing power structure. We are not conservatives in the sense that
conservative means accepting the status quo." They believed that
liberalism was a dying force in American politic sand that the
political future belonged to conservatism. "The liberals have not only
lost confidence in themselves but in their ideas," Viguerie
declared. "We're convinced we have the ability to govern and will
govern in the not-too-distant future."
(pp. 129-130):
Weyrich's principal talent was teaching conservatives how to form
and make use of coalitions involving antitax groups, antiabortion
groups, veterans' organizations, small business associations, and
conservative pro-family advocates.
In his work, Weyrich was joined by Howard Phillips, the founder of
the Conservative Caucus, in late 1974. The mission of the caucus was
to recruit conservative leaders, organize the grassroots, and help set
the conservative agenda. Phillips developed hsi political skills as a
Harvard University undergraduate and as one of the founders of the
Young Americans for Freedom in 1960. In 1964, he became Republican
party chairman in Boston and then managed Richard Schweiker's
successful race in Pennsylvania for the U.S. Senate in 1968. In 1970,
he lost his own race for Congress in Massachusetts and accepted an
appointment by Richard Nixon as head of the Office of Economic
Opportunity (OEO). Nixon had talked about shutting down OEO, but a
Democratic-controlled Congress prevented Phillips from doing so. By
1979 the Conservative Caucus had a base of 300,000 contributors. It
also launched the Religious Roundtable, which reached out to
evangelical Protestant leaders and brought them together for briefings
on public policy issues.
Richard Viguerie brought new technical skills to the Right through
his use of sophisticated computer technology to raise money and garner
support among the grassroots. Viguerie had gained valuable experience
in mass fundraising by working int he 1950s for Marvin Liebman, whose
Committee of One Million had pioneered the use of fundraising on the
Right through mass mailing. Viguerie took direct mailing to new levels
of effectiveness through the use of the computer. In doing so, he
advanced the conservative cause well beyond the technological
capabilities of the Left.
(p. 162):
The ERA battle taught conservatives three important lessons that
changed the course of American politics from its leftward drift to the
right: First, the STOP ERA organization and the antiabortion movement
showed the importance of social issues in mobilizing unheard numbers
of average Americans. Second, the anti-ERA campaign provided a
casebook example of how evangelical Protestants, Roman Catholics, and
Mormons could be united into a single cause. In particular, the
antifeminist crusade revealed that there was a huge reservoir of
potential voters in the evangelical Protestant revival of the 1970s
that could be tapped by the Republican party. Finally, the defeat of
the ERA taught conservatives that they could win when they mobilized
around the right causes. Ever since Barry Goldwater's defeat in 1964,
the conservative movement had lacked confidence that it could ever win
nationally, but on the issue of the ERA it had triumphed.
(pp. 174-175):
The Reagan campaign realized that if Carter was successful in
making the 1980 election into a replay of 1964, Republicans would
lose. To prevent this outcome, Reagan needed to emphasize the poor
economy while reassuring the public that he would not slash benefit
programs indiscriminately. This was a tricky strategy because Reagan
was on record as opposing many of the entitlement programs proposed to
help workers hurt by economic dislocation. GOP strategists realized
that the key to victory rested in winning traditional Democrats to
their cause. As a result, when Senator Paul Laxalt nominated Reagan at
the convention, he pointed to Reagan's record as governor of
California in increasing aid to the truly needy, increasing funding to
higher education, protecting the environment, and undertaking welfare
reform.
(p. 177):
These were minor mistakes compared with the controversy that
followed a speech in Philadelphia, Mississippi, the place where three
civil rights activists had been murdered in 1964. In his first speech
following his nomination, Reagan declared, "I still believe the answer
to any problem lies with the people. I believe in states' rights
. . . I believe we have distorted the balance of our government today
by giving powers that were never intended to be given in the
Constitution to the federal establishment." Reagan's use of the words
"states' rights" in a town known for the murder of civil rights
workers gave immediate offense to black leaders. Following these
remarks, Carter's secretary of health and human services warned that
black voters "will see the specter of a white sheet" behind
Reagan. Carter's former ambassador to the United Nations, Andrew
Young, said that Reagan's remarks seemed like code-words implying
"it's going to be all right to kill n---- when he's President."
Coretta Scott King, the widow of Martin Luther King, Jr., told the
press she was frightened that if Reagan won the election "we are going
to see more of the Ku Klux Klan and a resurgence of the Nazi
Party."
In 1976, Carter had swept the South. Reagan's campaign strategists
assumed that if Reagan could take the South, he would win the
election. Mississippi was a good place to start because Carter had won
the state by less than two percentage points of the popular vote.
(p. 184):
In the early spring of 1985, a year after his landslide victory for
reelection to the White House, President Ronald Reagan addressed his
critics on the Right who complained that the Republican revolution had
stalled. Reagan reassured them that the "tide of history is moving
irresistibly in our direction" because liberalism had become
"virtually bankrupt of ideas. It has nothing more to say, nothing to
add to the debate. It has spent its intellectual capital, such as it
was, and it has done its deeds." He concluded, "We in this room are
not simply profiting from their bankruptcy; we are where we are
because we're winning the contest of ideas. In fact, in the past
decade, all of a sudden, quietly, mysteriously, the Republican party
has become the party of ideas. All of a sudden, Republicans [are] not
defenders of the status quo but creators of the future."
(pp. 187-188):
Reagan's core beliefs led him to the worldview that the best
government is that which governs least so individual citizens can
reach their full potential. Reagan believed that centralized
government weakened a free people's self-reliance and capacity for
self-government. In his inaugural address, he declared, "In this
present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem,
government is the problem. From time to time we've been tempted to
believe that society has become too complex to be managed by
self-rule, that government by an elite group is superior to government
for, by, and of the people. Well, if no one among us is capable of
governing himself, then who among us has the capacity to govern
someone else?"
(p. 189):
Banking deregulation had begun under Carter with the enactment of
the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of
1980. Further deregulation was continued into the Reagan
administration in the Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of
1982. Backed by Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, these acts
deregulated the savings and loan industry while tightening federal
control over the banking industry. One of the unforseen consequences
of this policy was the collapse int he late 1980s of many savings and
loans owing to over-expansion and, in some cases, fraudulent
loans.
(pp. 246-247):
The final weapon in the battle for control of Congress came in the
form of a clever election proclamation signed by 337 Republican
candidates for the House, the "Contract with America." The ten-point
legislative program was promoted as a covenant with the voters -- a
promise to introduce ten specific pieces of legislation if Republicans
became a majority party in the House. The Contract with America had
evolved out of extensive polling and focus-group interviews which
revealed that voters wanted "accountability" in government. The
contract called for welfare reform, anticrime measures, a line-item
veto, regulatory reform, and tax reduction. In addition, hot-button
issues such as abortion, pornography, and school prayer were not
included in the plan in order to avoid the charge that Republicans
represented only the Religious Right. Although the exclusion of social
issues upset social conservatives like Paul Weyrich, this program gave
Republicans the offensive. As the 1994 mid-term elections approached,
Republicans were on the march, energized by their victory over the
Clinton health-care plan.
(pp. 256-257):
In the process [the 2000 presidential campaing], [George W] Bush
put his own stamp on conservatism. His proclamation of himself as a
"compassionate conservative" during the 2000 election was more than
campaign rhetoric. Through this identity Bush sought to combine
traditional conservative principles of individual responsibility, free
enterprise, low taxes, and resistance to government spending with an
acceptance of the important role that government had come to play in
American life. He sought to use activist government for conservative
ends by allowing faith-based charitable organizations to provide
social services to the poor; by making public schools more accountable
by linking federal aid to national standards; and by expanding federal
health insurance for prescription drugs to the elderly. He believed
that the federal government could help promote moral values, regulate
abortion, and encourage individual responsibility. At the same time,
he called for reform of Social Security through limited
privatization. Bush's compassionate conservatism reflected his
religious faith as a born-again Christian who believed in the
responsibility to be "thy brother's keeper." The Bush vision of
government was far from what the first generation of postwar
conservatives -- Hayek, Rand, or Buckley -- had called for when they
sought to overturn the New Deal liberal order.
Thursday, May 1. 2008
John W Dean: Conservatives Without Conscience (2006; paperback,
2007, Penguin Books)
Same John Dean who was White House legal counsel to Richard Nixon
during Watergate. He acquitted himself relatively well (if somewhat
belatedly) in that scandal, which left him in good position to write
a book about the George W Bush administration called Worse Than
Watergate: The Secret Presidency of George W. Bush (2004). This
is his follow up, and it has in turn been followed by a couple more
books: another on Bush called Broken Government: How Republican
Rule Destroyed the Legislative, Executive, and Judical Branches,
and another on conservatism, cowritten with Barry Goldwater Jr.,
called Pure Goldwater. In his introduction here, Dean claims
that this book was originally planned as a joint effort with Barry
Goldwater Sr., who died before he could put his name down here. The
title contrasts nicely with Goldwater's 1960 The Conscience of a
Conservative. While it would be nice to think that Goldwater
would have had some scruples over what Bush has wrought, I have my
doubts, and those only start with the probability that had Goldwater
lived he would have taken no more interest in this book than he did
in his own ghost-written bestseller.
Dean does his best to preserve his sense of conservative identity
against the scandal of conservative reality, mostly by characterizing
his opponents as authoritarians. The more operative word that no one
uses is "neofascists": the "neo" merely dispenses with the no longer
palatable racism of the colonial/imperialist era that went out of
fashion after 1945 and the subsequent |