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Richard (RJ) Eskow

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Killing Us Softly

Posted: 09/14/11 01:19 AM ET

Yesterday some prominent people signed a letter urging the so-called "Super Committee" to "go big" on cuts to the Federal budget. Many of these people would describe themselves as "moderate" and "centrist." Some would call themselves liberal. I've met a few of them casually, both Republicans and Democrats, and they seemed like very nice people.

They're nothing like the audience members at the Republican presidential debate who shouted "yes!" when asked if society should let a young man die because he didn't buy health insurance. They're courteous and civilized, and were undoubtedly appalled by the shouts from the crowd.

That sort of thing isn't done in the salons or think tanks of Washington. You wouldn't catch anyone who signed that letter behaving that way.

But are they really all that different?

Donner, Party of Four

It's fair game to label today's Republicans as (in Terrance Heath's words) "Death's Own Party." The GOP earned that name when it filibustered disaster relief for flood and hurricane victims this week, as it did when it passed a budget that slashed funding for lifesaving weather warnings, police, and firefighters.

It's also reasonable to call the Tea Party's more blood-crazed members a "Cult of Death" funded by the ultra-rich, as William Rivers Pitt did after the debate. They cheered executions last week, and last night they let us know it's a death-penalty offense to make the wrong insurance purchasing decision, too.

These responses come from independent critical voices. It's different when powerful people, whether they're "moderate" Republicans and self-described "centrist" Democrats, privately cluck over these Tea Partiers. These insiders are in a position to address their fears and explain what's been done to them, to channel their outrage constructively.

Instead they've formed a mob of their own, so they can urge leaders to "go big" with assaults on services that help average Americans -- including those who follow the Tea Party.

Go Big

That phrase is just one more reflection of these Orwellian times. "Go big" really means "go small." Small government. Small future. Small dreams.

The letter said "we urge you to 'go big' and develop a large-scale debt reduction package sufficient to stabilize the debt as a share of the economy." It called for going "well beyond" the Committee's $1.5 trillion goal for additional deficit reduction, and proposed "major reforms (a Beltway code word for "cuts) of entitlements" and "reforms" to the tax code (which typically means lower taxes that would increase the deficit.)

The signatories proposed to "restore Americans' faith in the political system" -- by imposing cuts that most Americans in both parties oppose. Now that would be a trick ...

The List

Who are they?

Many of the signers are the usual suspects, professionals from both parties who have pushed the same anti-government agenda for decades. They're functionaries and hired academic guns who have long benefited from the pro-austerity largesse of right-wing billionaire Pete Peterson and like-minded plutocrats. They're Democrats like Erskine Bowles and Alice Rivlin and like-minded Republicans like Alan Simpson (whose public outbursts make the worst Tea Party dustup look like a meeting of the Emily Post Fan Club) .

The list also includes some of the "bipartisan" architects of today's economic crisis, people like Robert Rubin. Rubin pushed for the deregulation that crashed the economy, joined the worst of the bloated and incompetent banks and made hundreds of millions, and is now pushing to have middle and lower-income America foot the bill for what he has wrought.

There were one or two disappointments like economist Laura Tyson, who's attaching herself to a document that any reasonable economist knows is a recipe for economic disaster. It calls for the same austerity that's decimating Europe and unraveling the social contract which built its postwar prosperity.

The austerity approach pushed in this letter has already shattered investor confidence in the US economy, driving down the stock markets and making them surge up and down like the paroxysmal double-takes of a vaudeville clown. And now they want us to "go big" with it.

And yet none of them, with the probable exception of Simpson, would ever shout anything crude about death in a public place.

Death in Private Places

That's ironic, since people will surely die as a result of the policies they're advocating. Somewhere between 35,000 and 50,000 Americans die each year because they don't have health insurance. If the president listens to the people who signed this letter, as many people believe he will, he'll propose raising the eligibility age for Medicare from 65 to 67.

One study showed that Medicare reduces mortality for its members by about 13% per year, and lowers the number of days spent in the hospital by about the same percentage. So the austerity economics these people are proposing will lead to death.

It's true that they're not shouting in public places. They're whispering their opinions in the ears of the powerful. You can decide for yourself which form of behavior is more obscene.

Hating the Victim

We're seeing it all across Washington: The demonization of the victim. It's in the public hatred for underwater homeowners, which began at the first Tea Party rally (on the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange) and now reaches to the highest halls of power in both parties, where we told that helping struggling homeowners would be "rewarding the undeseverving."

(Funny -- the word "undeserving" wasn't mentioned when both parties rescued Wall Street's megabanks. Rescuing homeowners, many of whom were persuaded to take out bloated loans by those same banks, would help stimulate the economy in a way those bankers have yet to do.)

We saw it in the question that stirred the bloodlust last night, too. Here's what Wolf Blitzer asked:

"You're a physician, Ron Paul... Let me ask you this hypothetical question: A healthy 30-year-old young man has a good job, makes a good living, but decides, you know what? I'm not going to spend $200 or $300 a month for health insurance because I'm healthy, I don't need it. But something terrible happens, all of a sudden he needs it.


Who's going to pay if he goes into a coma, for example? Who pays for that?

The spin in that question encapsulates the Beltway bias: A "healthy" thirty-year-old "makes a good living" (which is unusual, with youth unemployment at 25%) but cavalierly decides not to spend "200 or 300" dollars. That's the common insiders' picture of the uninsured American as the villain of the piece.

Reality TV

Blitzer didn't ask this, more realistic question:

"The father in a family of four lost his job, so his wife is working double shifts without health insurance to pay the bills. Premiums would cost at least $14,000 per year (let's say $7500 under the new law) for insurance that still sticks them with big out-of-pocket costs. They couldn't come up with the money to pay United Healthcare, and then he had this accident ..."

That's the kind of real-life scenario that doesn't get portrayed much on television these days.

Now let's change it again, in one detail: The man is 66 years old. The "go big" crowd is urging the President to exclude that man from Medicare, making him even more unemployable and his insurance even more unaffordable. And he's much more susceptible to life-threatening questions.

We'll ask the question again: How different are the people who signed the letter from the audience at the debate?

Civil Discourse

We're told we can disagree without being disagreeable. I hope so.

I've met Tea Party members, and I understand their fear and their anger. I think it's very misdirected, and at times very ugly. But I understand it. And as I've said, I've met a couple of the people who signed that letter, too. We had pleasant chats. If we meet again, that chat may be pleasant too.

But as long as we're talking, let's talk honestly. The shouters and haters are disturbing, and we face a terrible threat from the big-money financiers stoking their fears. But it's easy for civilized people in the corridors of power to look down on the shouting rabble. Easy -- and cheap.

I worry just as much about the ones who are welcome in the salons of both parties, the ones who are heard at both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue. They're the powerful ones. They're the quiet ones. While we're looking at the loudmouthed shouters on television, they're the ones who are killing us softly.

 

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muysuave41
Olive Oil Producer
02:53 PM on 09/14/2011
The old adage of 'pick 'em up by his bootstraps' where each individual can make it if they try has become a fallacy. The USA government 30 year policy of favoring the rich while undercutting the middle-class and poor has definitely not helped to correct the fallacy either. The modern day Tea Party movement really started by Reagan's welfare queen attacks.
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worldlyhick
01:14 PM on 09/14/2011
We have a moderately right wing party, and an ultra right wing party, both leaning strongly toward authoritarianism. In effect, these are essentially the same. There are very few of the good progressive people that we need in any branch of government. Democrats should protect these valuable progressives with all their being, but they do not because they are trying to be "moderates".

This is the way I see it, and I don't know what to do come next election but vote for the candidate I find most progressive, which will most likely be President Obama and available Democrats, though most seem to be so called "moderates". Some real progressives to vote for would be wonderful, but I don't think I will have any real progressive choices.

I agree these people take a frighteningly distant view of the lives of most of the people in the country, and in the end the results of moderate right and ultra right policies are the same. Maybe with moderate right wing policies the collapse of the country will be more of a slow process and more people can be saved from the wreckage.
gmikejake
resist evil
07:46 AM on 09/16/2011
The most dangerous element of this "movement," in my opinion, as a "different" person, are the social conservatives well researched by Altemeyer in his work on Right Wing Authoritiarians, the RWA. John Dean talks about them too and they are described nicely at Palingate and by Rosenberg. Essentially, these folks fear both change and "difference," their definitions of "difference," and they turn that fear intro deep hatred. There is absolutely no doubt, if you take an objective view, that many core supporters of tea parties exhibit many of the personality characteristics of the RWA.
12:59 PM on 09/14/2011
1st to the writer, why does "Go Big" mean automatically cut medicare or essential expenses that help poor people? Do you know how many programs the government subsidizes that to some are important but to others just seem silly. example: The Cowboy Poets Festival held in Nevada every year gets funding. ex.2.. why are we giving money to some company in Iowa I believe it was to try and figure out why pigs smell? ex.3.. Solyndra, As a homeowner who has been forced to cut back, I have found little things to cut and when they all get added up it's a decent amount. GO BIG doesn't have to mean cut a ton of money from one thing, how about just eliminiating the non essentials, pick example 1, 2 or 3 above. If you picked all it would be a pretty decent amount just to start. I picked the cable box on the 2nd TV and downgraded my plan, & quit smoking for total savings approx savings of $250 a month. Smaller scale, same idea. The media should be using their influence to make people look at how much is spent on all these little things and then total them altogether to show savings. Old saying, very true... inch by inch it's a cinch, yard by yard is very hard. This government, both parties always go for the hard way. Don't listen to what they say, watch what they do. Really watch.....
Maarten Wentink
99%er, 53%er & Job Creator
12:22 PM on 09/14/2011
The demonization of victims and the unfortunate in America these days is very disturbing to me. Some of us are starting to look like a pack of hungry wolves crazed by the smell of blood. Where is the compasion we are supposedly known for? If this country was founded on Christian biblical principles, it seems we have thrown these principles out the door and replaced it with barbaric reasoning.
jhNY
Mercy.
11:44 AM on 09/14/2011
The overclass is well-represented in that crowd of think-tankers and DC professionals. It cannot surprise that they come up with a deep desire for cuts all over. Winners are often not content with victory; often they require the destruction of those over whom they have triumphed, and in this case are happy to leave the dirty work of it to their employees.

No thinking American can put his trust in our political system or its operatives or its beneficiaries. Money madness has ruined our democracy. I don't think this earnest appeal to austerity by the pampered menials of our ruinous status quo is going to turn that around.
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onemoreonce
11:40 AM on 09/14/2011
Terrific article. Dead center correct. It's heartening to hear someone like Mr. Eskow speak about reality rather than ideologically driven nonsense.
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WilliamBradford
Veritas vos Liberabit
11:00 AM on 09/14/2011
It is not the job of government, especially our federal government, to keep you personally or financially healthy. Your health and your money are your business. Like most other aspects of life, this freedom does involve risk. It is often difficult and, in all cases, the eventual conclusion is death.

Cognizance of this truth is not "hate". That is an emotional appeal that is made when logic fails.

During the 2000s, I was approached repeatedly by lenders and real estate agents. They insisted that I should refinance my home, or even better, buy a much more expensive home to take advantage of the soaring market and my borrowing power. We were tempted, but declined, choosing to be satisfied with our modest home and very manageable mortgage.

I watched some of our friends and family make other decisions. Some of them became "victims" of their own decisions. I am obligated to care about them and help as I can, but they are not owed anything by the government.
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dfranz
With Liberty and Justice for all
02:31 PM on 09/14/2011
You must feel real good about yourself. But you forget that millions never had the chance to have a mortgage since they are working minimum wage jobs with no benefits or future. Before you go blaming people for the choices they make, go take an empathy pill and try to connect to your inner human being.
gmikejake
resist evil
07:54 AM on 09/16/2011
No "safety net" because all of those "victims" are just like your friends and relatives who made bad decisions? What about children born into poverty, seniors living in poverty, those of us that are seriously disabled through no fault of their own? You know, the primary recipients of Medicaid. Medicaid, that "liberal" invention that so many conservatives have hated since creation and that so many conservatives are currently trying to destroy. So, destroy the "safety net?" And what do we do with the wreckage? A return to the good old days of "warning out," branding with a p, work houses, "binding out," beggars in the streets, "lady bountifuls," debtors prisons? Whatever is necessary to force these people into making correct decisions, right? Just how far do we go with your line of thinking?
10:56 AM on 09/14/2011
I LOVE this line Richard: "Donner, Party of Four"
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seanny53
Things fall apart, the center cannot hold
10:48 AM on 09/14/2011
Blitzer's question set up the response and played right into the hands of the hateful, by portraying those without insurance as irresponsible rather than as innocent victims. Still, from the many comments of the hateful, I know that they also hate the innocent victims.

Lately I can hardly bring myself to respond to the hate spewed on so many comment threads. It just makes me tired. I can only hope the hateful don't represent too big a segment of the population because, if they do, we're headed for fascism.
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Scott Fraley
10:48 AM on 09/14/2011
Republicans are the type of people that stand over your shoulder while you're working, tell you that everything you're doing is wrong and how much better it would be if they were in charge, then refuse to help.
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procrustes13
10:40 AM on 09/14/2011
The permanent reduction in the standard of living is that they demand despite greater wealth than ever. It's because it's a moral imperative to them that certain people collect Bond villain type wealth and power.
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Scott Fraley
10:31 AM on 09/14/2011
Excellent points from the author.
10:24 AM on 09/14/2011
Ever notice the small government only applies to us? We suffer the cuts but bear the costs, while the worshippers of the god mammon reap the rewards of money funneling into their coffers. The irony is those on the Right are envious and humbled by wealth and power as the true American dream heroes and defend their entitlement to loot the rest of us.
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aacme
My micro-bio is on a strict need-to-know basis.
09:07 AM on 09/14/2011
"The letter said "we urge you to 'go big' and develop a large-scale debt reduction package sufficient to stabilize the debt as a share of the economy."
Before Bush insinuated himself into power we were on track to retire the entire national debt by about now, if I am not mistaken (I'm not. That is the polite form). Every bit of our debt problem is from tax cuts and wars, period. Con men, and women, try to pretend that is "coddling the poor" or some such crap that is responsible for the insane debt we are carrying. But it is the insane policies of the Bush/Cheney administration, carried on for some insane reason by the Democrat we elected to undo that insanity, that bears 100% of the responsibility. The only reason everyone in the country doesn't know this is that the right has raised the art of "political suasion" to a heretofore unknown level.
As Geobbels said (I'm paraphrasing here), nobody does it better than the Americans.
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10:29 AM on 09/14/2011
That insane policy was at the bidding of Alan Greenspan, who warned that if the U.S. had a surplus, they would not be able to manipulate interest rates and bond prices.
09:00 AM on 09/14/2011
If we were to take an honest look at the Clinton administration we would see how right wing it really was because the people mentioned here had very important economic positions in Clinton's government. Obama continued this movement to the right with his terrible appointments at the beginning of his administration and we have had republican like government from that time forward. It is bad enough that both parties are corrupt but to force people to choose between two right wing parties without a serious alternative is depressing.