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Richard (RJ) Eskow

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"President Ryan": Another Shrewd Move in the Corporate State's Long Game

Posted: 08/13/2012 12:18 am

Paul Ryan's looks are often compared to an actor's, and that's no accident: He's being groomed for the role of a lifetime. When Mitt Romney accidentally introduced Ryan as "the next President" he may have been displaying the same predilection for accidental honesty -- for truth-telling as political gaffe -- that he showed when he praised Israel's socialized health system.

And Romney may be right. The most likeable and electable extremist in the country just became the GOP's 2016 front-runner. That's no accident either.

All the signs suggest that the economy will struggle for years unless progressive steps are taken. Worse, another steep decline into recession or depression could occur at any time. If Obama's re-elected and we're still suffering in 2016, as now seems likely, our "electable extremist" will be in the perfect position to become the next President.

Heads we win, says Corporate America, and tails you lose.

The Long Game

Even that doesn't tell the whole story. The Ryan choice reflects something much bigger than an election or two. Corporate America and those who serve it have been playing a Long Game for political power, displaying formidable qualities yet to be seen in its electoral opponents: a clearly-articulated vision, concrete goals, and the ability to plan and execute long-range strategies.

Under their ideal of Corporate Statism, the President is no longer "the Decider." He or she increasingly serves as Corporate America's employee, a hireling who serves as its sales rep, its celebrity spokesperson, as a flesh-and-blood avatar for faceless financial power.

Who's better suited for that job than Paul Ryan?

The game plan was laid out in the infamous Lewis Powell memo of 1970, which encouraged corporations to take control of all major US institutions. And their game was already well underway when Powell sketched his strategy on the chalkboard.

Far from being a blunder, the Ryan nomination can be seen as the next step in a decades-long plan to capture this country's political institutions for the ideology of radical corporate statism. The left would be wise to stop celebrating it and start coming up with a Long Game of its own.

We Don't Do Windows

The Corporate Right's leadership may have already concluded that this year's Presidential election is likely unwinnable. Ryan then becomes the perfect choice for VP: With one move, the nation's most genuinely radical national politician became the leading contender for the 2016 nomination. Ryan will turn out the GOP base and give it a lift in down-ticket races. And most importantly, a far-right radical has been given four months to preach an extreme vision of America on a national platform.

And let's not forget: If the unexpected happens and the GOP ticket wins, this radical will also be a heartbeat away from the Presidency.

If Uriah Heep were the leading man on a daytime soap opera, he'd be Paul Ryan. Ryan's half-suave, half-goofy style puts an avuncular smiley-face on the corporatists' brutal ideology. He'll move the "Overton window" of political acceptability even further to the Right every time he appears on television. And he'll appear on television a lot. Let's face it, liberals: The camera loves those eyes.

Until this weekend, nobody in the Presidential race was articulating a clear political vision. But Paul Ryan will.

Ryan's is an extreme Randian vision of the economic landscape as painted by Hieronymus Bosch, where corporate colossuses strive above a ragged population struggling to survive in their shadows. Why is this ideology frightening, if it's so unpopular and dystopic? To paraphrase John Goodman in The Big Lebowski: Say what you like about the tenets of corporate statism, Dude, but at least it's an ethos.

The Corporate State

The phrase "corporate statism" describe the GOP's new ideology far better than "conservatism" does. The corporate statists don't share traditional conservatism's abhorrence of fiscal deficits, for example, despite all their rhetoric to the contrary.

In fact, the Ryan budget would actually increase the deficit from its current $10 trillion to $22 trillion over a ten-year period, so that by 2022 the nation would be paying more in interest payments than it would in Medicare payments. That's much higher than the deficits projected under President Obama's plan, which leads to reduced indebtedness over time.

The only genuine conservative in this year's race, at least where government deficits are concerned, is Barack Obama.

The Rand/Ryan/Romney ideology is "corporate statist" because it places the institutions of government at the disposal of, and in the service of, a few dozen mega-corporations. We saw the corporate-statist agenda in action when Rep. Spencer Bachus, in another "truth as gaffe" moment, told Wall Street executives that "Washington exists to serve the banks."

We've also seen the corporate-statist agenda in massive government giveaways to corporations through bank bailouts. We've seen it in the movement to privatize government functions, a policy failure that has helped some executives get very, very rich. We've seen it in the push to "private Social Security accounts." And we''re seeing it in the soaring expenditures for military purchasing in the supposedly "cost-cutting" Ryan/Romney GOP budget.

Who will promote that radical agenda this year? Paul Ryan will.

The Great Plundering

The endgame for the Corporate State is ever-increasing wealth transfer from the vast majority to a tiny minority. That happens on the aggregate level through deregulation and political corruption, and on the individual level through a series of increasingly greater tax cuts for the ultra-wealthy. That costs money, of course, so this agenda subsidized through a program of economic warfare on most Americans that includes:

  • Deep cuts in government services for lower-income people;
  • Deep cuts in some social insurance programs (Social Security) and the outright elimination of others (Medicare) for the middle class;
  • An immediate tax increase for 95 percent of Americans; and,
  • Even more drastic longer-term tax increases for most Americans through the elimination of "tax expenditures" - that is, deductions for home mortgage interest, employer health coverage, and child care.
Even those payments on the national debt, which would soar under the Ryan plan, are a form of wealth transfer. They'll use taxpayers' money to increase profits for Wall Street banks.

The Vision

The corporate-statist movement has a vision, all right. It's the vision of a nation where most people live in financial uncertainty and deprivation, a harsh environment which accomplishes two goals for corporatists: It adds to the pool of low-cost employees who will tolerate degrading working conditions, and it ensures that the public will be too frightened to mount any real resistance to corporate abuse.

Why do you think more underwater homeowners haven't walked away from their mortgages? They know that low credit scores would deprive them of the ability to borrow, which they may desperately need to make ends meet, and that it could even render them unemployable. That's just a small taste of what life wil be like under Corporate Statism. If people are too frightened to refuse to pay usurious interest on deceptively obtained loans, they'll certainly be too frightened to Occupy the Corporate State.

And that's the plan.

Yes, the Corporate Right has a vision. It's the vision of a classically oligarchical nation controlled by a tiny and extremely wealthy ruling class. It's a vision of deregulated corporations who have the unrestrained freedom to endanger lives, jeopardize the global economy, and despoil the environment. It's a vision of unfettered corporate control over our politics, our media, and even our private lives.

Say what you will about these tenets, dudes and dudettes, but at least it's an ethos.

Story Time

Is there a counter-ethos?

Not so far. It was encouraging to hear our centrist-leaning President accurately characterize Ryan's approach as "social Darwinism," but his message and his deeds continue to blend old-school conservatism with rhetorical populism. Even erstwhile liberal firebrand Nancy Pelosi says she'd vote for the right-leaning, anti-government Simpson-Bowles plan in a heartbeat.

The Democrats will be tempted to use Ryan as an excuse to stick to their destructive (and self-destructive) strategy of articulating a DC-centric version of "centrism" that's far to the right of American public opinion. That would weaken turnout and enthusiasm among their base, without impressing very many undecideds.

Democrats aren't going to win against an anti-Social Security, anti-Medicare agenda with nuanced arguments about cutting them a little less, or a little differently, than their opponents would. Sure, Obama may eke out a Presidential victory, but the Democratic message will have received another damaging blow. And the Corporate Right's message will have validated by a wave of dithering, hair-splitting, "we're the real Simpson-Bowles'" deficit reduction rhetoric from the Dems.

A coherent story is usually much more persuasive than an incoherent story one - even if it happens to be insane.

That's never more true than in hard times like these. As many as 24 million voters live in homes with "underwater" mortgages. Fifteen million of them are un- or under-employed. Most of them are feeling the agony of long-term wage stagnation, cuts to vital government services, and an economy that's in permanent recession.

If they only hear one clear story to explain what's going on, a clear story is the story they'll remember. Who'll tell a clear story this year? One thing's for sure: Paul Ryan will.

Double Vision

Randian social theory, like conservative economic theory, has been conclusively disproved by events. What's more, polls show that most Americans support government's role in their daily lives -- in Medicare and Social Security, in police and firefighting efforts, in education, and in the construction and maintenance of our national infrastructure.

But if the Democrats don't articulate a clear vision of their own, this campaign season will shift public consciousness further to the right. The idea of a nation "of the people, by the people, and for the people" will recede even further into the dim recesses of public memory. "President Ryan" -- or another smiling cipher -- will be that much closer to attaining power on behalf of his or her sponsors. And Corporate America's frightening plan to own our future and everyone in it will be that much closer to becoming reality.

To anyone with a basic grasp of policy and numbers, Paul Ryan's charts and graphs are empty and meaningless. He's a salesman, not a leader. He "didn't build that" -- but he can sell it. He can't write the story, but he can tell it. And, however crazy it may sound to some of us, the Corporate Right does have a story to tell.

If the Democrats don't, do it, then somebody who opposes the Corporate Right needs to articulate a vision for the future -- and then fight for that vision with everything they've got. Because one thing's for certain:

Paul Ryan will.

 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shadow mutt
07:30 AM on 08/16/2012
"With one move, the nation's most genuinely radical national politician became the leading contender for the 2016 nomination."

LOL! Whut?

They used to say the same thing about Sarah Palin in 2008. Look at how likely SHE will ever become elected President.

If Ryan tries to cut out the middleman and make a go at it himself for the top job, then he'll just get his clock cleaned by the Democrats......again!
08:28 PM on 08/14/2012
The US Economy Sucks! No wonder people are piling on to get welfare benefits or disability benefits! Some are taking another approach and reinvesting in their skills by going back to school. If you are applying for admissions to law school/med school/grad school or college, see http://www.ivyresearch.com for IMPORTANT HELP.
09:47 PM on 08/13/2012
On the one hand I agree, if things get worse a Repug could be elected in 2016.

The people will most likely vote for the opposite party of whoever is in the White House.

And that could be Ryan.

HOWEVER, if things get that bad I have been predicting social and political unrest.

If the two political parties and their 1% masters don't do something for ordinary Americans, I predict a very destabilized America.....though the rest of the world, will be as bad off or worse.

Of course "they" (in power) could try to go to martial law......

All of this suffering because lower class people (the majority of Americans) are treated as nothings.....only good to trick into giving votes.

America WAS great when the top, middle, and bottom were all treated as Americans.
When the rich shared some of their money with the ordinary people (workers with good salaries and benefits).
When we all pulled together for the benefit of the country and each other.
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kenashby
Life is chance and necessity
09:45 PM on 08/13/2012
Good theory apart from the demonstrated historical fact that a failed VP run is a career-ending move. Palin, Edwards, Liebermann, Dole where are you now?
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cmmerkel
If cars could run on cognitive dissonance ...
05:01 PM on 08/13/2012
Could you also not postulate a "long game" in which progressive ideas win out? After all, historically the US has had periods of corporate excesses that are punctured by social revolution (when the people have had enough). Then a lot of changes happen (usually progressive), and then the corporate class knuckles under for awhile, and then plots the takeover again. Lather, rinse, repeat. However, after each of these periods the end result in a more progressive nation. Sure, it is not perfect (jeez - I can't even believe I wrote that!) but compare 2012 to 1962 to 1912, and on back. Each time of social/political upheaval left us a little better off. Not all the way, just better. Just a thought......
06:26 PM on 08/13/2012
And the changing electoral map is going to make it increasingly harder for Republicans to win the Presidency, no matter who they run, unless it's someone like Governor Arnold, and 2016 is not too early to see some significant demographic effects on national elections.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nowThenzen
I am
04:27 PM on 08/13/2012
'Saint Peter don't you call me 'cause I can't go
I owe my soul to the company store'

Sixteen Tons'
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim1657
01:24 PM on 08/13/2012
The Corporate State. If you don't believe it just look at Citizens United; the revolving door allowing lobbyists to take government positions, change the law, policies and regulations , and then go back to their industry backers after the damage is done (some have even been paid by industry while in their government jobs); and Tort Reform, that limits the liability of corporations, just to name a few examples. Check out "Unequal Justice" by Thom Hartman, for more examples. Then check out "Free Lunch", by David Cay Johnston. You will be shocked to know how long this move toward the Corporate State has been in the works.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
TRex86
Enjoying life in West Ohio
01:22 PM on 08/13/2012
RJ, here's the manifesto. See if it sounds familiar: We the People of the Unites States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this constitution for the United States of America. Yes, it's the preamble, our 18th century mission statement, expressing our mission, vision, and values. The mission, forming a more perfect union among among the quarreling states. The vision, providing safety, justice and tranquility while promoting the general welfare. The values, liberty and justice for all. It promoted community and respected personal freedom, a delicate balance that we're in peril of losing under statist-theocratic corporatists. It's become community benefits for the rich and powerful and sauve qui peut for all else. (Privatized profits; socialized losses). The constitution isn't about "makers" and "takers." This is Paul Ryan's interpretation of Ayn Rand's omnipotence fantasies. It is the worst sort of social Darwinism as it presumes the innate superiority of the ruling class. Unless Americans wake up to this swindle they will relearn how class rule works. The Hilton's, Koch's, Walton's, et. al. will become a hereditary aristocracy, appointing their servile apparatchik to govern at their whim. "L'etat, c'est moi."
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:59 PM on 08/13/2012
Certainly a major problem with our present day political system is that it has been co-opted by corporate bribery ... I will not call it anything other than what Article 2 Section 4 Word 25 calls it ... to the extent that the "hot news headline" is how many billions of dollars one camp vs. the other one has collected from anonymous donors, ostensibly for advertising purposes.

I fully expect that the impetus for change will never come from within the USA; it will come from without. The growing on-paper disaster in the European Union is the source for it, as nations which are thousands of years old confront an on-paper impossibility which nevertheless is punishing ordinary citizens merely for living on an island. And yet, "over there, this not-yet 250 year old Upstart Crow claims to have endless supplies of money." Where does this *U*pstart *S*tate get all of its cash? Why, by borrowing it right out of its own asterisk. Why? Because it says it can, that's why!

At the end of the day, "you can't touch Europe, you can't touch Russia, you surely can't touch China." The US's notion of power are built strictly upon the greed of literally less than 750 people, and that money is being coined by Rumpelstiltskin.

We are surrounded by truly ancient nations, who are already wisely rejecting our folly. And without that folly, our "exceptionalism" is empty hot-air.
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Gestas
Mountain Man
12:35 PM on 08/13/2012
We better start getting smart..The Republican Game Plan is to develope a completely governmnet-free capitalist society....Works like a charm for the Richest 1%....not to good for the other 99%.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GreshamGuy
The plural of "anecdote" is not "evidence"
12:24 PM on 08/13/2012
The real secret of the corporate right is their knowledge that it is easier to sell a plausible lie than a difficult truth. Presidential elections have steadily become marketing contests. There is no discussion of substantive issues, no pretense of honest debate. We are asked to select between illusions of democracy and unless people begin to demand it, our governance will soon be as relevant as reality TV.
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BBackSoon
Hello, I must be going.
12:20 PM on 08/13/2012
See what Billionaires can do with just a few hundred million and a Decade or two?
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JoeyDee2
I know what just passed here
11:02 AM on 08/13/2012
I’ve tried to come up with the proper term for the post-Democracy era in America. I’ve called it Debtocracy. But I think Corporate Statism is succinct and accurate. Something Mr. Eskow points out which few seem attuned to is the shift in the political spectrum where the extreme right has become the “normal” right and the left moderately centrist at its most radical. Mr. Eskow is correct when he writes, “The only genuine conservative in this year's race, at least where government deficits are concerned, is Barack Obama.” Attacks on Obama as a “Marxist” are patently absurd, for he is not even a liberal. That’s just a deflection. But Obama is not the “One” to oppose the dire threat of the coming Randian society. The Dems are in disarray with no plan to counter this, and many are to some degree complicit with the Republican scheme. It has become a de facto one-party system. In the Dems case, they should heed the words of Edmund Burke, “All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing” or America will be unrecognizable in decades or less.
03:13 AM on 08/13/2012
There is no way the good people of the this here lands will elect Reagan to be the president. That level of folly is simply unimaginable. W? You have gots to be kidding. Even someone without the knowledge of elementary algebra knows that would be a complete disaster, despite the fact that Maureen Dowd can't stand Gore. Surely no one will buy the teenage fantasy Ayn's number one fan is huckstering. We are simply too bright and civilized a people to fall for this nonsense.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jax328
Allergic to Bullsh**
08:51 AM on 08/13/2012
You would think so....but WI has reflected Ryan how many times...they put A Bush in twice....never underestimate some folks ability to vote against their own interests....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Three Lakes
09:33 AM on 08/13/2012
People vote against their own interests because they fear their guns will be taken away. They are told what to think in church about contraception, abortion and gays and feel obligated to vote as they are told or ....hell, rapture etc. They vote against their own interests because they fear the loss of gasoline for their vehicles and windmills just don't translate for them but building a pipeline does. They are happy just to have cable to watch reality shows after a long day of work and have no time to learn the issues behind the very social programs that help them. And then there are the racists who would rather have Obama out and their own interests hurt just because he is black and they believe that he helps the poor who are too lazy to work. Now the Republicans know just how to manipulate these voters and they do it well, usually through fear. We have been watching their marketing (Fox and Limbaugh etc.) to these voters for 35 years. The corporatist 1%ers sponsor the manipulation and totally disrespect these voters and the puppet lawmakers they pay.

When I sing a patriotic song at an event I sing for those past presidents like FDR who though very wealthy, cared about the future for all Americans.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:58 AM on 08/13/2012
Let us all pray or if one doesn't pray, then have the "intent" of getting President Obama re-elected. When I look at the audiences for Romney/Ryan over the weekend they were all WHITE and I won't pass any other judgments.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nowThenzen
I am
04:28 PM on 08/13/2012
we're doomed!
09:50 PM on 08/13/2012
Or we might eventually deal with the American version of the French revolution.

Ordinary people have been known to push back when things get unbearable.

****In fairness, things are not unbearable enough.....yet.......
01:28 AM on 08/13/2012
Insightful article as to the groundwork Ryan's candidacy lays and the Democrats need to not only debunk the Ryan ideals, but show some vision of their own. If the Democratic establishment really cares about this country, they need to rid their inner circle of their own wall st/corporate elites and go one of two ways:

Get off the fence with their fetish for European-style social democracy and embrace it. Advocate for it.

or

Return to the constitutional center and debate and make decisions about how we get back to responsible democratic republic governance.

Our institution of government is an absolute mess right now. The government does things it shouldn't do, does not do things it should, but mostly muddles up the distinction between public and private, which in its own way aids and abets the march to the corporate statism the author accurately describes in this article.

Government, in my view, is not the evil Republicans claim or the cure-all Democrats like to make it out to be. It is, as Jefferson called it, "a necessary evil." It's a lonely existence these days holding the view our nation's governance was founded upon. Is it any wonder why we are in such deep, deep trouble?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:00 AM on 08/13/2012
You say, "If the Democratic establishment really cares about this country." Unfortunately, I haven't seen any evidence that they do. Party leadership keeps on moving to the right to appease corporate donors, and the few progressives in the party are routinely bullied into voting against their constituents' interests.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
TRex86
Enjoying life in West Ohio
01:32 PM on 08/13/2012
Nice post, but I disagree that the Dems consider the government a "cure-all." This is a false meme perpetrated by the far right that now dominates the Republicans, a mainstay of the false equivalency fallacy. Unfortunately, the corrupting role of money in politics has made the craven Democrats unwilling to "bite the hand." Consequently we have two parties, one hell bent on the corporate take-over and the other making whimpering noises of opposition. The Dems utterly lack a vision of what this country should be as they are playing defense constantly (against the Long Game). In short, I concur that Democrats should stop kidding themselves and embrace European social democracy. They have nothing to lose and might actually find themselves.