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Robert Scheer

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Seven Republican Dwarfs

Posted: 06/15/11 08:23 AM ET

They assumed the stance of the Seven Dwarfs, not as a matter of physical but rather intellectual stature. Not one of the candidates for the GOP presidential nomination who debated Monday night rose to a point of seriousness in addressing the nation's grievous problems. Instead, they ever so playfully thumbed their collective noses at any possible meaningful government reaction to the mess that we are in. It was Herbert Hoover warmed over, leaving Barack Obama secure in the mantle of FDR whether he deserves that tribute or not.

Obama, who has been inconsistent and weak in reining in the Wall Street greed that got us into this deep economic morass, is now under no pressure from the opposition to improve his performance. The Republican knee-jerk reaction -- government bad, big business great, and don't dare say that the Wall Street scoundrels who created this crisis need a timeout -- gets Obama off the hook from legitimate criticism he needs to hear. As the Wall Street Journal headlined the non-debate: "Candidates Run Against Regulation."

It's as if the sound government regulation of the financial industry implemented in response to the Great Depression -- not its polar opposite, the radical deregulation fueled by Republican free market zealots -- was the source of our banking meltdown.

How dare these Republican candidates en masse ignore the truth that it was precisely the legislation that their party pushed through Congress, and that Democrat Bill Clinton shamefully endorsed, that launched the era of unregulated credit default swaps and mortgage-based securities that came close to destroying the entire economy. The failed policies involved are the cause of the 50 percent run-up of the national debt, 9.1 percent unemployment, an all-time high in poverty and the prospect of 50 million people being driven from their homes.

The Republican debate dashed any expectation that some populist candidate would rise from that side of the aisle, and in an honest way tap into voter resentment over the deep hurt that the Wall Street superrich have put on ordinary Americans. Instead, the candidates made regulation the enemy, rather than the misdeeds that responsible legislation is intended to curtail.

And their target was not just legislation to control the financial community. Indeed they offered, to a person, an across-the-board assault on the very idea of the power of the government being used in a forthright way to protect the rights of the individual citizen in any arena. As the Wall Street Journal summarized the New Hampshire debate:

Republican presidential hopefuls on Monday pressed for the dismantling of government regulations drawn up over 40 years, using a candidates' debate here to call for the scaling back or elimination of environmental, labor, financial and health-care rules.

The stakes in the next election couldn't be more important, and the danger for Obama and the country is that he might continue his practice of compromising instead of courageously challenging entrenched corporate power. If the choice is between him and any one of the Seven Dwarfs, it will be no contest as to who is the lesser evil. If Mitt Romney, the current front-runner by a wide margin for the GOP nomination, represents the best chance the Republicans have of putting up a sensible leader, Obama will be under no stress to improve his performance. Romney won't even defend the very minor health care reforms that the Republicans deride as "Obamacare," even though those reforms are based on a state program Romney championed when he was governor of Massachusetts.

The only candidate who has had the temerity to concede that the Republican vision of health care is "right-wing social engineering" was Newt Gingrich, and he has been backing away from that assertion ever since he made it in May. At Monday's debate, Gingrich felt the need to balance that earlier bit of reason with an absurd call for abolishing the National Labor Relations Board, as if it is the unbridled power of trade unions rather the mammoth corporations that is responsible for the downsizing and outsourcing of once well-paid American jobs.

The smug arrogance of these Republican candidates, preening with their concern for the masses of Americans oppressed by the chains of Social Security, minimal rights to health care, and environmental protection, leaves Obama as the only serious adult in the room. These folks even want to reverse the Sarbanes-Oxley law, designed to prevent the accounting fraud associated with the collapses of Enron and WorldCom that cost so many their jobs and savings.
With the president facing opponents such as these, the danger is that our national politics will once again be traumatized by a lesser-evilism, in which Obama will be given a free ride relieved of the pressure to perform better in dealing with an economy that is in deep trouble. It would be all too easy for him to make the case that he inherited rather than created the economic debacle, and that his palliatives, including the stimulus and mild regulation, may have not solved the problem but it would be a lot worse if the do-nothingness--that traditional bane of the GOP -- had been the order of the day.

 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ekstatik
Granfalloon-free!
05:53 AM on 08/13/2011
I'm voting fifth party.
02:24 PM on 06/25/2011
As a dwarf I am uncomfortable with the use of dwarfism as metaphor to illustrate a lack of intelligence.
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Skunkman
old & decrepit
11:53 AM on 06/16/2011
Pawlenty's plan is where all the rest of the Republican candidates begin. Imagine what Romney or Bachmann's plan would be for increasing debt for the sake of making billionaire's even more rich.

Mike
07:51 AM on 06/16/2011
There seems to be much you left out. Timmy lending money to banks and business for less then 1%, then selling them treasury bond at 3%. Fed is printing money qe2 and is getting ready to print more qe3. Obama passes new finicial regulations that business and bank do not know what is in it. Obamacare no one still know what all is in it. EPA is charging carbon taxes on energy and closing coal generated power plants. EPA keep pushing it control further without control of anyone. Clinton forcing mortgage loans to people who could not pay them back start the finicial meltdown. But a liberal wrote this article so facts are just a side bar and are needed in the story.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
muck-raker
give me liberty or give me death
09:13 AM on 06/16/2011
the answer is.......
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PTUY16CkS-k
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert Frank
My last name is FRANK so thats what I am..
07:17 AM on 06/16/2011
it should read "seven republican dopes"
06:34 AM on 06/16/2011
To hear these candidates repeat, over and over again, the right-wing "no regulation" mantra was almost literally unbelievable. After more than a decade of financial scandals that have wrecked the economy and impoverished millions while a tiny elite makes -- literally -- billions in personal wealth, how can anyone still believe this absurd agenda has the slightest credibility?!!!!
05:42 AM on 06/16/2011
How can these eminently reasonable views be more widely disseminated? Here at the HuffingtonPost, you're pretty much preaching to the choir, though not many express themselves so clearly. I'm hoping that there is some way to pierce the propaganda bubble generated by the right-wing propaganda machine. There is none so blind as he who would not see, as the saying goes.
I get that, and surely there is some of that in play here. But as we approach next year's elections, I feel we should fight for every vote and concede nothing!
So to any Republicans and independents who may be reading these words, as well as the
so-called "trolls": can't you see that you're being played? The rich are making out like bandits, and you're saying I'm getting 5 crumbs, but this guy over there is getting 6 crumbs. Destroy him!
Let me quote from this article, for Mr. Scheer said it better: "How dare these Republican candidates en masse ignore the truth that it was precisely the legislation that their party pushed through Congress, and that Democrat Bill Clinton shamefully endorsed, that launched the era of unregulated credit default swaps and mortgage-based securities that came close to destroying the entire economy. The failed policies involved are the cause of the 50 percent run-up of the national debt, 9.1 percent unemployment, an all-time high in poverty and the prospect of 50 million people being driven from their homes."
Indeed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
muck-raker
give me liberty or give me death
09:16 AM on 06/16/2011
excellent post..many here are starting "To see the light of day"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ekstatik
Granfalloon-free!
05:51 AM on 08/13/2011
Second that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ralph Boyd
Look, . . right behind you!
02:55 AM on 06/16/2011
The radical "Conservative" economic experiment has failed. The concept that you could have a modern industrial society with nineteenth century laws, regulations, and taxes came crashing down in 2008 and took the planet's economy with it. The problem of course is that we still have "Conservatives" of both parties in government desperately clinging onto this failed experiment.

The Democrats offer us some hope of recognition of the economic situation, but the Republicans are inconceivably chained to this economic insanity. Not one candidate offered by the GOP has a solution to the economy other than flag waving and faith, and not one has more substance than a red, white, and blue marshmallow.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert Frank
My last name is FRANK so thats what I am..
07:19 AM on 06/16/2011
thats not true some of them said we should focus on abortion, gays, and less taxes for rich people and then somehow someday these issues will lead to jobs somewhere...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CroatianCritter
is keeping people honest
02:49 AM on 06/16/2011
Two things about this post: First, being the LESSER of two evils (Obama) still will not make me vote for him. We have had bi-partisan tyranny in this country since the 90s and re-electing the guy who does not appear as bad will not slow our decline into meaninglessness. Isn't Obama the guy claiming that he deserves the power to assassinate American citizens? The corporations are the ones who truly run this country and the idea that government should not regulate business (Republicans) or the idea of larger government to regulate (Democrats) will never fix these problems because we are beyond the normal solutions that have existed over the past sixty plus years. How did that bailout work out, by the way? Second, I disagree that all Republicans don't care about the working class in this country. Ron Paul, whether you agree with his politics or not, has always voted his conscience and is truly concerned with the direction of the United States. You may not agree with his solutions but the guy is strong in what he believes and has been uncorruptable to this point. He believes in the libertarian Constitutional definition of government power (And being a person who has seen both the Republicans and Democrats screw up this country for the past 30 years, I am willing to give him a chance) and believes that government should have the power to only do what is Constitutional viable. Maybe we should take his ideas seriously.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
muck-raker
give me liberty or give me death
09:22 AM on 06/16/2011
related: For all the drastic spending cuts in GOP Rep. Paul Ryan's proposed 2012 budget, there's one major government program that it barely touches: Social Security. Now Republicans in both houses of Congress are preparing to dig into that sacrosanct entitlement as well.

On Wednesday morning, shortly before Obama's big deficit speech, three Republican senators unveiled a plan to cut $6.2 trillion by paring back Social Security over the next two decades. Under a proposal unveiled by Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), Rand Paul (R-Ky.), and Mike Lee (R-Utah), the qualifying age for Social Security would rise from 67 to 70 by 2032, while benefits for everyone earning more than an average of $43,000 over their lifetime would be reduced. Graham took pains to explain that he wasn't pushing for privatization but also slammed any tax increases to shore up Social Security, saying such a move would "destroy America." "It's much better to give up benefits on the end side than pay taxes now," he explained.
http://motherjones.com/politics/2011/04/republican-social-security-cuts
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FogBelter
Illegitimis non carborundum
02:47 AM on 06/16/2011
I didn't see Seven Dwarfs, what I saw, semi-animated, at the Republican Debate was the residue left over in Dr Frankenstein's Laboratory after the Creature had escaped to rampage in the countryside. I saw half-formed, ideologies oozing from cracked mason jars ... Forsaken limbs dangling from rafters, with greedy hands grasping for past glories ... disembodied eyes searching for acceptance in the darkness beyond a damp petri dish and finding none ...

I saw no dwarfs on that stage, for dwarfs are lofty beings ... all I saw were castoff remnants of disappointment, awaiting Igor's return to either be discarded or consumed ...
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ChairmanMoe
The Revolution Will NOT Be Televised
02:06 PM on 06/16/2011
That's some poetic imagery: Satisfactory!
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unionave
Old Codger
02:45 AM on 06/16/2011
After WWI Harry Truman with the help of Herbert Hoover did a lot of relief work in Europe which was expanded in to the USA for destitute Americans . The American relief program was later morphed into Welfare by the Republicans . Democrats copied the German Social Security annuity program , and instituted it here in the USA . Which , as it is in Germany , is income assistance to seniors after retirement . The Democrats added to the Social Security program a health insurance program called Medicare to assist seniors with health care needs . In other words the Democrats have formed several programs to assist needy Americans .

What programs have the Republicans ever initiated to assist needy Americans ? Is the Republican party only for the greedy selfish who consider needy Americans as not worth assisting ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FearlessFreep
I'm actually a radical leftist
12:35 AM on 06/16/2011
Of course, the "Seven Dwarfs" designation was originally applied to the 1988 Democratic presidential candidates in the spring of 1987. (The press viewed them as a safer target than Ronald Reagan in the midst of Iran-Contra.) But it was actually one of the more interesting Democratic contests, because one of the dwarfs was Jesse Jackson.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tulsey
I was Bill Hicks.
01:35 AM on 06/16/2011
I thought it was Disney. At least his dwarfs had some animation.
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thinklib
I will not mince words.
12:04 AM on 06/16/2011
The purpose of this shallow hit piece?

To distract people from the miserable failure in the White House - a man completely ignorant of basic economics and the way the world works.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
marco01
01:18 AM on 06/16/2011
Great, vote Republican.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rob burton
"I will write peace on your wings and you will fly
04:16 AM on 06/16/2011
So were you hibernating during the eight years W was prez?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Danielle Burke
philosophical anarchist/ voluntaryist
10:20 PM on 06/15/2011
"Hence left-corporatist policies, to succeed, must be marketed as protecting
ordinary people against big business, while right-corporatist policies must be marketed as
protecting ordinary people against big government; through a strategy I’ve elsewhere called
“left cop, right cop,” those who find one face of the corporatist establishment unappealing
are lured into supporting the other face."-Roderick long
http://praxeology.net/invisible-hands-and-incantations.pdf
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Danielle Burke
philosophical anarchist/ voluntaryist
10:04 PM on 06/15/2011
Roderick Long: "In a free market, firms would be smaller and less hierarchical, more local and more numerous (and many would probably be employee-owned); prices would be lower and wages higher; and corporate power would be in shambles. Small wonder that big business, despite often paying lip service to free market ideals, tends to systematically oppose them in practice.

So where does this idea come from that advocates of free-market libertarianism must be carrying water for big business interests? Whence the pervasive conflation of corporatist plutocracy with libertarian laissez-faire? Who is responsible for promoting this confusion?"

http://www.cato-unbound.org/2008/11/10/roderick-long/corporations-versus-the-market-or-whip-conflation-now/