MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
In last week’s State of the Union Address, President Obama replayed themes he had touched on here in North Carolina when speaking at Forsyth Technical College in December.[1] He spoke of competitive challenges and the danger of a loss of global leadership. He spoke of countries like China and India “educating their children earlier and longer, with greater emphasis on math and science.” He told us that “in South Korea teachers are known as ‘nation builders’,” and that it was “time we treated the people who educate our children with the same level of respect.” He declared this to be the nation’s sputnik moment. He argued that the external threat, though now economic rather than military in nature, was as significant as that symbolized in 1957 by the unexpected Soviet leadership in space exploration. He called for a sustained American response to growing international competition, singling out the encouragement of innovation, the modernization of our infrastructure, and the funding of a general rise in educational performance as key needs now before us; and he used the same metaphor that had informed his earlier speech at Forsyth Tech– the metaphor of the overloaded airplane and the endangered engine. Speaking to Republicans keen to rapidly reduce the federal deficit, he said this on Tuesday:
I recognize that some in this Chamber have already proposed deeper cuts, and I’m willing to eliminate whatever we can honestly afford to do without. But let’s be sure we’re not doing it on the backs of our most vulnerable citizens. And let’s make sure what we’re cutting is really excess weight. Cutting the deficit by cutting our investments in innovation and education is like lightening an overloaded airplane by removing its engine. It may feel like you’re flying high at first, but it won’t take long before you feel the impact.[2]
So, in the wake of the State of the Union Address, are we now poised to reduce the federal deficit in ways that protect the engine of growth without adding further to the load on the back of our most vulnerable citizens? Sadly, it is likely that we are not. We are not because the Obama package is insufficiently radical to fundamentally alter the weight-engine ratio so vital to successful long-term air flight. We are not because, in the politics of contemporary Washington, members of Obama’s administration are obliged to seek common ground with a Republican Party, a section of which doesn’t want any federal airplane to fly at all, and the rest of whom seem determined to reinstall into that airplane the very engine that failed so badly less than three years ago.
To the Obama side of the Washington conversation, we should say this:
Not that the Republican answer was any better. It was, on the contrary, significantly worse.
In the cloistered world of Washington, Republican prejudice against the developmental role of government acts as a magnet, pulling the focus of debate away from the fundamental progressive reforms of foreign policy and public investment so vital to our long-term prosperity. The State of the Union Address is always political theatre at its most carefully orchestrated. It is always the one moment in the annual political calendar when the nation has the opportunity to hear the president’s general understanding of our internal and global condition, and glean his view of how best to strengthen both. It is always the one moment when the entire Washington class goes on television together. But given what members of that class are currently choosing to say to one another – given what passes as conventional wisdom in Washington these days – they would do themselves (and us) greater service by gathering together less often and gathering in public rarely at all. Because whatever else they were discussing last Tuesday, it was not the true state of the union. It was anything but the true state of the union. What should disturb the rest of us most is that on Tuesday our political leaders seemed so blissfully unaware of the level of their disconnect from reality.
First posted at www.davidcoates.net
[1] For commentary on that speech, see http://www.davidcoates.net/2010/12/09/president-obama-and-this-generation%E2%80%99s-%E2%80%9Csputnik-moment%E2%80%9D/
[2] The full text is at http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/01/25/remarks-president-state-union-address
[3] Contrary to the Republican claim that the federal government is too large, the share of GDP passing through the hands of both US federal and state governments is actually less than that going through the hands of governments in other major industrial democracies – less currently than any major western government but those in tiny Switzerland and Luxemburg. In fact, taking the post-war period as a whole, “non-defense federal spending has been fairly steady at 2-3% of GDP. Defense spending registers as larger (often substantially larger) than non-defense spending, and state-and-local–governments are responsible for almost two-thirds of total government spending.” It is, of course, state and local government spending which is now so under pressure (see footnote 7). This from Bruce Chadwick, Government Spending as a Proportion of GDP, available at http://www.chadwickresearch.com/blog/?p=124
[5] Figures from Katrina vanden Heuvel, ‘The costs of war,” The Washington Post, December 21, 2010. For the argument that the war in Afghanistan is not going well, see Robert Greenwald and Derrick Crowe, Failure, not Progress, in Afghanistan, available at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-greenwald-and-derrick-crowe/failure-not-progress-in-a_b_797215.html
[6] David Wassel, “What Sent States’ Fiscal Picture into a Tailspin?” The Wall Street Journal, January 27, 2011, p. A5
[7] Data at http://www.census.gov/govs/state/. And at US Census Bureau, State Government Finances Summary: 2009, available at www2.census.gov/govs/state/09statesummaryreport.pdf. Commentary at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/01/05/AR2011010505798.html
[8] See James Politi, ‘Move to allow state bankruptcy,” The Financial Times, January 22-3, 2011, p. 4
[9] So far, we have seen 13 states winning, so 39 losing: 13 winners, plus Washington DC.
[10] The full text is at http://nationaljournal.com/congress/full-text-michelle-bachmann-response-to-the-state-of-the-union-20110125
[11] “The Fact Checker: Obama’s 2011 State of the Union Address,” The Washington Post, January 26, 2011. General Electric apparently paid 11.5 percent of its revenue in corporation tax, while Siemens paid the German government 29 per cent of its!
[12] The increase in the CBO’s new projection – of a federal budget deficit of $1.5 trillion in 2011 – some 9.8 percent of GDP – was explained by the CBO director as almost entirely the result of the tax package agreed by the President and Congressional Republicans in December. (Details in Lori Montgomery, “CBO projects U.S. budget deficit to reach $1.5 trillion in 2011, highest ever,” The Washington Post January 27, 2011). For calculations on the cost of permanently extending the tax cut to the top 2% of U.S. taxpayers, see http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2010/11/bonus_tax_cuts_fade.html
[13] The full text is at http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-20029571-503544.html
[14] For the latest data on sluggish investment, see Adam Hersh, The Missing Ingredient in Our Recovery, Center for American Progress, January 28, 2011: available at http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2011/01/recovery_gdp.html
[15] For data on U.S. business unease with the Republican deficit cutting agenda, see James Politi, “US business cool on cutting deficit,” The Financial Times, January 24, 2011
Comments
Great commentary, David, as usual.
In his SOTU speech, Obama was not talking to the issues confronting most of America, such as chronic joblessness, home foreclosures, etc.. He wasn't even talking to consumers, addressing their lack of confidence about their future prospects. Instead, he spoke to the "post-recovery" crowd. It was time to celebrate the improvement in our circumstance wherein "the stock market has come roaring back. Corporate profits are up. The economy is growing again."
The speech kinda' fell flat in my neighborhood. But I understand it was a hit on Wall Street and K Street.
Happy Days Are Here Again, eh?
by SleepinJeezus on Mon, 01/31/2011 - 8:15am
I find it ironic that many conservatives will credit Reagan's defense spending as the reason the Soviet Union collapsed - because trying to keep up broke their metaphorical back, but not consider the idea that it might one day break ours…
by Verified Atheist on Mon, 01/31/2011 - 9:33am
GOP Fires at the Pentagon
In this recent essay, Dreyfuss sounds excited at the potential of these conservatives unting with liberals against Neo-Con defense spenders. But he neglects thinking about what happens after the jobs related to that defense spending are gone-both governent jobs and related private sector jobs-when those conservatives might not be such friendlies.
by anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 01/31/2011 - 4:33pm
This highlights a big problem with the current national debate. Policymakers from both parties are basically operating with default acceptance of the Norquistian concept that budgetary/taxation policy exists to "drown government a bathtub". Democrats have thus far failed at providing their own compelling counter-narrative integrating a balanced budget with a larger social-justice platform.
As such, the question of reallocating resources to more productive use is entirely absent from the national conversation. It's all about eliminating the role of government and handing the money that would have been spent directly to the millionaires by way of mega tax-cuts and loopholes.
Yay.
by kgb999 on Tue, 02/01/2011 - 7:09pm
by CVille Dem on Mon, 01/31/2011 - 6:18pm
A sputnik moment is the moment that you realize that all you have to eat are sputs which is Russian for potatoes. Then you know that creeping socialicism has you by the balls. This was first written about by Alexander Soldierson, a Russian who wrote books to try to warn other Russians that only sputs was in there future.
by The Decider on Mon, 01/31/2011 - 9:36pm
I don't really have anything to add. Just wanted to note my appreciation for another great piece.
by kgb999 on Tue, 02/01/2011 - 6:59pm