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Demeter

(85,373 posts)
53. The progressive case against Obama By Matt Stoller
Sat Oct 27, 2012, 08:51 PM
Oct 2012
http://www.salon.com/2012/10/27/the_progressive_case_against_obama/?source=newsletter

Bottom line: The president is complicit in creating an increasingly unequal -- and unjust -- society...this piece is an attempt at laying out the progressive case for why one should not vote for Barack Obama for reelection, even if you are in a swing state.

There are many good arguments against Obama, even if the Republicans cannot seem to muster any. The civil liberties/antiwar case was made eloquently a few weeks ago by libertarian Conor Friedersdorf, who wrote a well-cited blog post on why he could not, in good conscience, vote for Obama. While his arguments have tremendous merit, there is an equally powerful case against Obama on the grounds of economic and social equity. That case needs to be made...So why oppose Obama? Simply, it is the shape of the society Obama is crafting that I oppose, and I intend to hold him responsible, such as I can, for his actions in creating it. Many Democrats are disappointed in Obama. Some feel he’s a good president with a bad Congress. Some feel he’s a good man, trying to do the right thing, but not bold enough. Others think it’s just the system, that anyone would do what he did. I will get to each of these sentiments, and pragmatic questions around the election, but I think it’s important to be grounded in policy outcomes. Not, what did Obama try to do, in his heart of hearts? But what kind of America has he actually delivered? And the chart below answers the question. This chart reflects the progressive case against Obama.



The above is a chart of corporate profits against the main store of savings for most Americans who have savings — home equity. Notice that after the crisis, after the Obama inflection point, corporate profits recovered dramatically and surpassed previous highs, whereas home equity levels have remained static. That $5-7 trillion of lost savings did not come back, whereas financial assets and corporate profits did. Also notice that this is unprecedented in postwar history. Home equity levels and corporate profits have simply never diverged in this way; what was good for GM had always, until recently, been good, if not for America, for the balance sheet of homeowners. Obama’s policies severed this link, completely. This split represents more than money. It represents a new kind of politics, one where Obama, and yes, he did this, officially enshrined rights for the elite in our constitutional order and removed rights from everyone else (see “The Housing Crash and the End of American Citizenship” in the Fordham Urban Law Journal for a more complete discussion of the problem). The bailouts and the associated Federal Reserve actions were not primarily shifts of funds to bankers; they were a guarantee that property rights for a certain class of creditors were immune from challenge or market forces. The foreclosure crisis, with its rampant criminality, predatory lending, and document forgeries, represents the flip side. Property rights for debtors simply increasingly exist solely at the pleasure of the powerful. The lack of prosecution of Wall Street executives, the ability of banks to borrow at 0 percent from the Federal Reserve while most of us face credit card rates of 15-30 percent, and the bailouts are all part of the re-creation of the American system of law around Obama’s oligarchy.

The policy continuity with Bush is a stark contrast to what Obama offered as a candidate. Look at the broken promises from the 2008 Democratic platform: a higher minimum wage, a ban on the replacement of striking workers, seven days of paid sick leave, a more diverse media ownership structure, renegotiation of NAFTA, letting bankruptcy judges write down mortgage debt, a ban on illegal wiretaps, an end to national security letters, stopping the war on whistle-blowers, passing the Employee Free Choice Act, restoring habeas corpus, and labor protections in the FAA bill. Each of these pledges would have tilted bargaining leverage to debtors, to labor, or to political dissidents. So Obama promised them to distinguish himself from Bush, and then went back on his word because these promises didn’t fit with the larger policy arc of shifting American society toward his vision. For sure, Obama believes he is doing the right thing, that his policies are what’s best for society. He is a conservative technocrat, running a policy architecture to ensure that conservative technocrats like him run the complex machinery of the state and reap private rewards from doing so. Radical political and economic inequality is the result. None of these policy shifts, with the exception of TARP, is that important in and of themselves, but together they add up to declining living standards.

While life has never been fair, the chart above shows that, since World War II, this level of official legal, political and economic inequity for the broad mass of the public is new (though obviously for subgroups, like African-Americans, it was not new). It is as if America’s traditional racial segregationist tendencies have been reorganized, and the tools and tactics of that system have been repurposed for a multicultural elite colonizing a multicultural population. The data bears this out: Under Bush, economic inequality was bad, as 65 cents of every dollar of income growth went to the top 1 percent. Under Obama, however, that number is 93 cents out of every dollar. That’s right, under Barack Obama there is more economic inequality than under George W. Bush. And if you look at the chart above, most of this shift happened in 2009-2010, when Democrats controlled Congress. This was not, in other words, the doing of the mean Republican Congress. And it’s not strictly a result of the financial crisis; after all, corporate profits did crash, like housing values did, but they also recovered, while housing values have not.

This is the shape of the system Obama has designed. It is intentional, it is the modern American order, and it has a certain equilibrium, the kind we identify in Middle Eastern resource extraction based economies. We are even seeing, as I showed in an earlier post, a transition of the American economic order toward a petro-state. By some accounts, America will be the largest producer of hydrocarbons in the world, bigger than Saudi Arabia. This is just not an America that any of us should want to live in. It is a country whose economic basis is oligarchy, whose political system is authoritarianism, and whose political culture is murderous toward the rest of the world and suicidal in our aggressive lack of attention to climate change...MUCH MORE WORTHYOF YOUR READING....We need to build a different model of politics, one in which people who want a different society are willing to actually bargain and back up their threats, rather than just aesthetically argue for shifts around the margin. The good news is that the changes we need to make are entirely doable. It will cost about $100 trillion over 20 years to move our world to an entirely sustainable energy system, and the net worth of the global top 1 percent is $103 trillion. We can do this. And the moments to let us make the changes we need are coming. There is endless good we can do, if enough of us are willing to show the courage that exists within every human being instead of the malevolence and desire for conformity that also exists within every heart.

Systems that can’t go on, don’t. The political elites, as much as they kick the can down the road, know this. The question we need to ask ourselves is, do we?
And we have a bank so bad, nobody could be coerced into taking it--LIQUIDATED! Demeter Oct 2012 #1
If Sandy Becomes 'Frankenstorm,' It Could Be Worst In A Century Demeter Oct 2012 #2
Hurricane Sandy wreaks havoc on airline flights Demeter Oct 2012 #9
Strange Weather...Glenn Frey (ex-Eagle) Fuddnik Oct 2012 #3
Brilliant title, Demeter! bread_and_roses Oct 2012 #4
Don't forget the vodka! Fuddnik Oct 2012 #5
Martinis by candlelight! sheshe2 Oct 2012 #28
And don't forget...... AnneD Oct 2012 #55
You can sell power to neighbors, become a local utility, too Demeter Oct 2012 #65
One of the really cool things that happened with Ike.... AnneD Oct 2012 #91
Thanks, but I cannot tell a lie Demeter Oct 2012 #52
The Oddest Revelation From the Bank of America Fraud Suit DemReadingDU Oct 2012 #6
Paulson was probably clandestinely shoveling money into them Demeter Oct 2012 #8
1938 New England hurricane Demeter Oct 2012 #7
This earnings season, more global means more pain Demeter Oct 2012 #10
see you all in the morning Demeter Oct 2012 #11
9 More Banks Subpoenaed Over Libor Demeter Oct 2012 #12
Rajaratnam friend agrees to settle SEC insider trading case Demeter Oct 2012 #13
Wells Fargo sends refunds to some FHA mortgage customers Demeter Oct 2012 #14
‘Frankenstorm’ has financial centers on edge Demeter Oct 2012 #15
A comparison of competitiveness and wealth Demeter Oct 2012 #16
Stock Market Needs a Little Christmas, Right This Very Instant Demeter Oct 2012 #17
How an improving economy makes new Fed policies more potent Demeter Oct 2012 #20
Presidential Election Weighs on the Federal Reserve Demeter Oct 2012 #21
This message was self-deleted by its author hamerfan Oct 2012 #18
Musical Interlude hamerfan Oct 2012 #19
New Federal Rules for Debt Collectors By EDWARD WYATT Demeter Oct 2012 #22
The Perfect Storm Movie Synopsis DemReadingDU Oct 2012 #23
I read the book sseveral years before it was a movie. Fuddnik Oct 2012 #49
Le Storm xchrom Oct 2012 #24
Widespread U.S. Power Outages Possible When Storm Arrives xchrom Oct 2012 #25
Don’t Cram Audits Down Investors’ Throats xchrom Oct 2012 #26
French banks hit by downgrade as consumer confidence stalls xchrom Oct 2012 #27
Revenge on Hollande Demeter Oct 2012 #35
thats what i think too. nt xchrom Oct 2012 #37
Vietnamese Banks Got Caught Selling Clients' Gold To Finance Themselves xchrom Oct 2012 #29
A fool and his gold are soon parted Demeter Oct 2012 #38
The Latest Exports Data Is Troubling {lots of charts} xchrom Oct 2012 #30
Calling this an economy is like calling a corpse a "registered voter" Demeter Oct 2012 #34
... xchrom Oct 2012 #36
Businessman Billed A Cold-Call Firm $13 For Every Minute They Wasted His Time—And Won xchrom Oct 2012 #31
FRANKENSTORM WATCH: Get The Latest News Right Here xchrom Oct 2012 #32
A little something to warm your innards during Frankenstorm. Fuddnik Oct 2012 #46
... xchrom Oct 2012 #47
The Turducken Storm. Fuddnik Oct 2012 #58
... xchrom Oct 2012 #61
Unemployment is falling everywhere except the Northeast. Why is that? Demeter Oct 2012 #33
Obama says he’ll renew pursuit of ‘grand bargain,’ offering specifics on agenda Demeter Oct 2012 #39
Pursue a grand bargain with crazy people. Fuddnik Oct 2012 #48
A Stalemate May be the best we the People can hope for Demeter Oct 2012 #50
More than a Dozen Nuclear Plants Near Hurricane Sandy’s Path Brace for Impact Demeter Oct 2012 #40
TWO POINTS TO NOTE Demeter Oct 2012 #41
China at a Crossroads in Shift from World's Factory to Industrial Power xchrom Oct 2012 #42
SPANISH POLICE PROTEST THE LOSS OF CHRISTMAS BONUS xchrom Oct 2012 #43
DOONESBURY GIVES ECONOMICS LESSON FOR MILLENNIAL GENERATION Demeter Oct 2012 #44
A Hurricane Once More, Sandy Defies The Rules by Jon Hamilton Demeter Oct 2012 #45
Why You Should Be Terrified Of Hurricane Sandy xchrom Oct 2012 #51
The progressive case against Obama By Matt Stoller Demeter Oct 2012 #53
and this time around, there aren't even promises bread_and_roses Oct 2012 #57
... xchrom Oct 2012 #72
I'd post more tonight, but Demeter Oct 2012 #54
Musical Interlude II hamerfan Oct 2012 #56
Dusty Springfield - Spooky xchrom Oct 2012 #59
Spain austerity: Thousands join new budget cuts protest xchrom Oct 2012 #60
Six burning questions for Spain xchrom Oct 2012 #62
86 the banks--save the people and the nation. Demeter Oct 2012 #66
+1 xchrom Oct 2012 #67
Australia PM Julia Gillard outlines Asia manifesto xchrom Oct 2012 #63
Dusty Springfield - a brand new me xchrom Oct 2012 #64
Tens of Thousands Protest Against Austerity in Rome xchrom Oct 2012 #68
The Annotated Brothers Grimm: in pictures {this is SO cool} xchrom Oct 2012 #69
Why Big Bucks Donors Don't Want President Obama to Champion Social Security By Dean Baker Demeter Oct 2012 #70
10 Filthy-Rich, Tax-Dodging Hypocrites Pushing Disastrous Austerity on America Demeter Oct 2012 #73
Paying Taxes to Your Boss: A Step Toward 21st Century Feudalism Demeter Oct 2012 #78
Barclays slashes bankers' pay by up to half as profits fall xchrom Oct 2012 #71
That's it then Demeter Oct 2012 #75
wait...i'll pack my purse and go with you. we can do tea. nt xchrom Oct 2012 #76
Sounds like fun! Demeter Oct 2012 #83
wouldn't that be a HOOT -- i bet she has stories she's just dying to dish. xchrom Oct 2012 #84
and cheese and pickle sandwiches at the Pub bread_and_roses Oct 2012 #87
I can just see miss Demeter putting cheese sandwiches xchrom Oct 2012 #89
KKR Falls Short of $8 Billion Goal for Buyout Fund xchrom Oct 2012 #74
Greek Journalist Held Over List of Swiss-Account Holders xchrom Oct 2012 #77
Far TOO OFTEN I have Been on the Receiving End of This! Demeter Oct 2012 #79
lol! oh yes. nt xchrom Oct 2012 #80
Today is the Condo Association's Annual Halloween Bash Demeter Oct 2012 #82
Have fun! DemReadingDU Oct 2012 #86
German Finance Minister Says No Way To A New Greek Debt Haircut xchrom Oct 2012 #81
Musical Interlude III hamerfan Oct 2012 #85
All Along the Watchtower (Hendrix) bread_and_roses Oct 2012 #88
Thanks, hamerfan! Demeter Oct 2012 #90
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