Boycott the "Greater" Israeli Apartheid Regime!

Boycott the "Greater" Israeli Apartheid Regime!

Învaţă, Cunoaşte-te pe tine însuţi, Schimbă-te... Învaţă de la oameni, Cunoaşte-i, Schimbaţi Împreună Lumea!

Saturday, 25 February 2012

The Emperor's Messenger Has No Clothes



by: Robert Jensen, Truthout
 
 
A review of "The Imperial Messenger: Thomas Friedman at Work," by Belén Fernández, published by Verso in its new series Counterblasts, dedicated to "challenging the apologists of Empire and Capital."
 
"The Imperial Messenger" is the Truthout Progressive Pick of the Week and is available directly from Truthout for a minimum contribution by clicking here.
 
What's scary about Thomas Friedman is not his journalism, with its underinflated insights and twisted metaphors. Annoying as his second-rate thinking and third-rate writing may be, he's not the first - or the worst - hack journalist.
 
What should unnerve us about Friedman is the acclaim he receives in political and professional circles.
 
Friedman's New York Times column appears twice a week on the most prestigious op-ed page in the United States; he has won three Pulitzer Prizes; his books are best-sellers; he's a darling of the producers of television news shows; and he fills lecture halls for a speaking fee as high as $75,000.
 
Although his work is stunningly shallow and narcissistic, Friedman is celebrated as a big thinker.
 
MSNBC's Chris Matthews was so excited after a 2005 "Hardball" interview with Friedman that he proclaimed: "You have a global brain, my friend. You're amazing. You amaze me every time you write a book."
 
How does a journalist with a track record of bad predictions and a penchant for superficial analysis - a person paid to reflect about the world yet who seems to lack the capacity for critical self-reflection - end up being treated as an oracle?

The answer is simple: Friedman tells the privileged, and those who aspire to privilege, what they want to hear in a way that makes them feel smart; his trumpeting of US affluence and power are sprinkled with pithy-though-empty anecdotes, padded with glib turns of phrases. He's the perfect oracle for a management-focused, advertising-saturated, dumbed-down, imperial culture that doesn't want to come to terms with the systemic and structural reasons for its decline. In Friedman's world, we're always one clichéd big idea away from the grand plan that will allow us to continue to pretend to be the shining city upon the hill that we have always imagined we were/are/will be again.

As a reporter, columnist, author or speaker, Friedman's secret to success is in avoiding the journalistic ideals of "speaking truth to power" or "afflicting the comfortable." Those ideals are too rarely met in mainstream journalism, but Friedman never goes very far beyond parroting the powerful and comforting the comfortable. Friedman sees the world from the point of view of the privileged, adopting in his own words the view of "a tourist with an attitude" when reporting on the rest of the world.

Here's the problem with that mindset: Around the world, American tourists routinely are experienced as boorish and smug. Around the world, people smile at American tourists and take their money, all the while despising their arrogance and ignorance. Tourists never quite catch on, wondering why the "natives" don't appreciate them.

In her examination of Friedman's work, Belén Fernández explains the danger in America's affection for its No. 1 Tourist Journalist. Her book, "The Imperial Messenger," is as much about the cultural and political crises in the United States as it is about Friedman's flaws. This larger focus transforms what could have been a sarcastic hit piece that took easy shots at Friedman's most mangled prose into a thoughtful meditation from a young journalist willing to state the obvious: the emperor's messenger has no clothes.

After graduating from Columbia University with a political science degree in 2003, Fernández traveled throughout the Middle East, Latin America and Europe. Eventually, her travel notes turned into journalism, as her accounts of people she met and interviewed became stories for web publications. Frustrated by the gap between what she knew from her education and reporting, and Friedman's version of international affairs, she wrote a few short critiques of the Times' columnist in 2009. Then she undertook the systematic review of all his columns since 1995, selections from his writing as a reporter and his books that led to "The Imperial Messenger." In an email interview, she explained how that happened and why.


Robert Jensen: What sparks a relatively unknown journalist with no establishment credentials to research a book that argues one of the country's most well-known journalists is, to put it bluntly, a fool and a fraud? That isn't going to put you in the fast lane for a well-paying job in mainstream journalism.

Belén Fernández: Prior to 2009, my familiarity with the work of Thomas Friedman was basically limited to his notion that France should have been removed from the U.N. Security Council for refusing to support the Iraq war. When I began reading him more extensively, I couldn't believe that no one had debunked him in book form and took it upon myself to do so - naïvely assuming that it would be an enjoyable and relatively simple task. This assumption proved unfounded, as I realized that a book of any real value had to consist of something more serious than 150 pages of making fun of Friedman's blunders and general foolishness.

What kept me going throughout the months of reading and re-reading decades' worth of Friedman's drivel was anger - at his warmongering jingoism, his blatant racism vis-à-vis large sectors of the world's population, and the fact that someone unable to keep track of his own arguments and to refrain from continually contradicting himself had risen to a position of such prominence in the US media.


RJ: What word or phrase would you use to describe Friedman's analytical framework, his way of understanding the world?

BF: Perhaps Friedman's own decree: "Many big bad things happen in the world without America, but not a lot of big good things."


RJ: Good journalists inevitably have to simplify the complex events they report about. You suggest Friedman's work is reductionist. What's the difference between the two?

BF: It's one thing to simplify events and phenomena so that audiences can more easily understand them; it's quite another to brand Palestinians as "gripped by a collective madness" and to whitewash war crimes such as collective punishment.

Recall Friedman's justification [on the "Charlie Rose Show"] in 2003 for the Iraq war: A "terrorism bubble" had emerged in "that part of the world" and had made itself known on 9/11. In order to burst the bubble, US troops needed to go "house to house, from Basra to Baghdad," wielding a "very big stick" and instructing Iraqis to "Suck. On. This." No matter that Friedman himself acknowledged that there was absolutely no link between Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein.

Or recall Friedman's reductionist Tilt Theory of History, which applies to situations in which "you take a country, a culture, or a region that has been tilted in the wrong direction and tilt it in the right direction." Again, "right" and "wrong" as conceived of by Friedman and the US military are passed off as universal truths.

Then we of course have the Golden Arches Theory of Conflict Prevention, which posits that no two countries that host McDonald's establishments have gone to war with each other since each acquired its McDonald's. This delightful discovery regarding the harmonious effects of American fast food and US corporate dominance is cast into doubt when, shortly after the theory's birth, 19 McDonald's-possessing NATO countries go to war with McDonald's-possessing Yugoslavia.

Around this same time, Friedman's reductionist assessment that "America truly is the ultimate benign hegemon" is contradicted by such things as his simultaneous entreaties for "sustained," "unreasonable," and "less than surgical bombing" of Serbia.

His economic reductions meanwhile rarely withstand the test of reality. Friedman exulted over the Irish economic model in 2005, threatening Germany and France that they had better follow the "leprechaun way" - by, inter alia, making it easier to fire workers - in order to avert economic decadence. The leprechaun way merits no further mention following the collapse of the Irish economy.


RJ: Friedman seems to defy easy political categorization. He doesn't fit into the categories of liberal or conservative typically used in mainstream politics in the United States. What word or phrase would you use to sum up Friedman's politics?

BF: Schizophrenic? For example, he advertised the Iraq war as "the most radical-liberal revolutionary war the US has ever launched" while simultaneously defining himself as "a liberal on every issue other than this war" and the war as part of a "neocon strategy." During an encounter with Haaretz journalist Ari Shavit in 2003, Friedman described the alleged war for democracy in Iraq as not a war that the American masses demanded but rather a war of an elite.

Friedman's consistent championing of policies benefiting the corporate elite - most recently in his campaign to slash corporate taxes and entitlements in the aftermath of the financial recession - would locate him on the right of the ideological spectrum, though he intermittently endeavors to disguise himself as a "Social Safety Netter" or a "radical centrist." According to Friedman, the current key to establishing a "party of the radical center" is a bizarre entity called Americans Elect, which will field a third presidential ticket in 2012 elected via "internet convention" and which Friedman acknowledges is funded with "some serious hedge-fund money" courtesy of investor Peter Ackerman. Centrism indeed.

At a presentation at a university in Istanbul in 2010, Friedman classified himself politically as neither a Democrat nor a Republican but rather a disciple of billionaire investor Warren Buffett's theory that "everything I got in life was because I was born in this country, America, at this time, with these opportunities and these institutions." Friedman reiterated his duty to pass on a similar situation to his children. As I say in my book, foreign audiences and non-billionaires might be forgiven for a lack of complete sympathy.


RJ: You decided to focus on three subjects in the book: "America," "the Arab/Muslim world" and the United States' "special relationship" with Israel. Why did you pick those?

BF: No book on Friedman would have been complete without a section on his grating patriotic obsession with the United States and his view of the country as a global role model and civilizing force. Given that the Arab/Muslim world is so often on the receiving end of the US military's civilizing endeavors, I decided it was also crucial to devote a section to Friedman's unabashed Orientalism and his dehumanizing and patronizing contempt for Arabs and Muslims, which he naturally attempts to disguise as concern for their freedom.

The "special relationship" with Israel is more a reference to Friedman's own function as an apologist for crimes committed by the Jewish state. He purports to be a serious critic of Israel, but his criticism is largely restricted to the issue of settlements, which he criticizes because he views them as jeopardizing the perpetuation of ethnocracy and Israel's ability to continue denying Palestinians equal rights in a single multi-ethnic democracy. Right-wing Zionists are increasingly condemning Friedman as anti-Israeli and a pro-Palestinian militant, which raises a question - with enemies like Friedman, who needs friends?


RJ: Your own political views are clearly at odds with Friedman's. How would you answer critics who might suggest your book is just a polemic about those issues, not about Friedman?

BF: One of the most fundamental problems I have with Friedman is that he uses his elevated position to belittle human suffering and to encourage the slaughter of civilians, as he did during Israel's Operation Cast Lead in Gaza (2008-09), when he invoked Israel's "logical" mass targeting of civilians in Lebanon in 2006 as an optimistic precedent.

I don't think it's possible to reduce this to a clash between political views. As I point out in the book, it is not up to Friedman to decide that the Fourth Geneva Convention prohibiting collective punishment and targeting of civilians in wartime is illogical. Given his influential position in foreign policy circles, I don't classify his promotion of the notion that some human beings are inherently inferior and more expendable than others, and that corporate profit supersedes human life in importance, as merely politically misguided. I classify it as criminal, and I consider him to be personally responsible and not just a product of the system in which he flourishes.


RJ: After this rather unorthodox start to your publishing career, what comes next?

BF: For the moment my plan is to travel to Peru and Bolivia and see what happens, and hopefully to not encounter anyone who has ever heard of Thomas Friedman.



This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.

Wednesday, 25 January 2012

Call for the World Social Forum Free Palestine, Nov. 2012 in Brazil

Posted on by StopTheWall Campaign


Occupied Palestine is part of every free heartbeat in this world and her cause continues to inspire solidarity across the globe. The World Social Forum Free Palestine is an expression of the human instinct to unite for justice and freedom and an echo of the World Social Forum’s opposition to neo-liberal hegemony, colonialism, and racism through struggles for social, political and economic alternatives to promote justice, equality, and the sovereignty of peoples.

The WSF Free Palestine will be a global encounter of broad-based popular and civil society mobilizations from around the world. It aims to:
1. Show the strength of solidarity with the calls of the Palestinian people and the diversity of initiatives and actions aimed at promoting justice and peace in the region.
2. Create effective actions to ensure Palestinian self-determination, the creation of a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital, and the fulfillment of human rights and international law, by:
a) Ending Israeli occupation and colonization of all Arab lands and dismantling the Wall;
b) Ensuring the fundamental rights of the Arab-Palestinian citizens of Israel to full equality; and
c) Implementing, protecting, and promoting the rights of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes and properties as stipulated in UN resolution 194.
3. Be a space for discussion, exchange of ideas, strategizing, and planning in order to improve the structure of solidarity.

Exactly sixty-five years after Brazil presided over the UN General Assembly session that agreed upon the partition of Palestine, Brazil will host a different type of global forum: an historic opportunity for people from all over the world to stand up where governments have failed. The world’s people will come together to discuss new visions and effective actions to contribute to justice and peace in the region.

We call on all organizations, movements, networks, and unions across the globe to join the WSF Free Palestine in November 2012 in Porto Alegre. We ask you to join the International Committee for the WSF Free Palestine, we will establish as soon as possible. Participation in this forum will structurally strengthen solidarity with Palestine, promote action to implement Palestinian’s legitimate rights, and hold Israel and its allies accountable to international law.

Together we can raise global solidarity with Palestine to a new level.

Palestinian Preparatory Committee for the WSF Free Palestine 2012

Secretariat members:
· PNGO – Palestinian NGO Network
· Stop the Wall – Palestinian grassroots Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign,
· OPGAI – Occupied Palestinian Golan Heights Advocacy Initiative

· Alternatives represented by:

Alternative Information Center,
Teacher Creativity Center

· Ittijah

· General Union of Palestinian women

Coordination office:

PNGO – Palestinian NGO Network
Tel: +970 2 2975320/1
Fax: +970 2 2950704
E mail: samahd@pngo.net

Saturday, 21 January 2012

Faecesbook and faecesbook-binders!

alternatively, there's one other slot where you could shove your credit card... with similar results!



Tuesday, 17 January 2012

Epoca modernităţii spectrale (The Age of Ghost-modernism): Falimentul noului liberalism utopic şi democratizarea post-corporatistă a economiei inechităţii

de Bogdan V. Lepădatu, Doctor în Sociologie (SNSPA)

Învaţă, Cunoaşte-te pe tine însuţi, Schimbă-te...
Învaţă de la oameni, Cunoaşte-i, Schimbaţi Împreună Lumea!

Descriam, cu ocazia acordării titlului mai sus-menţionat, epilogul post-modernităţii prin epitetul de "modernitate spectrală" în sensul halucinaţiilor de coşmar, aşa cum au fost ele induse de agenţiile comunităţii corporatiste Occidentale actorilor sociali, transformaţi în resurse umane, simple piese de schimb alienate de spirit critic prin intermediul reţetelor "ştiinţifice" de "pâine şi circ", de genul marketing, management (al subalternilor şi mai ales a percepţiei acestora) etc. etc.

Subliniam astfel golirea programatică de semnificaţie şi conţinut a epocii curente (o virtualitate spectrală, lipsită de orice urmă de virtute!) pentru a confirma oportunitatea şi, mai ales, necesitatea schimbării calitative (revoluţionară!) a paradigmei vetuste a noului liberalism utopic.

Statul corporatist – o entitate fascistoidă, cu faţă neoliberală – a transformat, prin intermediul unor rețele de agenții corporatiste bine coordonate, fosta entitate suverană, legală şi constituţională a statului într-o agenţie pentru "colonizare mentală" (Koensler), având drept scop îndeplinirea obiectivelor geopolitice ale Complexul Militar-Industrial. . O analiză a relațiilor dintre 43.000 de corporații transnaționale a identificat un grup relativ restrâns de companii, în mare parte aparținând domeniului bancar, având o capacitate disproporționat de mare de influențare a economiei globale.

Astăzi, Cruciada (post-liberală a...) Globalizării Occidentale împarte lumea, după modelul centru-periferie, într-o așa-zisă "comunitate internaţională" – formată din societăţile financializate ale Complexului Militar-Industrial, integrate unui sistem de pieţe (virtuale) libere de controlul societăţii civile şi... "restul lumii"!

Falimentul economic al comunităţii de societăți "dezvoltate", poluarea mediului înconjurător sau încălzirea globală  generată din obsesia creşterii economice, ipotecând viitorul întregii umanităţi pentru profitul unor elite sociopate periculoase denotă faptul că a venit vremea trezirii urgente din hiperinflaţionistul Vis American (care nu ştie măcar face diferenţa între un miliard şi un bilion!).

Astfel, "globalizarea“ modelului occidental nu este un efect mecanic al legilor economice sau tehnologiei, ci este produsul politicilor puse în aplicaţie de un ansamblu de agenţi şi instituţii şi rezultatul aplicării regulilor create în mod deliberat pentru servirea unor scopuri specifice (Pierre Bourdieu, 2001). De aceea, a sosit timpul ca acest lucru să fie înţeles de toţi cei care consideră că nesupunerea civică şi Ocupaţia agenţiilor corporatismului neoliberal sunt singurele modalităţi viabile de revoluţionare socială a sistemului injustiţiei sociale, de eliberare şi emancipare a societăţii civile de sub apartheidul globalizării Occidentale, dar si din hiperrealitatea (Baudrillard) specifică capitalismului post-industrial.

Băsescu, Antonescu, Ponta ş.a. sunt doar nişte figuranţi locali, urmaşii lui "Dracula" din telenovela "NATO ţie, dă-mi-o şUE", produsă de Pentagon, regizată la Hollywood şi filmată, în timp hiperreal, de FOX News şi CNN, la marginile Europei, pentru reducerea costurilor prin utilizarea mâinii de lucru ieftină... Doar că, această schemă de pacificare socială aducând, prin intermediul cucerilor revoluției din știință și tehnologie, rețetele romane de "pâine și circ" la hiper-realitățile mediatizate de agențiile de presă ale corporațiilor multinaționale nu poate preveni la nesfârșit procesul conștientizării acestei stări de fapt.

Este util de rememorat faptul că mişcările de "Ocupaţie" (nesupunere civică) sunt contranaraţiuni care aruncă mănuşa provocării falimentarei metanaraţiuni a neoliberalismului corporatist. Atrăgând atenția asupra deficitului flagrant de etică și echitate se vizează demontarea mecanismului doctrinar al injustiţiei sociale capitaliste, care rezistă intemperiilor istorice şi încercărilor de emancipare socială, de mai bine de cinci secole.

Dezmoșteniții clasei de mijloc, principalii agenți ai Mişcării sociale de Ocupaţie, vor trebui să conștientizeze acest fapt inoculând Mișcare de "virușii" grupurilor de interese, aparatele de partid ce dau sistemului capitalist aparența unui sistem democratic. Aceste partide (de USLaşi, PeDofiLi sau Socialişti "Conservatori"!), compromise definitiv şi irevocabil, încearcă să-şi nege apartenenţa chiar în consiliul de administraţie, nu doar în acţionariatul sistemului capitalist din România.

Trăgându-şi comisioane fabuloase din privatizarea activelor sociale, care ar fi putut să ne asigure tuturor un trai decent şi un sistem public (adică unul care permite accesul universal la sănătate şi educaţie!) dacă nu ar fi fost furate, aceste elite oportuniste sunt tocmai motivele care împiedică resuscitarea spiritului critic al societăţii civile.

Folosind tehnici de prozelitizare cultistă, aceste agenţii neoliberale au abolit spiritul critic al unei populaţii şcolită în fast-food-ul educaţional al Procesului "Bolognese". Doar că, nemaiputând să o mituiască pentru a-i cumpăra tăcerea, fabricarea acelui aşa-zis consens paradigmatic, în contextul transgresiunilor Contractului Social, a devenit acum mult mai dificilă. Falimentul Visului American al ignoranţei egoiste, care alcătuieşte, prin intermediul poliţistului ucigaş al planetei, NATO, aşa-zisa "comunitate internaţională" de economii financializate – a nu se confunda cu Organizaţia Naţiunilor Unite (ONU)! – anunţă că sistemul inegalităţii şi inechităţii sociale a intrat in metastază.

Reţetele de pacificare prin Depolitizare, Distragerea atenţiei şi Divertisment (de la manele la telenovele, fotbal sau MTV) operaţionalizează acelaşi "management al percepţiei" (implementat în arii atât de diverse pe cât sunt reţelelele sociale sau cele mass-media, ori în domeniul militar în care este implementată strategia Războiului Continuu) au transformat imaginea societăţii dintr-o clepsidră (în care "clasa de mijloc" păzea clasele bogate de ameninţarea claselor sărace!) într-o sticlă (de tip boxbeutel!) de cognac, în care "dopul" plutocraţiei constituind o fracţiune de procent (0,1%, şi nu 1% cum este mediatizat) apasă asupra "restului lumii" (dezmoşteniţi ai clasei de mijloc, datornici aflaţi la un salariu distanţă de faliment, săraci şi fără de speranţă, depuneri reziduale, "viermii - inepţi, inculţi şi ciumpalaci" (de)căzuţi la fundul acestei "sticle".

"Adunarea Generală" a Societăţii Civile oferă oportunitatea decodificării metanaraţiunii neoliberalismului fascistoid, pentru auditarea modului în care acest tip de raţionalitate mărginită este alienat de gândirea critică şi codificat axiomatic în scopul legitimării şi perpetuării sistemului exploatării capitaliste. Este de aceea necesară renunţarea imediată la politicile de creştere economică, a căror amprentă ecologică criminală ameninţă viitorul întregii umanităţi şi revenirea la politici sustenabile, salarii decente şi democratizarea societăţii printr-o taxare progresivă, care să pună capăt inechităţii şi inegalităţilor sociale. Gigi Behehecali nu poate fi taxat la fel cum este taxat muritorul de foame!

Este necesară şi renunţarea la apucăturile de "necrofilie culturală" (Simon Schama) de către cei care mai cred încă în zeităţi supranaturale sau în sângele "albastru" (ha-ha, oare ce grupă de sânge are acesta?) ale "aleşilor" Domnului-Zeu pe Pământ... lăsând în grija lor să rezolve ceea ce nu poate fi rezolvat decât prin mobilizare socială, gândire critică şi curaj!

În fine, este necesară identificarea abuzurilor paradigmei privatizărilor de tot felul, renaţionalizarea activelor sociale care ne dau calitatea de cetăţeni (sănătatea, educaţia, resursele naturale) şi introducerea unor politici de redistribuire, necesare recuperării ontosului afectiv comunitar şi nu numai.

Mult succes!

Monday, 16 January 2012

From the Monroe Doctrine...


... to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID)...


... "created by the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, along with the Alliance for Progress, one of the first programs under USAID's responsibility. Just two year after the triumph of the Cuban Revolution, the Alliance was intended to foster the economic development in Latin-American countries, to reduce popular pressure for change through left-wing policies. According to Stephen Streeter, for example, in Guatemala the Agency's programs aimed to conquer peasants' and workers' "hearts and minds", moving them away from the guerrillas. [...] USAID's programs' primary motivations, clearly established in the Foreign Assistance Act, were to advance the foreign policy goals of the United States, above all national security."

 

by Rafaela Pannain

The position of United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in the American foreign policy field shapes its strategies for exporting democracy. Thus, in order to draw some conclusions about its efficacy, it is crucial to understand USAID’s democracy promotion programs within the context of how they are developed both inside and outside the agency. Beyond the complex relations among different bureaus and groups inside USAID, its work is also determined by the relation the agency has established with other important agents of the American Foreign Policy field, especially the State Department and the Congress. Since 1990, the bureaucratic structure of USAID has been submitted to several restructuring plans, which had as a consequence an important reduction of its personnel and missions. Despite USAID’s continuous loss of autonomy, the organization has managed to survive in a very hostile environment thanks to different strategies. Successfully advocating the importance of democracy promotion programs can be understood as one of them. Therefore, the analysis we propose of the development and implementation of these programs points first to the importance of the motivations of USAID as an organization in relation to others. Secondly, we highlight that, due to the limited autonomy of the agency, its programs also reflect the interests of the Congress, which is responsible for the allocation of most of the agency budget, as well as those of the State Department.

Sunday, 8 January 2012

The Ghost-Modern American Dream: Circling the Meta-narrative Drain

Yet another newscast for the willfully blind Fakebookers, ogling with Google Goggles and Twittering one-liners while choosing to ignore the corporate agencies' financialising of politics, society and the rest of XXIst century ghost-modern narratives...

by Noam Chomsky, August 5, 2011

“It is a common theme” that the United States, which “only a few years ago was hailed to stride the world as a colossus with unparalleled power and unmatched appeal is in decline, ominously facing the prospect of its final decay,” Giacomo Chiozza writes in the current Political Science Quarterly.

The theme is indeed widely believed. And with some reason, though a number of qualifications are in order. To start with, the decline has proceeded since the high point of U.S. power after World War II, and the remarkable triumphalism of the post-Gulf War ’90s was mostly self-delusion.

Another common theme, at least among those who are not willfully blind, is that American decline is in no small measure self-inflicted. The comic opera in Washington this summer, which disgusts the country and bewilders the world, may have no analogue in the annals of parliamentary democracy.

The spectacle is even coming to frighten the sponsors of the charade. Corporate power is now concerned that the extremists they helped put in office may in fact bring down the edifice on which their own wealth and privilege relies, the powerful nanny state that caters to their interests.

Corporate power’s ascendancy over politics and society—by now mostly financial—has reached the point that both political organizations, which at this stage barely resemble traditional parties, are far to the right of the population on the major issues under debate.

For the public, the primary domestic concern is unemployment. Under current circumstances, that crisis can be overcome only by a significant government stimulus, well beyond the recent one, which barely matched decline in state and local spending—though even that limited initiative probably saved millions of jobs.

For financial institutions the primary concern is the deficit. Therefore, only the deficit is under discussion. A large majority of the population favor addressing the deficit by taxing the very rich (72 percent, 27 percent opposed), reports a Washington Post-ABC News poll. Cutting health programs is opposed by overwhelming majorities (69 percent Medicaid, 78 percent Medicare). The likely outcome is therefore the opposite.

The Program on International Policy Attitudes surveyed how the public would eliminate the deficit. PIPA director Steven Kull writes, “Clearly both the administration and the Republican-led House (of Representatives) are out of step with the public’s values and priorities in regard to the budget.”

The survey illustrates the deep divide: “The biggest difference in spending is that the public favored deep cuts in defense spending, while the administration and the House propose modest increases. The public also favored more spending on job training, education and pollution control than did either the administration or the House.”

The final “compromise”—more accurately, capitulation to the far right—is the opposite throughout, and is almost certain to lead to slower growth and long-term harm to all but the rich and the corporations, which are enjoying record profits.

Not even discussed is that the deficit would be eliminated if, as economist Dean Baker has shown, the dysfunctional privatized health care system in the U.S. were replaced by one similar to other industrial societies’, which have half the per capita costs and health outcomes that are comparable or better.

The financial institutions and Big Pharma are far too powerful for such options even to be considered, though the thought seems hardly Utopian. Off the agenda for similar reasons are other economically sensible options, such as a small financial transactions tax.

Meanwhile new gifts are regularly lavished on Wall Street. The House Appropriations Committee cut the budget request for the Securities and Exchange Commission, the prime barrier against financial fraud. The Consumer Protection Agency is unlikely to survive intact.

Congress wields other weapons in its battle against future generations. Faced with Republican opposition to environmental protection, American Electric Power, a major utility, shelved “the nation’s most prominent effort to capture carbon dioxide from an existing coal-burning power plant, dealing a severe blow to efforts to rein in emissions responsible for global warming,” The New York Times reported.

The self-inflicted blows, while increasingly powerful, are not a recent innovation. They trace back to the 1970s, when the national political economy underwent major transformations, ending what is commonly called “the Golden Age” of (state) capitalism.

Two major elements were financialization (the shift of investor preference from industrial production to so-called FIRE: finance, insurance, real estate) and the offshoring of production. The ideological triumph of “free market doctrines,” highly selective as always, administered further blows, as they were translated into deregulation, rules of corporate governance linking huge CEO rewards to short-term profit, and other such policy decisions.

The resulting concentration of wealth yielded greater political power, accelerating a vicious cycle that has led to extraordinary wealth for a fraction of 1 percent of the population, mainly CEOs of major corporations, hedge fund managers and the like, while for the large majority real incomes have virtually stagnated.

In parallel, the cost of elections skyrocketed, driving both parties even deeper into corporate pockets. What remains of political democracy has been undermined further as both parties have turned to auctioning congressional leadership positions, as political economist Thomas Ferguson outlines in the Financial Times.

“The major political parties borrowed a practice from big box retailers like Walmart, Best Buy or Target,” Ferguson writes. “Uniquely among legislatures in the developed world, U.S. congressional parties now post prices for key slots in the lawmaking process.” The legislators who contribute the most funds to the party get the posts.

The result, according to Ferguson, is that debates “rely heavily on the endless repetition of a handful of slogans that have been battle-tested for their appeal to national investor blocs and interest groups that the leadership relies on for resources.” The country be damned.

Before the 2007 crash for which they were largely responsible, the new post-Golden Age financial institutions had gained startling economic power, more than tripling their share of corporate profits. After the crash, a number of economists began to inquire into their function in purely economic terms. Nobel laureate Robert Solow concludes that their general impact may be negative: “The successes probably add little or nothing to the efficiency of the real economy, while the disasters transfer wealth from taxpayers to financiers.”

By shredding the remnants of political democracy, the financial institutions lay the basis for carrying the lethal process forward—as long as their victims are willing to suffer in silence.