“So long as the best
elements of a community do not feel in duty bound to protect and train and care
for the weaker members of their group, they leave them to be preyed upon by these
swindlers and rascals.” W.E.B DuBois, The Souls of Black Folks
Paul Ryan thinks he has pinpointed the cause of persistent
poverty in America. No, it has nothing to do with the 2008 financial meltdown.
The reason poverty persists in America, according to Ryan, is LBJ’s War on
Poverty, now fifty years old. Dependence on government largesse has kept the
poor down, prevented them from taking responsibility for their own lives,
halted their progress and retarded their initiative; this is why the poor
aren’t launching entrepreneurial ventures or investing in Fortune 500 companies.
It’s all the fault of the federal government’s attempts to alleviate poverty.
Like most politicians of his ilk, Ryan believes poverty is
lucrative and that people enjoy life on the dole. He obviously thinks that
taking a welfare check makes for as comfortable an existence as taking a fat
congressional salary and all the perks that come with high office.
Paul Ryan is an asshole. He should be horsewhipped.
The other day I was listening to Adolph Reed, Jr., a very
intelligent man, talking to Bill Moyers. Reed has been in the trenches of the
political left for a long time and he has a good memory; he remembers where the
left was and contrasts that with where the left is today, which, to put it
succinctly, is up a creek sans paddle. No one on the political left can make a
cogent argument in support of the causes the left once championed: economic
opportunity and justice, education, health care, a real social safety net,
civil rights, equal rights, and human rights. The left is all about
neoliberalism now, laughable fantasies of upward mobility for people through
fealty to corporate power and profit; both parties are guilty of slapping a
price tag on our lives, turning our wants, desires and dreams into commodities
to be bought and sold. Both parties tell us that free market capitalism is the
cornerstone of democracy, the well from which all bounty springs; both parties
reduce social problems to individual problems; both parties suck at the teat of
corporate masters.
Adolph Reed Jr. told Bill Moyers that American democracy has
been hollowed out by corporate and individual money; political power and
influence is just another commodity with a price tag that only the rich can
afford to buy and sell. Ordinary voters are priced out of the game, our voices
silenced beneath a tidal wave of campaign dollars. The only way to defeat
organized money is to organize people, but that’s difficult when neither
political party represents the interests of the majority of citizens. Don’t
believe it? Then why is it that the power brokers in Washington D.C. talk only
of austerity, budget cuts, deficits, and the dangers posed by entitlement
programs like Social Security and Medicare? Outside the corrupt Beltway, people
sit around their kitchen tables and talk about jobs, wages, the cost of college
for their children, the cost of medical insurance for themselves and their
ailing parents, the price of basic commodities we all need to live. Consider the
state of our current politics. The men and women we elect (and, let’s be
honest, most of the time our choices are between Tweedledee and Tweedledum) do
not devote themselves to addressing the issues we care about. They claim to,
but a cursory examination of most congressional voting records confirms the
real story.
The American left lost the battle of ideas with the American
right back in the 1980’s. The left’s core ideas weren’t perfect, but they were
responsible for keeping the worst excesses of corporate capitalism in check. If
the left represented working Americans the way it should, and could articulate
its ideas powerfully and clearly – the way FDR and Henry Wallace once did –
nobody would pay any attention to phonies like Paul Ryan.
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