You are on page 1of 3

http://economicpopulist.

org/content/crazies-versus-sleepwalkers-big-budget-showdown

The Crazies versus the Sleepwalkers -

Big Budget Showdown


By Michael Collins

The Republican crazies are in a


celebrity death match with
sleepwalking Democrats. It is a
fabricated drama amounting to not
much of anything in terms of the
nation's well being. The stakes are
supposedly the shutdown of the
United States government at
midnight this Friday. But the
most pressing issue isn't discussed
on Capitol Hill.

Why can't anyone in a position of


power mention the
unmentionable? There have been
no net new jobs in the United
States since 2000. There were 137 million employed citizens that year. There are 139
million employed citizens today. This comes into clear focus when you consider the size
of the workforce for 2000 and 2010; 143 million versus 154 million respectively. There
are actually fewer jobs in proportion to the workforce.

Isn't this a worthy topic? Shouldn't the story be carried nightly on a major network with a
title like: Jobless America, Day 4112
Apparently not. Congress and the Chief Executive don't have to worry (they'll still get
paid). Members of Congress have perpetual income once they've been initiated into the
elect. If they win, the members, along with family and friends, do quite well. If they
lose, they will likely do even better with a lobbying firm. The presidency represents the
most spectacular welfare program ever. Lifetime guaranteed income, personal security
details, free health care, honoraria in the form of cash, and other benefits are a flow
down a never-ending river of largesse.
Citizens have no such guarantee. Despite a willingness to do real work for long hours, at
stagnant wages and shrinking benefits, nobody pays attention when more than twenty
million or so are jobless.

Ignoring a jobless economy insures that an unacceptable problem for those who work
gets mentioned only in passing -- flat incomes over a decade.

Celebrity Death Match

Instead of a serious, no holds barred effort to revive the economy for citizens, the
Republican and Democratic wings of The Money Party are fighting over which bad
budget will be adopted. The Republican budget would make Ebenezer Scrooge smile in
his grave. They want to privatize Medicare, trash Medicaid, drop supports for the poorest
of the poor, and dig the grave for Social Security.

Republican Representative Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, Chairman of the House Budget


Committee, is the mastermind behind this affront to the people, the Republican budget
and the one-week bill debated now. Ryan's congressional biography says that, "he works
to bring fiscal discipline and accountability to the federal government." Ryan worked in
the private sector for less than two years as a marketing consultant for a family owned
business while he completed his undergraduate degree

The 41-year-old budget expert never managed or owned a company. He has never met a
payroll. From 1992 until his election to the House in 1998, he has worked either for US
Senators or as a speechwriter for Republican luminaries. He served seven consecutive
terms in Congress from 1999 through the present. Almost all of his professional
experience is as a political aide or politician, nothing else.

Right now, the Republicans are on the floor of the House claiming that their one week
compromise to avoid a government shutdown will allow "our troops" to be paid. Of
course, the best gift to the troops would a return home from pointless wars overseas.

The Democrats are firing back that the Republicans should consider not just soldiers, but
all citizens as they urge a broader settlement of the budget conflict. The Democrats are
happy to give up most of the social contract between citizens and government, just not all
of it. That would tarnish their image.

But neither side focuses on the core issue, citizens can't support themselves without jobs.
The public can't support the government services it pays for and needs with twenty
million able bodied citizens out of work. And those fortunate enough to have work, can't
survive without wage increases, a problem that started before the jobless decade.

The Crazies versus the Sleepwalkers

There is but one party in the United States, the permanent institution known as The
Money Party, the small group of enterprises and individuals who have most of the money
in this country. They use that money to make more money by retaining ownership of the
institutions of power.

The Republican and Democratic wings agree, in general, on key issues. They both
favor: more wars; more defense spending; Wall Street bailouts; the ongoing evisceration
of the Constitution; and other programs that benefit the very few at the expense of the
many.

The adoption of Tea Party goals makes the Republicans the crazies, at least on a
superficial level. A more accurate assessment takes into account that the Tea Party is the
cynical creation of a fake populist movement by major corporate interests. The
disaffected rank and file, many living on government pensions, don't realize that their
antics are merely diversions that prop up the interests of their corporate backers.

The Democrats are the sleepwalkers and proud of it. President Obama never misses an
opportunity to reach out and "embrace business," as he calls it. Not just any business will
do. Obama's new pal is General Electric CEO Jeff Immelt, recently in Japan to asses the
situation with GE reactor failures at Fukushima or maybe look at off shoring more GE
jobs.

The embrace of big business, big banks, and Wall Street, through their loyal servant,
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, completes the White House landscape of all
corporate all the time. All the while, the people need jobs, mortgage interest relief, and a
return of the wealth transferred from their savings to the Wall Street faction so well
represented in the White House.

Who will win in this latest drama on the Hill? It really doesn't matter. We all lose as
long as we have two parties, separated by just a few degrees, that show consistent
disrespect for reality and the people that they claim to serve.

END

This article may be reproduced entirely or in part with attribution of authorship and a link
to this article.

http://economicpopulist.org/content/crazies-versus-sleepwalkers-big-budget-showdown

You might also like