Unfair to Bismarck

"I hate to tell you I told you so, but..."

Largely because of F.A. Hayek’s THE ROAD TO SURFDOM, the legacy of Bismarck is in ill-repute. His “cradle to the grave” policies of providing a safety net to all Germans is somehow considered the origin of the destruction of human liberty.  But there is another interpretation of Bismarck that contradicts this and America would do well to heed its lessons.

Bismarck orchestrated the unification of the German Empire and became Chancellor under Wilhelm I. He detested Socialism so much that he drove Socialists from their homes.  His anti-Socialist Laws outlawed the Social Democratic Party.  He then concluded that the only effective way to defeat Socialism was through a limited form of self-government that provided sufficiently for its citizens in a capitalist society so they would never be tempted to adopt collectivism as a solution to their problems.  He had the good fortune to have an ally in the Kaiser, who was relatively enlightened and who trusted Bismarck.  When the Kaiser died, Frederick III, a representative of the great, now largely forgotten German liberal tradition succeeded him.  He had no desire to engage in aggressive war and renounced any intention by Germany to build a large and powerful navy, something Great Britain feared.  Germany was becoming a brilliant success, a leader in industry and commerce with the world’s greatest universities.  Tragically, Frederick died of cancer after ninety days and Willy, the one with the withered arm and a temper, succeeded him as Kaiser Wilhelm II.  One of his first acts was to fire Bismarck, who had warned him against starting another war in Europe.  He memorably remarked, “If another war starts in Europe, it will be because of some silly thing in the Balkans.”

The road to serfdom was not Bismarck’s fault.  Willy was responsible, bungling Germany into the Great War, leading to defeat and the ultimate rise of Hitler and Nazi Germany.  Unlike Bismarck, Hitler imposed a command model economy.  Had Frederick lived, none of this would have happened.

For a while it looked as if Germany was going to win.  The Germans humiliated Russia and the

Thanks, Willy!

Russians blamed the Czar who became hugely unpopular, ultimately enabling Lenin to stage the Bolshevik revolution.  Creating the world’s first Communist state, he set about nationalizing private property and creating a global threat to Capitalism.

It was in this environment that the Russian Communists seized Ayn Rand’s father’s pharmacy.  She never forgot that.  More than Hayek, Rand’s condemnation of any kind of state action, including social welfare, shaped the minds of countless Americans. For Rand, the solution to the problems of the human condition was laissez-faire capitalism.  Her influence can be felt very much today amongst the Tea Party activists who condemn every program offered by Obama as Socialist.  He is denounced as a Marxist, determined to lead America on the road to serfdom.  It was Glenn Beck’s calling attention to Hayek’s THE ROAD TO SERFDOM that drove it to number one on Amazon.com, which surely would have delighted the old-school Austrian gentleman. But they are wrong and Bismarck was right.

Capitalism can only succeed if there is a safety net for the citizens of a country in which a free market economy prevails.  Unemployment insurance and Social Security both help in a time of economic contraction and recession by enabling great numbers of people to keep spending.  Margaret Thatcher, Britain’s most conservative prime minister, supported the National Health as well, recognizing that in the end it is cheaper than having vast numbers of people unable to work because of illness. Ronald Reagan, America’s most conservative president and a close friend of Margaret Thatcher, endorsed the safety net.  He worked closely with the Democrats in Congress, particularly Patrick Moynihan, in rescuing Social Security.

In this context it should be remembered that Hayek supported Social Security as well, even going so far as to say “probably nothing has done so much harm to the liberal cause as the wooden insistence of some liberals on certain rules of thumb, above all the principle of laissez-faire capitalism.” (Here he is referring to the 19th-century free market liberalism). Hayek writes that the government has a role to play in the economy through the monetary system (a view that he later withdrew), work-hours regulation, social welfare, and institutions for the flow of proper information. Hayek even dedicated THE ROAD TO SERFDOM to “my fellow socialists.” So, to a certain extent, Hayek argues against the very basic premises of his own book.   In any event, it would appear that Beck and his ilk have never read it. Which is terribly unfair to Bismark… and to America.

Okay, I didn't read the damn thing! It's really long and confusing!

One out of Six – Thank you, Goldman Sachs!


Thank you, Goldman Sachs!  The illustrious banking giant has adopted a new in-house measure that would halt the paying of all bonuses in the event that the United States Government has to bail them out again.  I, for one, am greatly relieved by this action since it manifests a sense of social responsibility previously lacking at Goldman.  The fact that the payment of gigantic bonuses might be a factor in creating conditions necessitating a second bailout should not deter us from celebrating their sense of propriety whilst fifteen million Americans remain unemployed and millions more are underemployed or have stopped looking for work altogether.

Surely it is Lloyd Blankfein we must congratulate for this munificence.  It is farsighted of him as well because when the bubble bursts again, as it certainly will, The Goldman Sachs will be obliged once again to go hat-in-hand to the Fed and to the Treasury for an infusion of cash to prevent them from going under. They will do this even as they stand fast to their position that The Goldman Sachs is a capitalist business and that government regulation only impedes its ability to function effectively as they do “God’s work” in the immortal words of The Blankfein himself.  But The Blankfein undoubtedly believes that eschewing bonuses in such a situation will placate the Tea Party-dominated Congress that has sworn on their very lives that there will be no more bailouts and that no bank will ever again be described as “too big to fail.”

But The Blankfein is taking care of that possibility as well by hiring scores of lobbyists who will grease the wheels in the interests of, that’s right, The Goldman Sachs.

The new members of the House of Representatives tipped their collective hand even before being officially sworn in. They held a lavish “swearing in” bash at W, one of the most luxurious and expensive hotels in Washington and sold itickets in the $50,000 range.  In short, the Tea Party is now a booze party in the great Washington tradition with a wink to the lobbyists signaling that, notwithstanding the rhetoric, it is business as usual.  “As soon as coin in coffer rings, the bank regulations repeal from Congress springs.”

After all, this is a free enterprise system except that it is Socialism for the rich and Capitalism for the poor. Congress will continue to create loopholes for the financial giants and corporate America, including all those waivers that allow corporate favorites like Dole, the pineapple giant, to do business in Iran.  These same Congressmen who created the loopholes insist that sanctions are insufficient and that America must seriously consider bombing Iran and engaging in their favorite pastime, “regime change.”

But don’t expect the American people to wake up.  The retired employees of a town in Alabama sat despondently at a town meeting during which town officials informed them, just before Christmas, that there was no longer any money to pay their pensions.  With the exception of one retired black person sitting towards the rear, all the elderly faces were white.  If you were to ask them they would undoubtedly tell you that they are conservatives and are against raising taxes on the wealthy as well as against more spending in the form of another stimulus.   But what would they say if you explained to them that stimulus money went to local governments to prevent the sort of thing they are experiencing, to wit, the loss of their pensions?  Would they shake their heads and moan that there was nothing that could be done and that they would just have to grin and bear it?  After all, a stimulus in this crowd is considered Communism or, at best, Socialism.  And Socialism, as everyone from John Boehner on down knows, is un-American.

One can just imagine Boehner making a passionate speech on how brave these good people of Alabama are to forsake any help from the federal government so Obama cannot impose his Stalinist policies on America.

“These folks may have to go without food for a couple of days,“ he would bellow, “but they are keeping the faith, the great faith that has made America what it is.   And now that we have abolished Medicare and Social Security, they can go to their graves with the knowledge that their sacrifice will enable America to pay for the invasion of Iran.  But I am privileged to announce some good news for the great Americans of Alabama.  The Goldman Sachs will be shipping baskets of foodstuffs and other necessities to all of these folks.  I don’t want anyone to say that this is not a generous nation.  What the government will no longer do, charity will.”

CODA

Please, BOFA? Please?

Truth CAN be stranger than fiction. A few days after I composed this post, Bank of America began running an ad on television in which a voice intones as the words appear on the screen:  “THE FEAR OF HUNGER IS ALL AROUND–ONE IN SIX AMERICANS LIVES WITH HUNGER.” But not to worry.  Cut to lots of red boxes presumably filled with foodstuffs  rolling off an assembly line.  The voice goes on to say that BOFA is working with various groups to make sure the food gets to the needy, but can you trust them?

This is the same Bank of America that cooked the books when it bought Merrill Lynch.

BOFA settled up with the SEC for a small fine of $150 million. But this was not the end.

Bank of America Corp. also recently settled with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Internal Revenue Service, the Federal Reserve, 20 state attorneys-general and other regulators over charges of rigging bids for investments in municipal securities, agreeing to pay $137 million to authorities.

“The conduct was egregious — in return for business, the company repeatedly paid undisclosed gratuitous payments and kickbacks and affirmatively misrepresented that the bidding process was proper,” said Robert Khuzami, SEC director of enforcement.

And, oh yes, AllState is suing Bank of America, former Countrywide CEO Angelo Mozilo and others over Countrywide’s sale of mortgage securities. AllState said it suffered “significant losses” after buying more than $700 million of Countrywide mortgage-backed securities in reliance on misrepresentations and omissions. Way to go, BOFA.   They have morfed into Robin Hood, robbing the rich to give to the poor.  God bless you BOFA.  Now we can all chow down.

The Bush Tax Cuts Scam

What, share my wealth?

In the early 19th century, Alexis de Tocqueville noted how democracy and capitalism combined to foster an inordinate amount of envy in American life. “I never met in America with any citizen so poor as not to cast a glance of hope and envy on the enjoyments of the rich,” he wrote. The American’s envy, he went on, kept him in constant “anticipation of those good things fate still obstinately withheld from him.”

George McGovern experienced the direct effects of his advocacy of wealth sharing, which was greeted with hostility by hard-up Americans.   So did Barack Obama when he said he supported “spreading the wealth around.”   McGovern concluded that all Americans believe they will catch the gold ring on the Merry-Go-Round.

Unlike many other nations, particularly in Europe where the great disparity of wealth led Marx and Engels to write the Communist Manifesto and Socialism took root culminating in the Russian Revolution, this has never been a particularly popular approach to inequality in America.  When Mother Gitlow, the famous Communist agitator, addressed a group of Irish workers in New York, she was shouted down and heckled.

The reason for this is that America is supposed to be the “land of opportunity.”   American historian James Truslow Adams coined the term “American Dream” in his 1931 book The Epic of America. His American Dream is “that dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement. It is a difficult dream for the European upper classes to interpret adequately, and too many of us ourselves have grown weary and mistrustful of it. It is not a dream of motor cars and high wages merely, but a dream of social order in which each man and each woman shall be able to attain to the fullest stature of which they are innately capable, and be recognized by others for what they are, regardless of the fortuitous circumstances of birth or position.”

In a country that now has a worse class system than Britain, and where the worth of a person is determined by how much money and

We're number one!

how many possessions he has, the myth nevertheless persists.  The tiresome repetition of the phrase, “the American Dream” by politicians of all persuasions, including Obama, has made it a meaningless platitude.  America, which used to lead the world by far in college graduates, has dropped considerably behind other industrialized nations, largely because more and more Americans simply cannot afford higher education any longer. The once great California university system founded by Clark Kerr, boasting such gold-standard institutions as Berkeley and UCLA, was free.  Now, with tuition increases making the cost prohibitive for many Californians, the American Dream in the Golden State is rapidly receding, much as it is across the country.

No matter how wretched an American’s circumstances, when told that taxes will go up for the wealthy, he is offended, firmly convinced that he will one day be rich and would not want the government taking away his money.  Because of this it is very difficult to get Americans to act together in the furtherance of objectives that might benefit everyone collectively.  The mass opposition to the health care reform bill, which would prevent insurance companies from cutting off benefits once you got sick, is a prime example of this absurd mentality, a product of the relentless propaganda designed to perpetuate the illusion that you can climb the social ladder in what is an increasingly stratified society.

Senator Claire McCaskill told Tea Party activists that the curtain had gone up after the election and that they should look to see who was really pulling the strings.  It was the wealthy and powerful, whose objective is simply to get more wealth and power.  The entire Republican platform now is to cut taxes for the wealthy and get rid of Obama, nothing else.  If they could find another war, maybe with Iran, they would go for that as well.

Yet Americans, in a tie with Ireland for the lowest math scores of all industrialized nations, with lousy science and reading scores, have become a nation of illiterates and believe all the crap that is fed them by the endless propaganda coming from corporate America.  Blacks, who at one point in American history made up a preponderance of the country’s college graduates, have descended into a world of illusion that has led to an increase in violent crime amongst young males in the inner city fueled by frustration and envy.

Obama needs to tell the American people that they are getting screwed and not to believe the bull that the plutocracy is selling them.  If the deal to extend the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy to two years goes through, Obama will have his chance in 2012.  He must put the choice directly to the Americans.  “If you vote Republican again, you will get what you deserve.”