Chomsky on things...Gov't Shutdown

Gary Childress

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Found this out there. I have to wonder, is Chomsky here being unfair to Republicans? Isn't there more to the Republican position than simply fearing that socialized medicine may just work?

Harrison Samphir: Thank you for speaking with me today, Mr. Chomsky. I would like to begin with the recent federal government shutdown in the United States. Acknowledging that it has happened once before, how is this instance different, if at all? How does it speak to the unwillingness from above to institute meaningful reform - healthcare or otherwise - and respond to the desires of the majority of the population?

Noam Chomsky: Well, actually, there was pretty good commentary on it this morning [October 4] in The New York Times by Paul Krugman who basically makes the point, it's a narrow point, that the Republican Party among the public is a minority party. So for example, they do run the House of Representatives, they're a majority there, and it's the House that is essentially sending the government into shutdown and maybe default. But they won the majority of seats there because of various kinds of chicanery. They got a minority of the votes, but a majority of the seats, and they're using them to press forward an agenda which is extremely harmful to the public. The particular thing that they're focusing on is defunding the health-care system.

You're from Canada so you probably know, the United States is unique among the rich countries, developed countries, in not having some kind of a national health-care system. The US health-care system is a complete scandal. It's got twice the costs of comparable countries and some of the worst outcomes. And the reason is that it's largely privatized and unregulated. So ofcourse it's highly inefficient and costly. And what's called Obamacare is an effort to mildly change this, not change it as far as it should go or as much as the population wants it to go, but to make it a little better and a little more affordable. And the Republicans have picked that as the one thing that they want to hang on to to try to gain some political stand, so they have to destroy what they call Obamacare. This is now not all the Republicans, it's a wing of the Republican Party, which is called conservative but in fact is just deeply reactionary. It's correctly described as a "radical insurgency" by one of the leading conservative commentators, Norman Ornstein.

So there's a radical insurgency, which is a large part of the Republican base, which is willing to do anything, destroy the country, whatever, in order to get rid of this Affordable Care Act. That's the one thing that they're able to hang onto. If they can't get rid of that, they're going to have to tell their base, we've been lying to you for the last five years. So they're willing to go to almost any extent to do that. That's unusual, in fact I think it's unique in the history of modern parliamentary systems. And it's very dangerous for the country and for the world

HS: How do see the shutdown ending?

NC: Well the shutdown itself is bad but not devastating. The real danger will come up in a couple of weeks. There's legislation which is in fact routine - it's passed every year - which allows the government to borrow money, otherwise it can't function. If Congress does not approve this budget request, the government may have to default. That's never happened. And a default of the US government would not only be very harmful here, it would probably send the country back into deep recession, but it just might crash the international financial system. Now, maybe they'll find ways around it, but the financial system of the world depends very heavily on the credibility of the US Treasury Department. US Treasury securities are what's called "good as gold"; they're the basis of international finance, and if the government can't uphold them, if they become valueless, the effect on the international financial system could be quite severe. But in order to destroy a limited health-care law, the right-wing Republicans, the reactionary Republicans, are willing to do that.

Now there's a split in the US about how this will be resolved. The main point to look at is the split within the Republican Party. The Republican establishment, and Wall Street, and the bankers, and the corporate executives and so on, they don't want this. They don't want it at all. It's the part of the base that is mobilized that wants it. And they're finding it hard to control that base. There's a reason why they have a collection of near crazies as the base. Over the past 30 or 40 years, both political parties have drifted to the right. Same thing's happened in Canada, incidentally. This is all part of the whole neoliberal shift in the economy. But the parties have shifted to the right. Today's Democrats are pretty much what used to be called moderate Republicans a generation ago. And the Republicans went so far to the right that they just can't get votes. They've become a dedicated party of the very rich and the corporate sector. And you can't get votes that way. So they've been compelled to mobilize a base of voters and gone to elements of the country that have always been there but were kind of marginal to the political system, for example, religious extremists. The United States is off the international spectrum in religious extremism. I mean half of the population, roughly, thinks the world was created a couple thousand years ago. Two thirds of the country is expecting the second coming of Christ. They've also had to turn to nativists. The gun culture in the United States, which is out of control, is party fueled by people who think 'we've got to have our guns to protect ourselves.' Protect ourselves from whom? From the United Nations? From the federal government? From people from outer space?

http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/...politics-global-affairs-and-capitalist-reform
 
That's about the only time I've ever seen a political commenter agree that the Democratic party has moved substantially to the right.
 
That's about the only time I've ever seen a political commenter agree that the Democratic party has moved substantially to the right.
Chomsky has repeatedly stated the Democrats are a right-wing party since at least Kennedy. I honestly don't recall ever hearing or reading anything about his views on FDR or Truman.

This was odd in a Chomsky discussion in that he doesn't bother to list most of his sources, just Krugman. Chomsky is likely the best human being on the planet at citing his sources during discussions, so it's surprising he doesn't go into much detail there. On the face of it, I don't note anything wrong with his analysis, though I do believe the US will avoid a default.
 
Chomsky has repeatedly stated the Democrats are a right-wing party since at least Kennedy. I honestly don't recall ever hearing or reading anything about his views on FDR or Truman.

This was odd in a Chomsky discussion in that he doesn't bother to list most of his sources, just Krugman. Chomsky is likely the best human being on the planet at citing his sources during discussions, so it's surprising he doesn't go into much detail there. On the face of it, I don't note anything wrong with his analysis, though I do believe the US will avoid a default.

On a side note: I think the real author of this piece is the interviewer. So it's not really Chomsky who is writing here. Otherwise you're right we'd have a source list almost as long as the interview itself.
 
On a side note: I think the real author of this piece is the interviewer. So it's not really Chomsky who is writing here. Otherwise you're right we'd have a source list almost as long as the interview itself.
Fair enough. Chomsky usually spends far too long describing his sources before everything he says.
 
Chomsky has repeatedly stated the Democrats are a right-wing party since at least Kennedy. I honestly don't recall ever hearing or reading anything about his views on FDR or Truman.

This was odd in a Chomsky discussion in that he doesn't bother to list most of his sources, just Krugman. Chomsky is likely the best human being on the planet at citing his sources during discussions, so it's surprising he doesn't go into much detail there. On the face of it, I don't note anything wrong with his analysis, though I do believe the US will avoid a default.


By his standards they are. But the point is not that they are right wing, but rather that they have gotten considerably more so in the past couple decades.
 
I pretty much agree with everything he says here.

Why else would they mobilize such a rabid, dysfunctional assault on the ACA? If it was about its effectiveness, where are the alternatives? Where are the bills that are introducing fixes to the program or whatever? Corporate America mostly wants reform. The insurance industry mostly wants reform. This is a Republican idea for healthcare reform, created by Republicans. All the classic staples of the Republican party--large corporations, Wall Street--they wanted something like this. Some of them wanted more! What big company with crippling health and pension benefit programs would not love to off-load that cost onto a socialized system?

So why are these particular politicians fighting it if the classic Republican base (i.e., the money) is actually for this change? And not just changing it, the push is instead to cripple it and destroy it. Even the minor, almost insignificant change the Republicans got for this budget deal was to make it harder for people to benefit from it.

Republicans probably remember that almost all untouchable social programs--untouchable because of their popularity--were enacted by democrats. Medicare, wildly popular and a political football with all parties ("no he is going to cut medicare--no HE is going to cut it!") was signed by Lyndon Johnson. We all know the history of Social Security. The ACA is not anywhere near the level of these two programs, but it is one of the biggest major policy changes of the decade, I think, and it is seeking to deal with what is and will be the major social policy struggle for coming generations. If it works, it will bring more affordable healthcare to more people. It will ideally improve, albeit in small ways, the way healthcare is administered in the US. So some Republicans are maybe motivated simply by a desire to not see another Democratic policy change become popular.

It's a compelling theory at least. I think there is more than a grain of truth to it.
 
I see the tea party types being against the ACA (AHA?) because.. well, they're all talking points and no substance. They hate Obama, because he's socialist, so they have to oppose his evil socialist healthcare plan. That's what gets their voters riled up, that's what works on them on a "talking point" level, so that's what they're doing.

I don't think they actually have a.. you know, plan.. aside from opposing whatever Obama wants to do. That's as far as they've thought it through. It's what appeals to their voter base, so that's what they're doing. They don't care if it's not going to work, because they're just saying what the people who vote from them want to hear - whether it's true or not.
 
They certainly haven't thought it through. The primary losers of the Tea Party program is the children of the Tea Party members.
 
By his standards they are. But the point is not that they are right wing, but rather that they have gotten considerably more so in the past couple decades.
There's been a lot of discussion in The American Conservative about how the Democratic Party has swung to the right noticeably just in the last four years to fill the gap left by the republican party.
 
There's been a lot of discussion in The American Conservative about how the Democratic Party has swung to the right noticeably just in the last four years to fill the gap left by the republican party.


That's interesting. I wonder why it hasn't gotten more attention among political pundits?
 
That's interesting. I wonder why it hasn't gotten more attention among political pundits?

Maybe because those on the right don't want to admit that "those on the left" are moving closer to the right.. and those on the left don't want to admit that the shift is happening?
 
The question is, why aren't those on the left end of the spectrum making themselves heard while the Democrats are abandoning them?

Is everyone just accepting the shift because they continue to accept the Democrats as the lesser evil? Or did the electorate as a whole move to the right with the Democrats?
 
The question is, why aren't those on the left end of the spectrum making themselves heard while the Democrats are abandoning them?

Is everyone just accepting the shift because they continue to accept the Democrats as the lesser evil? Or did the electorate as a whole move to the right with the Democrats?


What happened was that conservatives gained control of the terms of the debate. Since the 70s the conservatives have been able to say "why we are right, and you should follow us". But the liberals have not been able to do the same. There are many factors involved in that. A prominent one is the rise of the right wing think tanks. You have CATO, American Enterprise, Heritage, just to name a few of the most prominent ones. And 100s of others. All building an intellectual justification for conservative polices. What have you got opposing those?

...

...

Exactly. No opposition on that end. Now look at who is funding all those think tanks. There have been 100s of billions of dollars spent over decades to change the terms of the debate. To undermine labor, to get the message out.

There was also, starting in the 70s, the Culture War. Far right Christianity came off the sidelines and allied themselves firmly with the Republicans. Evangelical Christianity had been largely neutral with regards to politics in the postwar era. But not any more. Not after Roe v Wade. So the vocal part of Christianity was solidly pushing a conservative influence. Now, like with libertarians, the Christians you hear from in American politics are the crazies and the reactionaries. Not the mainstream or the liberal. Not the moderates.

Now what also helped was that by the end of Carter's time in office, the liberal movement was in complete disarray. And could no longer compete based on making a case for why it was in the right. Couple that with the backlash from the Vietnam war backlash, and the backlash from the Civil Rights movement, and the defection from the Democratic party of the Dixicrats, and what you had was a liberal movement that was associated with helping minority people, but not helping white people.

So people are hearing a coherent message from the right continually, and hearing a coherent message from the left, essentially not at all. Then add in the ever greater importance of big money in elections. Even the most liberal of Democrats have to give undue access to special interest lobbyists, because otherwise they'll never raise enough money for election.

Liberalism was finished off by the Democratic Leadership Conference and Bill Clinton. That was an all but formal turn away from liberalism, particularly in economic policy. By embracing conservative economics and moderate social policy, and calling themselves moderates, when they were actually country club Republicans, the war was over. If you are already right of center, and you are moving to the right to "move to the center", then the war is over.
 
That's interesting. I wonder why it hasn't gotten more attention among political pundits?

I can't speak to the pundits, but this isn't a surprise to everyone. There is a reason why I don't hesitate to vote for some Democrats. My ballots are almost always fairly close to an even split. Why? Because not all Democrats are extremist leftist nutballs. Just some. We have a pretty good Democratic Governor that I voted for, along with a multitude of other officials. McCaskill, our Senator, is a Democrat and I voted for her, though that had much to do with ensuring whackjob Akins didn't get in. Still, I'd voted for her in the past for State offices because she's a good egg.
 
Why? Because not all Democrats are extremist leftist nutballs. Just some.
Only 20 percent or so of the US population are even leftists. Of those, perhaps 1-2% are "extremist leftists". So name one elected Democrat politician who is one, much less anybody for whom you could possibly vote.

It is blatantly obvious that the Democrat Party has been getting more and more conservative for the past 30 years, much less recently. Just look how far Obama changed in just 4 years:

usprimaries_2008.png


Us-Political-Compass-2012.png


There was only one Democrat who ran for the presidency in 2008 who was even a leftist.

Regarding the OP, I'm really surprised that Chomsky's comments are considered to be in any way controversial.
 
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