It
will probably be news to Cal Thomas, the longtime syndicated
right-wing pundit who has been around for decades to know that the
“spoiled children” of affluent America who are drawn to
socialism are a bit smarter than his generation of lovers of
predatory capitalism.
In
an attempt at humor, Thomas opened up his column earlier this summer
with: “For the current generation, it appears one thing is more
seductive than sex — and that's socialism.” Then he goes
on to say that socialism, the concept of shared wealth (in his view),
is nothing more than “handing out free stuff to just about
everyone.”
As
has been the case for so many on the right, Thomas has been an
apologist for everything that so-called “conservatives”
in government or those who are even further out on the right of the
political spectrum. Generally, he has been the town crier for more
corporate control, in that those who agree with him seem to believe
that government should just get out of the way and let the “free
market” do its thing and everything will be alright. The free
market has had its way with the American people and the picture is
not pretty, especially in the age of Donald Trump in the White House.
The
younger generation has seen what the “free market” has
done to their parents within the general structure of capitalism and
they don't like what they see and the “free market” has
passed its “benefits” to them. Aside from the usual
generational complaints about younger folks that Thomas apparently
feels about them in his dotage, he truly is not likely ever to see
the forest for the trees.
Let's
go through some of the things young people see in their nation and
society: staggering student debt, which they've been told they must
bear if they are ever going to be gainfully employed; a health care
crisis that, under capitalism, amounts to “if you can pay, you
get health care;” a sizable percentage of Americans go to bed
hungry every night and even more are “food insecure;”
there is a homeless crisis, rooted in a lack of a coherent federal
housing program, with no program in sight; there is an environmental
crisis, rooted in the free fall of regulations that protect humans
and the earth, especially rampant in this current administration's
“exploit everything for profit” philosophy of governing;
and, for those who are paying attention, perpetual war has been the
goal of recent administrations, but has been ramped up by the erratic
ruminations in foreign policy of Trump, whose means of communicating
with the nation and much of the world is by his ungrammatical tweets,
which also seem endless.
So
much for a few things that young Americans see as the result of
capitalism run wild. The general chaos of the Trump Administration
is enough to give seasoned politicians and political junkies the
scare of their lives. No one knows where berserk administration
policy will go next, and, if this government runs true to form, it
could end up in more war or wars. They know, the young people do,
that when a war is started by their government, it won't be Trump or
his children or family and it won't be the children of the rich and
powerful, it will be them, struggling to pay off insurmountable
student loans on a private's pay. That kind of life is not going to
work for them. And, don't try to tell them about the great free
market that, left alone, will even out the rough spots and make
things more equal. They're tired of that myth. They know that the 1
percent and their minions in the next-lower 9 percent (their buffer
from the masses) have saved most of the nation's wealth for
themselves.
As
for Cal Thomas' charge that young people just want “free
stuff,” for the last 40 years, he should have been paying
closer attention to where the “free stuff” goes. It may
be that he doesn't understand socialism or really very much about
capitalism. The “free stuff “has gone largely to the top
in the modern manifestation of capitalism, to corporations (who are
now people), and to the very rich. That is not likely to change in
the near future, because Trump is in the White House to make sure
that the money and wealth keep flowing toward the top of the economic
scale.
This
condition has been described as “socialism for the rich and
capitalism for the rest.” That includes 90 percent of the
American people. Young men and women are aware of this and are not
taken in by the pronouncements of right-wing politicians, pundits,
and economists. If they are not fully aware that the gap between the
few rich and the rest resembles the gap that existed just before the
Great Depression of 1929, they can sense that the rapacious
capitalism of today is taking us down the same road as that fateful
time. They're not buying the idea that capitalism is the ticket to a
fulfilling life, in which there is some equity and equality and
justice. That's why they are leaning toward socialism.
From
the established order, there are ominous warnings that socialism
would lead us to some dark world, in which all of the trappings of
democracy and economic largesse would disappear and the U.S. would be
in the same straits as, say, Venezuela. But, these critics don't
mention European countries that have either a socialist system in
general, or a combination of socialism and capitalism, in which the
worst elements of rapacious capitalism are mitigated. For example,
there are few countries in which CEOs are paid 300 or 400 times what
their company's workers earn, as it occurs in the U.S. In that gap
in income and wealth lies the eventual breakdown of a society and,
eventually, a nation. Again, socialism for the rich...
The
juvenile belligerence of President Trump in what passes as foreign
policy in his White House is nothing new. Rather, it is a
continuation of policies that transfer wealth from the people to the
wealthy and Corporate America, through continual war. Where there is
no enemy, U.S. administrations will create one. This is not lost on
young people and some can connect massive war and “defense”
spending with their inability to rent or buy housing and, worse,
inability to find work that will allow them to pay off $30,000 to
$70,000 or more in student loans. It's loan sharking on a national
scale (see Trump University for starters). They are making
connections that were not seen or were ignored by previous
generations.
Thomas
is, like so many of his contemporaries, of an older generation, and
may not have thought this through and can not fairly compare
socialism to capitalism. He has been steeped in the propaganda
(including his education) that capitalism is vital to the existence
of democracy. That's not true, but he is not capable of changing his
mind, that is, opening it.
A
current example of the frenzy of criticism of any political candidate
who mentions socialism is a recent segment on the Fox “News”
business show, anchored by Trish Regan, the business reader. Here's
what she said, according to DailyKos.com: “In a segment
hashtagged #TrishIntel, Regan takes Denmark to task for providing
free education and using taxes to provide its citizens with
affordable programs. From here Regan blabbers about the high taxes
in Denmark and how 'everyone is working for the government.' Also,
there’s a '180 percent tax' on cars that you buy!...Most
importantly, according to Regan, because no one has
to work, nobody wants
to work.”
In
a display of ignorance, she compared the situation of socialist
Venezuela with that of Denmark, which has a form of socialism,
ignoring that Venezuala's problems stem largely from depending on one
exportable commodity, oil, and the broad set of issues that stem from
that.
In
a nutshell, Denmark's Finance Minister, Kristian Jensen, pointed out
just a few facts to Regan, again according to Daily Kos: “So
Danes don’t wants to work? 11 places better than U.S. in OECD
(Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development with
36 member contries) statistics! We are working much more
than Americans and at the same time ranking as the worlds best in
Work-Life-Balance. You should come to Denmark if you dare be
confronted with facts...”
Such
is the constant drumbeat of U.S. rulers, that socialism is bad,
capitalism is good. What the young people of the nation see in front
of them is the collapse of a nation that has forgotten the working
people who, ultimately, pay the bills. They see that the nation is
structured so that power and money rise to the top of the
wealth-income scale and that the bulk of the people are on the road
to penury and the young people find themselves at the head of the
line toward that pathetic end. Simply, they see that capitalism has
not worked for them and they are willing to try something else. It
makes sense to them. They are more tolerant in many ways than their
parents' and grandparents' generations and are not easily fooled by
those generations' telling them that what they see with their own
eyes is not real.
No
one is suggesting that the top-heavy economic and political systems
that exist in the U.S. will be changed overnight, or that it would be
easy to do so, without some cataclysmic event to spur the change.
Rather, the right-wing elements and fringe elements are viewing even
the discussion of the value of socialism or some combination of
socialism and capitalism with unhinged fright. Even gradual
acceptance of some changes toward socialism is a deadly threat to
such people and that's why we're seeing the ramped-up hysteria
against “socialism,” a prospect as frightening as the red
scare of the 1950s, when communism was the enemy needed to push
capitalism to its predatory state.
Cal
Thomas is one of those oldtime fear-mongers and it should surprise no
one. He comes by it honestly, having been associated with Fox News
in recent years and, in slightly less hysterical moments, he was a
columnist for USA Today and other publications. But, he also served
as vice president of the Moral Majority from 1980-1985, whose
politics could only be described as right-wing (if religious groups
ever should be as deeply involved in politics as that organization).
Politically
and intellectually active American young people who are still able to
think for themselves largely do not agree with either Thomas or the
Moral Majority. Thomas' libel against the young that they just want
“free stuff” is a lie that he (and others of his ilk,
right on up to the White House) uses to cover up the free ride, tax
breaks, and outright gifts to Corporate America and the rich 1
percent, at their expense. They're willing to try socialism. In the
immortal words of the current president, “What have you got to
lose?”
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