David Brooks wants to rewrite the
nation’s social contract. Not only that, the New York
Times columnist and PBS personality wants the idea enshrined
in a new “unwritten austerity constitution” that aims to
get “state and federal budgets under control” a process
that “will take decades” to complete and the foundation
of which “has to be this principle: make everybody hurt.”
Brook’s
February 21column doesn’t give any indication of how much
pain he himself is prepared to endure in the cause of fiscal
responsibility but we can be certain it will not require
taking out a subprime mortgage on his a four-bedroom, 4,600-square-foot
residence in upper middle class suburban Montgomery County,
Maryland. Ordinarily, I wouldn’t mention Brooks’ wealth
- that he was born into or acquired - but I’m just intrigued
these days by how much the people who have a lot have become
the most insistent that those below them on the social ladder
bear the brunt of paying for capitalism’s current crisis.
But no one ever said Brooks doesn’t have a lot of nerve.
Brooks is critical of Wisconsin Governor
Walker’s handling of the state’s budget crisis. He thinks
Walker made a “strategic error” in raising the issue of collective bargaining
at this point, and accuses Walker of inconsistency in trying to exempt police officers and firefighters
from the state workers’ union, whose rights he seeks to
undermine. “The process has to be balanced. It has to make
everybody hurt,” he says.
“Even if you acknowledge the importance
of unions in representing middle-class interests,” (which
I assume he doesn’t) “there are strong arguments on Walker’s side,” he says. Walker’s critics, who “immediately flew into a rage, are “amusingly
Orwellian,” write Brooks. “They liken the crowd in Madison to the ones in Tunisia and claim to be fighting for democracy.
Whatever you might say about Walker,
he and the Republican majorities in Wisconsin
were elected, and they are doing exactly what they told
voters they would do.” Problem here is that that’s not true.
They never told the voting public they intended to erase
public workers’ collective bargaining rights. Talk about
Orwellian. Never mind, such subtitles often elude the suburban
oracle. He’s looking at the big picture. The current situation in the country,
Brooks says, calls for “a rewrite of the social contract.”
A social contract is a big deal.
In a more general sense it is an agreement between the government
and the governed that sets forth the rights, duties and
responsibilities of each. In a specific sense it can refer
to the principles that emerged out of the Great Depression
of the 1930s known of as the New Deal and including such
elements as the right to collective bargaining and Social
Security. It’s clearly the latter that Brooks has in mind.
Brooks has had some nice things to
say about Barak Obama in the past but the President has
frustrated him. It all has to do with handling the problem
of “entitlements,” like Medicare and Social Security. Instead
of hanging back and hoping to cut a deal with the Republicans,
he wants the President out front waving the banner of reform.
“This is not like fixing Social Security in the early 1980s,”
he writes. “The current debt problem is of an entirely different
scale. It requires a rewrite of the social contract, a new
way to think about how the government pays for social insurance.”
(Never mind that the government doesn’t pay for social insurance;
that’s called welfare.)
“So the mantle of leadership has
passed to Capitol Hill,” writes Brooks. “While Obama asked
for patience yet again, Eric Cantor announced that Republicans
will put entitlements on the table. It may be politically
risky, but it looks more like leadership to me.”
I’m
not suggesting here that there is anything wrong with renegotiating
the country’s social contract. In fact, the continually
expanding economic and social inequality that has plagued
us over the past three decades or so would indicate that
we need a readjustment in the rules for dividing up the
pie. But it need not, and must not, be premised on a 20-year-long
austerity constitution which aims to “make everybody hurt.”
It’s time to take out our Naomi Klein
(“The Shock Doctrine”) and give it a second read. The right
wing crusaders do not intend to - in the words of Rahm Emanuel
- let “a serious crisis to go to waste.” If they have their
way we will end up with Social Security privatized, Medicare
turned into welfare, a two-tiered education system and the
unemployed left to shift for themselves. Gone will be any
semblance of the original U.S. social contract notion that government acts
“to protect the general welfare.”
“Madison has been the scene of large demonstrations against the governor’s
budget bill, which would deny collective-bargaining rights
to public-sector workers,” economist Paul Krugman wrote
last week. “Gov. Scott Walker claims that he needs to pass
his bill to deal with the state’s fiscal problems. But his
attack on unions has nothing to do with the budget.
“What’s happening in Wisconsin is, instead, a power grab - an attempt
to exploit the fiscal crisis to destroy the last major counterweight
to the political power of corporations and the wealthy.
And the power grab goes beyond union-busting.”
“The truth is that we don’t live
in Bangladesh
or Malawi,” green jobs
advocate and civil rights activist, Van Jones, wrote last
week at the Huffington Post. “America is not a poor country.
The public has just been hypnotized into believing that
the richest and most creative nation on Earth has only two
choices in this crisis: massive austerity (as championed
by the Tea Party/Republicans) or SEMI-massive austerity
(as meekly offered by too many DC Democrats). It is ridiculous.
“Fortunately,
the people in Wisconsin know that. So they are fighting courageously.
Their efforts could blossom into a compelling, national
force for the good - offering a powerful alternative to
those false choices.”
In the face of this, economist Robert
Reich has some weighty advice, especially for progressive
Democrats. “You can’t fight something with nothing.” he
wrote on his blog February 23. “But as long as Democrats
refuse to talk about the almost unprecedented buildup of
income, wealth, and power at the top - and the refusal of
the super-rich to pay their fair share of the nation’s bills
- Republicans will convince people it’s all about government
and unions.
“What’s happening in Wisconsin is a power grab - an attempt to exploit
the fiscal crisis to destroy the last major counterweight
to the political power of corporations and the wealthy.”
“The Republican message is bloated
government is responsible for the lousy economy that most
people continue to experience. Cut the bloat and jobs and
wages will return,” wrote Reich. “Nothing could be further
from the truth, but for some reason Obama and the Democrats
aren’t responding with the truth. Their response is: We
agree but you’re going too far. Government employees should
give up some more wages and benefits but don’t take away
their bargaining rights. Private-sector unionized workers
should make more concessions but don’t bust the unions.
Non-defense discretionary spending should be cut but don’t
cut so much.”
“The truth that Obama and Democrats
must tell is government spending has absolutely nothing
to do with high unemployment, declining wages, falling home
prices, and all the other horribles that continue to haunt
most Americans,” wrote Reich. “Indeed, too little spending
will prolong the horribles for years more because there’s
not enough demand in the economy without it.
“The truth,” said Reich, “is that
while the proximate cause of America’s economic plunge was
Wall Street’s excesses leading up to the crash of 2008,
its underlying cause - and the reason the economy continues
to be lousy for most Americans - is so much income and wealth
have been going to the very top that the vast majority no
longer has the purchasing power to lift the economy out
of its doldrums.”
“The truth is if the super-rich paid
their fair share of taxes, government wouldn’t be broke.
If Governor Scott Walker hadn’t handed out tax breaks to
corporations and the well-off, Wisconsin wouldn’t be in
a budget crisis. If Washington
hadn’t extended the Bush tax cuts for the rich, eviscerated
the estate tax, and created loopholes for private-equity
and hedge-fund managers, the federal budget wouldn’t look
nearly as bad.
“And if America had higher marginal
tax rates and more tax brackets at the top - for those raking
in $1 million, $5 million, $15 million a year - the budget
would look even better. We wouldn’t be firing teachers or
slashing Medicaid or hurting the most vulnerable members
of our society. We wouldn’t be in a tizzy over Social Security.
We’d slow the rise in healthcare costs but we wouldn’t cut
Medicare. We’d cut defense spending and lop off subsidies
to giant agribusinesses but we wouldn’t view the government
as our national nemesis.”
“The
final truth is as income and wealth have risen to the top,
so has political power,” Reich continued. “The reason all
of this is proving so difficult to get across is the super-rich,
such as the Koch brothers, have been using their billions
to corrupt politics, hoodwink the public, and enlarge and
entrench their outsized fortunes. They’re bankrolling Republicans
who are mounting showdowns and threatening shutdowns, and
who want the public to believe government spending is the
problem.
“They are behind the Republican shakedown.”
“These are the truths that Democrats
must start telling, and soon. Otherwise the Republican shakedown
may well succeed.”
Will they? I’m not holding my breath.
But they might. If they feel enough heat.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member
Carl Bloice is a writer in San Francisco, a member of the National Coordinating Committee of
the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism and formerly worked for
a healthcare union. Click here to contact Mr. Bloice.
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