M. 37% ( @EmmanuelMacron ) is the New Leader of The Neo-Liberal Enlightenment? Old Socialist comments

M. 37% practices his own version of authoritarianism, maladroitly self-described as Jupertarian Politics built upon ‘Rule by Decree’ that now seems to to have devolved into a slow-motion disarray. But The Financial Times hireling Harriet Agnew quotes from Macron ,with a bit of propaganda embellishment, as part of  strategy at rescuing that retrograde  ‘Énarque Anti- Revolution’  :

During Sunday’s service, the French president issued a plea for international co-operation to fight new challenges such as climate change, poverty, famine and inequality, and against “withdrawal, violence and domination.” He urged action at a time when “old demons are resurfacing,” adding: “History sometimes threatens to take its tragic course again and compromise our hope of peace. Let us vow to prioritise peace over everything.”

Énarque Macron appears to be  not just tone deaf but a bungler like Reagan. Reagan got into trouble when he ‘went off script’. M. 37% is too lost in his hubris to consider such a strategy.

Headline:Storm over Macron’s remarks on homage to Nazi-collaborator Pétain

Sub-headline: French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday denounced a “pointless polemic” that has flared up after his defence of Nazi-collaborator Philippe Pétain’s record as a general in World War I. On Wednesday he declared that a homage to Pétain, who was imprisoned after World War II for heading a pro-Nazi government, would be “legitimate”.

http://en.rfi.fr/20181108-storm-over-macrons-remarks-homage-nazi-collaborator-petain/

What is not really puzzling is that a large segment of the ,what to call them, ‘Left’ ‘Progressives’ have adopted M. 37 % as the ‘voice of political reason’.  In their desperate search for a politician, that appears to be the polar opposite of the Know-Nothing Trump, and his congressional henchmen McConnell and Ryan. Such is the gullibility of my fellow Americans, who look to staunch Neo-Liberal Obama as a ‘standard ‘ of enlightened political leadership!

Old Socialist

https://www.ft.com/content/e9caeea2-e5bc-11e8-8a85-04b8afea6ea3

 

 

 

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janan.ganesh@ft.com in three (two) keys? Part I. Old Socialist comments

Mr. Ganesh’s essay of November 7, 2018 on the American Mid-Terms must be named as an exercise in the unimaginative political generic, with bit of statistical gloss.

Headline; US midterm elections: Democrats must not overplay their hand

Sub-headline: Activists want pressure on Trump, but new voters might quail at two years of process
…Beyond an oblique pledge to restore the “constitution’s checks and balances to the Trump administration”, Nancy Pelosi, who is poised to lead the House for the second time this decade, tellingly majored on substance in her victory speech.

https://www.ft.com/content/3b6d87b2-e1d3-11e8-8e70-5e22a430c1ad

I’m writing this on Saturday November 10, 2018 and its looks like putative Speaker Pelosi  will face opposition in her own Party :

Headline: After leading her party to House majority, Nancy Pelosi faces battle for speaker’s gavel…

About three dozen Democratic candidates in competitive races came out against Pelosi to varying degrees, according to surveys of news reports, but the vast majority of them are not expected to win their elections.

As of Wednesday afternoon, 11 had won. An additional six are in races that haven’t been called. There are also a handful of sitting members who have voiced opposition to Pelosi’s speakership, including Reps. Tim Ryan of Ohio, Kathleen Rice of New York and Conor Lamb of Pennsylvania.

Moves to topple Pelosi are nothing new but rose dramatically in recent years, and especially as Democrats’ opportunity to take the House emerged. Critics have long pushed for new leadership, but Pelosi’s effectiveness and fundraising prowess have typically allowed her to beat back challengers.

During the campaign, Pelosi insisted that Democratic candidates in competitive House districts were free to distance themselves from her if needed. Winning the seat, she said, was the top priority.

http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-congress-pelosi-speaker-20181107-story.html

_____________________________________________

Headline: Why Nancy Pelosi Isn’t Guaranteed The Speakership

The Democrats have won the House, and Republicans will have to hand over the speaker’s gavel in January. But it’s not totally clear whom that gavel will go to.

The long-running drama over the fate of House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi is entering a new phase. It has been clear for months that Pelosi might not have enough Democrats behind her to become speaker. Some incumbent House Democrats oppose the California Democrat because they believe it’s time for a new figure to lead the party, which Pelosi has done since 2003. And dozens of Democratic candidates, facing a barrage of attacks from Republicans linking them to Pelosi, pledged during their campaigns not to support her in a speaker vote. Of course, many of Pelosi’s critics were running in very red districts — so they lost.

But Pelosi still has some work to do if she wants a second tenure as House speaker. With almost all the 435 House races decided, we did a whip count of the newly elected or re-elected Democrats. Here’s what we found: Pelosi does not appear to have 218 votes to become speaker, unless some Democrats backtrack from previous comments suggesting that they will not support her.

https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/why-nancy-pelosi-isnt-guaranteed-the-speakership/

Pelosi is about the Old Guard, in sum , the New Democrats led by the Clintons. In the Age of  Trump, this millionaire  represents an entrenched Oligarchy, and her allies like Debby Wasserman -Schultz. Pelosi will eventually be supplanted,  even with all her accumulated power, she is the New Democratic past!  The women elected in 2018 will bring into the open the ebbing power of this sclerotic New Democrat! Its the beginning of the end of Pelosi, to employ and apt cliche,

Mr. Ganesh  then explains the course the Democrats might pursue, the political  possibilities are laid out, except that the only thing considered, in this paragraph,  is  ‘RussiaGate’ and notorious New Democrat and New Cold War political hysteric Adam Schiff. Mr. Ganesh cautions the New Democrats:

It is not Tuesday’s results, but their consequences, that promise to be otherwise. With committee control and subpoena powers, Democrats can now investigate Mr Trump on several fronts: the Russian role in his 2016 win, his alleged elision of the presidential and the commercial. Adam Schiff, the probable new chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, could not fail to be tougher on the president than Devin Nunes has been.

The question is how far to push it. The Democrats should take caution. It is hard to read into the midterm results a mandate for a March-to-the-Sea offensive.

https://www.ft.com/content/3b6d87b2-e1d3-11e8-8e70-5e22a430c1ad

On the question of ‘caution’ question look to this Politico essay:

Headline: Democrats Want to Investigate Trump. Here’s Why They Should Be Careful.

Sub-headline: The new House will have to proceed strategically in selecting both the topics and the tools of inquiry.

Some have even suggested that congressional investigations will suffice to address any legally questionable moves by the present administration. But such optimism should be tempered: The new House will have to proceed strategically in selecting both the topics and the tools of inquiry. Missteps will not only undermine proper oversight and generate partisan blowback. They might also sap the long-term prospects for maintaining an executive branch constrained by the rule of law—something both liberals and conservatives should fear.

https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2018/11/09/democrats-investigate-trump-222402

We are witnessing the evolving Party Line of respectable bourgeois Reportorial/Pundit class.

Mr. Ganesh ends his essay that features the notion of a ‘highly controlled midterm campaign’ .  That studiously ignores the fact that the victories in this mid-term were not, for the most part, old guard New Democrats, but represent the evolution of the New Deal Democrats in a contemporary iteration. Once identified by the New Democrats as ‘The Bernie Bros’, that served as a not so surreptitious propaganda tool , while it nurtured a vigorous Feminist cadre. The reader can ignore the last two sentences ,of this essay, as a kind of flaccid cosmic self-congratulation.

Democrats seemed to intuit as much in their highly controlled midterm campaign. The trick is to keep the discipline over the next two years, as candidates woo activists for the presidential nomination. An important race ended on Tuesday. A seismic one began.

Old Socialist

Added November 10,2018, 2:54 PM ST

Mr. Ganesh’s second essay was about Football, a subject in which I have no interest:

https://www.ft.com/content/a98044bc-e343-11e8-8e70-5e22a430c1ad?kbc=b1d025bc-56d5-4420-ae8c-49c0c02cc81

The third entry is a video in which various FT writers discuss the American Mid-Terms, Mr. Ganesh being the last.

https://www.ft.com/video/3adf26b4-0e7b-4ff7-a234-9e716fcdc59f

The point of propaganda is to repeat its message, as often as possible, so this  5:44 second video is to drive the points home by repetition. The Party Line on these elections is repeated, with the aid of a visual image of writers talking directly to the viewer. The video image repeats what viewers experience when watching television .

OS

 

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Macron’s fading ‘revolution’. Almost Marx comments

Headline: Emmanuel Macron’s fatigue gives his government the blues

Sub-headline : French president pays for overpromising as rumours of burnout afflict his brand

I’m  catching up, after a week focused on the mid-term elections in America. And can’t resist the fact that Macron’s four hours of sleep a night has caught up with the Neo-Liberal masquerading as a ‘Reformer’, with the help of The Financial Times Corporatist hirelings!

Note the framing of the headline and sub-headline ‘fatigue’ and ‘overpromising’  and the sine qua non of Free Market dreck ‘brand’!

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Bruce Fein’s brief endorsement of Scalia’s ‘Textualism’. Publius comments

When I first read this tweet from The American Conservative,  authored by Bruce Fein, I was startled that anyone would defend Scalia’s conception of ‘Textualism’, no matter the context.

As Justice Antonin Scalia endlessly lectured, what matters in constitutional interpretation is that the text that was ratified, not words bandied about during debate

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/the-constitution-is-crystal-clear-on-birthright-citizenship/

I recalled reading Robert Post’s essay ‘Justice for Scalia’ in the June 11, 1998 edition of the New York Review of Books. Which was a review of  A Matter of Interpretation: Federal Courts and the Law,by Antonin Scalia, edited by Amy Gutmann, with commentary by Gordon S. Wood, Laurence H. Tribe, Mary Ann Glendon and Ronald Dworkin.  After much kow-towing to the Great Man, Prof. Post finally begins his polemic against Scalia:

Most litigation in federal courts involves the interpretation of statutes. Yet, as two prominent law professors have put it, the “hard truth of the matter is that American courts have no intelligible, generally accepted, and consistently applied theory of statutory interpretation.”1 Uncertainty in the interpretation of legislation adversely affects not only lawyers and judges, but all those who seek to live by the laws. In A Matter of Interpretation Scalia is right to call for a vigorous reassessment of our practice of statutory interpretation. His book’s main contribution is to remind us that legal authority attaches to the text of a duly enacted statute, not to the unenacted intentions of legislators.

Questions of interpretation arise when the meaning of a statutory text is not clear. Scalia believes that the theory of textualism requires courts to determine statutory meaning by referring to ordinary language usage, to generally accepted rules of construing texts, and to other legislation that has been passed. The chief theoretical position that Scalia wants to defend in A Matter of Interpretation is that courts ought scrupulously to avoid referring to legislative history when they are attempting to understand an ambiguous statute. Legislative history consists of items such as committee reports, floor debates, and legislative drafts—all the available documents and statements that accumulated while a statute was being passed. Scalia writes: “I object to the use of legislative history on principle, since I reject intent of the legislature as the proper criterion of the law.” Scalia fears that if judges can rely on legislative history, courts will engage in “judicial lawmaking” by seizing on one piece of evidence or another to write their own preferences into law.

Scalia’s relentless campaign against the use of legislative history, and his refusal to join opinions interpreting statutes by referring to that history, have been astonishingly effective. One recent study estimates that the proportion of Supreme Court opinions in cases involving statutory construction that refer to legislative history has dropped from 100 percent in the 1981 term to 18 percent in the 1992 term.2 Scalia may justly claim a large share of the responsibility for this transformation.

For this reason it is all the more important to stress that Scalia’s opposition to the use of legislative history rests on exceedingly shaky theoretical foundations. Scalia readily acknowledges that if the meaning of a text is unclear, “the principal determinant of meaning is context.” In ordinary life the intentions of a speaker are central to the process by which we determine his meaning. If someone casually observes that “Casey has thrown a disc,” I would want to know something about the speaker’s intention in order to understand whether the comment refers to the state of Casey’s back or to the integrity of his CD collection.

Scalia does not dispute this, and he even concedes that there may be extreme cases where legislative history may be consulted in order to determine whether there has been a “‘scrivener’s error,’ where on the very face of the statute it is clear to the reader that a mistake of expression…has been made.” In his commentary, Ronald Dworkin cannily seizes upon this concession and brings out its implications.

https://www.nybooks.com/articles/1998/06/11/justice-for-scalia/

In my search for the Story essay, I came across the August 23, 2012 essay by Richard A. Posner titled ‘The Incoherence of Antonin Scalia  Scalia’ at The New Republic. Which is a review of a book by Justice Antonin Scalia and the legal lexicographer Bryan Garner titled Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts, 2012.

Posner wastes no time kowtowing to Scalia, perhaps because he has an ego to match that of Scalia. This polemic is first of all well written, and scrupulously argued and focused on exposing the ‘Textualism’, that Scalia makes the center of his Legal Theorizing, is on close analysis, without merit backed by incompetent or just disingenuous arguments.

The passive view of the judicial role is aggressively defended in a new book by Justice Antonin Scalia and the legal lexicographer Bryan Garner (Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts, 2012). They advocate what is best described as textual originalism, because they want judges to “look for meaning in the governing text, ascribe to that text the meaning that it has borne from its inception, and reject judicial speculation about both the drafters’ extra-textually derived purposes and the desirability of the fair reading’s anticipated consequences.” This austere interpretive method leads to a heavy emphasis on dictionary meanings, in disregard of a wise warning issued by Judge Frank Easterbrook, who though himself a self-declared textualist advises that “the choice among meanings [of words in statutes] must have a footing more solid than a dictionary—which is a museum of words, an historical catalog rather than a means to decode the work of legislatures.”

Scalia and Garner reject (before they later accept) Easterbrook’s warning. Does an ordinance that says that “no person may bring a vehicle into the park” apply to an ambulance that enters the park to save a person’s life? For Scalia and Garner, the answer is yes. After all, an ambulance is a vehicle—any dictionary will tell you that. If the authors of the ordinance wanted to make an exception for ambulances, they should have said so. And perverse results are a small price to pay for the objectivity that textual originalism offers (new dictionaries for new texts, old dictionaries for old ones). But Scalia and Garner later retreat in the ambulance case, and their retreat is consistent with a pattern of equivocation exhibited throughout their book.

Scalia and Garner reject (before they later accept)  Easterbrook’s warning. Does an ordinance that says that “no person may bring a vehicle into the park” apply to an ambulance that enters the park to save a person’s life? For Scalia and Garner, the answer is yes. After all, an ambulance is a vehicle—any dictionary will tell you that. If the authors of the ordinance wanted to make an exception for ambulances, they should have said so. And perverse results are a small price to pay for the objectivity that textual originalism offers (new dictionaries for new texts, old dictionaries for old ones). But Scalia and Garner later retreat in the ambulance case, and their retreat is consistent with a pattern of equivocation exhibited throughout their book.

Scalia is a pertinacious critic of the use of legislative history to illuminate statutory meaning; and one reason for his criticism is that a legislature is a hydra-headed body whose members may not share a common view of the interpretive issues likely to be engendered by a statute that they are considering enacting. But when he looks for the original meaning of eighteenth-century constitutional provisions—as he did in his opinion in District of Columbia v. Heller, holding that an ordinance forbidding people to own handguns even for the defense of their homes violated the Second Amendment—Scalia is doing legislative history.

Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III has argued that because the historical analysis in Heller is (from the standpoint of advocates of a constitutional right to own handguns for personal self-defense) at best inconclusive, judicial self-restraint dictated that the District of Columbia’s ordinance not be invalidated. His argument derives new support from a surprising source: Judge Easterbrook’s foreword to Scalia and Garner’s book. The foreword lauds the book to the skies, but toward the end it strikes the following subversive note: “Words don’t have intrinsic meanings; the significance of an expression depends on how the interpretive community alive at the time of the text’s adoption under-stood those words. The older the text, the more distant that interpretive community from our own. At some point the difference becomes so great that the meaning is no longer recoverable reliably.” When that happens, Easterbrook continues, the courts should “declare that meaning has been lost, so that the living political community must choose.” The “living political community” in Heller consisted of the elected officials, and the electorate, of the District of Columbia.

https://newrepublic.com/article/106441/scalia-garner-reading-the-law-textual-originalism

‘Textualism’ appears to be just so much ideological window dressing for Scalia’s ‘Originalism‘ , yet even ‘legislative intent’ also plays a part in the thought of the later Scalia. These two essay deserve to be read in their entirety, such in their importance.  In dismantling the myth that Scalia was a formidable legal theorist. When he is, in fact, an American Political Romantic, in the guise of a pugnacious bully whose arguments are steeped in a self-serving intellectual dishonesty.

Publius

 

 

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Some thoughts on Andy Divine & Janan Ganesh. Old Socialist comments

Among the topics raised in his usual political free association, of October 12, 2018 titled The Danger of Trump’s Political Accomplishments , Andy Divine was surprised at what McConnell and Ryan were able to pass in Congress, controlled by Republicans in both houses:

Now put this in the broader context of Trump’s sole legislative achievement: his massive, budget-busting tax cut. For many mainstream Republicans, this is what they live for. It will be hard to reverse. Which is to say it’s a further justification for the GOP’s going along with populist authoritarianism. No, the tax cut hasn’t proved an electoral godsend, unless you factor in its positive, short-term impact on economic growth. But it sure has helped reconcile the old GOP to the new one.

http://nymag.com/intelligencer/2018/10/andrew-sullivan-the-danger-of-trumps-accomplishments.html

The desperate hacks of Neo-Liberal Press, on both side of the Atlantic, were fulsome in their praise of  the McConnell ‘Leadership’ , Janan Ganesh at The Financial Times among them:

Headline: Democrats need their own Mitch McConnell

Sub-headline: The left must learn from the Republican majority leader’s tactical successes

Mitch McConnell’s ever-startled face could have been drawn by the cartoonist Tex Avery. The majority leader of the US Senate also does a vivid line in Southernisms: his support for Brett Kavanaugh, whom he navigated on to the Supreme Court, was as “strong as mule piss”.

And there, his outwardly interesting characteristics end. Grey of hair and persona, the distinguished side of 70, Mr McConnell blends into the collage of Republican life so well that you wonder if a country club is missing its chair of governors. His indistinctiveness allows the craftiest politician in the land to work in relative stealth.

And to nation-changing effect. With a one-seat margin in the Senate, he has populated the judiciary with conservatives, secured the highest court for the right and passed an improbable tax cut. He fleeced Barack Obama of his last Supreme Court nominee and changed the rules to install Donald Trump’s first by a bare rather than super majority. He survived the Tea Party’s cull of mainstream Republicans, as well as low approval ratings in his own Kentucky. His passage from state-level moderate to operational arm of Trumpism has been bourbon-smooth. This summer he became the Senate’s longest-serving Republican leader.

https://www.ft.com/content/6a34e6e8-cc62-11e8-b276-b9069bde0956?kbc=b1d025bc-56d5-4420-ae8c-49c0c02cc816

That the Pundits are surprised that a Republican Party, now in thrall to the Know-Noting Trump, and the fellow travelers of the Tea Party,  Dixiecrat McConnell and Re-Closeted Randian Ryan, can unite to pass its frontal attacks on what is left of The New Deal and The Great Society: this is not just an expression of the astounding historical/political ignorance, it is cultivated! but part of a self-apologetic, for the perpetual absent exercise of ‘good judgement’ of a coterie of Corporatist hirelings.

In Andy Divine’s essay of November 2, 2018 titled Can the Republic Strike Back? he proves that the Trump’s Strategy of keeping his allies and opponents in a condition of exploitable disequilibrium, is a highly effective tool of his moral/political nihilism, expressed in vulgar terms as an expression of toxic egotism. While Trump stokes the fires of racial/ethnic/political animus, that are the inheritance of Huntington’s ‘Clash’ and ‘Who Are We?  While Bolton proclaims ‘Troika of Tyranny’ of  Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua .  

There are few historical guides. It is hard to think of a precedent for a president who endorses violence against political foes, sees the Justice Department as his own personal prosecutor, calls the press “the enemy of the people,” tears children from parents, brags of multiple sexual assaults, threatens to lock up his opponents, enthuses about war crimes, “falls in love” with the foulest dictator on the planet, refuses to divest of personal holdings in office, lambastes allies, treats the Treasury as a casino, actively endorses the poisoning of the environment, destabilizes NATO, baits minorities, lies incessantly, and oversees a resurgence of the white nationalist right. Any single gesture in any one of these areas would have been political death for most previous presidents. But we live in a time when we have come to expect that all this can now empower and even reward an American politician, rather than ruin him.

http://nymag.com/intelligencer/2018/11/andrew-sullivan-can-the-republic-strike-back.html

Andy Divine is part of a coterie that can be aptly called  The Midwives of Trump. The collapse of the Neo-Liberal Swindle and America’s endless Wars of Empire , called ‘The War on Terror’, provide the essential background to the victory of Trump. For the record of Andy’s support for the War in Iraq see his own 136 page PDF here:

Click to access andrew-sullivan-i-was-wrong.pdf

Such is the toxic  egotism of Andy ,that he publishes the record of his -folly is too trivial a concept to encompass the extent of his moral/political culpability – support for this crime! Sack Cloth and Ashes of the penitent are not Andy’s style, he prefers the Public Confessional, awash in melodrama expressed through a low level hysteria,  in which he is the center of attention.

Old Socialist

 

 

 

 

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@BretStephensNYT on Trump’s obliteration of ‘the moral guardrails that keep bigotry down.’ Almost Marx ponders the question.

Mr. Stephens points at Trump and his obliteration ‘the moral guardrails that keep bigotry down.’ The ‘as if’ here is that his readers will develop ‘political/moral amnesia’ , on Mr, Stephens’ shameless advocacy of the IDF’S mass murder of Palestinians!

That shopworn Anti-Semitic trope of ‘duel loyalty’ does not apply to Mr. Stephens, as respectable bourgeouise apologist, for mass murder committed by his political/religious allies, but to the twin Tribalisms of  Zionism and the Starussian Mendacity with the name of Neo-Conservatism!

Is this just another definitional frame that reflects the notion that ‘identity’ is not a singularity but a plurality, as presented in Amartya Sen’s Identity and Violence:The Illusion of Destiny’ ?

IdentityAndViolenceASNove022018

Almost Marx

 

 

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janan.ganesh@ft.com on ‘The Politics of Absolutes’. Almost Marx comments

Mr. Ganesh never ties of speaking in platitudes, under the guise of valuable insight, the paragraph below is a telling example of this unimpressive political strategy.

The calls for political civility run up against another limitation. They are essential as far as they go, but they only go as far as exterior behaviour. The underlying problem in modern politics, in the US and elsewhere, is an excess of intellectual certitude. The basis of democracy — of civilization — is doubt. A person who is reasonably confident that their ideological programme is correct is unlikely to harm anyone to advance that programme. A person who is absolutely certain might.

In present American political climate this seems more like what? The failure of the Neo-Liberal Elite, to somehow fix the  catastrophe they have made, has proven futile? The wan attempt at Keynesian Interventionism, allied with its successor ‘Austerity’ have proven futile. The 99% are caught in a web of debt as servitude, to utterly corrupt Banks and their apologists. While the 1% flourish as in The Gilded Age, except now the Oligarchs are named Zuckerberg, Bezos and the notorious Tax Evader at Apple Tim Cook. While the elusive ‘Self-Correcting Market’ remains the unrealized myth of the Free Market Swindle!

Mr. Ganesh fails the mention one of the pervasive problems of American Life: the Cult of Toxic Masculinity. From the Mayflower to the present this toxicity has rule American life and politics. Look to the Iconic Founder George Washington. The bourgeois respectable notion of  ‘displacing its Native inhabitants’ is academic code for genocide!

Iroquois Indians called him Conotocarious, or “Town Destroyer”. We know him as George Washington, America’s premier Founding Father. Could this really be the same man? In his magisterial The Indian World of George Washington, Colin G. Calloway answers with a definite yes. Establishing the new nation and displacing its Native inhabitants went hand in hand, he argues, and Washington took part in both endeavours.

https://www.the-tls.co.uk/articles/private/george-washington-native-americans/

Or look to American popular culture as in ‘The Birth of a Nation’ the D.W. Griffiths movie based on the novel ‘The Klansman’ and it glorification of racist violence against blacks! Add to that list John Wayne’s cowboy epics, and his Vietnam propaganda film of ‘The Green Berets’ , the revenge films of Charles Bronson steeped in violence ,even sadism. The ‘Dirty Harry’ films of Clint Eastwood. And their precursors the films of Sam Peckinpah ‘The Wilde Bunch’ and ‘Straw Dogs’ . Mr. Ganesh’s ignorance of American culture, both political and popular, makes him an utterly unreliable even, an inept  commentator. He  relies on Pseudo-Delphic platitudes as a defense of his ignorance of a  country he fails to grasp in all of its various, confusing historical/political/cultural  iterations!

Also  look to the the novels of Norman Mailer, particularly ‘An American Dream’ a novelistic  expression of his  misogyny.  And the continuing debate between Gore Vidal and Mailer provide a measure of insight on the intransigence of this Cult of Toxic Masculinity.

To engage in reductivism, for want of both space and patience with  Mr. Ganesh’s self -congratulatory rhetoric: look to the cultural/political despair of the victims of the failed Neo-Liberal Swindle, for manifestations like the Opioid Crisis, The Proud Boys, Charlottesville and the Know-Nothing Trump and  even Jair Bolsonaro. 

Any real hope for a viable future lies with Left-Wing Social Democrats, in the American political context, a New-New Deal. The patient reader will be rewarded by Mr. Ganesh’s  flaccid apologetic for Trump, in his antepenultimate  paragraph. With the proviso that the notion of ‘at relative peace’ is self-serving agitprop!

The US is nearing a decade of economic growth. Unemployment is under 4 per cent. The country is at relative peace with the world. If politics is as raw as it is now, we have to entertain the prospect that it will become worse in the event of a souring domestic or international context.

Almost Marx

https://www.ft.com/content/becd97a4-dc39-11e8-8f50-cbae5495d92b

 

 

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Guillaume Duval (@gduval_altereco) answers his own 2017 question! Old Socialist comments

Guillaume Duval asked the question, in his May 18, 2017 essay, titled Can Macron Move Europe Forward?  

https://www.socialeurope.eu/author/guillaume-duval

The more than patient reader has her answer in his October 30, 2018 essay titled Trump, Putin, Orbán, Kaczyński, May, Salvini… An Opportunity For Europe:

Might Emmanuel Macron be the one, as he proclaims, to seize this bundle of opportunities to finally relaunch European construction? That’s clearly desirable since it is he who, as president of the French Republic, could start doing so straight away but nothing is less certain, however. His obsession with advancing the Franco-German tandem is counter-productive because it seriously rubs other Europeans up the wrong way. His ‘Jupiter-like’ manner of intervening in Europe, as he does in France, raises the hackles of all our neighbours who still fear, after all the havoc wrought over the entire continent by Napoleon Bonaparte, French ambition and imperialism in Europe.

What’s more, the way in which he has continued at home the irresponsible policy begun in 2015 by his predecessor on the question of migration – whereby France refused to take its share of welcoming them in – significantly contributed to the turn towards Euroscepticism that took place in Italy. Last but not least, economically and socially he does little more than back the continuation and heightening of the deflationary policies that have prevented Europe from recovering post-2008 and have fed everywhere Euroscepticism and the rise of the populists. If we are to profit from the present cluster of factors that favour a relaunch of European construction we unfortunately need to find, without delay, another engine…

https://www.socialeurope.eu/trump-putin-orban-kaczynski-may-salvini-an-opportunity-for-europe

Macron, M. 37%, rounding up the number of spoiled,unmarked or otherwise uncountable ballots in the final election. His ‘Jupertarian Revolution’, Rule by Decree has reached its point of stasis , not just the precursor to its ultimate decline but indicative of its actuality, as key Ministers depart, but not quietly .

@BretStephensNYT was one of the most vociferous advocates of Macron’s ‘Revolution’, not just of  énarque Macron, but of the likely ‘Death of French Socialist State’ . Mr. Stephens is an American intellectual/political hick, one of a breed of dullards that The New York  Times favors for their Editorial and Opinion pages.

Old Socialist

 

 

 

 

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Three telling insights from Dave Kotz’s ‘End of the NeoLiberal Era?’ At The New Left Review

Regime change

Neoliberal restructuring promised a reversal of the decline in profits. Couched in the language of individual freedom, it would raise profits by undermining the bargaining power of labour, cutting taxes on capital and opening new profit centres through privatization and deregulation. In addition, capital had resented the expansion of the regulatory state in the 1960s into environmental protection, consumer safety and occupational health. Neoliberal restructuring would reverse those changes. Big business abandoned its previous compromise with labour and allied with small business, which had never accepted the regime of regulated capitalism, and was able to rapidly push through neoliberal restructuring. This began not with Reagan, but during the last two years of the Carter Administration. The us, supported by the uk, then took the lead in pushing through the neoliberal restructuring of global economic institutions. Free-market or neoliberal ideas had been growing in influence from the late 1960s; they now displaced Keynesianism to become the new orthodoxy, motivating and justifying the institutional shifts. The capital–labour compromise was replaced by a drive to fully subordinate labour to capital. [6]

https://newleftreview.org/II/113/david-kotz-end-of-the-neoliberal-era

 

Advocates of neoliberal restructuring had promised a big increase in investment as business was unshackled from state regulation, high taxes and trade-union pressures. However, business investment in the neoliberal era has been lacklustre, apart from the investment boom in new information-processing and communications technologies in the 1990s. Instead, the long expansions were propelled by debt-financed consumer spending. Both the share of consumer spending in gdp (Figure 7), and the level of consumer spending as a percentage of disposable personal income (Figure 8), trended upward after the early 1980s. While us gdp growth in the era of regulated capitalism had been led by investment and government spending, now it was driven by consumer spending, with the growth in investment and government spending lagging behind (Table 1). [9]

https://newleftreview.org/II/113/david-kotz-end-of-the-neoliberal-era

 

Structural crisis of neoliberal capitalism

The 2000s economic expansion was sustained by the huge real-estate bubble. However, every asset bubble bursts eventually, and when real-estate prices stopped rising in 2006 and began to fall in 2007, these unsustainable long-term trends brought about both the financial crisis and the Great Recession. The deflating real-estate bubble rapidly drove down the market value of the new derivative securities, which constituted a significant fraction of the assets of the banks that had accumulated so much debt. In September 2008, the major us banks suddenly became reluctant to engage in the essential overnight lending that kept the financial system afloat, as they couldn’t be confident of repayment. The system froze up, the banks faced failure.

https://newleftreview.org/II/113/david-kotz-end-of-the-neoliberal-era

 

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Andy Divine of October12 & 26, 2018. Old Socialist comments

Recall Andy Divine’s essay of October 12, 2018?

Headline: The Danger of Trump’s Political Accomplishments

It was the usual political travelogue that is Andy’s  specialty. ‘Kanye and Khashoggi and even Kavanaugh’

The Kavanaugh-Ford showdown also helped upend the overly simple view that women somehow form a monolithic bloc, all united around “women’s” issues, with those issues being defined by the left. In fact, partisanship and tribe trump gender, and always have. Women are no more a single ideological bloc than men, as a majority of white female voters proved in the 2016 election, when they voted for the gross dude over the feminist icon. (One of the really eye-opening parts of Jill Lepore’s new history of the United States, These Truths, is her account of how indispensable women were to the construction of the conservative movement.) These cultural fights, after all, are dynamic. They can rebound on you. If you’d predicted that the Kavanaugh hearings would have been a net-plus for the GOP a couple of weeks ago, people would have deemed you crazy. Today? Not so much. By November, who knows?

http://nymag.com/intelligencer/2018/10/andrew-sullivan-the-danger-of-trumps-accomplishments.html

Andy can’t suppress his political enthusiasm for Conservatives and their opinions. note the insights of Jill Lapore’s book that provides information , on the part played by women in the rise of Conservatism.  Andy’s ignorance of American political history in terms of Conservative women-the names Phyllis Schlafly and Peggy Noonan are just two of the well known writers/activists.

There are some other ‘points of interest’ on his itinerary but Andy finally lites on Christopher Browning essay at The New York Review of Books titled “The Suffocation of Democracy.” Political Melodrama resonates with Mr. Divine, and Weimar, and its ‘suffocation’ by the Nazis, is rife with a usable example of a more than possible historical recrudescence, in American terms. Reader beware! as the New York Review of Books has become the headquarters for Ukrainian Coup propaganda authored by Timothy Snyder and his fellow travelers. The New Cold Warrior has many cunning guises, and writes ideologically usable propaganda. How historically convenient that this essay should suit Mr. Divine ideological needs.

Next under the political analysis of Mr. Divine, he considers  Reihan Salam’s Melting Pot or Civil War?, but a more careful look reveals that the full title of the book is Melting Pot or Civil War?: A Son of Immigrants Makes the Case Against Open Borders’ Mr. Salam is a First Generation American, meaning that his parent immigrated to America and is executive editor of National Review. He could more accurately be described as that favorite Conservative hybrid , the ‘Libertarian’ or should it be termed more like an light coating of whitewash.

The reason why Salam’s book  deserves mention is that it plays the part of sub-text to Mr. Divine’s essay of October 26, 2018 titled:

Headline:  Democrats Can’t Keep Dodging Immigration As a Real Issue

More political travelogue but with a full scale attack on the New Democrats for their failure to take a position on ‘Border Security’ . The  security he is speaking of is the Southern Border, where the great unwashed Mestizo Horde will invade and not just dilute Anglo-Protestant culture, as outlined in the paranoid hysteria of Samuel P. Huntington’s 2004 book Who Are We? The Challenges to America’s National Identity, but will cast it into mongrel status! Mr. Divine plays on the historical ignorance of his readership allied to his own cynical mendacity! There is no excuse for his ignorance of this Huntington racist tract!

Mr. Divine finds an ally in fellow immigrant David Frum:

David Frum is right: “If liberals insist that only fascists will defend borders, then voters will hire fascists to do the job liberals will not do.” And unless the Democrats get a grip on this question, and win back the trust of the voters on it, their chance of regaining the presidency is minimal. Until one Democratic candidate declares that he or she will end illegal immigration, period, shift legal immigration toward those with skills, invest in the immigration bureaucracy, and enforce the borders strongly but humanely, Trump will continue to own this defining policy issue in 2020.

http://nymag.com/intelligencer/2018/10/democrats-cant-keep-dodging-immigration-as-a-real-issue.html

‘Shift legal immigration toward those with skills’ in sum immigrants like Andy Divine and David Frum are welcome, but the refugees from American murderous political adventurism, in its southern neighbors, that began with The Monroe Doctrine of 1823: in sum, America would be,and is, the ultimate arbiter of the political legitimacy of any and all political regimes in its southern neighbors.

Old Socialist

Further thoughts:

That Huntington, Andy Divine, David Frum are white males who were/are an integral part of a Conservative Elite,  Mr. Salam is jut a fellow traveler employed by the reactionary National Review, are  in their various iterations of xenophobes . Huntington’s xenophobia is the most extreme, as he views ‘The Other’ in  terms of  his Clash of Civilizations ,paranoia writ on a wold wide scale, yet he more specifically points to those Mestizo Hordes in ‘Who Are We?’ as the most imminent threat to American Protestant virtue: this bespeak a kind of extreme historical/political/ideological myopia , or just the prejudice of a white male from the 18th Century!

Frum is an immigrant from a very wealthy Canadian family, who came to America and became a propagandist for ‘The War on Terror’ and over time has ‘evolved’ into a self-proclaimed ‘Wise Republican Elder’, for a Party now utterly in thrall to the Dixiecrat racialist ethos.

Mr. Divine whose political enthusiasm for the ‘Bell Curve’ places him in the long tradition of the British Colonial mentality, that looks at the lesser beings of planet Earth as in need of the civilizing tutelage of The British White Male. With the proviso that ‘they‘ can never quite measure up to that standard, but must persevere under that life long tutelage.

October 28 & 29, 2018 10:55 AM PDT

 

 

 

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