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May 18, 2013
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Romney’s Magical CapitalismPosted on Apr 25, 2012It turns out that there is at least one question on which Mitt Romney is not a flip-flopper: He has a Utopian view of what an unfettered, lightly taxed market economy can achieve. He would never put it this way, of course, but his approach looks forward by looking backward to the late 19th century, when government let market forces rip and a conservative Supreme Court swept aside as unconstitutional almost every effort to write rules for the economic game. This magical capitalism is the centerpiece of Romney’s campaign, and it may prove to be his undoing. Here’s Romney’s problem. His best strategy is to cast President Obama as a failure because the economy has not come all the way back from the implosion of 2008. The most effective passages in his well-reviewed speech after his Tuesday primary victories were about the shortcomings of the status quo. “Is it easier to make ends meet?” Romney asked. “Is it easier to sell your home or buy a new one? Have you saved what you needed for retirement? Are you making more at your job? Do you have a better chance to get a better job? Are you paying less at the pump?” And there was the line pundits were bound to love that played off James Carville’s memorable utterance from Bill Clinton’s 1992 campaign. “It’s still about the economy,” Romney said, clearly relishing the moment, “and we’re not stupid.” Advertisement Romney is right in saying he has “a very different vision” from Obama’s, and this is where the magic comes in. He envisions “an America driven by freedom, where free people, pursuing happiness in their own unique ways, create free enterprises that employ more and more Americans. And because there are so many enterprises that are succeeding, the competition for hardworking, educated, skilled employees is intense, so wages and salaries rise.” Just like that, all would be well—as if we never needed the trust-busting of the Progressive Era, the social legislation of the New Deal, the health programs of the Great Society, and the coordinated action of the world’s governments in 2008 and 2009 to keep the Great Recession from becoming something far worse. This is Romney’s true radicalism. I suspect it is a principled radicalism. And exposing its implications will be Obama’s opening to make the campaign about something other the economy, stupid. Romney’s speech on Tuesday was every bit as important as his supporters said it was. It contained both the foundation of an effective campaign based on the electorate’s discontents, and the basis for undermining the very argument Romney wants to make. Romney’s philosophical inclinations give the president ample room to speak to non-ideological, non-Utopian voters, the 10 percent or 15 percent who will decide this election. They may not like government very much, but they are also wary about what capitalism does when the watchdogs fall asleep. They don’t cotton to further tax cuts for the wealthy. They reject the idea that worrying about how unequal the rewards in our society have become is the same thing as being “envious” of those who have done well. They are fully onboard that opportunity and not “entitlement” is the American way. But they rather welcome the help—low-interest student loans, for example—that government can offer to those looking to rise and prosper. That’s why Romney’s shift to Obama’s side in the president’s battle with House Republicans over student loans may be his most instructive flip-flop yet. It shows that Romney will do all he can to soften his underlying radicalism. His goal is to deprive Obama of ways to reveal the concrete impact of free-market Utopianism—and the price of the cutbacks Romney embraced by endorsing Rep. Paul Ryan’s budget. What Romney has going for him is a journalistic presumption that he is either a closet “moderate” or so opportunistic that he is altogether lacking in a coherent worldview. The first is wrong. The second is unfair to Romney. What he believes matters, and it is the biggest obstacle between him and the White House.
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By Mekhong Kurt, May 9, 2012 at 11:42 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
I huge part of the problem in the current debate is not new, but goes back decades: willful denial of even the most obvious facts.
For example, in the wake of the 1972 elections (my first), I remember people damning President Nixon for moving to end the Vietnam War. (Whether he ended it appropriately is an entirely different matter, one I’m deliberately leaving aside here.) It doesn’t matter what different individuals felt about that war. What matters is that one of Nixon’s main campaign planks in his re-election campaign in 1968 was to get us out of Vietnam—and he promptly set about to do precisely that. Having won a landslide victory, first in ‘68 then again in ‘72, he can be forgiven for thinking he had a mandate, come ‘72, to hold the course.
What was he *supposed* to do after making such a huge promise? Turn right around and nuke Hanoi and Haiphong?
What is new is the intensity of willful denial since the second President Obama fell silent after uttering the last words of his oath of office. Despite the fact that he won rather handily, if not exactly by a landslide (in the popular vote, that is, though he did in the Electoral College with 67.8% of the electoral votes at 365 of them out of 538).
What’s going on now reminds me of the McCarthy era and, back in the 1930’s, the hate radio of Father Charles Coughlin (the Rush Limbaugh of his era). Interestingly, in light of some of the questions some Obamaphobes keep raising, Coughlin’s attacks on FDR were direct ancestors of those questions, passed on through accusations McCarthy made. McCarthy suggested that President Eisenhower might be a communist, or at least unwittingly influenced by them! *Eisenhower*!!!
I’ve tried countless times to convince such people to use reason and facts, pointing out that they well might conclude they oppose President Obama anyway—but on reasonable grounds, not fact-free manic, crazy accusations. (See: Rush Limbaugh & Co.). The retorts? varied, but often focused on words such as “you’re a traitor.”
The only tack I can think of to take now is to answer fire with fire. I’m tired of trying to talk sensibly with people whose first instinct is to reach for a gun.
Report thisBy gerard, April 27, 2012 at 7:55 pm Link to this comment
Here’s the absurd scenario:
Report this1. Conservatives howl about “big government” and “cut, cut, cut.”
2. At the same time they support every military expense that comes down the pike, most of which are permitted to be wasteful. This eventuates in big government getting even bigger, with a humongous debt that is never cut.
3. Government funding war with huge debt hollows out the national economy by limiting consumer goods (with jobless consumers having no money to buy) and taxing consumers for over-priced war materials and ancillary costs which benefit relatively few with jobs and even fewer with vast fortunes.
4.As government war-related expenditures become the predominant enterprise, much of it necessitating more trillions of dollars of debt and breeding ever more fear and threats concerning national insecurity related not only to assorted foreign interests but to citizens also, the “electronic fear industry” (“surveillance”) appears on the scene, and stimulates even more debt until most of the population is without jobs but also without courage and independence.
This in turn increases individual and class resentment and inhibits economic recovery resulting in further lack of foresight,education,employment and wellbeing. And that puts a further health-care burden on government’s already huge debt as nothing is done to prevent the syndrome of malaise.
How does such a policy, that is: “drowning government in the bathtub” of insolvency square with with increasing the power of government to fight everybody abroad and suspect everybody at home? How is this supposed to enhance individual incentive, freedom, private initiative, job creating and independence? How is such ignorance supposed to be winning anything but scorn?
By who'syourdebs, April 27, 2012 at 7:08 am Link to this comment
I think Romney has just started tacking to the left—he’ll be right-center by November. He’s just “Bush III”, when it really comes down to it, silver-spooned lackey for the other super-rich. Working class Republicans! He is not your friend. This brand of ruthless capitalism is not your friend either. The Blue Dog Democrats are losing out in their primaries, and the GOP will take losses in the fall as well. If they lose the Presidency, it won’t be because they haven’t lied, cheated, or played their Nixonian dirty tricks to the hilt. Blocking access to the vote, flooding the airwaves with propaganda, the works. Don’t be chumps, people. You have nothing is common with a guy worth 300 mil. Life ain’t a reality show, after all. Keep buying those lottery tickets, too. Don’t let reality intrude. Truly sad.
Report thisBy Michael, April 26, 2012 at 1:09 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Personally, I prefer “magic capitalism” to magic socialism. Capitalism does not have
Report thisenough controls - but socialism al la Obama - places TOO much power in the hands of
the government. I do not trust the government, period. Leave us alone.
By Doubtom, April 26, 2012 at 10:38 am Link to this comment
Romney’s Magical Capitalism? It’s only fitting that this should emanate from
Report thissomeone who believes in “magic underwear”
By Alan MacDonald, April 26, 2012 at 8:04 am Link to this comment
“Romney’s Magical Capitalism Benefits the Empire”
Best,
Report thisAlan