Thursday, December 17, 2009

Progs, paradox, class and health care

We now come to the moment of progressive self-examination. As health care reform loses support, as the progressives turn against Obama, all those on the left side of the political dividing line must ask the big questions: "What do we stand for?" "Who are we?" "What the hell went so wrong in one short year?"

Here are some answers.

Many thanks go to reader G for drawing my attention to this piece by Sam Smith of the Progressive review, which highlights the major reason why the Obama movement was doomed to fail:
My sense is that the infatuation over Obama was based on much larger problems including the iconization of politics, an excessive infatuation with words over deeds, as well as naive assumptions of what having the first black president would be like. Few recognized that true equality among ethnicities includes a balanced dispersal of sins and weakness as well as virtues.
That's the lesson I started to draw while mulling over the cartoon republished in the post below. (Sometimes you don't understand your own work until months or years later.) Everyone looked at Obama and saw two-and-only-two things: Skin color and the (D) next to his name. From those two factors, most of the country wrote a narrative that had nothing to do with reality. Everyone drew conclusions at odds with the man's history, to the extent that he had a history.

The right saw those two factors and concluded that Barack Obama must be a bolshie. Of course, they say that about all Democrats. It is a measure of this country's collective insanity that the Marxist bogeyman has become a political issue in 2009.

The left saw the same two factors -- the skin color and the (D) -- and concluded that Barack Obama must be the Progressive Messiah, the Lightbringer, the Kwisatz Haderach.

Neither side allowed itself to contemplate the possibility that Obama might be just another compromised politician with conservative instincts.

Those of us who didn't judge Obama by his skin color were -- paradoxically -- called racists. Yes, I had a bias, but not that bias. My prejudice was founded on geography, not parentage. Chicago. Fucking Chicago. Chicago Democrats were the most corrupt kind, as virtually everyone in the party admitted in the days before the ascent of Obama.

Let's get back to Sam Smith's piece. All liberals and progressives should study this next passage the way clerics study scripture:
Most of all, however, Obama represented a triumph of a generation of liberals dramatically different from their predecessors, most markedly in their general indifference to issues of economic as well as ethnic equality.

This heavily professional liberal class never once - in the manner of their predecessors of the New Deal and Great Society - took the lead in pressing for economic reforms. It wasn't that they opposed them; they just never seemed to occur to them.

They, after all, had risen in status even as much of the rest of the country was slipping. Over a quarter of a century passed and the best the liberal Democrats could come up with was to slash welfare and raise the age for Social Security.
Remember how the Kos Krowd radiated utter contempt for the working class voters who favored Hillary? The sheer spectacle of this historic turnaround still astounds me: Democrats disparaging workers.

And now, as a direct result, we have a Democratic congress tossing money at Wall Street and allowing the escalation of an unpopular war in Afghanistan. How could it have come to this?
The first thing that needs to happen is for there to be a clear distinction between smug, self-serving liberalism contemptuous of so many Americans and a populist progressive movement that seeks unity with those [whom] many liberals prefer simply to condemn.

The magnets for this unity are such obvious yet ignored issues as the creation of jobs, the preservation of pensions, decent treatment of endangered homeowners, an end to credit card usury, respect for local decision-making, and, yes, a healthcare plan based on providing financial assistance, not bureaucratic nightmares.
The healthcare reform bill is the turning point. The sleeper must awake. Yeah, a lot of the people who voted for Obama were idiots -- but none of those idiots voted for this.

Right now, the progs have Lieberman as their "shield of dreams": The Thing From Connecticut functions well as blame-catcher. But no less an authority than Russ Feingold tells us that Lieberman has acted as Obama's avatar:
On Tuesday, Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) pointed the finger at President Barack Obama, rather than Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT), for the disappearance of the Medicare buy-in and public option from the Senate health reform bill.

“This bill appears to be legislation that the president wanted in the first place, so I don’t think focusing it on Lieberman really hits the truth,” Feingold said...
(So vote against the bill, Senator. Why should the Thing From Connecticut make all the grand gestures?)

Anthony Weiner is one of the best on Capitol Hill, but he still misses the essential point that Feingold has grasped:
“Snowe? Stupak? Lieberman? Who left these people in charge?" Weiner asked. "It’s time for the President to get his hands dirty. Some of us have compromised our compromised compromise. We need the President to stand up for the values our party shares. We must stop letting the tail wag the dog of this debate.”
The president is the one who left those people in charge. He's not the tail. He's the wagger.

Obama's health care bill is now decidedly unpopular -- polls indicate that more people would now rather keep the horrid status quo than go for mandated health insurance. Meanwhile, the reimportation of Canadian drugs is very popular. So is single-payer. Yet single-payer and Canadian drugs are unthinkable in DC, while health insurance mandates may well carry the day. This, at a time when Democrats control both Congress and the presidency.

Why is this?

Why do popular ideas flounder while unpopular ones move forward? Who are the eldritch eminences defining the politically permissible?

And what can those on the left do to change this situation?

Much of the problem, I think, goes back to the aforementioned schism between the snooty, college-educated progs who idolized Obama -- the "Whole Foods nation," as some have called them -- and the working class. As Sam Smith notes (in sections of his essay not quoted above), workers sense the antipathy of the progs, and disingenuous reactionaries have stepped in to fill that void. By now, it's a familiar trick: We've all chuckled at the sight of opera-loving Ann Coulter pretending to be spiritually aligned with the NASCAR crowd. It's an old trick, yes, but it works. In fact, the strategy is more effective now than ever before.

Even after eight years of George W. Bush, the working class accepts right-wing framing of the issues, no matter how deceptive and ludicrous that frame might be.

For example, here's how the Republicans in Feingold's state see the problems with Obama's health care reform bill:
Government-Run Health Care Will:

-Take health care decisions away from patients and doctors.
-Undercut private insurance rates.
-Empower government bureaucrats to set prices and determine what treatments to cover.
-Force private insurers out of business.
-Raise taxes and reduce the quality of care
Bullshit.

Yes, it's a bad bill -- but it's not bad for those reasons.

Granted, there is some truth in the assertion that a robust public option might undercut private rates. That would be a good thing -- if there were still a public option in this bill. But there isn't. Most of the public option was taken out ages ago, and now even the wispy remains have been swept away. All we have left is a compromise of a compromise of a compromise, just as Weiner said.

Nothing in this bill has anything to do with "Government-Run Health Care." The Republicans are lambasting a plan which simply does not exist.

Nevertheless, this hallucination is very real in the minds of millions of working class Americans.

Now here is Deborah White, a liberal, describing the problems with the very same bill:
The Obama-Lieberman health care plan eliminates all proposed competition for private insurance corporations in what Dean calls "a bigger bailout for the insurance industry than AIG."
An Obama-Lieberman plan mandate that all Americans purchase health care coverage will translate into tens of billions more annually for private insurers, but with absolutely no measure to control costs charged to consumers.

Thus, the same private insurers who caused our current unaffordable mess can (and will, according to history!) charge sky-high prices, and we have no choice but to pay.
That's a lot closer to reality, innit? And here's Jane Hamsher:
And what are senators planning to call a “win”?

• A removal of the ban on annual limits that Reid slipped in at the last minute, in violation of the president’s promise in his September address to Congress;

• an exemption from antitrust law for insurance companies, which will reduce competition;

• taxes that start up in January but benefits that don’t start until 2014; and

• a tax on middle-class insurance plans that is designed to cut back insurance benefits, reduce coverage and increase co-pays and deductibles.
Again, one has to sit back and bask at the spectacle of the thing. Both Republicans and an increasing number of progressives now condemn the same piece of legislation. Yet they do so for very different reasons. Republican propagandists attack a "socialized medicine" bill which does not exist. White and Hamsher are attacking a bill that does exist.

Here's the problem: More blue collars have heard the Republican argument than will ever read what Hamsher, White or even Howard Dean have to say.

Why? Because working people have stopped listening to them.

Yes, it is true that working people favor single payer; polls have demonstrated this. And yet -- paradox! -- they have also internalized the Republican framing of the health care issue, of every issue. Workers want socialized health insurance run by private industry. They want Medicare without gummint. They want welfare without the State. They want a cubical sphere and a dog that meows.

Clean, but obscene -- know what I mean?

Workers want contradictory things because the Republicans, who don't have their interests at heart, have learned to talk their language.

Until "progressives" find a way to rebuild a base among those who toil -- until they stop attending the Cabernet Sauvignon soirees and sit down with the guys swigging Miller -- the Democratic party will fail. So will the country.

20 comments:

Anonymous said...

Excellent, excellent, excellent observations. I have been so dismayed by the "progressive" clique's disdain of the working class. Their smirking dismissal of the "tea parties" was sickening to me. Yes, of course, many at those events were misled and misinformed. But many just had a feeling in their gut that something is going terribly wrong with our government. The right wing has given them comfort and told them the problem is "socialism" while the left has laughed at them and called them childish names. So who do you think they are going to turn to?

Anonymous said...

Excellent post.

Everyone drew conclusions at odds with the man's history, to the extent that he had a history.

What was so apparent to me as some of the background of Obama came out even during the primaries was that Obama went far out of his way to be as ambiguous as possible. And I thought, why should an honest man do that?

From Smith's piece:
This heavily professional liberal class never once - in the manner of their predecessors of the New Deal and Great Society - took the lead in pressing for economic reforms. It wasn't that they opposed them; they just never seemed to occur to them.

I'm 70 years old. I have an lapsed identity over at evil orange. One of the things I discovered over there is that we each have a window on history dependent upon our age, our experiences, our willingness to stretch our boundaries. When in a commenting thread with a young/younger liberal, such as described by Smith, I had the feeling that they were missing pieces of history. And I was right. In one exchange, a commenter revealed that the beginning of his political attention span was Bill Clinton. It was as if Bill Clinton was Adam. There was not only no recognition of suffering that had gone on throughout the century, there was actually a blank space in their brains.

I was born right after the depression, but the effect of the depression was so strong and deep that my parents and grandparents talked about it in almost mythic terms. I experienced their suffering so acutely in their telling and retelling of their stories that, 60 years later, my memories are like archive recordings of their voices, rough working class voices, salt of the earth voices.

My neice is living in Scarsdale, a place so far from her family's roots. Their children have absolutely no idea of working class life. Where I have memories, they have a blank space.

Great post, Joseph. Keep on writing.

Barbara

Anonymous said...

Hey joe.

So reading your article , and barbara's response echo's my thoughts. Granted they are influenced heavily by Thom Hartmann, particularly his books on jefferson and the effective use of emotional communication.
-Tea baggers have no connection as the real tea party or any of the reasons, they just have a visceral reaction to the language being perpetuated the pundits who are effectively lying to them.
-Liberals, unlike me, consistantly have no life experience to sympathize with the working class, so they have no sympathy. I worked at UPS when they went on strike, I am a machinist by trade and am young. Nobody even knows that in the 1800's businesses would send in gunmen to break a strike in textile mills.
-Working class joes have been abused for a long time, maybe they are suffering from stockholm syndrome.
-Economics is not a mandate in any schooling. Well not across the board the country.
-Civics has been removed from the the curriculum, why do we have an inheritance and estate tax? Ask the monarchs why they don't.

My grandfather has been a lifelong republican, ex army, small business owner. He will be 91 and is a Norwegian son of missionary parents, he wasn't born here, he is the old style norsk conservative, in which you contribute to the lives of other people. He aided in the young men achieving conscientious objector status during vietnam, he served in WWII and was geared up on the tarmac during the bay of pigs. He was the type of american who was willing to sacrifice for what he thought was just causes and contribute to the lives of his fellow man, irrespective of skin color. Is he from a rare time where people shared in the collective pain and shared in the good as well? But what I see today is immense selfishness being promoted amongst my peers.

Re anne coulter, she is an effective liar, and nobody seems to care anymore that there are liars all around. As long as the lies we are being told don't make us feel uncomfortable. It isn't strange that we have people going after power and eliminating education, because they knew hitler was right when he said this
"All propaganda has to be popular and has to accommodate itself to the comprehension of the least intelligent of those whom it seeks to reach."
He also said stuff about big lies, force etc. how long will it last and work?

purenoiz

MrMike said...

Nature abhors a vacuum (no shit, Sherlock) and the republicans filled that vacuum with their canards.
If Joe and Jane Sixpack are too busy to ferret out the facts about a single payer or national health care payment system and the Dems too stupid, or compromised, to give it to them who will? Certainly not the paid shills at the cable news outlets. Has Olbermann named the Plastic Messiah the worst person evah yet?
As for the Tea Party crowd, scratch one an you find a Birther, at least in my neck of the woods here in fly-over PA.

Anonymous said...

Here's a link to a Kos article linked in DU (going from bad to worse?!). http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x7250697

This part struck me: "Where were the national, well-tested ad campaigns pushing Medicare for All? Where were the free screenings of Sicko at major movie theaters across the nation, complete with sponsored food & drink for those who attended and signed up to take action? Where were the mid-cycle ads done by Madison Avenue professionals targeting specific Senators and making them deeply uncomfortable? Where, in effect, was the message campaign?"

Or did the left-leaning groups' leadership know Obama never planned to give us true health care reform?

What the writer didn't touch on is that Obama supporters bought and spread the Republican propaganda on the Clintons during the Primary.

Thank you, Joseph;
great response, Barbara.

Peg

Zee said...

Excellent rundown.

Particularly this bullseye:

"Those of us who didn't judge Obama by his skin color were -- paradoxically -- called racists."

Dead-on.

Gus said...

You have, very accurately, described why many people I know hate Democrats (even though they are friends with some Dems, they just see it as "the other side"......but that is another problematic issue for another time). The arrogance, the condescension, the aloofness. I noticed this during the Bush era, but most just shrugged it off as frustration from those whose team wasn't in power. It made me explore 3rd parties as I was so disgusted with Dems and Repubs. I think both parties are hopelessly corrupt and simply pretend to be ideologically different while they achieve the exact same ends by slightly different means. Both are contemptuous of the people they claim to serve. But you are correct, the conservatives have slowly become the populist party, which is hard enough to believe. But even harder to believe is that so many Dems and "progressives" still think that their party is populist despite all the evidence to the contrary.

Anonymous said...

One of your best, Joseph.

Ted Kennedy summed things up at the 1980 Democratic Convention:

Our cause has been, since the days of Thomas Jefferson, the cause of the common man and the common woman.

Our commitment has been, since the days of Andrew Jackson, to all those he called "the humble members of society -- the farmers, mechanics, and laborers." On this foundation we have defined our values, refined our policies, and refreshed our faith.


I choose to remember him thus.

Democrats have broken faith with the people before, but the 2008 debacle and its aftermath is infuriating and heartbreaking. It is as if FDR had lost to Al Smith in 1932.

Invictus

Anonymous said...

For an unwelcome take, I'm sure, I blame the '80s DLC movement.

When it appeared there was a GOP-lock on the Oval Office, big DLC-style Dems decided to become the other corporate party, as the 'permanent Congressional party,' in order to try to equalize the money flow (mother's milk of politics, they say).

They did that, and nigh unto 30 years of that, this is what we get-- DEMOCRATIC US Senators that represent their constituencies, whom they consider Big Pharma, Big Insurance, Big Banking, etc.

Dodd, Schumer, Baucus, traitor Lieberman-- you betcha.

XI

Caro said...

>>Until "progressives" find a way to rebuild a base among those who toil -- until they stop attending the Cabernet Sauvignon soirees and sit down with the guys swigging Miller -- the Democratic party will fail. So will the country

I still believe that one of the reasons the Clintons are so reviled by the upper crust wannabes is that they're two of the very few Democrats who DO speak to the working class.

Carolyn Kay
MakeThemAccountable.com

Caro said...

>>Why do popular ideas flounder while unpopular ones move forward?

Follow the money. I learned that lesson while growing up in Louisiana. Whenever some decision was made that seemed crazy, we could only conclude that someone was bought off. We were seldom proved wrong.

I felt perfectly at home when I moved to Chicago. The only difference here is that stuff actually gets done. In Louisiana, little does.

Carolyn Kay
MakeThemAccountable.com

Anonymous said...

The strangest part about this chism is that the alinated democrats still bound to the party. The mention of a 3rd party make them run for cover.

S Brennan said...

From a blog posting, copied to self email...

...and yes I caught a lot of flak for writing this.

Oddly, the Republicans have been using this negative stereotype of lib-ber-als for thirty years, it is amazing to me that "progressives" are so out of touch that they in engage in behaviors that confirm this negative stereotype. Ezra K, Josh M, Matt T, Matt Y, Digby, etc. take a bow then get off your knees and wipe that stain off your blue dress.


----- Original Message -----
From: [deleted]
To: [deleted]
Sent: Monday, September 14, 2009 7:04 PM
Subject: I know tea-baggers sound wacko, but educated liberals would do better

I know I'm not gonna hear the end of this [deleted non-pertinent paragraph]

I know tea-baggers sound wacko, but educated liberals would do better understand that there is an uninformed and seething anger in this country and rather than ridicule the "unwashed" masses for their media induced ignorance, an ounce [and I'm dating myself here] of "conscious raising" is worth a pound of class based superiority.

Having said that, I don't know how any right wingnut could be unhappy with Obama, he's not gonna change one major Bush policy. From the rights POV Obama is a much needed face lift to Bush's policies...and it's Obama that has gotten Bush's wish list past congress without so much as a whimper of resistance. What was abhorrent to the left under Bush has suddenly become fashionable under Obama. Plus Obama can read a teleprompter like he's ringing a bell...and both left and right agree that is far more important than actually serving the needs of the nation.

Trojan Joe said...

One of your best postings, Joe.

It turns out that the Obots were the racists, for not accepting that blacks can come in all shades of ideology (just like, uh, whites).

On health-care, my hope is that Bernie Sanders, Russ Feingold and Tom Harkin form the same kind of obstructionist block on the left that Lieberman, Mary Landrieu and Ben Nelson have formed on the right. Threaten to vote NO unless the views of the MAJORITY are incorporated into the bill. (I'd invite Al Franken into the huddle too, but he still seems gun-shy.)

Trojan Joe

Purple said...

Yeah, white trash jokes are de rigueur at DK , Huff and their ilk.

Anonymous said...

Joe: Excellent post, as always. The one central irony about it; however, is that you write (rightly so) about the dripping condescension and outright hostility by the "Whole Foods Nation" towards the working class. Yet, you consistently call the hundreds of thousands who turned out at tea parties around the nation this year "teabaggers" which is not only condescension of the highest degree but a term coined by the Whole Foods Nation Empress herself, Janeane Garofolo.

Curious.

HT said...

I'e been reading for a long time, and only commented once or twice, but this piece is so good, and one of the comments referred to Joe and Jane Six pack, so I thought I might add something to the discussion. I am a liberal, and have been for over 60 years. I don't come from wealth, but from solid working class roots. I've noticed a tendency, since Reagan's infamous "welfare queens" of the choice political class and their followers to denigrate those who are, to my mind, the backbone of any nation. Unfortunately, whether it is deliberate, or subconscious, the so called "progressive" groups run with it. For example, Joe and Jane Six pack are the folks who run the corner store, or the gas station down the street. Neither of them drink to excess, and they resent being delegated to that box. Joe the plumber - likewise. He is not just a plumber, he is a person who is trying to keep his family afloat during trying times. And don't get me started on the so-called "trailer trash" designation. People who live in trailers do so for various reasons, most of which has to do with money or lack thereof. That doesn't mean they are all morons.
Where did the liberal sense of fairness go? We used to reach out to people, to be inclusive. Now we seem to label them without thinking about how that will play outside of our urban existance. I wish everyone would stop and think about how they would feel if they were labeled based on their socio-economic status rather than on their actual accomplishments? My apologies, but I had to get that off my chest. I'll go back to lurking now.

Anonymous said...

I guess I've been confused all my life. I've considered myself a "liberal" for over 50 years because I believed in civil rights for all citizens, human rights for all humans, and taking care of every American's needs. There's more, but that is it in a nut shell.

Now I hear "progressives" calling "liberals" a bunch of elitists. I have been poor or middle class all my life. I've worked my butt off to raise four kids alone and I am not an elitist. My collar is bluer than most.

I don't know what a progressive stands for. But, I'm not one of them. Liberal was good enough for me when everyone hated us. It still is.

All of a sudden several years ago I started hearing Democrats calling themselves "Progressives" instead of "Liberals", trying t distance themselves from the stigma of caring about others, I guess. As far as I can tell that is when the Democratic Party started going all to shit.

"Liberal" became a dirty word and those who didn't want to be associated with it, changed their names. I am not a Progressive. I've been a "liberal" for 50 years and that is what I'll stay. My values have remained true all this time. I left the Democratic Party last year, because the fucking "Progressives" (many of whom who used to be Republicans) took it over. I'm a liberal, I always have been.

I'm not going to change how I identify myself because someone made up a new name.

apishapa

Anonymous said...

Joseph -- this post gets to the heart of the problem the Dems have and the reason soooo many "old dems" are (were) turned off by Obama.

And the more Axelrove and Obots were trying to portray Obama as the reincarnation of FDR (and all other great presidents besides), the more hollow that comparison rang (it was for me and my spouse). I feel it even further strengthened that resolve -- insults usually do. Soooo many rank and file Dems I knew could not bring themselves to vote for Obama because he looked down on them. & quite literally so, as his body language conveys every time he gives one of those boring lecturing speeches while shaking his head from side to side to read the teleprompters. Inspiring, my ass@!

Then even the way these people talk is not good enough for these progressive elitists. [At least Al Franken contends that there are geographical differences in word usage and never made fun of the Shrub for saying "nuklar". But I suspect because he sees himself as a LIberal and not a progressive.] But you don't seem to gain your progressive stripes UNLESS you make fun of the verbiage and colloquialisms of low information voters. MoveOn and the other prog orgs were among the many reasons I ceased my memberships.

These "common people" are the very same people who rely strongly upon their common sense and their gut feelings -- which every Obot and commentator interpreted as being racist. The faux science that came from the West coast, conveniently, telling people that they weren't likely to vote for a black man, was an obvious sham drummed up to guilt trip them, and for some it worked. But, you can only insult and guilt trip people for so long until it results in a huge backlash ala the "tea partiers", and I know many previous Dems who are secretly attending such rallies but not telling their "progressive" friends for fear of reprisals -- being endlessly made fun of.

What I still find the most amazing is that those Dems who hang onto these tactics are those who don't live within miles of the "hood" but choose to live in the gentrified fashionably "liberal" neighborhoods. It is enough to make me sick. & with healthcare, now we're being told again to "shut the f up 'cause you are racist, and a hater of poor people." notwithstanding too dumb to understand that healthcare reform will never be on the table again....

As for me, this chick in her 30's is a LIBERAL and proud of it, and agrees with Howard Dean about scrapping the healthmonster bill.

Sharon said...

Barbara, great response!

Tracy, Status Now