Washington's Lords of Creation
by
Tom
Engelhardt
and Thomas Frank
by Tom Engelhardt
and Thomas Frank
DIGG THIS
As the Bush
administration heads for "closure," Republican Senator Ted Stevens
of Alaska seems to be heading
for the same fate in a "redecorating" scandal; Monica Goodling of
the (in)Justice Department is back in town for her hiring
and firing practices; the eternally Foxy Karl Rove continues
to give
contempt of Congress real meaning; a federal judge ruled
against the administration's typically imperial idea of "immunity";
and rumors are flying about coming "preemptive,"
blanket presidential pardons for those who organized the administration's
torture regime and committed other crimes. All the while, holding
up the glorious banner of the Great Tradition, the John McCain campaign
continues to be a chop
shop for K Street Lobbyists. And that's just a two-second glance
at the Washington scene as August begins. As always, give them all
high marks for consistency!
Après Bush, of course, le déluge.
Thomas Frank,
a Kansas boy who once followed conservatism deep
into his home state and now writes op-eds
that probably drive the readers of the Wall Street Journal
crazy, has had a front seat at the Washington spectacle these last
years as the Bush administration applied its "enhanced interrogation
techniques" to the Federal government. In his latest must-read book,
The
Wrecking Crew: How Conservatives Rule, Frank offers nothing
short of a how-to history of the conservative era specifically
how to destroy a government, leave Americans in the lurch, and enrich
yourselves all at the same time. It wasn't just, as he argues, that
this administration left "smoking guns" littered around the landscape,
but that it itself was the smoking gun. If you want to know just
what we face as a nation in terms of rebuilding America, his book
is a good place to start. ~ Tom
Follow
This Dime: Why Misgovernment Was No Accident in George W. Bush's
Washington
By Thomas
Frank
Washington
is the city where the scandals happen. Every American knows this,
but we also believe, if only vaguely, that the really monumental
scandals are a thing of the past, that the golden age of misgovernment-for-profit
ended with the cavalry charge and the robber barons, at about the
same time presidents stopped wearing beards.
I moved to
Washington in 2003, just in time for the comeback, for the hundred-year
flood. At first it was only a trickle in the basement, a little
stream released accidentally by the president's friends at Enron.
Before long, though, the levees were failing all over town, and
the city was inundated with a muddy torrent of graft.
How
are we to dissect a deluge like this one? We might begin by categorizing
the earmarks handed out by Congress, sorting the foolish earmarks
from the costly earmarks from the earmarks made strictly on a cash
basis. We could try a similar approach to government contracting:
the no-bid contracts, the no-oversight contracts, the no-experience
contracts, the contracts handed out to friends of the vice president.
We might consider the shoplifting career of one of the president's
former domestic policy advisers or the habitual plagiarism of the
president's liaison to the Christian right. And we would certainly
have to find some way to parse the extraordinary incompetence of
the executive branch, incompetence so fulsome and steady and reliable
that at some point Americans stopped being surprised and began simply
to count on it, to think of incompetence as the way government works.
But the onrushing
flow swamps all taxonomies. Mass firing of federal prosecutors;
bribing of newspaper columnists; pallets of shrink-wrapped cash
"misplaced" in Iraq; inexperienced kids running the Baghdad stock
exchange; the discovery that many of Alaska's leading politicians
are apparently on the take our heads swim. We climb to the
rooftop, but we cannot find the heights of irony from which we might
laugh off the blend of thug and Pharisee that was Tom DeLay
or dispel the nauseating suspicion, quickly becoming a certainty,
that the government of our nation deliberately fibbed us into a
pointless, catastrophic war.
Bad Apples
All Around
So let us
begin on the solid ground of these simple facts: this spectacular
episode of misrule has coincided with both the political triumph
of conservatism and with the rise of the Washington area to the
richest rank of American metropolises. In the period I am describing,
gentlemen of the right rolled through the capital like lords of
creation. Every spigot was open, and every indulgence slopped out
for their gleeful wallowing. All the clichés roared at full, unembarrassed
volume: the wines gurgled, the T-bones roasted, the golf courses
beckoned, the Learjets zoomed, the contractors' glass buildings
sprouted from the earth, and the lobbyists' mansions grew like brick-colonial
mushrooms on the hills of northern Virginia.
Democrats,
for their part, have tried to explain the flood of misgovernment
as part of a "culture of corruption," a phrase at once obviously
true and yet so amorphous as to be quite worthless. Republicans
have an even simpler answer: government failed, they tell us, because
it is the nature of government enterprises to fail. As for the great
corruption cases of recent years, they cluck, each is merely a one-of-a-kind
moral lapse unconnected to any particular ideology an individual
bad apple with no effect on the larger barrel.
Which leaves
us to marvel helplessly at what appears to be a spectacular run
of lousy luck. My, what a lot of bad apples they are growing these
days!
Corruption
is uniquely reprehensible in a democracy because it violates the
system's first principle, which we all learned back in the sunshiny
days of elementary school: that the government exists to serve the
public, not particular companies or individuals or even elected
officials. We Are the Government, insisted the title of a
civics primer published in the earnest year of 1945. "The White
House belongs to you," its dust jacket told us. "So do all the other
splendid buildings in Washington, D.C. For you are a citizen of
the United States." For you, young citizen, does the Post Office
carry letters to every hamlet in the nation. For you does the Department
of Agriculture research better plowing methods and the Bureau of
Labor Statistics add up long columns of numbers.
The government
and its vast workforce serve the people: The idea is so deep in
the American grain that we can't bring ourselves to question it,
even in this disillusioned age. Republicans and Democrats may fight
over how big government should be and exactly what it should do,
but almost everyone shares those baseline good intentions, we believe,
that devotion to the public interest.
We continue
to believe this in even the most improbable circumstances. Take
the worst apple of them all, lobbyist Jack Abramoff, whose astonishing
career as a corruptionist has been unreeling in newspaper and congressional
investigations since I came to Washington. Abramoff started out
as a great political success story, a protégé and then a confidant
of the leaders of the conservative faction of the Republican Party.
But his career disintegrated on news of the inventive ways he ripped
off his clients and the luxury meals and lavish trips with which
he bribed legislators.
Journalistic
coverage of the Abramoff affair has stuck closely to the "bad apple"
thesis, always taking pains to separate the conservative movement
from its onetime superstar. What Abramoff represented was "greed
gone wild," asserts the most authoritative account on the subject.
He "went native," say others. Above all, he was "sui generis," a
one-of-a-kind con man, "engaged in bizarre antics that your average
Zegna-clad Washington lobbyist would never have dreamed of."
In which case,
we can all relax: Jack Abramoff's in jail. The system worked; the
bad apple has been plucked; the wild greed and the undreamed-of
antics have ceased.
Misgovernment
by Ideology
But the truth
is almost exactly the opposite, whether we are discussing Abramoff
or the wider tsunami of corruption. The truth is as obvious as a
slab of sirloin and yet so obscured by decades of pettifoggery that
we find it almost impossible to apprehend clearly. The truth slaps
your face in every hotel lobby in town, but we still don't get the
message.
It is just
this: Fantastic misgovernment of the kind we have seen is not an
accident, nor is it the work of a few bad individuals. It is the
consequence of triumph by a particular philosophy of government,
by a movement that understands the liberal state as a perversion
and considers the market the ideal nexus of human society. This
movement is friendly to industry not just by force of campaign contributions
but by conviction; it believes in entrepreneurship not merely in
commerce but in politics; and the inevitable results of its ascendance
are, first, the capture of the state by business and, second, all
that follows: incompetence, graft, and all the other wretched flotsam
that we've come to expect from Washington.
The correct
diagnosis is the "bad apple" thesis turned upside down. There are
plenty of good conservative individuals, honorable folks who would
never participate in the sort of corruption we have watched unfold
over the last few years. Hang around with grassroots conservative
voters in Kansas, and in the main you will find them to be honest,
hardworking people. Even our story's worst villains can be personally
virtuous. Jack Abramoff, for example, is known to his friends as
a pious, polite, and generous fellow.
But put conservatism
in charge of the state, and it behaves very differently. Now the
"values" that rightist politicians eulogize on the stump disappear,
and in their place we can discern an entirely different set of priorities
priorities that reveal more about the unchanging historical
essence of American conservatism than do its fleeting campaigns
against gay marriage or secular humanism. The conservatism that
speaks to us through its actions in Washington is institutionally
opposed to those baseline good intentions we learned about in elementary
school.
Its leaders
laugh off the idea of the public interest as airy-fairy nonsense;
they caution against bringing top-notch talent into government service;
they declare war on public workers. They have made a cult of outsourcing
and privatizing, they have wrecked established federal operations
because they disagree with them, and they have deliberately piled
up an Everest of debt in order to force the government into crisis.
The ruination they have wrought has been thorough; it has been a
professional job. Repairing it will require years of political action.
Conservatism-in-power
is a very different beast from the conservatism we meet on the streets
of Wichita or the conservatism we overhear talking to itself on
the pages of Free Republic. For one thing, what conservatism
has done in its decades at the seat of power is fundamentally unpopular,
and a large percentage of its leaders have been men of eccentric
ideas. While they believe things that would get them laughed out
of the American Sociological Association, that only makes them more
typical of the movement. And for all their peculiarity, these people
Grover Norquist, Tom DeLay, Jack Abramoff, Newt Gingrich,
and the whole troupe of activists, lobbyists, and corpora-trons
who got their start back in the Reagan years have for the
last three decades been among the most powerful individuals in America.
This wave of misgovernment has been brought to you by ideology,
not incompetence.
Yes, today's
conservatives have disgraced themselves, but they have not strayed
from the teaching of their forefathers or the great ideas of their
movement. When conservatives appoint the opponents of government
agencies to head those government agencies; when they auction their
official services to the purveyor of the most lavish "golf weekend";
when they mulct millions from groups with business before Congress;
when they dynamite the Treasury and sabotage the regulatory process
and force government shutdowns in short, when they treat
government with contempt they are running true to form. They
have not done these awful things because they are bad conservatives;
they have done them because they are good conservatives,
because these unsavory deeds follow naturally from the core doctrines
of the conservative tradition.
And, yes,
there has been greed involved in the effort a great deal
of greed. Every tax cut, every cleverly engineered regulatory snafu
saves industry millions and perhaps even billions of dollars, and
so naturally securing those tax cuts and engineering those snafus
has become a booming business here in Washington. Conservative rule
has made the capital region rich, a showplace of the new plutocratic
order. But this greed cannot be dismissed as some personal failing
of lobbyist or congressman, some badness-of-apple that can be easily
contained. Conservatism, as we know it, is a movement that is about
greed, about the "virtue of selfishness" when it acts in the marketplace.
In rightwing Washington, you can be a man of principle and a boodler
at the same time.
The Wrecking
Crew in Full Swing
One of the
instructive stories We Are the Government brought before
generations of schoolkids was the tale of a smiling dime whose wanderings
were meant to introduce us to the government and all that it does
for us: the miner who digs the ore for the dime has his "health
and safety" supervised by one branch of the government; the bank
in which the dime is stored enjoys the protection of a different
branch, which "sees that [banks] are safe places for people to keep
their money"; the dime gets paid in tax on a gasoline sale; it then
lands in the pocket of a Coast Guard lieutenant, who takes it overseas
and spends it on a parrot, which is "quarantined for ninety days"
when the lieutenant brings it home. All of which is related with
the blithest innocence, as though taxes on gasoline and quarantines
on parrots were so obviously beneficial that they required little
further explanation.
Clearly, a
more up-to-date version is required. So let us follow the dime as
it wends its way through our present-day capital. Its story, we
will find, is the reverse of what it was in 1945. That old dime
was all about service, about the things government could do for
us. But the new dime is about profit about the superiority
of private enterprise, about the huge sums that can be squeezed
out of federal operations. Instead of symbolizing good government,
the dime now shows us the wrecking crew in full swing.
Our
modern dime first comes to Washington as part of some good citizen's
taxes, and it leaves the U.S. Treasury in a payment to a company
that has been hired to do work on the nation's ports. Back in 1945,
the government would have done the work itself, but now it uses
contractors for such things. This particular contractor knows how
to win a bid, but it doesn't know how to do the work, so it subcontracts
the job to another outfit. The dime follows, and it eventually makes
up a worker's salary, who incorporates it into his monthly car payment.
From there it travels into the coffers of an auto industry trade
association, which happens to be very upset about a rule proposed
by a federal agency that would require cars to notify drivers when
their tire pressure is low.
So the trade
association gives the dime to a Washington consultant who specializes
in fighting federal agencies, and this man launches challenge after
challenge to the studies that the agency is using in the tire-pressure
matter. It takes many years for the agency to make its way through
the flak thrown up by this clever fellow. Meanwhile, with his well-earned
dime, he buys himself a big house with nice white columns in front.
But
this is only the beginning of the story. As we make our rounds of
conservative Washington, we glimpse something much greater than
single acts of incompetence or obstruction. We see a vast machinery
built for our protection reengineered into a device for our exploitation.
We behold the majestic workings of the free market itself, boring
ever deeper into the tissues of the state. Ultimately, we gaze upon
one of the true marvels of history: democracy buried beneath an
avalanche of money.
From the
book The
Wrecking Crew: How Conservatives Rule by Thomas Frank, Copyright
© 2008 by Thomas Frank. Reprinted by arrangement with Metropolitan
Books, an Imprint of Henry Holt and Company, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
August
8, 2008
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
who
runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com, is the co-founder of
the American Empire
Project. His book, The
End of Victory Culture, has recently been updated in a newly
issued edition. He edited, and his work appears in, the first best
of TomDispatch book, The
World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire
(Verso), which is being published this month. A brief video in
which Engelhardt discusses American mega-bases in Iraq can be viewed
by clicking
here. Thomas Frank, the author of What's
the Matter with Kansas?, is the founding editor of The
Baffler, a contributing editor at Harper's, and, most
recently, a columnist for the Wall Street Journal. His WSJ
columns can be read at his
website. He lives, of course, in Washington D.C. and this essay
has been adapted from his new book, The
Wrecking Crew: How Conservatives Rule (Metropolitan Books,
2008).
Copyright
© 2008 Thomas Frank
Tom
Engelhardt Archives
|