The Shadow of the Pitchfork: Elite Panic Attack as Bailout Goes Bust
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
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The
vote by the House of Representatives to defeat the Wall Street
bailout plan is the first act of political courage that the Congress
of the United States has mounted in the last seven years. The fact
that it was due largely to right-wing Republicans afraid of going
down with the sinking ship of the witless leader they have followed
blindly throughout his reign is a delicious irony but the
whys and wherefores of the vote are not important. What matters
is that one of America's moribund institutions has flickered to
life long enough to derail a disastrous action that would have shoved
the nation even deeper into the pit of corruption and ruin where
it has been mired for so long.
The New York
Times called the House vote "a catastrophic political defeat
for President Bush, who had put the full weight of the White House
behind the measure." But this is manifestly untrue. As everyone
but the nation's media and the Democratic Party knows,
George W. Bush has no "political weight" to use,
or lose. Yes, he still retains the authoritarian powers that the
spineless Democrats have given him with scarcely a whimper of protest
(and often with boundless enthusiasm); but as a political force
i.e., someone whose opinions and statements can sway popular
opinion he has been a dead and rotting carcass for a long
time. He is the most unpopular president in American history; and
I can report from first-hand, eyewitness knowledge that he is thoroughly
despised by some of the most rock-ribbed, Bible-believing, flag-waving,
down-home, John Wayne-loving Heartland types that you can imagine.
Even his own party a party fashioned in his own image, the
Frankensteinian melding of willfully ignorant religious primitivism
and rapaciously greedy crony capitalism that he has embodied in
his twerpish person kept him away from their convention this
year.
Nothing
absolutely nothing could be politically safer than opposing
George W. Bush. And yet the entire Democratic leadership, Barack
Obama included, lined up to support a cockamamie plan proposed by
this scorned and shriveled figure, a plan that was transparently
nothing more than an audacious raid on the Treasury by Big Money
hoods and yet another authoritarian power grab by a gang of murderous,
torturing, warmongering toadies. This was the plan and these
were the people that the Democrats decided to fight for.
What's more,
the Democrats stood shoulder to shoulder with the president on what
is apparently the only issue that can now stir Americans to genuine
anger and widespread protest: a direct threat to their bank accounts.
Wars of aggression like the Nazis used to wage; elaborate tortures
like the KGB used to practice; concentration camps, lawbreaking
leaders, diminishment of liberty, the slaughter of a million innocent
people in a land destroyed by an illegal and pointless invasion
all of that stuff is pretty much OK, easily swallowable,
worth no more than a shrug or perhaps a frowny "tsk tsk"
before going on to the sports pages or flipping over to another
channel. But put out an open ploy to steal their money and give
it to the filthy rich and baby, it's pitchfork time! Yet
here, as the public face of just such a ploy, is where the
Democrats chose to make their stand.
So Monday's
rejection of the bailout plan is not a catastrophic political defeat
for George W. Bush; he has no political standing, no political future.
But it is a vast and humiliating defeat for the Democratic
leadership, across the board, who, as Democrat Lloyd Dogget of Texas
said
never
seriously considered any alternative to the administrations
plan, and had only barely modified what they were given. He criticized
the plan for handing over sweeping new powers to an administration
that he said was to blame for allowing the crisis to develop in
the first place.
Now the Democratic
elites have had their collective head handed to them on a platter.
It is a dish most richly deserved. And although it is almost possible
to believe that they will learn anything from this episode, there
is now a chance a chance that we can at least have
a discussion of alternatives to the Bush scheme.
I still believe
it is unlikely any genuinely effective program one that could
manage and mitigate the now-unavoidable effects of the Wall Street/Washington-induced
disaster will ever get enacted. After all, the Democrats
are largely owned by the same corrupt and greedy elites now seeking
a handout. And it seems reasonable to assume that the Bipartisan
Bailout Bunch will eventually find some kind of sugar to tempt away
the two dozen votes they need for their next "compromise"
on the Bush-Paulson plan.
Then again,
who knows? There are obviously a lot of very powerful and privileged
people sweating more bullets tonight than they have sweated in many
and many a year. They have roused the drowsy beast of popular anger
at last, and no one can say what might happen next. Probably nothing
or rather, more of the same, in some form or another. But
still, it is good to see the icy beads of panic dotting the brows
of elites who have inflicted and/or countenanced so much death,
destruction, terror and degradation in the past few years. Today
they have suffered a very rare defeat in the relentless, remorseless
class war they have been waging against us for decades. And that
is something to celebrate at least for one night.
October
2, 2008
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2008 Chris Floyd
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