Leader Call

Breaking News

Opinion

July 6, 2010

Americans still captive by the ‘zombie lies’

Laurel — It’s not simply about making the Obama administration look bad. Many Republicans actually love economic recessions. No better means of disciplining the labor force has ever been devised.

That’s the real message behind the GOP’s Senate filibuster denying extended federal benefits to roughly a million long-term unemployed. The same bill, which failed 57-41, would also have provided $16 billion in Medicaid help to states overburdened by declining tax revenues.

In consequence, several hundred thousand cops, teachers, firefighters and other public employees are sure to be laid off due to state budget cuts. Fat lot of good that will do the economy. But working stiffs will be keeping their heads down, won’t they?

Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., whose state has the nation’s second-highest unemployment rate (13.6 percent), put it forcefully: “The Republicans in the Senate want this economy to fail. In cynical political terms ... they want our country to fail to win an election, and they’re willing to take the people of this country with them.”

But that’s only part of the story. One of the enduring mysteries of American life is how Republicans keep succeeding by failing. The presidency of George W. Bush ought to have inoculated American voters against GOP economic theories for a generation. Tax cuts for the wealthy led not to greater prosperity, but runaway budget deficits, a doubled national debt and the weakest job creation since World War II. See-no-evil financial deregulation damn near destroyed the world banking system.

By the time President Obama was inaugurated last January, the economy was bleeding 750,000 lost jobs a month; the Congressional Budget Office had already projected the FY 2009 deficit at $1.3 trillion — a budget written by the Bush White House. After taking over in 2001 with a healthy budget surplus and some economists warning against paying down the debt too fast, Bush doubled it to over $10 trillion in eight short years.

Yet there was Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, on CNN, allowing as how he’s “waiting for this administration to take responsibility.” He accused the Obama administration of “tripling” the annual deficit, as brazen a falsehood as can be imagined. Is it even necessary to say that neither Cornyn nor any Republican who twiddled his thumbs throughout Bush’s two terms has condescended to explain what exact combination of revenue increases and spending cuts is needed to reduce the deficit short term?

Alas it’s absolutely necessary. According to the Center on Budget and Priorities, “(T)he fact remains: Together with the economic downturn, the Bush tax cuts and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq explain virtually the entire deficit over the next 10 years.”

New spending by the Obama administration — mainly the economic stimulus and auto industry rescue — is dwarfed by Bush’s spending on the Iraq and Afghan wars and the unfunded Medicare prescription drug benefit. If Democratic attempts to stimulate the economy have proven less than adequate, that’s because they’ve both been hostage to GOP obstructionism and restrained by the fiscal straitjacket Republicans left behind.

But a lot of voters simply don’t know it. Indeed, many people actively refuse to understand anything important about what the federal budget consists of or the role of government in modern economies. Millions remain captive to what Paul Krugman calls “zombie lies”: long disproven canards like the one that says cutting tax rates invariably leads to higher revenues. Because it’s so counterintuitive, parroting it makes Rush Limbaugh fans feel like intellectuals.

But self-deception goes deeper than that. I began to think about that after recently being invited to leave the country by a stockbroker who’d be picking up cans on the side of the road had the (Bush administration’s) TARP bailout not rescued his employer from insolvency. Yet he appears to see himself as an Ayn Rand hero, a rugged individualist, economically autonomous and disdainful of anybody needing government help.

It bears mention that this fellow, who I quite like personally, works in a nearby college town whose booming economy — compared to surrounding rural counties — is largely sustained by state and federal spending: Interstate highways, hospitals, a public university, airports, etc. Even the town’s newest large-scale private employers are Internet-related, thus highly dependent upon direct and indirect public support. Yet the town’s filled with self-described conservatives like my friend, selectively blind to the origins of their own prosperity.

To Americans who think of themselves as free agents, writes philosopher J.M. Bernstein in a recent New York Times essay, the 2008 financial crisis “demonstrated, emphatically and unconditionally, the depths of the absolute dependence of us all on government action.” That, in turn, “undermined the deeply held fiction of individual autonomy and self-sufficiency that are intrinsic parts of Americans’ collective self-understanding.”

Hence, he thinks, the Tea Party’s outrage. Hence too, contradictory demands like “keep your government hands off my Medicare.”

The great danger lies in their getting what they only think they want.



Arkansas Democrat-Gazette columnist Gene Lyons is a National Magazine Award winner and co-author of “The Hunting of the President” (St. Martin’s Press, 2000). You can e-mail Lyons at eugenelyons2@yahoo.com.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Opinion
  • grant callen mug use.jpg School Choice for All Children

    Cynthia Jackson is imprisoned by her zip code.
    She lives in Canton, works as an anesthesia technician, and is a single mother to Will, a 5th grader in Canton public schools.

    February 7, 2012 1 Photo

  • Purcell, Tom.jpg Sexes’ Differences Good for Valentine’s Day

    Get this: men and women are different.
    Italian researchers made this “groundbreaking” discovery in a recent study.

    February 7, 2012 1 Photo

  • Reducing state teen pregnancy

    In his State of the State address, Gov. Phil Bryant set out as a policy for his administration to tackle the issue of teen pregnancy — a formidable goal.

    February 7, 2012

  • Medicaid reform is truly an urgent need

    Medicaid and Medicare are very different programs.

    February 4, 2012

  • Numbers strongly suggest Mississippi’s true legislative priorities

    As the new Republican majority controlling state government claimed victory by passing the Children’s Protection Act with ease in the House, it’s clear that even more fundamental – and more politically difficult – challenges loom down the public policy road.

    February 4, 2012

  • Mullen, Jim.jpg Going Paperless — Priceless!

    For months, a large retailer emailed me twice a day, begging me to switch from paper billing to online billing. If only I would go paperless, my hair would grow back rich and thick, my sciatica would go away, my plantar fasciitis would heal itself, my cats would stop shedding, and my chance of heavenly reward would rise. OK, fine. I’ll sign up, just please stop sending me your stupid emails.

    February 2, 2012 1 Photo

  • Williams 2010.jpg Obama’s Racial Politics

    There’s been a heap of criticism placed upon President Barack Obama’s domestic policies that have promoted government intrusion and prolonged our fiscal crisis and his foreign policies that have emboldened our enemies. Any criticism of Obama pales in comparison with what might be said about the American people who voted him in to the nation’s highest office.

    February 2, 2012 1 Photo

  • byron york.jpg What really happened to the Gingrich case?

    The Romney campaign has been hitting Newt Gingrich hard over the 1990s ethics case that resulted in the former speaker being reprimanded and paying a $300,000 penalty.  Romney mentions it often, and his campaign made the ethics case the focus of the most widely viewed attack ad of the Florida primary.

    February 1, 2012 1 Photo

  • SidSaltermug use.jpg Outside counsel fight remains a political cold war

    The ongoing  legislative battle over the so-called “outside counsel” or contingency fee law remains a political cold war between the state’s trial lawyers and the state’s business and medical interests – and it’s a story that has two sides.

    February 1, 2012 1 Photo

  • Jackpot justice issues remain

    As the number of tort reform cases before the Mississippi Supreme Court keeps growing, state lawmakers don't seem quite as concerned about the court's rulings as are Mississippi's legal and corporate communities.

    January 31, 2012

Top News
Featured Ads
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
AP Video
Former Komen Exec Defends Funding Cut Skip the Coffee Cup and Inhale Your Caffeine Fix Calif. Gay Marriage Ban Ruled Unconstitutional Jury Selection for Ex-UVa Athlete Enters 2nd Day Raw Video: Giants Celebrate Another Super Bowl Cab Driver Helps Wis. Family Escape House Fire Greek Leaders Seek Deal As Bankruptcy Looms Bernanke: Recovery Depends on Consumer Spending Staff Removed at LA School During Abuse Probe Eastwood in Super Bowl Ad 'Compassionate' Stranded Fishermen Rescued From Bay of Green Bay Analyst: Outside Troops Won't Intervene in Syria Police: Father Planned Deadly Fire for Some Time US, UK Pressure on Syria; More Homs Violence Raw Video: Mass Killer Wants Medal, Freedom Court Strips Contador of Tour De France Title Runaway Goat Leads Police on Wild Chase And the Winner for Best Super Bowl Ad Is... Romney Latest Poll to Join Let-me-explain Club
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Popular Searches
Powered by Local.com
Seasonal Content
Parade
Magazine

Click HERE to read all your Parade favorites including Hollywood Wire, Celebrity interviews and photo galleries, Food recipes and cooking tips, Games and lots more.
Poll

Do you believe changes need to be made in Mississippi's mental health system?

Yes
No
     View Results
Stocks