Los Angeles Times - December 4,
2007
BLOWBACK
The common man will rise!
A reader cries Hitler after an Op-Ed in The Times
sideswipes limousine liberals.
By Jim Woolsey
n
their recent Op-Ed, "The Gentry Liberals," Joel Kotkin and Fred Siegel hit
the nail on the head ... mostly.
As the authors indicated, among Democrats, the concerns of the liberal
gentry have replaced those of the common man. Fashion has replaced substance
in the Democratic Party. Allowing political correctness to trump
standard-of-living provides a useful distraction from the disassembly of the
U.S. economy.
Kotkin and Siegel highlight the musings of such men as Arthur M.
Schlesinger Jr., who seemed to favor having an intellectual aristocracy
supplant the influence of working people, businessmen and labor leaders.
What the authors did not mention was how the Vietnam War catalyzed that
change, as intellectuals rejected the war long before the rest of the public
abandoned the effort. Getting out of the war was clearly a high priority,
but the impatience of the party elite cost Democrats their identification
with the welfare of Everyman. The party's new leadership thought it could
replace this single, almost universal issue with a bouquet of individual
concerns among various smaller groups, women, gays and minorities being
foremost. Economically, these groups were neutral enough that Democrats
could replace economic and labor issues with campaigns focused on trendy
concerns. Their campaigns could be funded by interests that normally favored
Republicans. The downside was that the resulting decline in the fortunes of
organized labor painted Democrats into the same corner as Republicans.
Republicans, long the standard-bearers for the cult of personal
enrichment, understood both the threat and the opportunity of this change by
the Democrats. While the Democrats might become even less credible on issues
like national security, corporate entities now had an alternative if the
Republican Party dragged its feet on any part of the corporate agenda. On
the right, only the foot soldiers of the gun lobby or the Good Book remain
in the dark as to their party's ultimate loyalties, or the means by which
those loyalties will be enforced.
Among Democrats, only those at the apex of the campaign-contribution
class recognize that serving the interests of CEOs is now the only game in
town. Thus Bill Clinton did more for the corporate agenda than any public
servant on the right. There remains a host of other issues to distract the
average voter, but the financial elites are indifferent.
The good news is that this trend marches unflinchingly to its own doom.
"It's the economy, stupid" is a phrase we shall hear again, even if
Democrats remain unsure of its ultimate meaning. A modern economy, built on
robust discretionary consumption, is as likely to drown those on the upper
decks as those in steerage once consumer incomes fall far enough. This is
something we already see in the mortgage crisis.
Only two alternatives will then remain: Hire enough night watchmen to
postpone chaos, or restore the economic factors that once produced
widespread consumer prosperity.
The bad news is that many of the institutions that were crucial in our
escape from the Depression are either fatally crippled or have become
vehicles for the self-satisfied views of those described by Kotkin and
Siegel. How many university endowments does one suppose are entirely based
on selling the concept of deregulation or the open market?
Only Big Labor, as it was once called, had the organizational and
economic might to counterbalance the power of the financial elite. It was in
the eddy between these forces that consumer incomes propelled both
commercial activity and public welfare to the heights experienced in the
second half of the 20th century. Sadly, labor itself may have fallen into a
state of mortal gentrification. Its next champions, should they ever appear,
are likely to hold a greater resemblance to the anarchists of Republican
Seville than to the pragmatic men who built the City of Big Shoulders.
Thus, the model most likely to undo both the corporate elite and the
gentry liberals will be something similar to that practiced by the Soviets,
the Fascists, the Nazis and the Falange.
These totalitarians will not resurrect the estate of the common man, but
they will clearly drive other parasites from the corpse.
Jim Woolsey has retired from a seafaring career and now
spends his days musing on the state of things ashore.
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