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marmar
marmar's Journal
marmar's Journal
September 27, 2012
Published on Sep 27, 2012 by RussiaToday
In this episode, Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert discuss punk rock 'Tall Paul' giving the two finger salute to Ben Bernanke's QE3 and gold adjusting for zero growth, yield, velocity and confidence.
Keiser Report: Kiss My QE
Published on Sep 27, 2012 by RussiaToday
In this episode, Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert discuss punk rock 'Tall Paul' giving the two finger salute to Ben Bernanke's QE3 and gold adjusting for zero growth, yield, velocity and confidence.
September 27, 2012
from Mother Jones:
The Dog That Voted and Other Election Fraud Yarns
The GOP's 10-year campaign to gin up voter fraud hysteriaand bring back Jim Crow at the ballot box.
By Kevin Drum
On March 21, 2005, a sandy-haired 43-year-old attorney named Mark "Thor" Hearne took a seat under the Greek Revival dome of the Ohio Statehouse to testify before the House Administration Committee. The committee was holding a field hearing on the subject of voter fraud, a hot topic in Congressand in Ohio, where George W. Bush had eked out a narrow, hotly contested victory over John Kerry the year before.
Hearne introduced himself as counsel for the American Center for Voting Rights. The Buckeye State, he said, had suffered from "massive" registration fraud during the presidential election. Liberal groups like ACORN and the AFL-CIO were implicated in illegal voter registration schemes. An NAACP operative had paid for fake registrations in crack. Then, after enrolling thousands of phony voters, these same groups had flooded the courts with lawsuits designed to create bedlam on Election Day and prevent fraudulent votes from being discovered. To back up his story, Hearne submitted a 31-page report, signed by more than a dozen Ohio attorneys.
It was a startlingly lurid pictureand the latest chapter in a long-simmering feud between Republicans, who claim that fraud is rampant in US elections, and Democrats, who say such charges are merely an excuse to suppress the vote. Still, there was something different about this episode. It wasn't just a one-off bit of bluster during a bitter recount battle. That would have been politics as usual. Instead, it marked a dramatic widening of the war. This was, after all, a congressional hearing, and Hearne represented an organization dedicated to pushing Republican claims of voter fraud not just during post-election court fights, but everywhere and all the time. ..................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2012/07/voter-suppression-kevin-drum
The GOP's 10-year campaign to gin up voter fraud hysteria—and bring back Jim Crow at the ballot box
from Mother Jones:
The Dog That Voted and Other Election Fraud Yarns
The GOP's 10-year campaign to gin up voter fraud hysteriaand bring back Jim Crow at the ballot box.
By Kevin Drum
On March 21, 2005, a sandy-haired 43-year-old attorney named Mark "Thor" Hearne took a seat under the Greek Revival dome of the Ohio Statehouse to testify before the House Administration Committee. The committee was holding a field hearing on the subject of voter fraud, a hot topic in Congressand in Ohio, where George W. Bush had eked out a narrow, hotly contested victory over John Kerry the year before.
Hearne introduced himself as counsel for the American Center for Voting Rights. The Buckeye State, he said, had suffered from "massive" registration fraud during the presidential election. Liberal groups like ACORN and the AFL-CIO were implicated in illegal voter registration schemes. An NAACP operative had paid for fake registrations in crack. Then, after enrolling thousands of phony voters, these same groups had flooded the courts with lawsuits designed to create bedlam on Election Day and prevent fraudulent votes from being discovered. To back up his story, Hearne submitted a 31-page report, signed by more than a dozen Ohio attorneys.
It was a startlingly lurid pictureand the latest chapter in a long-simmering feud between Republicans, who claim that fraud is rampant in US elections, and Democrats, who say such charges are merely an excuse to suppress the vote. Still, there was something different about this episode. It wasn't just a one-off bit of bluster during a bitter recount battle. That would have been politics as usual. Instead, it marked a dramatic widening of the war. This was, after all, a congressional hearing, and Hearne represented an organization dedicated to pushing Republican claims of voter fraud not just during post-election court fights, but everywhere and all the time. ..................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2012/07/voter-suppression-kevin-drum
September 27, 2012
from truthdig:
Republicans Lost the War With Women the Moment They Declared It
Posted on Sep 27, 2012
By Peter Z. Scheer
A new Quinnipiac University/CBS News/New York Times poll has the voting women of Ohio giving Barack Obama 25 points over Mitt Romney. In Pennsylvania, women prefer Obama by 21 points and in Florida the president has a 19-point advantage, according to the same poll. That might have something to do with the war on women Republicans have been accidentally waging this summer. Well, the war is not accidentalits quite intentionalit just wasnt meant to be this public.
Lets talk about women.
My grandmother didnt think her daughter needed to go to college. Mom could find a husband to provide for her. She went anyway and worked her way through school until she got herself a copyboy job at the Los Angeles Times at a time when women, if they were hired to write at all, wrote about clothes and food.
My mom became a reporter, an editor, a bureau chief, an edition chief, an associate editor in charge of 10 sections and a vice president of a company that, when she got there, thought she might be an aspiring secretary. ..............(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/republicans_lost_the_war_with_women_the_moment_they_declared_it_20120927/
Republicans Lost the War With Women the Moment They Declared It
from truthdig:
Republicans Lost the War With Women the Moment They Declared It
Posted on Sep 27, 2012
By Peter Z. Scheer
A new Quinnipiac University/CBS News/New York Times poll has the voting women of Ohio giving Barack Obama 25 points over Mitt Romney. In Pennsylvania, women prefer Obama by 21 points and in Florida the president has a 19-point advantage, according to the same poll. That might have something to do with the war on women Republicans have been accidentally waging this summer. Well, the war is not accidentalits quite intentionalit just wasnt meant to be this public.
Lets talk about women.
My grandmother didnt think her daughter needed to go to college. Mom could find a husband to provide for her. She went anyway and worked her way through school until she got herself a copyboy job at the Los Angeles Times at a time when women, if they were hired to write at all, wrote about clothes and food.
My mom became a reporter, an editor, a bureau chief, an edition chief, an associate editor in charge of 10 sections and a vice president of a company that, when she got there, thought she might be an aspiring secretary. ..............(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/republicans_lost_the_war_with_women_the_moment_they_declared_it_20120927/
September 27, 2012
WASHINGTON (AP) With college enrollment growing, student debt has stretched to a record number of U.S. households nearly 1 in 5 with the biggest burdens falling on the young and poor.
The analysis by the Pew Research Center found that 22.4 million households, or 19 percent, had college debt in 2010. That is double the share in 1989, and up from 15 percent in 2007, just prior to the recession representing the biggest three-year increase in student debt in more than two decades.
The increase was driven by higher tuition costs as well as rising college enrollment during the economic downturn. The biggest jumps occurred in households at the two extremes of the income distribution. More well-off families are digging deeper into their pockets to pay for costly private colleges, while lower-income people in search of higher-wage jobs are enrolling in community colleges, public universities and other schools as a way to boost their resumes.
Because of the sluggish economy, fewer college students than before are able to settle into full-time careers immediately upon graduation, contributing to a jump in debt among lower-income households as the young adults take on part-time jobs or attend graduate school, according to Pew. ......................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://news.yahoo.com/student-debt-stretches-record-1-5-households-220125251.html
Student debt stretches to record 1 in 5 households
WASHINGTON (AP) With college enrollment growing, student debt has stretched to a record number of U.S. households nearly 1 in 5 with the biggest burdens falling on the young and poor.
The analysis by the Pew Research Center found that 22.4 million households, or 19 percent, had college debt in 2010. That is double the share in 1989, and up from 15 percent in 2007, just prior to the recession representing the biggest three-year increase in student debt in more than two decades.
The increase was driven by higher tuition costs as well as rising college enrollment during the economic downturn. The biggest jumps occurred in households at the two extremes of the income distribution. More well-off families are digging deeper into their pockets to pay for costly private colleges, while lower-income people in search of higher-wage jobs are enrolling in community colleges, public universities and other schools as a way to boost their resumes.
Because of the sluggish economy, fewer college students than before are able to settle into full-time careers immediately upon graduation, contributing to a jump in debt among lower-income households as the young adults take on part-time jobs or attend graduate school, according to Pew. ......................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://news.yahoo.com/student-debt-stretches-record-1-5-households-220125251.html
September 27, 2012
(Bloomberg) The U.S. public is critical of both Republicans and Democrats in Congress for failing to resolve such issues as the national debt while rejecting the sacrifices that may be needed to fix it.
According to a Bloomberg National Poll, Republicans in Congress have an unfavorable rating of 51 percent, and Democrats are only in slightly better shape, with 49 percent of poll respondents viewing them unfavorably.
Congress hasnt been able to do anything except name post offices over the past two years, said Steve Crews, a 29-year- old writer and independent voter from Long Beach, California. As soon as one party or the other becomes a majority, they think they have this mandate from God Almighty and the other side must be the devil incarnate, he said.
With Congress recessing until after the Nov. 6 election, lawmakers left a pile of unresolved issues. Chief among them is a debt-reduction agreement that would address the expiring 2001 and 2003 tax cuts and $1.2 trillion in automatic spending reductions set to begin in January. The deficit is projected this year to reach $1.1 trillion, which would make it the fourth consecutive year the government has run trillion-dollar shortfalls. ..................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-09-27/contempt-for-congress-rampant-as-public-rejects-sacrifice.html
Contempt for Congress Rampant as Public Rejects Sacrifice
(Bloomberg) The U.S. public is critical of both Republicans and Democrats in Congress for failing to resolve such issues as the national debt while rejecting the sacrifices that may be needed to fix it.
According to a Bloomberg National Poll, Republicans in Congress have an unfavorable rating of 51 percent, and Democrats are only in slightly better shape, with 49 percent of poll respondents viewing them unfavorably.
Congress hasnt been able to do anything except name post offices over the past two years, said Steve Crews, a 29-year- old writer and independent voter from Long Beach, California. As soon as one party or the other becomes a majority, they think they have this mandate from God Almighty and the other side must be the devil incarnate, he said.
With Congress recessing until after the Nov. 6 election, lawmakers left a pile of unresolved issues. Chief among them is a debt-reduction agreement that would address the expiring 2001 and 2003 tax cuts and $1.2 trillion in automatic spending reductions set to begin in January. The deficit is projected this year to reach $1.1 trillion, which would make it the fourth consecutive year the government has run trillion-dollar shortfalls. ..................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-09-27/contempt-for-congress-rampant-as-public-rejects-sacrifice.html
September 27, 2012
.........
There Will Be No Bacon Shortage
How a British trade association press release sent the Internet into a senseless panic.
By Matthew Yglesias|Posted Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2012, at 3:08 PM ET
It all began, strangely enough, with a press release from an obscure foreign trade association. The National Pig Association of the United Kingdom, you see, wants British customers to feel OK about the idea of paying a higher retail price for pork products. Theyd particularly like it if British customers went out of their way to buy locally produced pork. And why wouldnt they?
Vendors want you to buy more of their product at higher prices is more or less the ultimate dog bites man (or, as the case may be, pork chop) story. But the press releases provocative ledeA world shortage of pork and bacon next year is now unavoidablecaptured the imagination of the Internet. Not right away, mind you. The release is dated Sept. 20, but the looming bacon shortage didnt start making global headlines until Tuesday, Sept. 25.
Bacon Shortage Worldwide Unavoidable UK Pig Group Says was CNBCs headline, while CBS went with Global Bacon Shortage Unavoidable, Group Says. Up in Canada, the CBC offered the pithier Global Bacon Shortage Unavoidable. The news made the Huffington Post and even the Washington Post's weather blog (Weather a factor in looming global bacon shortage).
Given the rise of bacon worship in recent years, perhaps its no surprise that people are upset at the thought of a bacon shortage. But is the shortage real? And does it even have anything to do with bacon in particular? Are we headed for a dystopian future of food lines and bacon rationing? ...................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.slate.com/articles/business/moneybox/2012/09/unavoidable_bacon_shortage_u_k_s_national_pig_association_has_everyone_worried_about_the_price_of_pork_.html
There Will Be No Bacon Shortage
.........
There Will Be No Bacon Shortage
How a British trade association press release sent the Internet into a senseless panic.
By Matthew Yglesias|Posted Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2012, at 3:08 PM ET
It all began, strangely enough, with a press release from an obscure foreign trade association. The National Pig Association of the United Kingdom, you see, wants British customers to feel OK about the idea of paying a higher retail price for pork products. Theyd particularly like it if British customers went out of their way to buy locally produced pork. And why wouldnt they?
Vendors want you to buy more of their product at higher prices is more or less the ultimate dog bites man (or, as the case may be, pork chop) story. But the press releases provocative ledeA world shortage of pork and bacon next year is now unavoidablecaptured the imagination of the Internet. Not right away, mind you. The release is dated Sept. 20, but the looming bacon shortage didnt start making global headlines until Tuesday, Sept. 25.
Bacon Shortage Worldwide Unavoidable UK Pig Group Says was CNBCs headline, while CBS went with Global Bacon Shortage Unavoidable, Group Says. Up in Canada, the CBC offered the pithier Global Bacon Shortage Unavoidable. The news made the Huffington Post and even the Washington Post's weather blog (Weather a factor in looming global bacon shortage).
Given the rise of bacon worship in recent years, perhaps its no surprise that people are upset at the thought of a bacon shortage. But is the shortage real? And does it even have anything to do with bacon in particular? Are we headed for a dystopian future of food lines and bacon rationing? ...................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.slate.com/articles/business/moneybox/2012/09/unavoidable_bacon_shortage_u_k_s_national_pig_association_has_everyone_worried_about_the_price_of_pork_.html
September 27, 2012
from Consortium News:
The Price of US Interventionism
September 26, 2012
Mitt Romney and his neocon advisers want to confront the Muslim world with a credible military threat as if more American tough-guy-ism will quell the regions anti-Americanism. But the reality is that the long history of U.S. intervention has engendered the hostility, says the Independent Institutes Ivan Eland.
By Ivan Eland
The attack on the U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya, which killed four U.S. diplomats, including Ambassador Christopher Stevens, is the latest example of tragic blowback from the U.S. governments interventionist foreign policy in the Islamic world. That it happened on the 11th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, an even more severe example of such blowback, is a cruel irony.
After 9/11, President George W. Bush told us that Islamist terrorists attack us for our freedoms. This contradicted the conclusion of his own Defense Science Board and other expert opinion including that of the perpetrator of those attacks, Osama bin Laden that al-Qaeda attacked us for our foreign policy of intervening indiscriminately in Muslim lands.
The enduring lack of introspection on the part of the American government and people about the ill effects of those needless interventions leads to their continuation and consequent unpleasant blowback. Unfortunately, the killing of American personnel in Libya and the attacks on and violent protests at U.S. diplomatic facilities in 20 Islamic countries are examples of this payback.
At the time, critics of the overthrow of Libyas Muammar Gaddafi rightfully asked during the process exactly who made up the opposition the U.S. was supporting and what kind of government would replace him. They held out the possibility of post-Gaddafi instability, tribal warfare, and maybe even an Islamist takeover of the country. ....................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://consortiumnews.com/2012/09/26/the-price-of-us-interventionism/
The Price of US Interventionism
from Consortium News:
The Price of US Interventionism
September 26, 2012
Mitt Romney and his neocon advisers want to confront the Muslim world with a credible military threat as if more American tough-guy-ism will quell the regions anti-Americanism. But the reality is that the long history of U.S. intervention has engendered the hostility, says the Independent Institutes Ivan Eland.
By Ivan Eland
The attack on the U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya, which killed four U.S. diplomats, including Ambassador Christopher Stevens, is the latest example of tragic blowback from the U.S. governments interventionist foreign policy in the Islamic world. That it happened on the 11th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, an even more severe example of such blowback, is a cruel irony.
After 9/11, President George W. Bush told us that Islamist terrorists attack us for our freedoms. This contradicted the conclusion of his own Defense Science Board and other expert opinion including that of the perpetrator of those attacks, Osama bin Laden that al-Qaeda attacked us for our foreign policy of intervening indiscriminately in Muslim lands.
The enduring lack of introspection on the part of the American government and people about the ill effects of those needless interventions leads to their continuation and consequent unpleasant blowback. Unfortunately, the killing of American personnel in Libya and the attacks on and violent protests at U.S. diplomatic facilities in 20 Islamic countries are examples of this payback.
At the time, critics of the overthrow of Libyas Muammar Gaddafi rightfully asked during the process exactly who made up the opposition the U.S. was supporting and what kind of government would replace him. They held out the possibility of post-Gaddafi instability, tribal warfare, and maybe even an Islamist takeover of the country. ....................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://consortiumnews.com/2012/09/26/the-price-of-us-interventionism/
September 27, 2012
from Democracy Now!:
Pt. I
Pt. II
......(snip)......
AMY GOODMAN: Joining us from Madrid is Democracy Now! correspondent and independent journalist Maria Carrion, who has been at the protest all day yesterday.
Maria, welcome to Democracy Now!
MARIA CARRION: Thank you, Amy. Good to be with you.
AMY GOODMAN: Tell us whats happening.
MARIA CARRION: Well, as you, as your viewers and listeners have been able to see, its a very serious situation here in Spain. This is just the latest of many, many protests that we have been having here in Spain, in the last year, especially, and there will be many more coming. People have lost faith in government. People have lost faith in the main institutions. And we are facing 27 billion euros in social spending cuts. Every week, the government unveils a series of new measures that affect primarily education and health and salaries and the welfare of Spanish people. And as we saw at the top of the hour, Greece is really an example of whats coming our way, and thats why I think people are so enraged and so worried, because they see that none of the measures imposed on Greece on in Portugal or in Ireland are having any sort of effect on the economy, on peoples welfare, on employment. And so, I think people are saying we do not want to head in that same direction.
NERMEEN SHAIKH: Maria Carrion, youve spoken also about some of the effects on people already with the austerity measures in place, quite apart from what might happen tomorrow. Can you talk in particular about housing and food? ............(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.democracynow.org/2012/9/26/thousands_surround_spanish_parliament_in_bid
Poder a la gente!! ...... Getting Greek in Madrid
from Democracy Now!:
Pt. I
Pt. II
......(snip)......
AMY GOODMAN: Joining us from Madrid is Democracy Now! correspondent and independent journalist Maria Carrion, who has been at the protest all day yesterday.
Maria, welcome to Democracy Now!
MARIA CARRION: Thank you, Amy. Good to be with you.
AMY GOODMAN: Tell us whats happening.
MARIA CARRION: Well, as you, as your viewers and listeners have been able to see, its a very serious situation here in Spain. This is just the latest of many, many protests that we have been having here in Spain, in the last year, especially, and there will be many more coming. People have lost faith in government. People have lost faith in the main institutions. And we are facing 27 billion euros in social spending cuts. Every week, the government unveils a series of new measures that affect primarily education and health and salaries and the welfare of Spanish people. And as we saw at the top of the hour, Greece is really an example of whats coming our way, and thats why I think people are so enraged and so worried, because they see that none of the measures imposed on Greece on in Portugal or in Ireland are having any sort of effect on the economy, on peoples welfare, on employment. And so, I think people are saying we do not want to head in that same direction.
NERMEEN SHAIKH: Maria Carrion, youve spoken also about some of the effects on people already with the austerity measures in place, quite apart from what might happen tomorrow. Can you talk in particular about housing and food? ............(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.democracynow.org/2012/9/26/thousands_surround_spanish_parliament_in_bid
September 26, 2012
The Spanish public won't accept a financial coup d'etat
Spain's government is right to fear the public reaction to this new round of suffering mandated by the financial markets
Katharine Ainger
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 25 September 2012
The attempt by the Spanish "Occupy" movement, the indignados, to surround the Congress in Madrid has been compared by the secretary general of the ruling rightwing People's party (PP) to an attempted coup.
Spanish democracy may indeed be in peril, but the danger is not in the streets. According to the Financial Times, the EU has been in secret talks with the economy minister Luis de Guindos to implement further austerity measures in advance of Spain requesting a full bailout. On Thursday the government will announce structural reforms and additional spending reductions, on top of the already huge cutbacks in health and education.
Pre-empting the bailout conditions means the government is able to retain the illusion of sovereignty.
In reality, Spain is on the brink of insolvency and under huge pressure to accept a rescue package. In return, the eurozone's fourth largest economy will have to surrender sovereign and financial control to the IMF, the European commission, and the European Central Bank. .......................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/sep/25/spain-public-financial-coup
Guardian UK: The Spanish public won't accept a financial coup d'etat
The Spanish public won't accept a financial coup d'etat
Spain's government is right to fear the public reaction to this new round of suffering mandated by the financial markets
Katharine Ainger
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 25 September 2012
The attempt by the Spanish "Occupy" movement, the indignados, to surround the Congress in Madrid has been compared by the secretary general of the ruling rightwing People's party (PP) to an attempted coup.
Spanish democracy may indeed be in peril, but the danger is not in the streets. According to the Financial Times, the EU has been in secret talks with the economy minister Luis de Guindos to implement further austerity measures in advance of Spain requesting a full bailout. On Thursday the government will announce structural reforms and additional spending reductions, on top of the already huge cutbacks in health and education.
Pre-empting the bailout conditions means the government is able to retain the illusion of sovereignty.
In reality, Spain is on the brink of insolvency and under huge pressure to accept a rescue package. In return, the eurozone's fourth largest economy will have to surrender sovereign and financial control to the IMF, the European commission, and the European Central Bank. .......................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/sep/25/spain-public-financial-coup
September 26, 2012
from In These Times:
Going Nuclear on Class
The Democrats working-class disconnect.
BY David Moberg
As the closely contested presidential race enters the home stretch, both campaigns are trying to sway the few undecided voters and boost key, if uncertain, bases of support: white retirees or working class men for Mitt Romney, women and better-educated voters for Barack Obama.
The contest may hinge on the success of such narrow appeals, but, jousting aside, the core issues at stake in this election involve questions of class. Driven for decades by rich donors, big corporations and movement conservatives (like the Tea Partiers), the Republican Party has increasingly committed itself to an extreme anti-government, raw capitalist ideology. In reaction against Obamas moderate liberalisma return to pre-Bush tax rates for the rich and modest regulations of an out-of-control financial sectorRepublicans want to consolidate the power of rich individuals and corporations while escalating the redistribution of wealth from the 99% to the 1%.
All elections revolve around class interests, but somelike Franklin Roosevelts Depression-era victoriesdo so more than others. In contrast, in the 1950s and 1960s, many big corporations and the mainstream of the Republican Party (but not Goldwater) grudgingly acquiesced to the New Deal legacy, making the elections less about class than about the Cold War, race and how much to expand the New Deal.
By the early 1970s, corporationscomplemented by rich right-wing ideologuesbegan to organize in a more class-conscious way against the threat to their profits posed by unions and the movements of the 60s. They built think tanks, lobbying operations and media organizations to advance both short-term policy goals and, in the long run, to politically roll back the 20th century, in the words of journalist William Greider. The conservative movement focused on the Republicans, but corporations and their PACs donated as well to Democrats, buying access and ultimately influencing policy. .................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/13827/going_nuclear_on_class
‘Going Nuclear’ on Class
from In These Times:
Going Nuclear on Class
The Democrats working-class disconnect.
BY David Moberg
As the closely contested presidential race enters the home stretch, both campaigns are trying to sway the few undecided voters and boost key, if uncertain, bases of support: white retirees or working class men for Mitt Romney, women and better-educated voters for Barack Obama.
The contest may hinge on the success of such narrow appeals, but, jousting aside, the core issues at stake in this election involve questions of class. Driven for decades by rich donors, big corporations and movement conservatives (like the Tea Partiers), the Republican Party has increasingly committed itself to an extreme anti-government, raw capitalist ideology. In reaction against Obamas moderate liberalisma return to pre-Bush tax rates for the rich and modest regulations of an out-of-control financial sectorRepublicans want to consolidate the power of rich individuals and corporations while escalating the redistribution of wealth from the 99% to the 1%.
All elections revolve around class interests, but somelike Franklin Roosevelts Depression-era victoriesdo so more than others. In contrast, in the 1950s and 1960s, many big corporations and the mainstream of the Republican Party (but not Goldwater) grudgingly acquiesced to the New Deal legacy, making the elections less about class than about the Cold War, race and how much to expand the New Deal.
By the early 1970s, corporationscomplemented by rich right-wing ideologuesbegan to organize in a more class-conscious way against the threat to their profits posed by unions and the movements of the 60s. They built think tanks, lobbying operations and media organizations to advance both short-term policy goals and, in the long run, to politically roll back the 20th century, in the words of journalist William Greider. The conservative movement focused on the Republicans, but corporations and their PACs donated as well to Democrats, buying access and ultimately influencing policy. .................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/13827/going_nuclear_on_class
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