-Caveat Lector-

A REAL IMPORTANT READ!

Published on Tuesday, February 25, 2003 by CommonDreams.org
Healthcare Reveals Real "Conservative" Agenda - Drown Democracy In A
Bathtub
by Thom Hartmann

They're hoping Americans won't notice.

Indeed, in late February a "senior administration official" presented
The New York Times with a masterpiece of obfuscation and avoidance of
responsibility. Speaking of the administration's plans to push users of
Medicare and Medicaid into the hands of for-profit corporations, this
"official" said, "We're looking at two programs that have worked, that
have provided health coverage to people who need it, and we want to help
them work better."

Ted Kennedy was more straightforward in his objection to the Bush
scheme. "Medicare is a firm commitment to every elderly American,"
Kennedy said, "not a profit center for H.M.O.s and other private
insurance plans."

Robin Toner and Robert Pear of The New York Times wrote in an
understated tone that, "The magnitude of the Bush proposals is only
gradually dawning on members of Congress."

It's also dawning on mainstream Americans.

When you look closely, you discover that what so many are calling the
"conservative agenda" would be shocking and alien to historic
conservatives like Republicans Teddy Roosevelt, Dwight Eisenhower, and
Barry Goldwater. It really has nothing to do with conservative or
liberal, left or right, war or peace. It doesn't care about abortion,
prayer, or flags, although these are useful props to bring in fringe
groups to "fill the big tent." It's not even about liberty, freedom, or
prosperity.

Today's so-called "conservative agenda" is, very simply, about
ownership.

Specifically, ownership of the assets of the United States of America -
things previously owned by "We, The People." And, ultimately, ownership
of the United States government itself.

Here's how it works.

In a democracy there are some things we all own together.

Often referred to as "the commons," they include the necessities and
commonalities of life: our air, water, septic systems, transportation
routes, educational systems, radio and TV spectrums, and, in every
developed nation in the world except America, the nation's health care
system.

But the most important of the commons in a democracy is the government
itself.

The Founders' idea of a democratic republic was to create a common
institution owned by its own citizens, answerable to its own citizens,
and authorized to exist and continue existing solely "by the consent of
the governed."

And make no mistake - it's democracy itself that is today at risk.

As the prescient Chief Justice of Wisconsin's Supreme Court, Edward G.
Ryan said ominously in his 1873 speech to the graduating class of the
University of Wisconsin Law School, "[There] is looming up a new and
dark power... the enterprises of the country are aggregating vast
corporate combinations of unexampled capital, boldly marching, not for
economical conquests only, but for political power... The question will
arise and arise in your day, though perhaps not fully in mine, which
shall rule - wealth or man; which shall lead - money or intellect; who
shall fill public stations - educated and patriotic freemen, or the
feudal serfs of corporate capital...."

We're entering a new and unknown, but hauntingly familiar, era. The Bush
plans to privatize parts of Medicare are just one thread in the larger
fabric of this "new world order."

It's new because it represents a virtual abandonment of the egalitarian
and democratic archetypes the founders of the United States put into
place in our Constitution and Bill of Rights. And it's hauntingly
familiar because it resembles in many ways one of the most stable and
long-term of all social structures to have ever established itself in
the modern history of civilization: feudalism.

Feudalism doesn't refer to a point in time or history when streets were
filled with mud and people lived as peasants (although that was
sometimes the case). Instead, it refers to an economic and political
system, just like "democracy" or "communism" or "socialism" or
"theocracy."

In a feudal state, power is held by those who own the greatest wealth.
At its essential core, feudalism could be defined as "government of, by,
and for the rich."

Marc Bloch is one of the great 20th Century scholars of the feudal
history of Europe. In his book Feudal Society he points out that
feudalism is a fracturing of one authoritarian hierarchical structure
into another: the state disintegrates, as unelected but wealthy power
brokers take over.

In almost every case, both with European feudalism and feudalism in
China, South America, and Japan, Bloch notes that "feudalism coincided
with a profound weakening of the State, particularly in its protective
capacity." Given most accepted definitions of feudalism, feudal
societies don't emerge in civilizations with a strong social safety net
and a proactive government.

There is a slight debate, in that some scholars like Benjamin Gu�rard
say feudalism must be land-based, whereas Jacques Flach and others
suggest the structure of power and obligation is the key. But the
consensus is that when the wealthiest in a society take over government
and then weaken it so it no longer can represent the interests of the
people, the transition has begun into a new era of feudalism. "European
feudalism should therefore be seen as the outcome of the violent
dissolution of older societies," Bloch says.

Whether the power and wealth agent that takes the place of government is
a local baron, lord, king, or corporation, if it has greater power in
the lives of individuals than does a representative government, the
culture has dissolved into feudalism. Bluntly, Bloch states: "The feudal
system meant the rigorous economic subjection of a host of humble folk
to a few powerful men."

This doesn't mean the end of government, but, instead the subordination
of government to the interests of the feudal lords. Interestingly, even
in Feudal Europe, Bloch points out, "The concept of the State never
absolutely disappeared, and where it retained the most vitality, men
continued to call themselves 'free'..."

The transition from a governmental society to a feudal one is marked by
the rapid accumulation of power and wealth in a few hands, with a
corresponding reduction in the power and responsibilities of government.
Once the rich and powerful gain control of the government, they turn it
upon itself, usually first eliminating its taxation process as it
applies to themselves. Says Bloch: "Nobles need not pay taille [taxes]."

Bringing this to today, consider that in 1982, just before the
Reagan-Bush "supply side" tax cut, the average wealth of the Forbes 400
was $200 million. Just four years later, their average wealth was $500
million each, aided by massive tax cuts. Today, those 400 people own
wealth equivalent to one-eighth of the entire gross domestic product
(GDP) of the United States.

And those who would take over the government of the United States have a
specific plan for how to do it. It begins with tax cuts, which are then
followed by handing government-mandated services over to private
corporations.

Tax cuts are not just about kowtowing to the Nobles of the new
conservative feudal state. Although that happens, the most important
function of tax cuts is to deprive government of oxygen.

The result is that the government must then turn to private corporations
- the new feudal lords - to administer the commons. This shift of the
commons ranges from the commons of health care for the elderly to the
commons of the vote, as we're seeing now with private corporations
linked to hard-right Republicans taking over the election systems of
states like Georgia, Florida, and Texas.

According to hard-right Republicans, killing off government to make way
for corporate rule is truly at the core of the so-called "conservative
agenda." For example, the lead cheerleader for Bush's tax-cutting fervor
is a man named Grover Norquist, well known to every politician in
Washington.

"I don't want to abolish government," Norquist told National Public
Radio's Mara Liasson in a May 25, 2001 Morning Edition interview. "I
simply want to reduce it to the size where I can drag it into the
bathroom and drown it in the bathtub."

At first, gullible politicians and voters thought drowning a democratic
government in the bathtub was, at worse, just another way for big
business to make more money. It might even make some of the functions of
government more efficient, they thought, even though any benefits of
that efficiency would be turned over to stockholders and CEOs rather
than the broader public that uses the commons.

Take over power plants and water systems built with tax dollars,
privatize hospitals built with tax dollars, run private prisons with tax
dollars, auction off the airwaves to for-profit enterprises. It built
empires, like Bill Frist's vast hospital fortune, and made wealth more
of a politically defining factor than party affiliation.

It is corporatism, to use Mussolini's word (which he later renamed
"fascism"): "a merging of corporate and state interests." It's simply
the modern version of feudalism.

The greatest force promoting corporatism in America is the mistaken
interpretation of the court reporter's headnotes in the 1886 Santa Clara
County v. Southern Pacific Railroad case before the Supreme Court. That
mistaken interpretation granted human rights to corporations, thus
enabling them to use "free speech" to buy politicians and thus strike
down laws against corporate political activity.

But there's a movement growing across America to rescue democracy from
the conservatives' bathtub.

Communities have passed resolutions and laws denying corporate
personhood, and cases like Kasky v. Nike are showing up before the
Supreme Court that may bring these questions into the open. And, perhaps
most important, the naked corporate grab of government in an
administration made almost entirely of corporate CEOs, is being outed.

America's largest progressive talk radio network, broadcast from Alaska
to Florida and available on the web at www.ieamericaradio.com, runs 12
hours of programming a day that openly discusses these issues, and
regularly attacks "the Bush Crime Family." Radio stations across the
nation are starting to seek out progressive programming, with AnShell
Media developing a new progressive talk radio network, and even the
right-wing bastion Fox announcing this week that they've syndicated the
moderate democrat Alan Colmes with a talk show in a handful of the
largest of America's radio markets.

Unions - the traditional defenders of working-class people - are
becoming politically active and pointing out that all people who draw a
paycheck, be they blue- or white-collar workers, are suffering from the
new American feudalism. Check out www.uaw.org and www.aflcio.org for an
extraordinary insight into how clear America's unions have become in
their understanding of the true neo-conservative agenda, and how it can
be challenged.

Hopefully one day soon such open plain speaking may even reach the
website of the party founded by Thomas Jefferson, although for now the
activist-run www.democrats.com site far outstrips the Party's
www.democrats.org for clarity, purpose, and political momentum.

Perhaps, as Leonard Cohen sings, "Democracy is coming to the USA." If
so, while the opportunity is still available to us, this nation's
citizens must listen, join, share, read, campaign, and enlighten others.
It will be no small effort to roll back the damage done by the so-called
conservative feudalists, but if we are to bring democracy back to the
land of its modern rebirth we must awaken, step forth, and speak out.

Thom Hartmann is the author of "Unequal Protection: The Rise of
Corporate Dominance and the Theft of Human Rights."
www.unequalprotection.com and www.thomhartmann.com. This article is
copyright by Thom Hartmann, but permission is granted for reprint in
print, email, or web media so long as this credit is attached.

http://commondreams.org/views03/0225-10.htm

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