this piece shows that the "social democratic" wing of the Democratic Party
is actually pushing for (what some leftists tried to parse in the 1960s)
real STRUCTURAL reform --- which was allegedly qualitatively different from
"MERE" reforms --- Of course the difference might be considered not
relevant by some but just as I believe the kind of capitalism introduced by
Carter, Reagan, Bush I, --- and accepted rather than resisted by CLINTON
and OBAMA -- what we in URPE call neoliberal capitalism --- made a helluva
difference for ordinary people and the course of capitalist development in
the US since the late 1970s --- I believe the proposals being put forward
by some Democrats today (lowering the age of Medicare eligibility for
example --- which is a step towards de-commodifying labor [agreed a baby
step!], etc.) would also change the nature of American capitalism FOR THE
BETTER.

apologies to comrades on the list who already get PORTSIDE

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Portside <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Mar 26, 2021 at 11:46 PM
Subject: The War FOR Government
To: <[email protected]>


[image: It's time to make a militant case for government that is every bit
as emotive and powerful as the forty-year case against, which was so
compelling that it persuaded millions of people to vote for their own
subjugation.] <https://portside.org/>

The War FOR Government   <https://portside.org/2021-03-26/war-government>


Anand Giridharadas
March 23, 2021
The Ink <https://the.ink/p/the-war-for-government>

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* It's time to make a militant case for government that is every bit as
emotive and powerful as the forty-year case against, which was so
compelling that it persuaded millions of people to vote for their own
subjugation. *

President Ronald Reagan and Senator Joe Biden at the White House, March
1984, Wikimedia Commons



Forty Januaries ago, Ronald Reagan, upon assuming the most powerful
governmental office in the history of civilization, declared in his
inaugural address that “in this present crisis, government is not the
solution to our problem; government is the problem.” To show he meant it,
Reagan soon proposed a budget that gutted social programs and cut taxes.
The idea was that, down the road, it would be harder to restore such
programs and still profess yourself dedicated to fiscal responsibility.

Some years later, an incisive observer of American politics reflected on
that pivotal moment in 1981: “The Reagan tax cuts have ended growth of the
social agenda; it’s all come to a screeching halt.” The observer was a
young senator named Joe Biden. He had voted for the Reagan budget. Now,
like many of his Democratic colleagues, he would have to live in the
political and moral — and narrative — universe it created.

In a remarkable swerve of history, forty years later, Biden, now president
of the United States, has a chance, should he choose to embrace it, to
break us all out of that universe. The war on government bankrupted itself
spiritually and materially a long time ago. What dances on the horizon is
the prospect of a war *for *government.

First came the American Rescue Plan, which was far from everything
progressives wanted and far from everything the country needed, and yet,
with that longer 40-year view in mind, a departure from the hegemony of the
government-is-the-problem caucus. Now comes word of Biden’s plans for the
second phase of his policy rollout, dealing with more chronic ailments,
having already targeted the most acute crises.

According to a new report in The New York Times
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/22/business/biden-infrastructure-spending.html?campaign_id=60&emc=edit_na_20210322&instance_id=0&nl=breaking-news&ref=cta&regi_id=8773497&segment_id=53928&user_id=241d005a16f5ea8cf24941b1c3c789a5>
,

President Biden’s economic advisers are preparing to recommend spending as
much as $3 trillion on a sweeping set of efforts aimed at boosting the
economy, reducing carbon emissions and narrowing economic inequality,
beginning with a giant infrastructure plan that may be financed in part
through tax increases on corporations and the rich.

Included in the package, which advisers told The Times
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/22/business/biden-infrastructure-spending.html?campaign_id=60&emc=edit_na_20210322&instance_id=0&nl=breaking-news&ref=cta&regi_id=8773497&segment_id=53928&user_id=241d005a16f5ea8cf24941b1c3c789a5>
might
be broken into pieces, are “the construction of roads, bridges, rail lines,
ports, electric vehicle charging stations and improvements to the electric
grid,” plus “free community college, universal pre-K education, a national
paid leave program and efforts to reduce child care costs,” plus plans to
“make permanent two temporary provisions of Mr. Biden’s recent relief bill:
expanded subsidies for low- and middle-income Americans to buy health
insurance and tax credits aimed at cutting poverty, particularly for
children.”

Now, I have my own preferred policy rollout list, and I’m sure you have
yours, and many of my priorities, including, say, Medicare for All or all
public college being free, aren’t anywhere on this list. But while we can,
and should, get into the particular policies, there seems to be something
more elemental and fundamental to say about this moment. With this proposed
$3 trillion in spending, over and above the $1.9 trillion of the rescue
plan, and with the philosophy animating the spending more importantly,
Biden has become an unlikely deserter of the war on government.

More than former Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, who, unlike
Biden, were not fixtures of Washington in the Reagan years and didn’t vote
for any of his agenda. We don’t yet know if Biden has the stomach to make
as strident a case for government-as-solution as Reagan made against the
state. But it would be foolish not to observe that, thanks in part to the
agitations of those who have shown the war on government to be an epic
disaster (and who have fought Biden oftentimes), something new is
happening. The proof that it is happening is that a moderate like Biden is
on board.

In the coming weeks, there will be the familiar haggling and begging and
bully pulpiting and Manchining as these proposals run through the
congressional grinder. But it would be a mistake to treat this as a purely
legislative challenge. Think back to Reagan. First there was the argument
against government; then there was the dismantling of it. In the coming
months, I long to hear an equal and opposite case for government, one
unlike any I’ve heard in my gray, elder-millennial lifetime.

I heard the faintest hint of it some days ago when, in celebrating the
passage of the American Rescue Plan, President Biden said these words: “We
need to remember, the government isn’t some foreign force in a distant
capital. No, it’s us, all of us, we the people.” In the United States of
America, this is a more radical statement than it ought to be. I threw out
all my bingo cards in 2020, but I will say that I didn’t have Joe Biden
making the case that the government is us.

I don’t think Biden had a religious awakening. I think the five
intersecting crises of the past year made it impossible for anyone in his
position to attempt to be anything but transformational and go down in
history as a serious person. There was Covid, of course, and the more
chronically unhealthy country it found. There was the economic crisis it
unleashed, and, again, the more chronically precarious and hard-up econony
that crisis exacerbated. There was the racial crisis put front and center
by Black Lives Matter and, more generally, a growing recognition of the
need to reckon with things long overdue and make the society safe and
healthy and dignified for people of all marginalized backgrounds. There was
the democratic crisis revealed by the fact that, for a while there, we
weren’t sure about a peaceful transfer of power. And there was climate, the
question that refuses to go away, even in plagues, with coronatime perhaps
serving as a test drive for what it looks like for the world to rally
together.

There are no personal solutions to problems like these. There are no
corporate solutions to them. There are no nonprofit solutions to them. As
Carol Hanisch once taught us, there are only political solutions to shared
political problems like these. The strange gift President Biden inherited
was a network of problems so deep-rooted, so far-reaching, so
long-in-the-making, so gnarled in their intersections, that they provide
the best cover and ammunition in years to advocate *for *government.

Again, by this I don’t just mean introduce governmental solutions and spend
money, which Biden is already doing. I mean adding to that a militant case
for government that is every bit as emotive and powerful as the forty-year
case against, which was so compelling that it persuaded millions of people
to vote for their own subjugation.

I’m talking about truly educating Americans about what the government does
— not just the famous parts of it that we hear about on the news and argue
about without end. But the uncelebrated and obscure and dull parts of it
that keep our food safe and roads clean and Social Security checks printing
and markets open and schools teaching and medical research coming, that
give us things like the internet.

Some of this advovacy is the work of people in government itself. But we in
the media have a role to play. Mark Zuckerberg didn’t make himself an
entrepreneur-hero-king (before he became a fallen emperor). We made him
that. We put him on magazine covers. We covered his thoughts as if they
reflected thinking. We built him up into something more than yet another
guy running an ad-based business without scruples.

Well, it’s going to take many of us in media, in Hollywood, in music, in
the culture more generally to reflect on how we have been captured by
Reagan’s story, however we may think we despise it. Captured by the basic
narrative that what we do alone matters more than what we do together, that
denigrates or just overlooks the commons. And we ought to find ways to tell
other stories. Stories of solidarity and collective adventure and shared
purpose and systemic answers. Stories of unsung heroes. Stories of kind and
decent structures rather than just kind and decent individuals.

I don’t know if those who can, will choose to take advantage of this moment
in this way. But I believe they have a window of opportunity to end a whole
damned age.

Anand Giridharadas blogs at the.ink. Writer. @TIME editor-at-large. Author:
@WinnersTakeAll, THE TRUE AMERICAN, INDIA CALLING. MSNBC political analyst.
@PriyaParker's man. Dad.

*Thank you for reading this post from The Ink. If you like what we do and
want more of it, consider supporting our work by subscribing
<https://the.ink/> to The Ink. Every single subscriber helps make this
enterprise possible.*

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