The Breakthrough Institute
 
October 17, 2013
 
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Elites Are Ruining America
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(http://thebreakthrough.org/index.php/voices/michael-lind/elites-are-ruining-america)
 The Hype Market Dominates US Politics
 
Michael Lind
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
If America’s bipartisan establishment is agreed on something, you can be  
pretty sure it will be a disaster. That is my reluctant conclusion, after 
nearly  three decades of involvement in politics and journalism, in Washington 
and New  York. 
I say “reluctant” because I am not a populist by temperament. I respect  
academic training as well as expertise based on personal experience. I think  
that institutions are, or should be, less likely to make mistakes than  
individuals. I detest people who pose as “contrarians” for the sake of  
controversy. I would happily be an establishmentarian, if there were a US  
establishment worth belonging to.
 
 
But the track record of what passes for the bipartisan elite in the United  
States in the last generation has been pretty poor. Instead of sober,  
dispassionate analysis of long-run trends, considered from the perspective of  
the nonpartisan national interest, the conventional wisdom among America’s  
movers and shakers has consisted of one hysterical fad after another. 
The earliest I remember is the “energy crisis.” In the aftermath of the 
1973  Arab oil embargo, it was the conventional wisdom that fossil fuel 
supplies were  about to run out and that we faced a future of energy 
starvation. 
Then oil  prices dropped in the 1980s, because of new energy finds and 
efficiency. 
Around the same time, back in the 1970s, the consensus exaggerated Soviet  
power. The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan — a desperate, defensive attempt 
to  stem a wave of Islamist revolutions in Soviet central Asian republics — 
was  portrayed by the right’s alarmists as part of a grand pincer movement 
around  Africa or the Indian Ocean or whatever that could lead to Soviet world 
 domination. A group called “Team B” — including many of the 
neoconservative  foreign policy apparatchiks who would later work for George W. 
Bush — 
claimed  that the CIA was underestimating Soviet power. After the Soviet Union 
 disintegrated, it turned out that the CIA had actually underestimated the 
strain  imposed on the Soviet economy by Soviet military spending. 
Then a few years after the Berlin Wall fell, many of the same  
neoconservatives who claimed that the United States was on the verge of defeat  
by the 
Soviet Union proclaimed a “unipolar world” in which the US was a  “
hyperpower.” America is on the verge of collapse! America is on the verge of  
permanent global dominion! Whatever. 
Following the end of the Cold War, the neocon America-as-world-empire  
narrative had to contend with the neoliberal globalization narrative, 
identified 
 chiefly with Thomas Friedman of the New York Times. According to  
globalization theorists, a free global market would soon sweep away all 
barriers  to 
the free movement of goods, money and people across borders. Nation-states  
would be replaced by corporations, or maybe virtual countries composed of  
digital ones and zeroes. 
The globalist millennium lasted only a couple of years. In 2008 the 
post-Cold  War global bubble economy collapsed, creating the greatest global 
slump 
since  the Depression of the 1930s. Countries that refused to liberalize 
their  financial systems, like China and Indonesia, were spared much of the 
damage  inflicted on other countries that foolishly listened to the “Washington 
 consensus” in favor of global financial deregulation. Countries that 
practice  relatively free trade, like the U.S., have been partly 
deindustrialized 
by  currency-rigging, market-protecting, industry-promoting countries like 
Japan,  Inc., and China, Inc. 
Another in the series of conventional-wisdom bubbles was the terrorism 
panic  that followed the al-Qaida attacks of 9/11. Jihadist terrorism is a 
serious but  hardly existential threat. But that was not enough for the 
alarmists, who, like  the neocons Eliot Cohen and Norman Podhoretz, inflated 
terrorism to the status  of “World War IV.” The Bush administration used Osama 
bin 
Laden’s atrocities to  justify the invasion of Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, which 
had nothing to do with  jihadism. Whether out of opportunism or conviction, 
the neocons were joined by  many “humanitarian hawks” in the Democratic 
Party who provided bipartisan cover  for the disastrous U.S. invasion and 
occupation of Iraq. 
The most recent bubble among the bipartisan elite has been the austerity  
consensus. Only a year or so ago, most establishment pundits and politicians  
were assuring us that the federal deficit was so bad that we had to slash 
Social  Security and Medicare. Even President Obama proposed using inflation 
to erode  Social Security for seniors. 
Never mind that the temporary expansion of the deficit in the aftermath of  
the 2008 financial collapse was part of the cure, not part of the disease.  
Governments need to expand deficit spending to compensate for the collapse 
of  consumer demand and business investment following financial crises. And 
never  mind that the long-term funding problems of Social Security and 
Medicare are  unrelated to the deficits caused by the Great Recession. The 
conventional  wisdom, amplified by Pete Peterson’s millions and minions, held 
that 
the  long-term deficit, not short-term unemployment or a weak recovery, was 
the  greatest threat to the future. This particular elite fad helped to 
justify the  disastrous sequester, which by contracting demand in the economy 
further has  worsened an already weak recovery. 
Most of these elite fads share some features in common. They usually 
involve  the exaggeration of a real but limited phenomenon — greater Soviet  
aggressiveness following the U.S. defeat in Indochina, the real but limited  
jihadist terrorist threat, the important but limited benefits to the  
liberalization of global trade and finance after the Cold War. In other cases,  
they 
underestimate public resistance to elite priorities. 
The politicians and pundits who get the most attention — at least for a 
while  — are those who treat a genuine but limited and reversible trend as 
evidence of  imminent utopia or approaching apocalypse. Such hype is then 
magnified by an  infotainment industry that promotes drama and penalizes 
nuance. 
I report this with regret, not relish. From the Byzantine era until the  
Enlightenment, the Venetian republic survived through centuries of war and  
social upheaval, thanks to the cunning of its senatorial oligarchy, which  
combined a deep sense of civic patriotism with first-rate 
intelligence-gathering  and a long institutional memory. But the leadership of 
the Serene 
Republic of  Venice was quite different from today’s American establishment, in 
which  attention-grabbing peddlers of trends and fads who target audiences of 
the rich  and powerful rise to the top at Davos and Aspen, if only until the 
next fashion  comes along. 
At the moment, fortunately, we are between ill-conceived elite fads in the  
U.S. But fashion abhors a vacuum. If experience is any guide, some new Big 
Idea  that is at once fresh, seductive and wrong will soon emerge to excite 
the  political class and the commentariat and become what every serious, 
respectable  person believes — at least until it goes horribly wrong. 
When it comes to the hype market, you will seldom err by betting against 
it.  When everybody who is anybody in politics and the press agrees on 
something,  it’s time to raise some doubts
 
 

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