Showing posts with label US History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US History. Show all posts

How Originalism Killed the Constitution

Historian Jill Lepore in The Atlantic

"The philosophy of amendment is foundational to modern constitutionalism. It has structured American constitutional and political development for more than two centuries. It has done so in a distinctive, halting pattern of progression and regression: Constitutional change by way of formal amendment has alternated with judicial interpretation, in the form of opinions issued by the U.S. Supreme Court, as a means of constitutional revision.

This pattern has many times provided political stability, with formal amendment and judicial interpretation as the warp and weft of a sturdily woven if by now fraying and faded constitutional fabric. But the pattern, which features, at regular intervals, the perception by half the country that the Supreme Court has usurped the power of amendment, has also led to the underdevelopment of the Constitution, weakened the idea of representative government, and increased the polarization of American politics—ultimately contributing, most lately, to the rise of a political style that can only be called insurrectionary.

The U.S. Constitution has one of the lowest amendment rates in the world. Some 12,000 amendments have been formally introduced on the floor of Congress; only 27 have ever been ratified, and there has been no significant amendment in more than 50 years. That is not because Americans are opposed to amending constitutions. Since 1789, Americans have submitted at least 10,000 petitions and countless letters, postcards, and phone and email messages to Congress regarding constitutional amendments, and they have introduced and agitated for thousands more amendments in the pages of newspapers and pamphlets, from pulpits, at political rallies, on websites, and all over social media. Every state has its own constitution, and all of them have been frequently revised and replaced.

Article V, the amendment provision of the U.S. Constitution, is a sleeping giant. It sleeps until it wakes. War is, very often, what wakes it up. And then it roars. In 1789, in the aftermath of the Revolutionary War, Congress passed 12 amendments, 10 of which, later known as the Bill of Rights, were ratified by the states by 1791. A federal amendment requires a double supermajority to become law: It must pass by a two-thirds vote in both houses of Congress (or be proposed by two-thirds of the states), and then it must be ratified by three-quarters of the states (either in legislatures or at conventions). No amendments were ratified in the 61 years from 1804 to 1865, and then, at the end of the Civil War, three were ratified in five years. What became the Thirteenth Amendment in 1865, abolishing slavery, had first been proposed decades earlier. No amendments were ratified in the 43 years from 1870 to 1913, and then, around the time of the First World War, four were ratified in seven years. The Nineteenth Amendment, granting women the right to vote and first called for in 1848, was ratified in 1920, after a 72-year moral crusade.

Again, the giant slept. In the 1930s, President Franklin D. Roosevelt largely abandoned constitutional amendment in favor of applying pressure on the Supreme Court.... 

Between 1980 and 2020, members of Congress proposed more than 2,100 constitutional amendments. Congress, more divided with each passing year, approved none of them. 

&&&&&&&&&

The full story is about how the legal theory known as Originalism undermines the evolutionary balance in the US Constitution. Lepore, American historian at Harvard, longtime NY-er journalist, traces an outline of evolutionary balance in US history that includes periods of popular pressures demanding democratizing reforms, Amendments to the Constitution, usually following the cataclysm of wars, alternating with periods of judicial interpretation and review, reconciling democratic pressures with existing Constitutional precedents and the foundational values of the framers. 

Originalism, spearheaded by controversial jurist Robert Bork (what Malthus was to free market capitalist early-19th c myth Bork is to Neoliberal technocratic capitalist late-20th c myth), and championed by iconic conservative justice Antonin Scalia, has undermined this evolutionary balance of the Constitution. Killing the Constitution. 

Originalism opposes this idea of a give-and-take evolutionary balance in the Constitution as a "living constitution." "It's dead. Dead, dead, dead," scoffs Scalia in public speeches. Jurists extending civil rights to groups unidentified in the Constitution, women, Blacks, etc, are "activist judges" and very bad. Liberal judicial review submits to democratic pressures, Amendments, and a changing evolutionary Constitution and is disparaged as "bleeding-heart liberalism." Originalism insists on strict, limited, readings of the framers original constitutional intentions. 

Originalism strikes me as really embarrassingly crackpot stuff for a national institution like the judiciary. Lepore calls Originalism radical but it holds tremendous sway within the conservative mainstream of The Federalist Society; the source of all the conservative justices on SCOTUS and the conservative legal establishment. 

Lepore's main case is how for an idea rooted in the importance of history, precedents, and the original framers intentions, the Originalists sure peddle a lot of bad history. Her historical takedown of Scalia's crowning achievement, his 2008 Second Amendment gift to Gun Rights enthusiasts, District of Columbia vs Heller, is like Lisa Simpson doing a touchdown dance with her saxophone. Love it. 

(I'd also recommend her podcast X Man: The Elon Musk Origin Story.) 

In my amateur take I'd lump Originalism with Neoliberalism and Social Darwinism as kind of obvious intellectual frauds that really only exist as propaganda to protect the rich, wealth, Billionaires, and market fundamentalists from democracy and the rule of law. Labor rights, expanding civil rights, environmental protections, public infrastructure, taxes, regulations, anything that gets in the way of their profit seeking and private wealth hoarding is verboten. That people otherwise sympathetic to working class rights should embrace these ideas as expressions of heroic machismo is one of the tragic conundrums of our day.  

Working Class Hero Scam Exposed Again

"Lou Antonellis, the business manager of the Massachusetts International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 103, added that the cuts to renewable energy projects in the U.S. [by Trump and Republicans and Project 2025] were not just cuts to funding. “[Y]ou’re pulling paychecks from working families, you’re pulling apprentices out of training facilities, you’re pulling opportunity straight out of our communities. Every solar panel installed, every wind turbine wired, every EV charger connected, that’s a job with wages, healthcare, and a pension that stands for dignity for the American worker. You don’t kill that kind of progress: you build on it.”

Letters from an American Historian

Trump recently issued an order to the FBI to focus on anti-immigrant policing and drop the "White Collar" cases. 

I know Maga like the anti-immigrant part and this is NOT even close to the first time Trump has shown his contempt for really existing Blue Collar working people, wage workers, stiffing them, trashing unions, scoffing at cost of living concerns with his War by Tariffs shakedowns, shutting down the one department of government devoted to actually protecting consumers, slashing the IRS's ability to reduce tax evasion by lawyered up richies, etc. 

I've seen polls for taxing the rich nearing super majorities while Trump is pardoning all White Collar crime. I really wish working class voters would figure this out. He may share your stupid bigotry but he is not on the side of your pocket book or bank account, as you apparently believe. 

I never bought the bs about being a post-racial society but did think we were beyond this kind of openly racist/bigot fascist gov; beyond yet another episode of How The South Won The Civil War. I was wrong. 

The videos coming out about ICE takedowns aren't popular. Some bystander lady in a hat in California wonders, "Where's the paperwork? This is crazy." Apparently, Trumpers voted for forced deportations but thought all of the people rounded up were going to be violent gang members, rapists, and murderers. Turns out there are not nearly so many bad guys out there as they made out on Fox and police intelligence about tattoo gang symbols is ridiculously crude and cruel ethnic profiling. 

The civic education failures of social media and online culture and Fox and all corporate mainstream media is no small part of the polycrisis we're mired in. And Big Tech standing behind Grump at the inauguration is a handy police lineup for most these charges; just inventory for yourself a few of the gov actions they have endorsed: stopping green energy projects already started, abandoning public health and scientific research, slashing the gov workforce with DOGE. 

A very old aunt, 90-something, and who I only wish peace and happiness for (and, well, maybe that she stop voting), told me she watched the news about the mass shooting in Minneapolis yesterday on Fox because they tell it like is. Yeah, I thought, they'll be sure to tell you that the killer was Trans but probably fail to mention they were also another Hitler fan, like several in the current regime she supports, and a big gun nut for the Sandy Hook mass shooter. The social pathologies we are now engulfed in are stunning and traumatizing, just like Russ Vought and Project 2025 called for. 

Anyway, I maintain we have problems, big problems, many of them, if you like, but turning immigration into a humanitarian crisis, concentration camps and forced deportations without any legal protections, police state crackdowns in cities no one wants, funding genocide in Gaza, etc, are sadistic and tragic distractions and only make matters worse. 

And, my point, they are being unbelievably shitty to some more poor working people again. Or put it this way: A lot of working class people might like Trump and the Republicans but Trump and the Republicans sure don't show much love for working class people. 

Labor Day Protests, September 1st, 2025. 

In the spirit of the newsletter ending videos, don't forget Massive Attack, trip hop, electronic, 1991, drops of multicultural working class bohemia, the diverse margins of peak 1990s hiphop, "Daydreaming": 

Briefing for a Descent into Rightwing Fascism

"In forty years [since 1980], Republicans went from opposing Democrats’ policies, to insisting that Democrats were socialists who had no right to govern, to the idea that Republicans have a right to rig the system to keep voters from being able to elect Democrats to office. Now they appear to have gone to the next logical step: that democracy itself must be destroyed to create permanent Republican rule in order to make sure the government cannot be used for the government programs Americans want.

When Trump says that our history focuses too much on how bad slavery was, he is not simply downplaying the realities of human enslavement: he is advocating a world in which Black people, people of color, poor people, and women should let elite white men lead, and be grateful for that paternalism. It is the same argument elite enslavers made before the Civil War to defend their destruction of the idea of democracy to create an oligarchy. When Trump urges Republicans to slash voting rights to stop socialism and keep him in power, he makes the same argument former Confederates made after the war to keep those who would use the government for the public good from voting."

Letters from an American Historian

Diehard cynical Republicans, market fundamentalists, and hardcore libertarians really and truly believe, or so I'm told, that government programs and services, social security, public education, health care, all social safety net programs, basically, are just a Democratic scam to buy votes and lock-up winning political constituencies. 

"Elitist thinking is widespread on the libertarian right, which depicts modern majoritarian democracy as a calculated project of coalition building by the“nonproductive” to exploit wealthy taxpayers," argues historian Nancy MacLean.*

Of course, pols regularly do stuff to preserve their power and office; typically, hopefully, within a rule of law intended to protect the public interest. But what if a democratically elected regime becomes entirely hostile to essential government human services that vast majorities would not have access to at all without government programs? Those services mentioned above are central but there are many more, natural disaster preparedness, environmental protections, basic scientific research, etc, all on the chopping block in the first six months of this US government. There is some waste in gov to be sure and it should be regularly reviewed and rigorously checked but government is crucial to protecting communities and building a sustainable future. 

Building public infrastructure and providing community services that private industry will not or cannot has been a fundamental role of governments since at least WW1, and a central motive of democratic government long before there were any Robber Barons of private industry. What happens when these important roles of government are forgotten or abandoned or deliberately sabotaged? Trump and Musk's Big Tech oligarchy and Project 2025 are what happens. 

Geared to gutting government and eradicating the Deep State the current rogue regime ruling over the US is the negative inverse of the Woke Mind Virus. It's radical market libertarianism turned into a death cult. To Republicans the response is: "Yay common sense government: let's burn it [civil rights and worker rights] all down." (What could go wrong?) To Democrats the response is: How do I oppose this lawless catastrophe without becoming a target of the violent reaction and alienating my billionaire donors? 

(I'm adamantly opposed to blaming Biden for Trump's popularity or Republican or Big Tech crimes, which is how the endless election postmortem always hit me. Any media favoring Trump was/is fascist propaganda. But, must admit, as the election falls farther into the rearview mirror one monumental failure of the Biden admin stands out above the rest. He had to see through the prosecution of Trump. That's it, really. That was his one job. SCOTUS was poised to let Trump off, as they did. Biden had to see this, his Dem people had to see this, and fight back against it directly. Use his bully pulpit to make the case. His passive deference to Garland and SCOTUS still fuels the animus against the Dems now. They don't fight. They get run over by the Republicans. I also chafe some at all the fight rhetoric that has been going around for the last six months. Fight what, how? Just start swinging wildly, try to hit something, anything, seems to be the dominant sentiment. Newsom's direct engagement with the gerrymandering battle is at least a specific fight. But nothing has come a long yet as specific and big as the Biden fight to prosecute Jan 6 and his predecessor's repeated assaults on free and fair elections, and which Biden avoided in the name of separation of powers and democratic decorum. And probably, to some degree, because he was too damn old and unable to put up the fight necessary. There is some small comfort in seeing the new regime choke trying to swallow the whole US (deep) state but the violence and destruction of democratic institutions has obviously become the Republican MAGA Christian nationalist cause or fight. And half the country voted for this destruction, whether they realized fully the consequences of their bigot paranoia or not. And the rest of us are hoping they come to their senses before it's too late, if it isn't already.) 

For now it's revenge of the Lost Cause and Confederacy and Jim Crow and radical billionaire libertarians and Neoliberal market fundamentalists. It's over a half a century of elite panic come home to roost and getting out of this fix I'm afraid is going to take more than a woman or democratic socialist POTUS, more than identity politics or a heroic class and social justice warrior. 

In the past centrist American history has comforted us (see Hofstadter) that when this kind of violent reaction and plutocratic power grabbing is put on full display, put on the ballot, instead of hiding behind the scene (in the gears of the machine), it is soundly rejected (a la Goldwater in '64). Well, not any more or let's say not yet and try to hold onto a little hope. 

And as I've said it before and I'll say again: American historian Heather Cox Richardson is a public service and national treasure. Support her work. 

*- What's behind this push for unfettered abundance for capital and cost-cutting austerity for everyone else? Again, MacLean: "In the Koch case, [it] is a new ruthlessness from a particularly ideological and threatened fraction of the capitalist class: an extremist minority, anchored in fossil fuels, that is breathtakingly well-funded and determined to win at any cost– and to make the transformation it seeks permanent. Through radical rule changes up to and including alteration of the Constitution, they aim to lock in the unpopular program of a tiny, messianic minority. And to stop action on the imminent climate catastrophe."  

Robert's Court the Worst in American History?

 On this day [August 5] in 1965, the Voting Rights Act became law. It became such a fundamental part of our legal system that Congress repeatedly reauthorized it, by large margins, as recently as 2006.

But in the 2013 Shelby County v. Holder decision, the Supreme Court under Chief Justice John Roberts struck down the provision of the law requiring that states with histories of voter discrimination get approval from the Department of Justice before they changed their voting laws. Immediately, the legislatures of those states, now dominated by Republicans, began to pass measures to suppress the vote. In the wake of the 2020 election, Republican-dominated states increased the rate of voter suppression, and on July 1, 2021, the Supreme Court permitted such suppression with the Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee decision.

Letters from an American Historian 

A little case history for calling this the worst SCOTUS in US history: 

DC v. Heller, 2008: Declares for first time Second Amendment protects individual right to bear arms. 

Citizen's United v. FEC, 2010: Spurs latest orgy of super PACs and dark money in politics. 

Shelby County v. Holder, 2013: Guts Voting Rights Act protections against racial discrimination. 

Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, 2022: Strips women of individual reproductive rights. 

Trump v. United States, 2024: Court gives immunity to POTUS as long as what they do can be construed as part of their "official duties," which then somehow exempted Jan 6 and trying to change votes in Georgia and refusing to relinquish top secret national security documents, etc. So, in other words, POTUS is now above the law. 

There's more but this list is enough to make the case, if you ask me. Republicans, with McConnell and Trump in starring roles, packed the Robert's Court with conservative ideologues and we are now living with the results: fascist, Christian nationalist, plutocratic rule in America. The blueprint: Project 2025. Only rivals, possibly, Taney Court 1836 to 1864, setting up the Civil War, or the Waite Court 1874 to 1888, basically, undermining the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments to the Constitution. 

Three-Legged Scam of the Modern GOP

 To appropriate a phrase long used to describe the GOP coalition, it’s the “Three-Legged Stool” of Trump-GOP subterfuge. The three legs of the swindle—let’s call this the “Three-Legged Scam”—are as follows:

1. Deficits pose a civilizational threat to our country and the American experiment, but only when a Democrat is in the White House.

[Trump's tariffs and his hostile posturing towards our trade partners pose a bigger threat to US deficits than the liberal spending of any Dem admin, ever. I believe quite a bit in Stephanie Kelton's deficit myth, certainly as it pertains to military spending, but to my understanding global demand for the dollar, which Grump threatens and has reduced, insures our deficit.]

2. Deficit concerns don’t constitute a case against tax cuts for the rich, because they will unleash massive growth and generate revenues that more than offset those lost to the tax cuts.

[Zombie economics. This has been discredited for decades by economists like Krugman but remains fundamentalist creed to the rich business classes, for obvious reason.]

3. But deficit concerns do require deep cuts to the social safety net, which won’t hurt the truly needy because they’re largely aimed at targeting the fraud that’s riddling the system and creating a massive class of welfare parasites.

[Austerity for the many is socialism for the rich. The government must insure for everyone-- national security, public safety, housing, food security, education, health care, child care, senior care, etc-- what private markets, unregulated, provide only to a privileged few in the economy who can afford these services. Is there waste in gov, of course, but does that waste hold a candle to the waste accrued by billionaires? No. It is looking increasingly like DOGE is going to cost more than it saved, and still it is being celebrated by repub officials. The three-legged scam makes the rich richer and poor poorer. That's it.]  

Greg Sargent @ TNR came up with the Three-Legged Scam. I'm the italics. 

Big Tech Loses on AI Regulation Ban in Big Butt-Ugly Bill

"So what do we learn from this episode? First, we need public financing of elections. It’s become increasingly clear that financial dependencies make it almost impossible to make good policy. There were probably two dozen Republican Senators who would have opposed this provision openly if they didn’t have to rely solely on corporate funds for elections. In truth, this provision never should have been proposed in the first place, let alone have a bitter fight waged to block it. But the financing for elections creates awful incentives.

Finally, don’t be fooled by the lopsided vote, this AI regulation ban was much closer to being enacted into law than that. The attempt to eliminate the regulation of automated decision and AI systems will return. Big business is going to have an open checkbook going forward, amounts of money that are unfathomable, to enact their agenda. Ultimately, money buys time on TV, but it can’t buy votes. And that’s the reason that this AI regulation moratorium went down."

Matt Stoller @ Big

Weird to think of Bannon, Blackburn, and Hawley as heroes in any story but need to take wins where we can get them. Everybody, hopefully, has heard the repub BBB bill savagely cuts health care for poor seniors like my parents to justify renewing big tax cuts for the rich. I don't know if the cuts will in fact reach my parents, they're in hospice now and very close to the end of their lives. But they are people who could be hurt by these cuts. People who worked their whole damn lives and I think deserve health care that they cannot afford, and I cannot afford, until they pass away. Call me a socialist but this is how I see things. You know that part in the Declaration of Independence about how government's derive their powers from the consent of the governed? These are the kind of government powers I consented to. But there are rich people in congress still screaming for bigger cuts, without any suggestion maybe they ought to give up some of their tax cuts. There's also billions in this bill to expand ICE and support more forced deportations. Building their fascist police state. It slashes green energy investments to boost fossil fuel production. And like the WTO, like all neoliberals, they were trying to keep state governments from enacting regulations to protect citizens from any negative impacts of AI that might turn up. And I'm pretty sure these are more or less the same people that were warning us about the unintended consequences of AI only a few short years ago, primarily it would appear now to secure more state funding, but now think states shouldn't be allowed to regulate whatever they want to do with AI for ten years. Anyway, they lost that one, for now.  


How the Billionaires Took Over

A Long View of American Oligarchy--

“We may have democracy, or we may have wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can’t have both," Louis Brandeis

"If Aristotle saw aristocracy degrading into oligarchy, Trump is oligarchy degrading into kleptocracy," Timothy Noah

"But Aristotle offered no guidance on what to do about an oligarchy that acquires power by democratic means. Nor did he reckon that the middle class [which he saw as democracies' class protector] would dwindle—from 61 percent in 1971, according to a Pew Research Center study, to 51 percent in 2023.

Aristotle could not possibly conceive the proliferation and growing wealth of the American billionaire. In 1976, Getty died the world’s richest man, with $6 billion. Musk has $431 billion. Correcting for inflation, the richest man in the world today is more than 10 times wealthier than the richest man in the world half a century ago. Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg are each six times wealthier than Getty was. Larry Ellison and Warren Buffett are five times wealthier. 

When you possess this much money, buying political influence looks like a bargain. Warren Stephens spent a combined $7 million to purchase his ambassadorship. But that’s nothing compared to the $31 million he paid a decade ago to buy a mansion in Carmel, California. Jeff Bezos spent $250 million to buy The Washington Post a dozen years ago. But he paid twice that to purchase the world’s largest sailing yacht, which clocks in at 417 feet and plies the seven seas with a support vessel that’s 246 feet long and carries additional crew.

The oligarch Donald Trump, in auctioning himself and American government to the highest bidder, may well match or surpass the stew of corruption that Washington created during the Gilded Age. That’s on him. But it’s on the rest of us that over 50 years, through economic policies that coddled the rich under both Democrats and Republicans, American wealth concentrated to such a degree that a Trump presidency—make that two Trump presidencies—was not only possible, but perhaps inevitable."

Timothy Noah @ The New Republic 

A brief overview of concentrated wealth and oligarchy in US history. Also includes several relevant book references, only one of which I've already read; including the authors's 2013 book, The Great Divergence, which I plan to read shortly. 

(And another "great divergence"! Love the big turning points in history genre and reviewing the cases for them.) 

Timothy Mellon, grandson of Andrew Mellon, a big business tycoon and plutocrat who ran the US economy (and much of the government) in the 1920s; his grandson, Timothy, was second only to Musk, maybe first, in donations to Trump's 2024 campaign. Making in a way 2024 perhaps the final total (totalitarian) triumph of the big business Billionaire oligarchy in American history. An 1848 triumph of capital for the 21st century. 

True it appears very likely a terrible falling-on-one's-own-sword pyrrhic victory; self-destructive, doubling down on burn-baby-burn climate change denial. MAGA's forever bigot wars have control now and desperately want to become the new mainstream. And the media is maddeningly deferential and plays along. But Trump's regime is still thankfully ten points or more underwater and unpopular. And no wonder, his agenda is bad for everyone but himself and a small circle of his best cronies. Maybe bad for them too? I mean, all this criming has to catch up with them eventually, no? But I know, not yet! 

Still, very bad; let us count just a few ways: 1) The grifter's economic idiocy; 2) DOGE's AI surveillance technology takeover; 3) the stupid anti-education and science agenda; 4) the stupid anti-DEI divisiveness; and 5) the anti-worker living wages and condescending rich guy hostility towards the cost of living for workers and care work and the caring economy and the general disdain for the public infrastructure of prosperity. 

In world history, or over the last millennia in western Europe at any rate,* the State first created, expanded, and regulated markets for the sake of national security. The goal was to build strong militaries to protect the State and the society over which the state ruled. And then, second, to expand and grow the economic provisioning of prosperity for all of society; which was always in tension with big private capital interests maximizing their take. Some might say the collective provisioning function has always been squeezed by big capital interests; imposing on the real economy austerity and efficiencies that only serve private profits. 

I'm not sure I've ever seen a US admin so disdainful of the working classes and encouraging to corruption. It's Hayek's collectivist nightmare and extreme bigotry in revolt against democracy and basic human rights; the latter better known as the "woke mind virus." It's libertarianism radicalized into a narcissistic pathology. I doubt you can keep a good country going for long like this, let alone a democracy. We might have already lost the latter.

Celebrating Juneteenth

 

So much hateful horrific stuff has been added to the pile on since 2015 it is easy to forget where this fascist descent in the US began was with Grump's racist birther reaction to Obama. So I suppose it shouldn't come as any surprise that he would snub Juneteenth, it's another national holiday recognizing the importance of DEI and CRT to the story of the country. But that doesn't make it any less cringeworthy when he dishonors this history, again; in 2025. Come on people! Here's the real history of Juneteenth, as American as apple pie and hotdogs. And a big victory over the violent bigotry that now rules over the country again. Respect. 

Letters from an American Historian 


Thomas Piketty Urges Dems to Turn Working Class Left

There is this now somewhat buried but nevertheless enduring and corrosive factional conflict amongst Dems going back to the 2016 primaries (at least). It is between Bernie Sanders leftists/democratic socialists and Hilary Clinton's moderate/centrist corporate elites. In its most caricature form, back when I was on Facebook/Twitter, Bernie Bros vs HRC's "Me Too" Pussyhats. Now it's Bernie/Warren/AOC, "stop the genocide in Gaza," progressive Dems vs corporate DNC septuagenarian plus pro-crypto Dems. My sympathies have always been more with the good gov "dirtbag left" (read: poor or in sympathy with the multicultural working poor) Berniecrats but I voted for HRC in '16 without hesitation. 

And some of this partisan circular firing squad stuff is probably inescapable after a electoral loss but nevertheless it drives me nuts how much of a self-defeating distraction it becomes when the contest that unites us is violent bigot fascism and monstrously corrupt corporate oligarchy. So I tend to avoid these squabbles like the plague. But looking up something about Thomas Piketty (my favorite academic economist) I found this story from 2018. Some reporting from Salon's Keith A. Spencer's about Piketty's take on this enduring factional Dem debate. In brief: 

"Left" parties — e.g. the Democrats in the United States, Labour in the U.K. or the Socialist Party in France — have lost the constituencies they once supported [working class people] and now appeal to the [educated and wealthy] elites, leaving a vast underclass politically unrepresented and rudderless," and, I might add, easy prey to reactionary bigots hating on whatever cultural scapegoats they are hating on this year,  and violent crackdown style law and order made-for-TV bullshit.

Piketty @ Salon 

But do I really think Bernie could have beat Trump in 2016? I doubt it. But do I think the Dem leadership's on and off hostility towards the progressive left wing of the party was/is, basically, proxy for the DNC's resistance to taking clear progressive positions on working class priorities like living wages, health care for all, and other basic cost of living measures because their big corporate billionaire donors don't want them to? Absolutely. 

Is bringing Fordism back even possible?

"At its core, the promise of Trumpism, at least in its idealized forms, is supposed to be all about the idea that working people have gotten screwed by a rigged economy for a half-century, and that to rectify this, Trump will end the elite gaming of it. But the new tax break for wealthy investors smuggled into the GOP bill—the same one that takes a hatchet to programs benefiting working people—perfectly epitomizes exactly this sort of elite rigging." - Greg Sargent, The New Republic

"The model used to be that of Henry Ford, mass production and ruthless efficiency to create high quality cheap cars with low profit margins, underpinned by machine tooling. You’d get rich by deploying a lot of capital, selling a lot of units, and being ruthless about productive efficiency. Today, the model is to do something that doesn’t require a lot of investment, so software or advertising or finance, essentially leveraging someone else’s capital. To do something like make screws for a low margin, you can just go to China, which seeks lower returns on capital. Indeed, we’ve been leveraging China’s capital for a long time.

There are many downsides to our model, but one of them is that high profit margins without discipline ends up causing bloat. Procurement consultant Rich Ham described the dynamic in corporate America, which is wildly inefficient, masked by excessive and persistent profit margins.

All of these dynamics are a result of law. I’ve gone over this dynamic many times, the basic idea is that a lot of the policies we implement, like strong patent rights, financial deregulation, and low corporate tax rates, are designed to ensure very high profits on any dollar of invested capital. Just having skilled labor and machine tooling around doesn’t fit in that model...."

Matt Stoller @ BIG

From a Fordist manufacturing economy to financial speculation economy, a process hastened by neoliberal financial deregulations during the 1980s and '90s. This really happened. 

But I'm much less sure about the possibility of any big revival in manufacturing. Some manufacturing in chips, weapons production, medications, stuff like that will be revived, a process that was already started by Biden. Big corporations have been offshoring their cheap labor needs since the 1980s and now it turns out some of that manufacturing should be done here for national security reasons. That will increase manufacturing jobs some. But manufacturing jobs as a percentage of all available jobs appears to be falling everywhere, like agriculture before it. Thomas Friedman talks about the development of dark factories in China, so automated they operate without lighting. Bringing back the motor city manufacturing boom of the mid-20th century is probably not realistic.  

Nonetheless, the neolib rationales for NAFTA and the rest of the globalizing free trade agreements were always bad. Basically, stiffing the working classes, wage workers, laborers, to goose corporate expansion in global trade. Move American labor up the value chain, offshore cheap manufacturing labor for better jobs in global trade and the financial sector, the free trade economic rationale went. It sounded good if you didn't think about it too much but it didn't pan out, unfortunately. One job in trade and finance was added for every four living wage union jobs in manufacturing were lost; and a Great Lakes rust belt grew to eventually engulf nearly all the flyover states. 

And, sure, blame the Dems for NAFTA. They contributed to this corporate fascist mess we're in for sure. Weak, dithering, sold out, Lucy and the football, all there, but still never as cravenly bigoted and corrupt as the repugs. Or not since Nixon at least, anyway. 

I've heard a Trump voter insist that Trump may do some bad stuff, hurt people's feelings, but he's not as bad as the Dems. My own view could not be more polar opposite of this Trump voter; another example of the extreme political polarization Ezra Klein talked about in his last book. The cruelty may be popular but not with me and, I'd argue, it does not promote economic prosperity or law and order and will never make America great again. 

At any rate, to believe Trump or the republicans will revive living wage jobs or reduce the cost of living for working people even if they could is preposterous and so oblivious to the actual historical record or positions republicans have taken on jobs and wages and reducing the cost of living for workers since, I don't know, forever?! 

Workers have been screwed by a rigged economy over the last half century. But to imagine Trump as someone who is going to end the elite-gaming of the economy?! He is the aristocratic progeny of the elite-gaming of the economy. He is a Frankestein creation of the neoliberal rigged-economy. 

He promised to drain the swamp but that isn't even his biggest hit, either. His greatest hit is obviously blaming the rigged economy on an invasion of non-white immigrants and foreigners ripping us off. The Christian Nationalists and rural bigots love scapegoating people, immigrants, LGBTQ+, women, the poor, and Grump is the bigot insult artist as Reality TV POTUS. These regular skits they're doing now with foreign dignitaries are talk show grotesques but, apparently, playing well enough with his X/Fox base. 

And the anti-DEI stuff is pathetic. White supremacists always have to be punching down at somebody to reassure themselves that they're above somebody else. This might be the essence of the paranoid style in conservatism. It goes way back in American history but has perhaps never been so popular or so big of threat to democracy and the rule of law. 

MAGA Might Makes Right vs Catholic Golden Rule:

New Pope Leo XIV Greets Trump World  

"[VP JD] Vance told Sean Hannity of the Fox News Channel, “[Y]ou love your family, and then you love your neighbor, and then you love your community, and then you love your fellow citizens in your own country, and then, after that, you can focus and prioritize the rest of the world. A lot of the far left has completely inverted that.” When right-wing influencer Jack Posobiec, who is Catholic, posted Vance’s interview approvingly, Vance added: “Just google ‘ordo amoris.’ Aside from that, the idea that there isn’t a hierarchy of obligations violates basic common sense.”

On February 10, Pope Francis responded in a letter to American bishops. He corrected Vance’s assertion as a false interpretation of Catholic theology. “Christians know very well that it is only by affirming the infinite dignity of all that our own identity as persons and as communities reaches its maturity,” he wrote. “Christian love is not a concentric expansion of interests that little by little extend to other persons and groups…. The true ordo amoris that must be promoted is that which we discover by…meditating on the love that builds a fraternity open to all, without exception.”

“[W]orrying about personal, community or national identity, apart from these considerations, easily introduces an ideological criterion that distorts social life and imposes the will of the strongest as the criterion of truth,” Pope Francis wrote. He acknowledged “the right of a nation to defend itself and keep communities safe from those who have committed violent or serious crimes while in the country or prior to arrival,” but defended the fundamental dignity of every human being and the fundamental rights of migrants, noting that the “rightly formed conscience” would disagree with any program that “identifies the illegal status of some migrants with criminality.” He continued: “I exhort all the faithful of the Catholic Church, and all men and women of good will, not to give in to narratives that discriminate against and cause unnecessary suffering to our migrant and refugee brothers and sisters.”

The new Pope Leo XIV greeted the world today in Italian and Spanish as he thanked Pope Francis and the other cardinals, and called for the church to “be a missionary Church, building bridges, dialogue, always open to receiving with open arms for everyone…, open to all, to all who need our charity, our presence, dialogue, love…, especially to those who are suffering.”


My parents never took us to church. Or, well, they sent us to this Baptist week-long day camp one summer but I think that was mostly just to get us out of the house. I remember coloring pictures of Jesus but no music. With some music they might have had a better chance at making me a believer. I like some gospel music. The Soul Stirrers from the 1950s: peak rock & roll era vocal group tightness. That Harry Smith gospel stuff from the late 1920s early 1930s. The Old, [Awesomely] Weird America in Sister Mary Nelson's "Judgment" (1927). Mahalia Jackson on Duke Ellington's Black, Brown, and Beige (1943). Achingly beautiful. I did attend a few Catholic masses with relatives and friends, several in Latin which made them feel impressive and a little scary to me as a little kid. And then as a bigger kid a little tedious sitting in the balcony of a 5 o'clock Saturday mass with a buddy so we didn't have to get up early on Sunday after partying like it was 1999 the night before. Of course, the Catholic church should immediately make transparent efforts to expose and root out the sexual abuse of children in the church. And then probably have one of their conclaves reevaluating the priestly vows of celibacy. Anyway, my point, I've got my gripes with the Catholic church. Opposition to birth control to me is barbaric and an assault on the basic individual rights of women. But in this battle I'm rooting for Pope Francis and Pope Leo standing up for poor migrants and refugees. The Catholic church is the last cultural remnant of the Roman Empire, and before it took over the empire it was a refuge to those who were marginalized and left behind and lived on the fringes of the empire. And here they are a millennia and a half later still speaking up for the suffering and speaking out against criminalizing people for their immigration status. I like that.    


The Darwin Awards Apocalypse:

From Techno-Optimism to Warlord Techno-Feudalism 

"Musk believes that humans must colonize Mars in order to become a multiplanetary species as insurance against the end of life on Earth. On Monday he explained to Jesse Watters of the Fox News Channel that eventually the Earth will be incinerated by an expanding sun, so humans must move to other planets to survive. In 2016, Musk predicted that humans would start landing on Mars in 2025, but in the Watters interview he revised his prediction to possibly 2029 but more likely 2031.

Critics note that while it is true the sun is expanding, the change is not expected to affect the Earth for another 5 billion years. As a frame of reference, humans evolved from their predecessors about 300,000 years ago.

Musk has the power of the United States government behind him. In December, Trump nominated Musk associate and billionaire Jared Isaacman to become the next head of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The Senate has not yet confirmed Isaacman, but the Republican-dominated Senate Commerce Committee advanced his nomination last week. The president’s proposed budget, released Friday, calls for cutting about 25% of NASA’s funding—about $6 billion—and giving $1 billion of the money remaining to initiatives focused on Mars.

Musk is trying to make Starlink dominate the Earth’s communications, a dominance that would give him enormous power, as he suggested last month when he noted that Ukraine’s “entire front line would collapse if I turned it off.” In April, Trump delayed the rural broadband program in what appeared to be an attempt to shift the program toward Starlink, and today Tom Perkins of The Guardian reported that the administration is going to end federal research into space pollution, which is building up alarmingly in the stratosphere owing in part to Musk’s satellites.

The attempt to gain control over artificial intelligence and human communication networks regardless of the cost to ordinary Americans might have a larger theme. As technology forecaster Paul Saffo points out, tech oligarchs led by technology guru Curtis Yarvin have called for a new world order that rejects the nation states around which humans have organized their societies for almost 400 years. They call instead for “network states” organized around technology that permits individuals to group around a leader in cyberspace without reference to real-world boundaries, a position Starlink’s terms of service appear to reflect.

Mastering artificial intelligence while dominating global communications would go a long way toward breaking down existing nations and setting up the conditions for a brave new world, dominated by tech oligarchs."

Letters from an American Historian 

This reads like a mad comic book bid for world domination. As if rewriting Zager & Evans 1969 number one hit, and comically dreary apocalyptic ballad, "In the Year 2525," as "In the Year 2025." They couldn't wait! Musk removing scientific research capacities to make room for AI technologies that don't yet exist is potentially the Darwin Awards winner to beat them all. What happens if the AI can't replace the scientists or the research they do? How many lives will be lost or setback because of this disruption in basic research? Of course such alarm is dismissed by the other side as a variation on TDS and rooting against America. But, actually, I'm rooting for America and against the country turning into a handful of ethnonationalist High tech corporate warlord island gulags. In 25 years of teaching I never shared the alarm raised at times about the moral direction of young people. If anything, I'd say the Millennials and Gen Z kids I taught seemed less frivolous and more generous than my generation. But the emergence of Musk as a icon to the young, so popular he might have swung the election to Trump, is very alarming. Particularly so because as his stature as a public figure has risen it has become increasingly evident to me that, like Trump, he can be a profoundly arrogant idiot. And that many young men believe in and admire this guy as a world building futurist is tragic and hateful. His thing against USAID is sick and inhumane. His support for white supremacy and Nazism repulsive. Apparently, he's a driven high tech production manager; achieving market dominance first in EVs and now satellites. If ever there was a good reason to ask someone to stay in their own lane, enforce some antitrust, and  leave the politics and moral leadership to others, this would be one such case. In Musk the fantasy of absolute private property and technological automation have fused. He makes greedy Robber Barons of old appear relatively benign. 

How China Escaped Shock Therapy: The Market Reform Debate By Isabella Weber (2021)

"Shock therapy" is a form of market liberalization, or privatization, ripping off the bandaid of government meddling in the economy and ending state control of the economy with one Big Bang. No half-way measures, no incrementalism; "Let's get rid of all regulations so we can get something done!" The tariff trade war being perpetrated by the Trump regime right now actually obscures understanding Musk's DOGE and the Christian Nationalist's Project 2025, slashing consumer protections, disarming the IRS, eliminating government services, as essentially radical privatizing economic shock therapy projects; perhaps the biggest ever embarked on. 

Some irony then that here's a relatively little book, an economic history study, contending, basically, that China escaping the adoption of economic shock therapy in the 1980s, avoiding the policies being pursued by the current US regime, was crucial to building one of the greatest economic growth spurts in the world since the launch of the industrial revolution.   

Shock therapy economics emerged originally as a quick-fix strategy for transitioning from a "planned economy" to a "market economy" in the crude binary that dominated conventional economic thinking and became entrenched in the Cold War of the 20th century. It was a branded package of austerity economics promoted by economic theory heavyweights like the University of Chicago school of Economics, Milton Friedan, and marketed to communist or socialist states, any state really, looking for ways to open and grow their economies. And as such it was a hot topic of market reform debates in China in the decade following Deng Xiaoping's opening of China in 1978. 

Actually, to step back for a moment, austerity economics like shock therapy-- i.e., campaigns to cut public spending and reduce democratic oversight of the private economy-- are not new and go back at least to the 19th century beginnings of the modern economy. They kick-in whenever capital, the rich,  feel threatened by democratic pressures and government reforms; popular suffrage, labor organization, minimum wage laws, environmental regulations, antitrust, anything that might impede maximizing private profits and wealth. In WW1, 1914-1919, governments naturally expanded involvement in their economies, organizing production for the "total war" effort. This improved working conditions for labor, and after the war workers pressured big employers and the government for better wages and job security. In response, big business elites, in Italy, Great Britain, and to one degree or another nearly everywhere in the developed world, launched austerity campaigns to discredit these democratic demands for better working conditions as budget busters, socialism, etc. 

The Reagan Revolution, 1980 to the present or until proven otherwise, bent on deregulation, disarming antitrust enforcement, tax cuts for the rich, hostility to labor organization, was another such campaign of austerity economics and has resulted so far in the redistributive transfer of 50 trillion dollars of wealth from the bottom 90% of the income scale to the top 1% of Billionaires. 

During the industrial revolution, from 1800 to the present, whenever labor asks for a raise and/or a government asks private industry to pay their fair share for the development of basic public infrastructure they are condemned as anti-business, overreaching sound Laissez-faire or "free market" principles, and offered instead some austerity economics. The only state or public spending capital, or Wall Street, likes are contracts with private industry and strong police and militaries to protect their massive holdings in private wealth. 

Shock therapy, specifically, a radical Big Bang austerity project to expand private control of the economy, grew out of neoliberal reforms developed at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank (WB); both established after WW2 to promote global economic development. In the 1960s and '70s the IMF/WB peddled Structural Adjustment Programs (SAP)'s to member borrowing states. As an end-run around the Group of 77 and the growing democratic influence of Global South countries in the UN General Assembly, and as a condition for loans, states receiving IMF/WB funding were required to aggressively privatize public utilities and other public assets and eliminate or dramatically reduce or pull back on taxing and regulating capital, implementing price controls, and supporting labor organization. The World Trade Organization (WTO), formed in 1995 ostensibly to update and replace the General Agreement of Tariffs and Trade or GATT (1948), but, again, formed essentially to get around the growing democratic pressures of states in the Global South has promoted privatization and shock therapy since it began operation.

The market fundamentalist ideas behind shock therapy economic policies are relatively simple, if increasingly in gobsmacking contradiction to reality. Privatizing public assets, letting private industry drive the economy unfettered by government interference leads to more economic expansion and modernizing technological development. This philosophy of political economy has gone by numerous names in the modern period, classical liberal economics, Laissez-faire, free market capitalism, ordoliberalism, neoliberalism, and probably others I don't know or I'm forgetting. But why I say they contradict reality is because the historical record increasingly indicates all these so-called "free market" regimes promote hoarding, monopoly, oligarchy, class war transfers of wealth, endemic exploitation of labor and plutocracy, corporatist state authoritarianism, and, yes, even fascism and Nazis, all of these things before and over general economic prosperity, in nearly every historical instance.  

Isabella Weber's relatively humble case in How China Escaped Shock Therapy: The Market Reform Debate is that China's state-directed growth spurt between 1980 and 2020, better known as "China's economic miracle," is at least in part, significantly, attributable to China escaping privatizing capital shock therapy policies in the crucial 1980s.  

In the middle of the 1980s China held several international economic conferences to address market reforms. China wanted to expand economically and develop technologically, and had been moving in that direction since Deng's first big visit to the US in 1979. The conferences in China were attended by WB/IMF officials, conservative economist Milton Friedman and his entourage, the usual suspects in international finance, including Eastern European states like Yugoslavia, all making pitches to the Chinese leadership in Beijing to privatize their economy with shock therapy economic reforms. And no doubt all the while drooling at the prospects of getting more access to China's potentially massive markets. 

So how did China escape the shock therapy onslaught? Scholars at an economic research institute in China set up by Deng reviewed shock therapy doctrine and concluded it was too preoccupied with hypothetical principles and ignored real economic impacts. Unfettered capital pitted private property against the state and encouraged self-dealing capitalist corruption. These Chinese economists promoted, instead, pragmatic, incrementalist, "crossing the river by touching the stones" market reforms.  

Scholars dug into Chinese history. They studied closely "The Discourses on Salt and Iron," appearing in the 1st century BCE during the Han Dynasty, and recognized price stability as crucial to sustained economic development. They found evidence of the rudiments of a dual pricing system going all the way back to the Shang Dynasty and the second millennia BCE. They noted persuasively that China prioritized, from its imperial beginnings, price stability over unfettered growth on the principle that wild swings in prices and jobs generated social unrest and depressed commerce.

They found a tradition in Chinese history of separating commodities into Heavy and Light categories. Heavy commodities, like salt and iron, like grains, were in heavy demand (or inelastic demand), everyone needed them, and so people, communities, were very vulnerable to sharp changes in the prices or supply of these commodities. And so the state took a role in stabilizing these Heavy markets; maintaining stable prices and supply. They did this less by price controls as we think of them today, although they did use them to set strategic boundaries constituting fair trade, but stabilized markets more by state procurement, or reserves, of the given Heavy commodity sufficient to offset fluctuations in private prices and supply. When private supplies in grain ran low, and prices rose, for instance, the state would release more grain reserves into the market; when supply exceeded demand, and prices fell, the state would purchase more grains to hold in their reserves. 

In this way China's state protected consumers from price gouging and other manipulations of private profiteers. Most commodities, the far longer list, were designated Light commodities and required no state interventions or fewer and looser price controls. When you get into the weeds it should be noted that some commodities moved between the Heavy and Light categories by the season and over time the Heavy commodities list, rice replacing millet, for example, evolved, naturally. But the position of the state in this tradition of Chinese economics remains a constant, trying to protect people from predatory greed and the wild swings of the market. 

My overall sense after reading Weber's study is that the pressures to privatize and deregulate the Chinese economy in the 1980s were particularly intense and consequential to China's subsequent economic boom but the neoliberalizing pressures never really stop. Weber, late in the book, references slackening price controls, enacted in the early 1990s that precipitated some wild swings in inflation and social hardships. The formal dual track pricing system was given up by 1989 but by then Weber makes the case they had already established a big state role in stabilizing the markets for so-called Heavy commodities, which was a shifting but relatively short list. 

Weber's biggest claim, or one I'm giving her anyway, is China's resistance to full-on Big Bang shock therapy privatizing market reform in this crucial historical moment, coming to head in two big international economic conferences held in China in the 1980s, was also likely very crucial to China's big modernizing push, enabled state-guided economic growth in China, industrial policy, "market socialism with Chinese characteristics," to reach a scale and resiliency that enabled it to effectively resist being taken over by private global financial interests. 

And resulted, let's remind ourselves, in a state-directed growth spurt between 1980 and 2020 that rivals any in modern economic history; growing by 10% a year when overall average annual growth rates in GNP around the world over the same period hover around 2.8-3.0. And led to China's global dominance in nearly every technology relevant to the coming 21st centuries energy transition: solar, wind, rare earths and battery technology, and EVs. 

China still puts significant limits on capital flows, again, seeing the unlimited flow of capital from outside China as a potential threat to China's political independence, presumably. 

In the first period of the opening, the 1980s, they were very careful about how they setup the first market reform zones, special economic zones (SEZs), the biggest one setup next to Hong Kong and another across from Taiwan; both in southern China, far from Beijing, the center of Chinese political power. Expanding the freedom of capital to flow first into these SEZs, experimentally, and then incrementally outward from there. They were wildly successful almost immediately but did unleash a lot of capitalist hustle and corruption.  

I've heard in recent commentary that China's limits on capital flows in and out of China have made it harder for China to expand the global trade in yuan/renminbi as a global reserve currency, as a viable alternative to the dollar or euros. Global investors want more liquidity, confidence they can cash out their assets in China whenever they want, and China doesn't want to be subject to extortion by global capital. It's in the news again but it's an old tension; and one, again, it should be noted very likely closely associated with China's tremendous economic growth over the last forty plus years. 

China, or Deng Xioaping, set out in the late 1970s to build a market socialism that worked, expanded, and prospered, but didn't threaten the authority of the central political state or China's sovereignty. They were wildly successful on the economic side of this equation but much less so on the political side, where Xi Jinping is now paramount leader for life and Uyghurs in western China live and work in or near concentration camps. 

This is Weber's first book. I first heard of her via Zachary Carter, my favorite Keynes biographer. And she's recently appeared in the news by helping the Biden admin deal with inflation. To offset rising oil prices triggered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and abetted by Saudi Arabia, the Biden admin released strategic oil reserves in 2022 or 2023, bringing back down the price of gas or at least mitigating the impact of Russia and Saudi Arabia's weaponized gas inflation against Bidenomics and the US. But when Weber's part in these policy actions first got out, Paul Krugman, the most popular economist in the US, called her an idiot. He was apologizing shortly thereafter but it's another illustration of the orthodox economic reflex against price controls and industrial policy, and the mainstream economic bias against the caring economy and essential government services and state capacity to build in America. It's a problem; I know I keep repeating myself.  

Meanwhile, we'll see how shock therapy economics works out this time for the US. 

Footnotes: 

1. First, pulling back again to world history scales, if you ask me, you have to add China's Century of Humiliation, 1850-1950, as relevant and crucial here to understanding Weber's study. China felt ripped off by the West and Japan in the 19th century; and has felt so since the Opium Wars with Britain in the 1840s and "unequal treaties" allowing imperialist nations to run nearly all China's biggest port cities and foreign trade until after WW2. Foremost, I think, China's resistance to shock therapy economics and "free market" shock doctrine is rooted in their deep suspicion that such foreign ideas can be threats to Chinese sovereignty and independence, as Western ideas and foreign relations have been in the past. Deng Xiaoping's strong hand and general Chinese wariness were a ballast moderating the market fundamentalist pressures coming from outside (and inside) China. Deng's aim was to open China one step at at time, without ever compromising China's sovereignty and political independence. His intolerance for political dissent was too harsh and illiberal but his state support for economic and technological development, research, and education were astonishingly effective and productive. 

2. Still, any study of China's economics comes up against how much economics are influenced by China's police state crackdowns on political dissent. Many of China's liberalizing economic reformers, those on the side of shock therapy reforms, found themselves on the wrong side of the authorities in the crackdown on protesters in Tiananmen Square during demonstrations in 1989. And it's not clear at all that the crackdown was necessary; there was no evidence of any organized armed uprising against the state. Up close it appears what protesting college students wanted most was more control over choosing their own career paths. They showed no interest in handing China's independence over to multinational corporations; they appeared as committed to overcoming the Century of Humiliation as any previous Chinese generation. But to the communist party leadership in China, Deng Xiaoping, masses of street protesters were a political threat. Overall the crackdown didn't even slow economic development in China much or for very long but it did draw a red line suggesting that economic reforms would not be allowed to challenge or threaten political authority in China. It subordinated economic power to political power, a political power that did not tolerate political dissent, could brutally disregard basic human rights, and still agitates against international standards on human rights and democracy today. Nor is it clear China has solved the problem of poverty and inequality domestically, by any stretch. But China has been exceptionally successful at fostering economic growth and technological development. It's something of a paradox, perhaps, but one that deserves more of our attention, not less. 

3. Worth noting also that Weber insists on this deep historical tradition in Chinese economics; its conception of the role of the state in economics: that, in the main, Chinese state economics prioritizes price stability over market freedoms. Weber takes a detour in her discussion of the market reform debates in the 1980s to point out that China maintained relative price stability in the inflationary aftermath of WW2 far better than Ludwig Erhard's "Economic Miracle" in West Germany during the same period, the latter a cherished model of shock therapy trumpeted by Friedman and neoliberals to this day. A year or two into Erhard's so-called miracle Berlin was rocked by inflation rates over 20% and suffering brutal poverty before abandoning the privatizing obsession for price controls and social democratic reforms; by the early '60s Erhard is already denying there was any liberalizing shock therapy economic miracle in West Germany at all. But Friedman and the neoliberals would rather go with the legend, of course. Which when you get down to it might be most of what market fundamentalist economics, neoliberalism, Econ 101, continues to run on. Myth and legend.  

4. Naomi Klein's 2007 book Shock Doctrine chronicles the disastrous results of shock therapy in Chile in the '70s and Russia in the '90s. Friedman's Chicago School, the neoliberal braintrust in the US at the time, working with the CIA, fomented a military coup that overthrew a democratically elected government in Chile. In Russia selling off public assets after the collapse of the Soviet Union subsidized the rise of a corporate oligarchy that brought to heel by Putin undermined democracy in Russia, generating a political system that How Democracies Die's Steven Levitsky calls "competitive authoritarianism," and what everyone else calls a murderous dictatorship. And, needless to point out, serves as a model to the current regime in the US. Klein's book is a big takedown of shock therapy economics and a brilliant example of investigative journalism. But her admittedly sensational account got a lot of pushback from mainstream economists at the time, castigating it as muckraking journalism depending on economic over-simplifications. None of the economic criticism I've seen is very convincing but I'm just a poor retired school teacher partial to New Deal social democratic economic reforms. The reaction, though, does encapsulate for me, again, the reigning power of free market dogma amongst economic policy elites and the populist Chamber of Commerce mob. The prevailing binary formula since the 1980s goes something like this: 

Deregulation, tax cuts, free (legally unfettered) capital=Pro-economic growth. 

Consumer protections, living wages, and regulations/environmental reforms=Anti-economic growth. 

It's becoming increasingly obvious this is a ridiculously false choice but money talks and here we are. 

5. At any rate, this last bit about Klein raises a question about who is a an academic economist that might appreciate the insights in Weber's study and corroborate the critique of the shock doctrine and has their own interesting takes on the real history of shock therapy economics, neoliberalism, and economic privatization being discussed here? Here's one: Ha-Joon Chang! Scholar at Cambridge for over thirty years, long time consultant to the World Bank and other international economic development agencies. Chang's like the Mr. Roger's of liberal economic development and reform. He unpacks and gently demolishes various "free market" orthodoxy in Bad Samaritans (2008) and many other delightfully readable economics books; Kicking Away the Ladder (2002) and 23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism (2010) being only two more I've read of the over ten Chang has written on the topic. For an example of his thinking: The Asian Tiger economies since the 1960s, Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong, and South Korea, are often held up by mainstream economists as models of successful neoliberal capitalist economics. Chang argues, by contrast, that South Korea, where he grew up, and the other Asian Tigers, actually took off economically and continue to develop with lots of essential state guidance and industrial policy; tariffs protecting infant domestic industries, price controls, etc. He makes the case that so did Great Britain, and the US, in the 1800s, when they were first industrializing, but they forget this now that their principle economic aim is to sustain and extend their own dominant position in global economic markets. Anyway, I'm a fan and would recommend his books to anybody interested in the history of political-economy.  

 


Bruce and James Baldwin: "There isn't as much humanity in the world as I would like but there is enough." By "enough," they mean, enough to endure and overcome the current humanitarian and democratic and constitutional and authoritarian crisis gripping America and much of the world. Hope they're right. 

Cuts to Science Funding Are Anti-Economic Growth

The study, by a team of economists at American University’s Institute for Macroeconomic and Policy Analysis, is among the first efforts to quantify the risks posed by Mr. Trump’s cuts. Because the full extent of the administration’s plans is not yet clear, the researchers studied a range of scenarios.

Even the mildest approach — a 25 percent reduction in public support for research and development — would correlate to a drop in economic output.

U.S. gross domestic product, adjusted for inflation, would be 3.8 percent smaller in the long term — a decline similar in magnitude to that in the Great Recession, which ended in 2009. The drop in output would be much more gradual than that downturn, taking place over years rather than months. But it would also be more lasting. Cuts to scientific research would sap innovation, leading to slower productivity growth and, as a result, permanently lower economic output.

The researchers estimate that a 25 percent cut to research funding would reduce government revenues 4.3 percent in the long term.

Larger funding cuts would have even greater effects. A 50 percent reduction in funding would lower gross domestic product nearly 7.6 percent, the researchers estimate, and a 75 percent cut would reduce it 11.3 percent — a larger decline than in any recession since the Great Depression.

NY Times

Economic historians argue over what contributed most to China's economic miracle between 1980 and 2010. I've read a book recently that argues a huge factor was China's refusal to adopt privatizing shock therapy policies during market reform debates that were conducted in China in the 1980s; privatizing shock therapy policies that resemble the privatizing thrust of DOGE and Project 2025 today, notably. But typically the biggest contributing factor mentioned as foundational to China's astonishing economic development is Deng Xiaoping's massive investments in education, science, and research, after taking over China in 1978. Again, near the opposite of what the republicans are doing right now. Or look to US history. The success of the industrial revolution in the US in the late 1800s is typically credited with large investments in scientific research and university education. Neolibs like to grouse about how taxes and regulations are anti-economic growth. Want to know what's really anti-economic growth: anti-science culture war politics. 

The History of Birthright Citizenship in US

"On the last day of his presidency, in his last speech, President Ronald Reagan recalled what someone had once written to him: “You can go to live in France, but you cannot become a Frenchman. You can go to live in Germany or Turkey or Japan, but you cannot become a German, a Turk, or a Japanese. But anyone, from any corner of the Earth, can come to live in America and become an American.”

He continued: “We lead the world because, unique among nations, we draw our people—our strength—from every country and every corner of the world. And by doing so we continuously renew and enrich our nation. While other countries cling to the stale past, here in America we breathe life into dreams. We create the future, and the world follows us into tomorrow. Thanks to each wave of new arrivals to this land of opportunity, we're a nation forever young, forever bursting with energy and new ideas, and always on the cutting edge, always leading the world to the next frontier. This quality is vital to our future as a nation. If we ever closed the door to new Americans, our leadership in the world would soon be lost.”

Letters from an American Historian 

Even Ronald 'Effing' Reagan got this much. And even if his class war policies against labor and workers, the so-called Reagan Revolution, actually setup the conditions for the backlash against immigrants we are experiencing now. The problem wasn't (and still isn't) immigrants or global trade or multiculturalism but letting capital and big business use global trade and cheap immigrant labor to escape paying living wages and to evade paying taxes for the kinds of public infrastructure that spreads economic growth to all. 

Diversity and multiculturalism are fine, good customer relations, as long as Big Biz is free to monopolize markets and hoard vast fortunes but when democratic pressures for raising wages or spending on infrastructure becomes too much, and mind you any taxes or regulations are too much to the business class, than cultural diversity and liberalism are scapegoated as the problem and austerity measures, cutting spending in the caring economy, demanded. And, to be sure, such public goods and democratic costs, health care, education, public safety, etc, can put a burdensome squeeze on small businesses and workers, but exempting rich corporations from these costs, from Walmart to McDonalds, is actually the biggest factor squeezing the regular economy and polarizing society. 

In a way this lopsided tug-o-war between capital and labor is at least as old as the industrial revolution and is always ebbing and flowing: big shots run the economy into the ground and then the gov steps in to restart the economy, bailing out business interests "too big to fail," establishing some guardrails to hopefully avoid repetition of the latest bust scenario, and everyone goes back to work until another loophole or another market is discovered to exploit and the next boom is on. Rinse and repeat. Of course, economic justice and social justice matter ("No Justice, No Peace"); and the gov should break up the monopolies and establish a living wage floor for all labor employed by large businesses, starting with all gov work and contracts. But the billionaires would rather try to manage a crazy sadistic megalomaniac than even contemplate taking such a haircut to their financial privileges. This struggle is not new. 

What is relatively new are the threats and challenges posed by global warming and climate change. And the problem isn't just that global warming is predominantly a market failure-- externalities, pumping too much carbon into the atmosphere. The problem is that addressing climate change and bending the economy towards environmental sustainability requires industrial policy, environmental regulations, government financing and guidance. But free market political-economy, neoliberalism, the ruling economic orthodoxy in the US, opposes such a role for gov, obstructs and even sabotages gov efforts to address climate change. Just look at the policies of the current administration; burn baby burn, etc. 

The problem isn't poor immigrants. The problem is the rich don't want to pay living wages and taxes necessary to building a sustainable economy and prosperous society. They only know how to get rich by extractive and predatory behavior; the collaborative and collective side of prosperity is completely lost on them. And many, a winning plurality, or 49.8% of the electorate at any rate, believe we're better off with this business mentality running the country. I hope the US can still reverse course but I think this path cuts the US off from a better future, and makes the US weaker and more dangerous. 

Thanks again, HCR! 

To Be Or Not To Be Equal Before The Law

"Here’s the thing: Once you give up the idea that we are all equal before the law and have the right to due process, you have given up the whole game. You have admitted the principle that some people have more rights than others. Once you have replaced the principle of equality before the law with the idea that some people have no rights, you have granted your approval to the idea of an authoritarian government. At that point, all you can do is to hope that the dictator and his henchmen overlook you.

At least some people understand this. The president of North America’s Building Trades Unions, Sean McGarvey, received a standing ovation when he said to a room full of his fellow union workers: “We need to make our voices heard. We’re not red, we’re not blue. We’re the building trades, the backbone of America. You want to build a $5 billion data center? Want more six-figure careers with health care, retirement, and no college debt? You don’t call Elon Musk, you call us!... And yeah, that means all of us. All of us. Including our brother [International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers] apprentice Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who we demand to be returned to us and his family now! Bring him home!”- Heather Cox Richardson

Letters from an American Historian

Fifth Amendment: "nor shall any person be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law"

Note, "person," doesn't have to be a "citizen." If the Grump admin ignores the law, as they are doing now, make no mistake everyone not wearing a red Maga hat is vulnerable. It is family separations all over again but scaled up now by Project 2025's culture war doomsday agenda. It starts with illegal deportations to notoriously brutal gulags in El Salvador, without any due process. We're all just supposed to go on Grump's say-so: they're all "terrorists and violent criminals," which he can't even say without an evil cartoon sneer. 

And now these degrading shit-shows in the WH are apparently going to become part of regular Trump 2 programming. Maga kayfabe. The inner circle braintrust lounging uncomfortably on couches; Grump and his guest in individual chairs, repartee so painfully awkward and smarmy and insulting I can't even watch it straight through. A gaggle of reporters on the side, the doofus chorus in The Thucydides Trap. The scene is the same as the embarrassing ambush of Zelensky a few weeks back. But this time the leader of El Salvador, Bukele, is more like a scary smart powerful drug lord in the Netflix series Narcos. Grump's new global dictatorship alliance: Russia, El Salvador, Israel, Hungary, Saudi Arabia, etc. Trump jokes with Bukele about building more prisons for our "homegrown" criminals, otherwise known as American citizens, but at this point Grump's slinging around charges of criminality at anyone or anything that opposes him. Owning the libs is everything for these guys. 

Even if the regime keeps to illegal disappearances of non-citizens we're still already living in a fascist dictatorship, and will be until further notice. The ruling regime refuses to submit to judicial review and in an aggressively dictatorship way. They could get back Abrego Garcia, of course, they admit they apprehended him mistakenly but they don't want to be told what to do by the court. We are now living under Trump's version of the "Unitary executive theory." It's like Trump still insisting on the guilt of the Central Park Five after they'd been exonerated by DNA evidence. Deporting people, anybody, citizen or not, without due process rights, is authoritarian; targeting and scapegoating groups, DEI, immigrants, women, Trans people, liberals, is fascist. Firebombing political enemies is fascist. Impeaching judges and punishing law firms that challenge your lawlessness is fascist. Courts and media and universities covering for this fake news BS is fascist. 

(As I've said before, Grump didn't invent fake news but he is its greatest practitioner. Certainly the biggest in my life time and has to be on a short list of the biggest liars in US political history.) 

Turns out it not only can happen here but is happening here right now and will go on happening until something stops what to this point has been, with the brief interruption of the Biden admin, an unstoppable force. We're now painfully dependent on the law to at least slow down his lawlessness but the law as an institution, Robert's Court, is probably more responsible for our corrupt police state trajectory than anything else, save the boss himself. 

Resistance is growing but Trump's illiberal reaction has control of crucial legal and media power centers. Most pundits insist now it comes down to the people, most of whom are too busy working and supporting families and trying to keep up with the bills to go on a general strike. But this stuff is so bad, slashing government services, slashing scientific research and education; snatching people off the streets, trampling human rights with sadistic glee. It's so bad people are already protesting in impressive numbers but what about the silent majority, the people whose politics are basically anti-politics?

It's grim but if you're a real glutton for this kind of punishment-- I am but there are much bigger gluttons, of course, real pros--consider this NY Times survey of 13 "independents" about how they think Grump is doing so far. Trigger warning: unbelievably depressing. 

I paraphrase: 

Trump is doing what he promised. At least he's doing something, Biden wasn't doing anything. Illegal immigrant violent gang members and criminals ought to be deported. But shouldn't courts confirm that those picked up are in fact violent criminals or here illegally before they are deported? Isn't due process a basic human right? These questions aren't brought up by the interviewers or the voters surveyed. Trump can be trusted on this is the confident vibe conveyed. 

Same goes for tariffs and Doge. Maybe they are going too fast but Trump is just trying to bring back good manufacturing jobs and Musk just trying to eliminate waste in government. The background historical rationale appears to be foreign countries have been ripping the US off since WW2; and business men are all government efficiency experts. As I've mentioned before, these are wildly popular sentiments with the working classes and go back to at least to the mid-20th century; even if never true and never less so than now. 

(And this isn't to suggest their aren't really foreign countries competing with the US for their own economic advantage. It goes both ways, all the time. It isn't crazy for Grump to try to get the US a better deal. It is dumb and destructive beyond belief if, however, Grump single-handedly gets countries to turn away from US trade and the dollar. And I'm not saying that there aren't foreign countries hostile to the US that have to be watched and checked by intelligence and diplomacy. But, point of fact, Trump is actually best buds with the foreign leader most hostile to the US!) 

But Trump wouldn't let Musk screw up Social Security, one of the focus group members concludes. You were not born yesterday, right? That Trump and Musk are actually destroying departments of government that protect consumers and labor or have already removed government officials whose job it is to reduce corruption and self-dealing in government, the kind of stuff the independent voter above is sure Grump would never do, gets not a peep, again, from the NY Times or any of these 13 "independent" voters.     

Trust in Trump prevails. Biden was a do-nothing and Harris a "joke." Russiagate, denying women and immigrants basic human rights, the reckless endangerment of public health, extorting Ukraine to cheat in an election, fake electors, Jan 6, selling out to Musk and billionaires, all just fake news attacks by Democrats trying to bring Trump down.

If these "independent" voters aren't cult members they are encased in a cult world, Trump World, and a conservative stranglehold on media and the courts bares much responsibility for this sorry state of affairs. Anyway, direct contact like this with Trump World can be despairing or I find it so anyway but a couple, hopefully comforting, reminders:  

1) Trump actually won by only 1.5% of the vote, and that was with a bunch of voter suppression and Musk's billions. Less than half of the electorate endorsed this tyranny and fewer still support it now. 

2) None of the stuff they are actually doing polls well; from deporting people without due process, abandoning Ukraine and Nato, trash talking our neighbors, to trade war tariffs and more tax cuts for the rich. Clear majorities oppose this stuff. Unfortunately, it appears most voters will never even realize and/or believe any of this is going on until it explodes in their faces. 

3) One voter attributed much of the current crisis to a civil war between elites, leaving the rest of us on the sidelines. This is especially true in the sense that there are many economic elites, republicans, billionaires that supported and voted for Trump, for reasons we don't need to go into here, that are waking up to a realization that Trump's control of the economy, erratic unilateral trade wars, threatening to take over the Fed, is potentially a catastrophic threat to US leadership in the global economy. (See Krugman's recent interviews with financial infrastructure super nerd Nathan Tankus.) 

Truly Trump 2 has the potential to turn into one of the biggest imperial faceplants in history. Grump is stress testing the US's super privileged and lucrative role of playing the reliable and trustworthy house banker to the global economy. He's counting on the dominance of the American economy forcing US trade partners to submit to his Snidely Whiplash/Mr. Potter machinations. We'll see. 

In the meantime, I do still also find some comfort in books, novels, memoirs, that resonate with the present. During Trump 1 I especially enjoyed Albert Camus's The Plague and Daniel Defoe's Journal of the Plague Year and Octavia Butler's Parable of the Sower. And I'd still recommend them. But I've come across nothing that resonates with Trump 2 so far as well as Butler's second book in her Earthseed series, Parable of the Talents. Published in 1998 it's a post-collapse America with an uncanny Trump-like potus character. 

The countervailing positive force to the illiberal catastrophe unfolding around people in Butler's America is spread by protagonist Lauren Olamina in her writings, Earthseed: Books of the Living, and her itinerant teachings, like this snatch of epigrammatic wisdom:

God is change, 

God prevails,

Kindness eases change,

Love quiets fear,

Sweet and powerful,

positive obsession blunts pain, 

diverts rage,

and engages us in the most intense of our chosen struggles. 

Civilization is to groups what intelligence is to individuals. 

The Long View of the American Civil War

"On April 9, 1865, General Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia to General Ulysses S. Grant of the United States Army at Appomattox Court House in Virginia. Lee’s surrender did not end the war—there were still two major armies in the field—but everyone knew the surrender signaled that the American Civil War was coming to a close.

Soldiers and sailors of the United States had defeated the armies and the navy of the Confederate States of America across the country and the seas, at the cost of hundreds of thousands of lives and almost $6 billion. To the northerners celebrating in the streets, it certainly looked like the South’s ideology had been thoroughly discredited.

Southern politicians had led their poorer neighbors to war to advance the idea that some people were better than others and had the right—and the duty—to rule. The Founders of the United States had made a terrible mistake when they declared, “All men are created equal,” southern leaders said. In place of that “fundamentally wrong” idea, they proposed “the great truth” that white men were a “superior race.” And within that superior race, some men were better than others.

Those leaders were the ones who should rule the majority, southern leaders explained. “We do not agree with the authors of the Declaration of Independence, that governments ‘derive their just powers from the consent of the governed,’” enslaver George Fitzhugh of Virginia wrote in 1857. “All governments must originate in force, and be continued by force.” There were 18,000 people in his county and only 1,200 could vote, he said, “But we twelve hundred…never asked and never intend to ask the consent of the sixteen thousand eight hundred whom we govern.”

But the majority of Americans recognized that if it were permitted to take hold, this ideology would destroy democracy. They fought to defeat the enslavers’ radical new definition of the United States. By the end of 1863, President Abraham Lincoln dated the birth of the nation not to the Constitution, whose protection of property underpinned southern enslavers’ insistence that enslavement was a foundational principle, but to the Declaration of Independence.

“Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure.”

The events of April 9 reassured Americans that they had, in fact, saved “the last best hope of earth”: democracy. Writing from Washington, D.C., poet Walt Whitman mused that the very heavens were rejoicing at the triumph of the U.S. military and the return to peace its victory heralded. “Nor earth nor sky ever knew spectacles of superber beauty than some of the nights lately here,” he wrote in Specimen Days. “The western star, Venus, in the earlier hours of evening, has never been so large, so clear; it seems as if it told something, as if it held rapport indulgent with humanity, with us Americans.”

So confident was General Grant in the justice of his people’s cause that he asked only that Lee and his men give their word that they would never again fight against the United States and that they turn over their military arms and artillery. The men could keep their sidearms and their horses because Grant wanted them “to be able to put in a crop to carry themselves and their families through the next winter.”

Their victory on the battlefields made northerners think they had made sure that “government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”

But their conviction that generosity would bring white southerners around to accepting the equality promised in the Declaration of Independence backfired. After Lincoln’s assassination, Andrew Johnson of Tennessee took over the presidency and worked hard to restore white supremacy without the old legal structure of enslavement, while white settlers in the West brought their hierarchical ideas with them and imposed them on Indigenous Americans, on Mexicans and Mexican Americans, and on Asians and Pacific Islanders.

With no penalty for their attempt to overthrow democracy, those who thought that white men were better than others began to insist that their cause was just and that they had lost the war only because they had been overpowered. They continued to work to make their ideology the law of the land. That idea inspired the Jim Crow and Juan Crow laws of the late-nineteenth and twentieth centuries, as well as the policies that crowded Indigenous Americans onto reservations where disease and malnutrition killed many of them and lack of opportunity pushed the rest into poverty.

In the 1930s, Nazi leaders, lawyers, and judges turned to America’s Jim Crow laws and Indian reservations for inspiration on how to create legal hierarchies that would, at the very least, wall certain populations off from white society. More Americans than we like to believe embraced facism here, too: in February 1939, more than 20,000 people showed up for a “true Americanism” rally held by Nazis at New York City’s Madison Square Garden, featuring a huge portrait of George Washington in his Continental Army uniform flanked by swastikas.

President Franklin Delano Roosevelt rallied Americans to oppose fascism by emphasizing the principles that would, he said, provide “the foundations of a healthy and strong democracy: “Equality of opportunity for youth and for others. Jobs for those who can work. Security for those who need it. The ending of special privilege for the few. The preservation of civil liberties for all. The enjoyment of the fruits of scientific progress in a wider and constantly rising standard of living.” He called for “the cooperation of free countries, working together in a friendly, civilized society.”

The gulf between the ideals of democracy and the reality of life in the segregated U.S. during and after World War II galvanized Black Americans, Mexican Americans, and Asian Americans to demand equality. They successfully challenged school segregation, racial housing restrictions, state laws prohibiting interracial marriage, and anti-Chinese laws based in the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act.

As the military fought fascism in Europe, schools and churches at home emphasized that democracy depended on acceptance of racial, ethnic, and religious differences. Rallies championed diversity, and government-sponsored films warned Americans not to succumb to fascist propaganda. Posters trumpeted slogans such as “Catholics–Protestants–Jews…Working Side By Side…in War and Peace!” and reminded Americans not to “infect” their children “with racial and religious hate.” In a 1947 radio show, Superman fought a Ku Klux Klan–like gang trying to keep foreign-born players off high school sports teams, and in 1949, comic book artist Wayne Boring portrayed him on a poster urging a group of American schoolchildren to defend their classmates from “un-American” attacks on their race, religion, or ethnicity.

In the 1950s those ideas had produced a “liberal consensus,” shared by most Democrats and Republicans alike. The government should regulate business, provide for basic social welfare, and promote infrastructure: in other words, it should reflect democratic values. But when the Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision tied the federal government not just to economic equality for white Americans, but also to civil rights, opponents of the liberal consensus resurrected the same argument former Confederates had used after the Civil War to couch their ideology in economic, rather than racial, rhetoric.

Rejecting the idea of equality, they argued that the government’s effort to protect civil rights was tantamount to socialism because it took tax dollars from hardworking white men to provide benefits for undeserving Black people who wanted a handout. This idea gained momentum after Congress passed the Voting Rights Act in 1965, and gradually came to include people of color and women who demanded equality. In 1980, Ronald Reagan rode the idea that the liberal consensus was simply a way to redistribute wealth to undeserving Americans of color or women—or both, like Reagan’s “welfare queen”—into the White House.

As more than $50 trillion moved from the bottom 90% of Americans to the top 1% between 1981 and 2021, Republicans deflected attention from the hollowing out of the middle class by demonizing racial, religious, and gender minorities. By 2012 they were talking of “makers” and “takers,” and by 2016 they were feeding voters ideas and images straight out of the nation’s white supremacist past.

By 2021 the idea that some people are better than others and have a right to rule—the same ideology that had driven the Confederates—created a mob determined to end American democracy. The rioters who attacked the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election believed they were writing a new history of the United States, one that brought to life the hierarchical version of American history claimed by the Confederates before them. On that day, one of the rioters accomplished what the southern troops during the Civil War had never been able to: he carried the Confederate battle flag into the United States Capitol.

At the end of his life, General Grant recalled the events of April 9, 1865. “What General Lee's feelings were I do not know,” Grant wrote. “[M]y own feelings, which had been quite jubilant on the receipt of his letter [asking to surrender], were sad and depressed. I felt like anything rather than rejoicing at the downfall of a foe who had fought so long and valiantly, and had suffered so much for a cause, though that cause was, I believe, one of the worst for which a people ever fought, and one for which there was the least excuse.”-Heather Cox Richardson 

Letters of an American Historian

Concise US History connecting the Civil War to Jan 6, tracing the white supremacist betrayal of the promises of the democratic revolution that founded the United States; and exposing the anti-CRT and anti-DEI, the anti-science and education scams being perpetrated now by Maga's alliance of billionaires and bigots.