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‘Romney is Wall Street’s worst bet since the bet on subprime’

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by gifford1967, Nov 29, 2012.

  1. gifford1967

    gifford1967 Contributing Member
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    This is a fascinating interview discussing, in part, Romney's superwealthy supporters and their reaction to his loss. I still find it mind blowing that people who are supposed to be elite data analysts were shocked when Romney lost. That's not to say that Obama had it in the bag, but the best available data clearly gave him significantly better than even odds on election day. It's really a testament to the power of psychological processes like "denial" and "epistemic closure".

     
    1 person likes this.
  2. SamFisher

    SamFisher Contributing Member

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    This exchange is pretty insightful IMO and gets to the root of what may be occurring:

    F: I completely agree. I think Obama and the economists around him have a very sophisticated understanding of both globalization and the technology revolution and the impact they’re having on the world economy and they way they’re creating these winner-take-all spirals. The positive scenario, which I think is a bit pollyannaish, is all you need to do is improve the education system and change the skill set and all will be well. And even that takes a lot of investment and a lot of time. But there’s actually the possibility that in order to have a healthy middle class, you’re going to need to have a more redistributive society, at least for awhile. I think that’s something the American super-rich don’t think about much. One guy who’s a liberal Democratic guy, who has worked in Washington for Democrats, who I quote in my book, he said to me, maybe this is how the world is. Maybe the 1950s were an aberration and the way the economy naturally works is this wide difference in distribution.

    EK: As a general point, though, I imagine that’s somewhat scary to these guys. If the basic, positive-sum nature of economic policy is eroding, and we’re going to have fiercer political battles over who gets the spoils of growth, that’s got to be worrying. I imagine the very rich look out and think to themselves, there are more of them then there are of us. That seems to me to be the concern that’s beginning to break into the open with this talk of “gifts.”

    CF: The happy way of reconciling that problem is to have an economy where the natural outcome of all of us working hard and being successful and all those good things leads to a more 1950s-style distribution. We’re more comfortable with that. Yes, the people with merit and inventiveness should be at the top, but we want the natural outcome to be harmonious. And the scary thing is, what if that’s just not how the economy will work for the next 20 or 30 years? What if even if we get education and economic policy and all the rest of it right, that we’re not there? Do you say, okay, the way it’s working now is not consistent with how we imagine this democracy should work and therefore we believe the rich should be taxed more aggressively to support the middle class? That’s a very different way of thinking about the economy and the social contract. And after Romney’s loss, the scary thing for the super-rich becomes actually maybe they’re not going to be the ones to decide.
     
  3. gifford1967

    gifford1967 Contributing Member
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    I think this realization may be a big part of why the superrich have such a strong negative reaction to Obama. He both represents the demographic shift that's occurring, and accelerated its impact. Which is going to have a huge effect on how the upcoming political/economic battles shake out. However, I would still expect them to have a more realistic perspective on any given election cycle.
     
  4. Dairy Ashford

    Dairy Ashford Member

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    For the love of god can we move on, please?
     
  5. gifford1967

    gifford1967 Contributing Member
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    Move on from what? This interview is about much more than just the election. Did the segment of the population that is being discussed, and which has an outsized influence on local, national, and global politics, suddenly disappear on November 6th?
     
  6. glynch

    glynch Contributing Member

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    Thanks for posting this very interesting article.

    I don't think I buy this whole idea that there is some sort of new econonomy that sort of immutably is being created and automatically is creating more of a winner takes all economy.

    I think that the plutocrat class has deliberately and very consciously put into place policies that creates this. Is the world becoming more linked through technology? Sure.

    What has accounted for societies with a more equal distribution of wealth and hence opportunity?. The two biggest mechanisms are 1) a labor movement/labor party and 2) a progressive tax system supporting a strong welfare state. The plutocrats have largely destroyed these two mechanisms.

    The plutocrats have fostered a type of transnational corporation control, immune from international government control- hence their particularly insane hatred of the UN or any government cooperation that can potentially control these corporations, as the US gvoernment could, at least in the US, in the old days.

    With respect to international labor movements/ parties they are just completely old school capitalist pigs, actively supporting Commissars, "communist" leaders, Emirs or dictators etc. who brutally kill labor organizers and folks who try to wage wages there, or create more worker oriented parties.

    Then with the low wages in these countries, due not just naturally, but also largely as a result of oppression aided by our plutocrats, they use international immigration laws and modern info,communication and travel technology rtc. to further suppress wages in the US and other wealthy western countries by pitting these workers against other workers with the "neutral" market mechanisms so dear to market fundies.
     
    #6 glynch, Nov 30, 2012
    Last edited: Nov 30, 2012
  7. glynch

    glynch Contributing Member

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    I also liked the discusion of the plutocrats completley justifying their wealth as moral and their own economic interests as completely the same as all their less wealthy inferiors and society as a whole. Same with their irrational hatred of Obama as a sort of do-gooder who willfully deviated a bit from their path, who doesn't worship or respect them enough personally.

    Of course I have always been amazed at this worship and allegiance to the plutocrats and their economics/ ideology by ordinary folks, whether college educated and/or with decent jobs or not.
     
  8. Raven

    Raven Member

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    Elizabeth Warren in 2016.
     
  9. glynch

    glynch Contributing Member

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    Quote:
    Maybe, but given the self serving nature of this perspective from the plutocrat perspective it should be not just a self proving and justiably questioned. Of course some "liberal" Dems are plutocrats and or fairly satsified with the staus quo.

    I would also assert that the way"economies naturally work" is a typical market fundie/ one percent argument as far as I am concerned. When dealing with the real world, i.e the role of poitics and governments, (sorry libertarians they still exist!) there are no mere natural way economies work -- whether "scientific socialism" ala Marxist-Lenism or current libertarian/market fundie mathematical demand curves or even appeals to "nature".
     
    #9 glynch, Nov 30, 2012
    Last edited: Nov 30, 2012
  10. A_3PO

    A_3PO Member

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    Folks, lets just be glad the super-rich weren't able to hijack our democracy when they attempted to buy the election for Romney. It would be truly scary if that had happened because it would have locked in the norm for the future.

    I'm no Obama-lover and didn't vote for him this year, but we really dodged a bullet this time. Mitt "47%" Romney was a lapdog who was "bought and paid for" by these people.
     
  11. glynch

    glynch Contributing Member

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    Quoted for truth
     
  12. gifford1967

    gifford1967 Contributing Member
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    Yes. Obama's election gave us a little breathing room. I'm hoping that something can be done about Citizen's United in the next four years, though not sure what. At least, there will be the possibility of Obama selecting one or more Supreme Court justices, so the decision can be revisited by the Court in the future.
     
  13. glynch

    glynch Contributing Member

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    It would be a complete game changer for all Americans of the 1% including conservatives, libertarians whether they realize it or not, liberals, moderates and the rest of the 99% if we could take the utter corruption and buying of our politicians out of the equation.

    I hope with no expectation that Obama or th Dem leaders,now that he has won, could lead the charge to overturn Citizen's United and say let's us have the next election campaign on a new slate without the money. Only the most corrupt or most viciously partisan or perhaps naive support the enormous money spent on the election, with the candidates with the most money winning 90% or more of the time and then being totally beholden to their contributors afterwards.
     
    #13 glynch, Nov 30, 2012
    Last edited: Nov 30, 2012

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