On the last day of 2009 (yes, coincidentally December 31st), the Washington Post departed from standard journalistic practice by running material produced by the "Fiscal Times" in its own news section. The Fiscal Times is a news service funded by billionaire investment banker Peter Peterson. Peterson has been working to gut Social Security and Medicare for at least two decades, starting and funding a wide variety of organizations that have this as their purpose.
The Fiscal Times is Peterson’s latest creation in this line. He had his kid hire some of the journalists displaced by the collapse of the newspaper industry to put it together. While most newspapers would not publish as news material produced by an organization with such a clear agenda, the Washington Post apparently had few concerns along these lines.
Today the Post ran a piece from the Fiscal Times that glorified the efforts of two members of President Obama’s deficit commission who are trying to push through a plan that is likely to involve substantial cuts to Social Security and Medicare, the country’s most important social programs. The piece implied that the two members who accepted the view that it is necessary to reach an agreement on reducing the deficit in the current political environment are getting beyond ideology. In contrast, those who think it is important to protect social programs that virtually the entire working population will depend on in retirement are somehow being ideological.
It told readers that: "On the fiscal commission, Stern [Andy Stern, former head of the Service Employees Internation Union, one of members highlighted in the peice] is already looking for ways to break through the ideological camps on deficit-reduction." In fact, individuals who are not motivated by ideology would note that the country’s projected long-term deficit problem is driven almost entirely by the broken U.S. health care system.
If per person health care costs were the same in the United States as in any other wealthy country, then the projections would show huge budget surpluses rather than deficits. It also should be possible for the people in the United States to take advantage of lower cost health care systems elsewhere even if the power of special interests like the insurance and pharmaceutical industry prevent reform here. This basic fact should feature prominently in any discussion of the long-term deficit that is not motivated by ideology. It is never mentioned in this piece.
The article also treats an assertion from Mr. Stern as a basic fact: "Now Stern argues that deficit reduction isn’t simply a conservative issue. ‘What I keep saying to the progressive community is that when the crisis hits, it’s students, workers and poor people who pay the price.’"
Of course, the crisis has hit — the country is facing its worst downturn since the Great Depression. While students, workers, and poor people have paid the price, this is entirely the result of politics. The government quickly moved to rescue the major banks, using vast amounts of public money to save Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America from bankruptcy. At the same time, it has refused to spend enough money to boost the economy back to full employment levels of output or take serious steps to prevent people from being thrown out of their homes.
However, the decision to protect the wealthy rather than students, workers, and poor people was entirely a political decision. The banks were able to use their political power to ensure that they got the resources needed to prevent their collapse. On the other hand, those not interested in helping students, workers, and poor people began to highlight concerns about deficits in order to head off additional spending. It may always be the case that the wealthy will dominate the political process to the extent that they do today, but it is worth pointing out that it is politics, not economics, that determines who suffers in a crisis.



25 Comments




Thanks for the heads up Dean, always good to know the source of our increasingly crazy news media.
Andy has drunk the Kool-Aid, being surrounded by the Pete-ites has warped his brain.
Thank you for this!
Thanks Dean; for more on Andy Stern:
“Much ink has been spilled, including in this magazine, on the internal disputes that racked the union under Stern’s tenure [see Peter Dreier, "Divorce—Union Style," August 31, 2009, and Esther Kaplan, "Labor's Growing Pains," June 16, 2008, among others]. And surely the rancor he leaves behind is part of his legacy—as one senior union official bluntly put it, “Andy Stern leaves pretty much without a friend in the labor movement.” But for Stern, who dismisses his critics as zealots and traditionalists, the more important question is whether he has realized his early promises of revitalizing the union’s organizing mission.”
“All told, SEIU today finds itself in a precarious situation. By 2009 the union was facing dire economic straits as it struggled under the rising costs of political campaigns, which were paying diminishing returns, and interunion wars, which had sapped its material reserves. The union spent much of Stern’s final full year in office cutting back on expenditures wherever it could. The deepest cuts, ironically, were made to SEIU’s representational expenses, which are associated with a union’s organizing operations. By the end of the year, the union Stern had promised to turn into the engine of growth for a revitalized labor movement was spending less per member on representational costs than at any time since 2002. As Stern exits, SEIU is left with more questions than answers about how the labor movement can once again become a dynamic force in the political and economic life of the country.”
From here
What people need to do is be writing their Senators and Reps REPEATEDLY about the fallacies and pre-determined biases of Obama’s -YES, IT IS OBAMA’S, Congress killed the idea- ‘deficit commission’.
Dean and Teddy:
I’m wondering, “what is the case with Andy Stern?” How did a guy who ran a huge union (representing mostly lower paid workers) get to this position?
Was he a stealth candidate all along?
If he did drink the Kool-Aid, anybody got any ideas on how they sold him on it? Seduced by being part of the Beltway crowd?
Or is this a case of he’s doing what’s in his best interests for his current/next gig and forsaking what he used to claim to believe in? (Join the veal pen? Exploit the veal pen?)
Anybody got any thoughts?
Ubethchaiam cross-posted some answers, but I’m still interested in more feedback. Interunion warfare and internal union politics are one thing, but changing one’s foundational philosophies is somelthing else again. Is this his form of revenge against the union(s)?
I think this tsunami of worry by big-money players, this worry that current debt load is a loaded gun at their temple, tells the whole story:
This is the world’s bondholders, presuming, probably accurately, that much of their current bond holdings will lose more than they expected as the aging Western countries necessarily inflate more than expected these next 30 years.
I’m very much counting on SocSec, as I enter my 60′s next year, with the retirement prep typical of all who came of age in the 1960′s, meaning, in truth, my worries directly counter Pete’s.
My point is this: the tsunami of worry is deeply founded, and ain’t going away for a long time. These people are motivated.
Thanks Dean for the heads up. I was talking with my 86yr old mother about this and she said surely they will leave me alone. No Mom they’re coming for every one and I’m only a yr away from being able to collect but I’m making more collecting unemployment at this time until it runs out.
“This is the world’s bondholders, presuming, probably accurately, that much of their current bond holdings will lose more than they expected as the aging Western countries necessarily inflate more than expected these next 30 years.”; you got it.
Thank you, Dean. The more transparent the show, the marotte and the puppet strings, the better.
RAWK ON FDL!
Joseph Stieglitz (former World Bank economist) is advising Greece to submit to debt peonage.
Michael Hudson has advised Iceland and is advising Latvia to tell IMF/World Bank, Swedish and British Banks, to go fuck themselves.
Kuttner, Reich, Stieglitz and others are in the end telling us to play along while tinkering on the edges.
Hudson, Faber, Nassim Taleb, etc. are genuinely outraged and are suggesting that people resist.
The Icelanders are resisting, and we should express our solidarity with them.
Let’s remember that the way Obama set this up, a lame duck congress must vote this down with a simple majority or the recommendations become law.
I truly appreciate your columns Mr. Baker.
How many citizens understand this truth?
Thanks for a great write up, as usual.
The Republicans have been very successful in framing the current social safety net debate as one of limited resources and good intentions. They omit all of the money passed to the vastly wealthy either overtly via tax cuts or covertly via TBTF bailouts that end up being converted to bonuses for the treasured few at the top. So we now have debates about the cutting benefits, including retirement, to union members because most private sector jobs no longer have them. We no longer frame the debate in terms of getting our share as employees but instead focus on making sure no one else that is middle class is any better off than the ex-chicken plucker at Tyson. Buffet said that the class war has already been fought and his people won. I would add that those not in his class, rather than being interested in succeeding together, are generally more interested in making sure that the winners also get the rest of the scraps that are left over as well as they strive to bring down the last vestiges of middle-class – retirement benefits.
The wealthy, including those on Obama’s Debt Commission chaired by Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson, have every intention of making sure that all of the money passed to the rich in order to supposedly rescue the economy after they cracked it open, says in the pockets of the rich. Make no mistake though, this commission consists of those who are doing the bidding of Team Obama. Even Peterson’s political strength comes from being in-sync with the goals of the President. Peterson is a symptom and the disease is on-going class warfare and preference of corporations over individuals along with the politicians who are paid members.
The current debt is a problem but the solution is not to create a state that really is the embodiment of Eisenhower’s Military-Industrial Complex. Now more aptly, the Military-Financial-Industry Complex.
Which is why there needs to be push back against the media representing Andy Stern as “the firebrand labor leader” and “Stern is pressing union officials about ways to tinker with Social Security” as if he represents unions.
The Washington Post article written by “The Fiscal Times” states “both men wore blue, pin-striped suits and bantered about their common experience running big organizations. Stern, with his coifed white hair and his pink silk tie, could have passed for a business mogul and often sounded like one as he talked of the need for “targets” and “reaching the numbers.” They neglected to mention that Andy Stern stepped down as SEIU President in part because he did such a poor job. He DOES NOT represent the unions and the article fails to mention this.
The Washington Post has trended ever more rightward since Len Downie, Jr. took over as executive editor on Sept. 1, 1991. They were cheerleaders for the “war” against “terror,” the invasion of Iraq, and so on and on. Not that Katharine Graham was perfect, but she must be rolling over in her grave about what the Washington ComPost has become.
So, Stern’s basically a lobbyist at this point?
What a fuckwad.
My guess is that tinkering around the edges is popular because it is clear that real reform is not currently possible. FDR had the power to do things because he got a lot of shoving from his left. Right now our political climate looks like it might turn a bit more like Europe did back then.
Most people today can barely allow themselves to find BP, or the administration, at fault. They must know what they are doing, how else would they be able make so much money. Multiply times a 100 for the idea that making money on Wall Street proves that they know more. That has been the real shame of this bailout. It made the incompetent look smart when they received billions from the taxpayers. They still look like the brightest. So it also follows that the taxpayers must be powerless.
Book Salon up at the Mothership with Joseph Romm’s Straight Up: America’s Fiercest Climate Blogger Takes on the Status Quo Media, Politicians, and Clean Energy Solutions hosted by Josh Nelson
When we want our way, we’re being idealogical. When they want their way, we need to stop being idealogical. Why, how centrist of them….
It’s over, it’s done, THEY get their way. Like the repulsive Noah Cross in the film “Chinatown”, the equally repulsive Alan Simpson wins.
Like “Health Care Reform”, it was a done deal from the start.
Andy Stern as head of the SEIU spent around $85M to get Obama elected. Obama and Stern are mighty tight, so the assumption is that SEIU/Stern have worked for the benefit of their members, when in reality since 2008 or more Stern might have just been playing the SEIU’s members and burning their money in order to elect someone against their own interests and to have the head of the SEIU promote policies harmful to its membership…of course Stern/Obama are claiming everyting they are doing is good, but talk is cheap. People should consider that certain unions are being run by corporatists where union leadership will do things harmful to the ran-and-file. Look at HIR for an example.
Ronald Reagan made the most of the Conservative intent to “empty the treasury so that social programs will go wanting”
George W. Bush, with his tax cuts for the wealthy, two wars, and Wall Street’s too-big-to-fail drain on taxpayer leavings, left for President Obama the financial mess the conservatives see as an opportunity to twist the knife of cruelty Reagan inserted and Bush pushed in.
I doubt they can, but if they could, they’d empty the Social Security Trust Fund, put the money into the treasury and spend it on future conservative attempts to nation build the rest of the world in their image.
Thanks for the post (I think). Unsurprising but disheartening. The elderly (who are still clear of mind) need to realize that these &*^%s mean to go after single one of us. All the crap about granny death panels was a fabricated lie last summer in re to HCR (as crappy as it is), but leftists should maybe make up a similar phrase in terms of the gutting of social security cuz Glenn Beck ain’t gonna save Granny this time.
I’ve said it a zillion times, if there *really* was a “problem” with Soc Sec, then abolish or at least raise the income cap on the SS deduction: voila, problem solved. This is all made up for the reasons already stated in the post and by commenters. Same goes for medicare.
Sadly the populace is, as usual, out to lunch in terms of what the shafting that the “small people” are about to experience from the “big people.” It’s all based on greed, too, sad to say. These uber wealthy F***s have more than enough… that’s what makes all so insanely gauling.
But unless the populace wakes up to whose really out to “get” them, then we’re ever closer to being ripped off even further. The whole issue with the populace now brow-beating unionized and/or gov’t workers about their pensions is, as stated, another case in point, where the serfs have been carefully trained to focus on the “not-the-enemy” rather than focus on whose really doing the robbing and pillaging – the uber wealthy.
Frustrating but good to get the info out.
Agreed in fully!
Dean, yer rawhkiin my house of social sensibilities, and I thank ya for it.
Bless ya.