David A. Love's Blog

David A. Love

David A. Love
Location
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Birthday
June 18
Bio
David A. Love is the Executive Editor of BlackCommentator.com, where his Color of Law column appears weekly. He is a contributor to the Huffington Post, the Progressive Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, theGrio, News One, In These Times and Philadelphia Independent Media Center. He contributed to the book, States of Confinement: Policing, Detention and Prisons (St. Martin's Press, 2000). Love is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania Law School. He also completed the Joint Programme in International Human Rights Law at the University of Oxford.

MARCH 12, 2009 11:15AM

Now the Robber Barons Replace the Welfare Queens

Rate: 27 Flag
Gordon Gecko had a long run of it, but now the party is over. I’m talking, of course, about the character in the film Wall Street, that conniving titan of finance who would sell his mother for a buck and a quarter, and there is scant evidence that he had not already accomplished that goal. "Greed is good," he declared.

Gecko began to have his heyday in the Reagan era. That’s when the "conventional wisdom," fueled by greed, began to call for a supply-side economic policy in which financial benefits would be bestowed upon the wealthy and businesses in the form of tax cuts. And as the theory goes, the benefits would "trickle down" to the common folk. In reality, the result was more like "trickle on".

Another hallmark of the Reagan era, which was perfected in the Clinton and Bush years, was the deregulation of the financial markets and other industries. Over the years, these policies were bought and paid for to the tune of $5 billion in contributions, given by Wall Street to Democratic and Republican politicians alike, to keep the government out of the gambling casinos, I mean financial markets. This led to the proliferation of exotic financial instruments called derivatives, which have turned out to be a little more than a high-tech, blue chip hustle. Unregulated, unmonitored, and getting their money’s worth, the banks were able to engage in predatory lending, sucking homeowners - particularly homeowners of color - into unconscionable subprime mortgages. When applied to the environment and food and safety standards, deregulation has resulted in salmonella - and rat - infested peanuts, E-coli tainted beef and climate change.

Meanwhile, as the land of opportunity became the most unequal, top-heavy society in the West, the media - deregulated, conglomerated and with fewer diverse voices (thank you, President Clinton) - provided us with empty calories for our entertainment.  Many of us did not realize what was taking place right under our noses: the most dramatic upward redistribution of wealth in history, and a level of income inequality which makes democracy unsustainable.

Since the 1980s, when much of the New Deal regulatory framework has given way to the best unbridled capitalism money could buy, society has steered its best and brightest into the whole Wall Street thing. As the nation’s infrastructure began to crumble and its students fell behind the rest of the developed world in math and science, everyone, including yours truly in a former life, wanted a job shuffling paper and moving numbers around but not creating anything tangible, not building anything of much use to society.

With the adoration of the rich and famous, and the glorification of wealth as a virtue, came the vilification of the poor and the stigmatization of poverty. This gave birth to the concept of the welfare queen, the fictional Black woman on welfare who has six children, wears a mink coat and drives a Cadillac. The typical welfare recipient is White, but never mind. What a worthy scapegoat, no doubt created in some conservative think tank. And what better justification for taking from the poor (unworthy as they are, living off the government dole), and giving to the rich (needy as they are, and unable to live the American dream)? It was "reverse Robin Hood", as Jesse Jackson aptly described it, which culminated in the passage of welfare reform by President Clinton and a Republican Congress.

A Dickensian treatment of the poor was in full fashion. Poverty became a moral failing, an issue of genetics. "Are there no debtors’ prisons? No poor houses?" Well, given that American capitalism never was meant to employ everyone (for more information, see slavery), and given that many of the good blue collar and even white collar jobs have been sent overseas, what do you do with that surplus population, as Dickens called it? It seems no accident that the prison boom, the war on drugs, and draconian prison sentencing came at a time when there were no jobs to be found in the inner cities. The "land of the free" has the world’s largest prison population, even more than China, which is a police state and has over four times the population of the U.S. Prisons are one of America’s primary forms of social control, and there is profit in the warehousing of Black, Brown, and poor bodies.

And as all of this was going on, the people at the top were having a big party at our expense. There has been very little mention of the plight of the poor, although their ranks rose under Bush. In America, over 41 million people were poor as of 2005. Further, 18 percent of children live in poverty, and 1 in 50 children is homeless. With the collapse of the financial system, how can you scapegoat the poor when everyone is either poor or has real potential to join its ranks? This time around, the anger is directed towards the real culprits: the people who, like the robber barons of old, actually stole the money and brought us to where we are today.

It is cathartic to watch the spectacle of bank executives hauled before Congress to explain themselves. What got these people in trouble was not merely their obscenely immense wealth or the manner in which they earned or stole that wealth. Rather, in the midst of all the destruction they left in their path, the broken lives and stolen futures, these individuals still wanted to be rewarded for their failure, for being the special people they think they are. With their pernicious sense of entitlement, the robber barons looked at the rest of society with contempt, as if they are superior to the regular everyday chumps at the bottom of the pyramid scheme.

In a moment of clarity, everyday people have identified the real problem - unfettered capitalism. The robber barons have replaced the welfare queens, and so we have come full circle. This time around, the public refused to fall for the okeedoke and allow themselves to be distracted by some straw man or scapegoat. The Right’s early contention - that Black and Latino homeowners brought the financial system down with mortgages they could not afford - did not hold water. So, is this a sign of political maturity for the common folk, a new populism? Perhaps, but it is too early to tell. The test will come in how society responds to the crisis, learns the lessons of history, and constructs an economic system that seeks fairness, equity and justice. Heaven forbid we become more like those so-called "socialist" Europeans, with their universal healthcare, lower levels of inequality, lower poverty rates and higher educational standards. In the meantime, it will probably get worse before it gets better. But no one said it would be a pretty sight.

 

(This is the first part of an ongoing series in BlackCommentator.com called Our House Is On Fire.)

 

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Heaven forbid we become more like those so-called "socialist" Europeans, with their universal healthcare, lower levels of inequality, lower poverty rates and higher educational standards.

That is exactly where I hope we end up. I see no need to support a privileged upper class. If that makes me a socialist omg I guess I am one.
Beautiful piece, David. So right on! And the repugs cry about wealth distribution now...
Wow, David. Not a single word that you wrote do I disagree with. You need a wider audience for this masterpiece here on OS. I'll see what I can do.

Monte
Yes, I agree with all that Dorinda and Monte have said, but I'd like to add that, heaven forbid we might be a happier, more compassionate nation too.
What Dorinda said.

"But we have more freedom than they do!" comes the cry. I always ask them what exact freedom they are talking about--Western European democracies have a free press, freedom of religion, etc.

I guess it's harder to buy a gun over there, but that hardly has anything to do with socialized medicine or banking regulation...
Excellent column. Many Democrats had a hand in deregulation, as did Clinton, though his tax policies were more equitable. I was under the impression that the gap between top and bottom narrowed during his residency. Am I wrong?
Monte sent me over here and I'm glad he did. This is a cogent and insightful and well written piece.You have an emotional tone with words that is insightful into the personalities of these modern day thiefs as in "With their pernicious sense of entitlement, the robber barons looked at the rest of society with contempt, as if they are superior to the regular everyday chumps at the bottom of the pyramid scheme."
Rated
And the people all said, "Amen!"
While everyone is hating the em>effects of greed now, it is still mainstream to believe in the profit motive as opposed to the people motive. We like to ascribe our problems to a few greedy bankers and some lax laws, but really this situation now is a communal thing. Who cried out against greed when they thought it benefited them? Americans love their love of money and most still believe it's the only way to live. There's no changing our fate without changing our minds.
I worked at the SEC during the Carter administration. We used to regulate those greedy bastids. I can still remember the awful conversations when Reagan was elected. I don't think anyone thought it would be as bad as it turned out.

During the 60's I got welfare and food stamps when I was a kid. I turned out okay, and in part, because I thought I lived in a culture where there were some folks who cared about me. Some of them got government paychecks, social workers, judges, counselors. They encouraged me. They made sure I was warm, clean & dry and had something to eat. And that is supposed to be a bad thing according to the republicans.

I just never understood how it is that selfishness was supposed to be so rewarding. If we took care of children, regardless of the skills and abilities of their parents, the parents would have a chance to make a better life for themselves and their kids. Scared parents make scary choices. If we were making sure that people who want an education were getting one, including young parents, we would be insuring a more prosperous future and those parents would be setting an example of not giving up that kids can appreciate and emulate for themselves. But such actions would indeed by like those horrifying "socialist europeans."

Keep going David. This is smart, compassionate and wise writing.
Damn, what are you doing here when you should be working for Obama? (Or Nutter). Seriously.

Not sure the recognizable scapegoat is understood as unfettered capitalism so much as it's finally reconized via true spectacle, reality-show-style, as unrepentant over-the-top greed.

You know you can't say "socialism" in America without being branded a commie pinko anti-union flag burner. The new populism will have to find a way to include Big Macs, Walmarts (yes, guns too), and CARS regardless of how many kids and seniors continue to starve in the process.

Thank you, Monte! David, I think we know each other, but I can't quite figure out the connection. Yea or nay, I've read you, am glad to welcome you aboard OS and looking forward to more.
The average welfare recipient is not only white, they also, in rural areas in particular voted Bush Part Deux into office twice too.
Rated for blunt honesty
"also" and "too", redundant, my apologies.
Great, great writing.
David,
Your analysis was exceptional and spot on. What really ticks me off is not only the hatred that the right seem to have for the poor but their claim that they are God fearing christians. They are the worst kind of hypocrite and I'm sure that some day the will get their just reward.
Why is this not an Editor's Pick and on the Cover? Excellent analysis, David. You've totally nailed it. I remember you from your touching post about your son and now you blow me away once again for a different reason. Thank you.
"The test will come in how society responds to the crisis, learns the lessons of history, and constructs an economic system that seeks fairness, equity and justice."

Yes! Excellent piece. Thanks to Monte for calling it to my attention.

It has been clear to many of us for a long time that the gap between super-rich and middle-class and poor was widening in an untenable way. Now we have a lot of work to do to untangle this mess.
Thanks Sao! I will check out that broadcast.
That's what I keep saying! I wish I could put it all in such perfect form. Brilliant and appreciated.
What an honor to read your posts! So much I want to say, but you say it so well! You're not only a great thinker and writer - you inspire thought and reflection. You are an inspiration.