Thursday, January 2, 2020

Commentariat Central: Bernie Edition

One of my New Year's resolutions is to comment more frequently on New York Times articles than I have been doing in recent months. This vow, of course, is contingent upon at least partially overcoming the nausea and rise in blood pressure that accompany reading the articles prior to responding to them. This is particularly true of the op-eds. For the sake of my own sanity and health, I long ago gave up perusing the silliness of Gail Collins and the banality of David Brooks. Brooks and Paul Krugman, his erstwhile nemesis, actually sound banally alike as #Resistance, Inc. fighters in the Age of Trump.

Here is my first Times comment of 2020, in response to another article about Bernie Sanders by Sydney Ember, co-written with Thomas Kaplan. The underlying theme of their piece is that since Bernie's record fund-raising haul from small donors is eclipsed by Donald Trump's bank account, Bernie might not be electable, despite the small-dollar donations from "loyal supporters who are faithful to him despite his setbacks."


The piece is less openly derogatory than Ember's previous anti-Bernie articles, but that is likely to change as the first primaries draw nearer. Knowing that the public is on to their bias, Ember and other mainstream journalists appear at this delicate moment to be very carefully covering their asses.


My published response:

The wording in the side-by-side headlines about Sanders and Yang's fundraising totals is a perfect example of how to subtly slant a story and cast doubt on a popular candidate.
Whereas "Yang raised $16.5 million, His Campaign Says" we are told that "Sanders Says He Raised $34.5 million."
 The subtle implication is that one is fact and the other is just a claim. Bernie "says" he raised the money and Yang definitely did, with the journalistic ploy of sourcing his campaign for the info, as a kind of afterthought. And then, as other commenters have rightly noted, the article goes on to ridiculously compare Sanders's stash to that of an incumbent president who is running unopposed. Cast the doubt and cast it as wide and as shallowly as what passes for journalistic ethics permits. 
It will be a lot of fun deconstructing the anti-Bernie rhetoric coming from the establishment media from here on in. Right now it's as subtle as they can make it, but as the plutocratic panic over his rise becomes ever more palpable, watch out for the subtlety to go out the window and for the more blatant smears to begin afresh. To Bernie's own great credit, he is not shy about calling the media out this time around. Last time, he was way too nice.
Now, if we could only get him to stop prefacing his Biden critiques with "Joe is a good friend of mine"...
My other two Times comments are actually from last month, in response to a couple of Paul Krugman's op-eds, both of which caused the nausea and angst that are the necessary impetuses (impeti?) for me to take to the keyboard in a desperate attempt to at least temporarily relieve my symptoms.

Krugman's more recent column, titled "The Legacy of Destructive Austerity," rather ridiculously posits that the corporacracy's punishing deficit obsession agenda disappeared in 2015 and that it was mainly a Republican effort to stop Democrats (who from 2009 through 2011 controlled the presidency and Congress)  from doing what they really, really wanted to do.

Specifically, debt fears were used as an excuse to cut spending on social programs, and also as an excuse for hobbling the ambitions of center-left governments. Here in the United States, Republicans went through the entire Obama era claiming to be deeply concerned about budget deficits, forcing the country into years of spending cuts that slowed economic recovery. The moment Donald Trump moved into the White House, all those supposed concerns vanished, vindicating those of us who argued from the beginning that Republicans who posed as deficit hawks were phonies.
Note the passive voice in the first paragraph, subtly absolving the true-believing deficit hawks in the Obama administration of culpability. Krugman feels so vindicated now that it's been proven beyond all doubt that the Republicans were only pretending to be austerians all along. What he unethically fails to acknowledge is that the Democratic leadership still are true-believing, wealth-serving, bought-and-paid for deficit hawks.

My published comment:

Paul Krugman doesn't mention that the Austerity Project was a totally bipartisan affair, what with President Obama himself convening the aptly-named Catfood Commission to cut the deficit as the economy was crashing. Congress did not force him to do this.
  Far from ending in 2015, austerity still rules, with the so-called opposition party addressing an epidemic of homelessness, sickness and premature deaths from despair by tinkering around the edges of catastrophe. The House leadership grudgingly agreed to control costs for only a handful of outrageously priced drugs while refusing to address the surprise hospital bills being sent out in droves by the private equity vultures who increasingly run our deeply sick health care system.
Last spring, Speaker Pelosi was once again a guest of honor at the late billionaire Pete Peterson's annual austerity conference. Complaining that Trump was taking all the media attention away from the "agenda," she said: "Pete Peterson was a national hero. He was the personification of the American Dream. I loved him dearly. He cared deeply about working people. He knew that the national debt was a tax on our children. He always said to me, 'Nancy, always keep your eye on the budget!"
 And thus does the oligarchy sing the same tired old refrain about why people (a/k/a "purists") have to suffer: "But how you gonna pay for that?"
They could start by withholding the trillion-odd dollars they keep gifting Trump every single year for our endless wars.
The other December column to which I responded had Krugman trying to absolve himself from his own destructive anti-Bernie rhetoric during the 2016 campaign, in which diehard austerian Hillary Clinton had fiendishly vowed that Medicare For All would "never, ever come to pass" under her leadership.

His column was a thinly-disguised campaign commercial for the faltering Elizabeth Warren, who is currently suffering the slings and arrows of billionaires from the right and progressives from the left as a result of her efforts to please all of the people all of the time.

Ridiculously once again, Krugman points to allegedly low unemployment numbers as proof that there was never any "skills gap" to blame for the nation's joblessness. He doesn't acknowledge that most of the jobs created since the 2008 financial collapse are of the low-wage, temporary and precarious variety. What counts is that he has been proven right, and the deficit hawks and the inflationistas were wrong, as were the oligarchs who blamed the unemployed for their own plights. These oligarchs have an inordinate influence on policy and are coming after Warren.

Krugman concludes:

Which brings me back to the 2020 campaign. You may disagree with progressive ideas coming from Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders, which is fine. But the news media owes the public a serious discussion of these ideas, not dismissal shaped by a combination of reflexive "centrist bias" and the conscious or unconscious assumption that any policy rich people dislike must be irresponsible.
 And when candidates talk about the excessive influence of the wealthy, that subject also deserves serious discussion, not the cheap shots we've been seeing lately. I know that this kind of discussion makes many journalists uncomfortable. That's exactly why we need to have it.

I just could not help myself. Those high-falutin' hypocritical words were exactly why I typed out this response:

An amazing thing is happening in Punditville. Some of the same outlets that only last week were engaging in a virtual Bernie Blackout are suddenly taking the opposite tack, admitting that hey, this guy might just clinch this nomination, especially since he looks to win Iowa and New Hampshire. leads in California, and even has a decent shot in South Carolina, whose millennial Black voters favor him overwhelmingly. Biden's current national lead is still based largely on name recognition rather than any fondness for his retro center-right policies.
 Cheap shots by this liberal columnist in 2016, such as "Bernie is becoming a Bernie Bro!" because his policy proposals for the greater public good were supposedly outweighed by nonspecific "serious character and values issues" are now conveniently buried under the rug. Given a choice between Trump and a winning Bernie-Liz ticket, it behooves even establishment types to acknowledge that the rich are losing this class war of ideas, that the oligarch-owned and controlled media are rapidly losing credibility for reasons that have nothing at all to do with Trump's own deranged critiques of "fake news."
Not, of course, that I'm complaining about mainstream journos suddenly gushing about the newly spry and funny Bernie so soon after gleefully pouncing on the heart attack to concern-troll the message that his candidacy was over. They don't want to be blamed if they once again trash Bernie so hard that they hand Trump another term.
This is different, of course, from what I suspect is their subliminal desire to actually hand Trump another term. They don't want to contend with a Sanders nomination or presidency because they would then be forced to expose themselves as wealth-serving careerists. They can champion progressive policy initiatives or they can keep their jobs. But they would not be able to do both. It would be far easier for them and more lucrative for their employers  to have Trump to kick around for another four years, to keep Russiagate propaganda on life support, and thus keep their hypocrisy more or less hidden from public view.

As I mentioned in my first Times comment, deconstructing the plutocratic propaganda promises to be very fulfilling, almost as fulfilling as the $14 increase I just got in my Social Security check.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great analysis of the twisted political opinions we get from corporate media. Maybe Paul Krugman is afraid of losing his job or maybe he truly is that "liberal conscience". There was a time when his column was my first choice to read. "Times have changed".

Add It Up said...

I keep seeing headlines that Trump out-raised every Democrat in the fourth quarter with his $46 million haul.

But the reality is so different if you add all the Democrats together. So far reporting are:
Bernie Sanders $34.5 million
Pete Buttigieg $24.7 million
Joe Biden $22 million (anticipated)
Elizabeth Warren $21.2 million
Andrew Yang $16.5 million

Grand Total raised to oppose Trump of just the top 5 Democrats is $119 million or over 2.5 times what he raised.

Jay–Ottawa said...


Bloomberg was left off of the above list (along with faint points of light like Tulsi Gabbard who is scraping along raising $1 million per month). Bloomberg is about to unleash $31 million of TV adds next week, for starters. So make that at least $119 + $31 = $150 m. So much more to this, however, than war chests.

Now are you set to bet $100 that Trump will or will not get a second term?

And, as we've been saying here for years, does it matter which party is successful judging by the ultimate effect on the average American? Just about every one of those Democrats is a loyal member of the Uniparty. The Uniparty, no matter who lends it his or her soul and style, supports greed, war and environmental catastrophe.

Speaking of war, are we all following the escalation of trouble between the US and Iran? How many Democrats putting up a real fuss? 2003 all over again. This time it's Iran, a more formidable opponent than Iraq.

The assassination of one higher up can't possibly lead to all-out war, can it? Let's ask Archduke Franz Ferdinand.

Add It Up said...

Jay, did you deliberately miss the point? The notion that "Trump out-raised the Democratic candidates" as expressed in every mainstream headline is misleading. The total raised by all Democrats is much higher, however this is "just the top five" who have reported fourth quarter results. Bloomberg did not raise the $31 million he is spending. He might even throw in with Trump in the General election.

To answer one of your questions, Bernie Sanders and his supporters are making a real fuss about the escalation. The others are all equivocating. Most will probably fall in line to "support the troops."

Now, you want $100 side bet? What are you offering for odds?

Annie said...

My $100 wager is placed on Trump winning re-election. The more Democrats continue to go after him like a pack of hyenas, the stronger he looks when they can't pull him down. They're been doing him a huge favor for 3 years when instead they should have focused on policy differences - IF there were any.

Democrats have botched things up so badly with their mass delusional, psychotic, Trump Derangement Syndrome and pathetic impeachment games that it would be better if Bernie does NOT win the nomination.

At least then his movement wouldn't go down with the sinking ship of the Democratic Party. Bernie's movement is loosely attached to the DP like a barnacle stuck on the hull of a rusted ship, and hopefully it will fall off and float to the top before that useless, dead-weight of a ship sinks. Bernie's loss would hopefully detach it. At least that's the bright side I'm trying to see after the Dems defeat at the next election. They are soooo blowing it and seem determined to continue on the same Titanic-like course.

Even if Bernie won by some miracle, he wouldn't be allowed to be President. As we learned after Trump's election, any MIC-incompatible candidate or wild card who can't be easily controlled will be at risk of being overthrown. My bet is that next time, the Intelligence Community will just National Security! him, declaring the election invalid based on Russian or Iranian interference.

Surely somewhere tucked into the latest NDAA must be the authority to override election results because National Security! I'm pretty confident of that because every time they get caught doing something illegal, they make sure it becomes legal for next time. Hopefully John Durham will bust their balls first and take Obama, Brennan, and Hillary down.

I'm still supporting Bernie - until he folds at the convention - because the movement needs to be kept alive. But what power can it ever have in a Democratic Party ruled by the iron fists of Schumer and Pelosi and increasingly stacked with MILOs? The DP is more Republican than the Republican Party and more militaristic.

Whatever happens, we oldies need to keep the light burning so that some day, when the smoke clears, the youth can remember the cause and take up the torch once again.

The Joker said...

"Whatever happens, we oldies need to keep the light burning so that some day, when the smoke clears, the youth can remember the cause and take up the torch once again." -- Annie

Reminiscent of the failure yet latter triumph that forms the backstory (or would it be "frontstory"?) in the plotline of Jack London's "The Iron Heel".

Worth reading. And said to have influenced George Orwell's "1984".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Iron_Heel

Jay–Ottawa said...


@Add It Up

Sorry to have misunderstood you. Were you merely pointing out how the MSM was "at it" again, its distortions this time masking the amount of money piled up by the Dem's top 5 fundraisers? No implications attached to that news?

Or were we to understand that these candidates' individual stashes piled together for effect are an indication of something big brewing among the Dems? Is it an indication, perhaps, that the DNC is getting its act together, that more voters (currently spread across the field) are committing to vote Dem this time around?

Will the total money collected eventually be pooled for the use of the winner of the primaries against Trump in the general? I don't believe it works that way; candidates bank what they raised even if they pull out. But if the wrong candidate is nominated, e.g., Bernie, I suspect lots of that same Dem money will get loose and be used against him in the general campaign.

Everybody knows big money buys wins at the ballot box. It buys name recognition, friends, lies, truth, dirt, praise, venues, and exposure good and bad Does it matter whether all those dollars spent on election staff and voter persuasion originally came from the pocket of the candidate himself, other rich people, banks, unions, or common citizens?

Are you saying there's talk that Bloomberg will not run as a Democrat in 2020? (Link please.) As an Independent, maybe? Or, better yet, as a sane Republican challenging the unstable incumbent from within the party? That would be very, very interesting. A noble gesture, win or lose, by Bloomberg before he retires from public life, all in order to rid the land of Trump for good. He'd get a statue in NYC for that.

Bet? What with all the money sloshing around with several other forms of corruption and incompetence, plus the unpredictable incumbent, the last thing I was suggesting was betting either way on the outcome of 2020.

Valerie Long Tweedie said...

Excellent comments to the Times, Karen. You absolutely nailed them all!

Karen Garcia said...

Thanks Valerie, have been wondering if your part of Australia is affected by the terrible fires - please keep us posted!

Annie said...

Welcome back, Valerie!