editing by Earl of Cruise
At present we see a president in hurry with his decrets to reorganized the USA into something, we cannot even think in calmness what he is doing ... but with his speed this Trump person is creating harm.
The original Tea Party targeted crony capitalists. Today’s would be wise to follow its example.
The original Tea Party targeted crony capitalists. Today’s would be wise to follow its example.
As
an aged Benjamin Franklin rose at the Philadelphia convention in 1787
to cast his vote for the Constitution, he also cast a warning that
conservative devotees of the document’s “original intent“ readers of
conservative websites, members of the Federalist Society and of such
business-corporation funded entities as The American Enterprise
Institute, the Heritage Foundation, the Conservative Political Action
Committee, and American Legislative Exchange Council, the William F.
Buckley Program at Yale, the Tea Party, and dozens more such
conservative think-tank and “popular front” organizations should heed
now more urgently than ever before:
"I agree to this Constitution
with all its faults Franklin said, adding that it “can only end in
despotism, as other forms have done before it, when the people shall
become so corrupted as to need despotic government, being incapable of
any other.… Much of the strength and efficiency of any government, in
procuring and securing happiness to the people, depends… on the general
opinion of the goodness of that government, as well as of the wisdom and
integrity of its governors.”
The rest of Franklin’s remarks make clear just how worried he was. And he was far from alone. As I showed recently,
the founders were reading Edward Gibbon’s account of how the ancient
Roman republic had slipped into tyranny, degree by self-deluding degree,
as its powerful men titillated and intimidated its citizens into
becoming bread-and-circus mobs.
"History does not more clearly
point out any fact than this, that nations which have lapsed from
liberty, to a state of slavish subjection, have been brought to this
unhappy condition, by gradual paces,” wrote founder Richard Henry Lee.
It could happen not with a bloody coup but with a smile and a friendly
swagger, if the people had grown tired of self-government and could be
jollied along or scared into servitude.
One of these flaws is the kind of election for the president ...
The United States presidential election is an indirect election in which citizens of the United States who are registered to vote in one of the 50 U.S. states or the District of Columbia cast ballots for members of the Electoral College, known as electors. These electors then in turn cast direct votes, known as electoral votes, in their respective state capitals for President and Vice President of the United States. Each of the states casts as many electoral votes as the total number of its Senators and Representatives in Congress, while Washington, D.C. casts the same number of electoral votes as the least-represented state, which is three.
This is a reason why Hillary Clinton got 2,7 mio voters more than Trump, but not the majority of the Electoral College.
This Electoral College was installed as the Founding Fathers did not believe in the maturity of the voting populace. And with voting for Trump they showed how immature they are ... but that is alternative truth ... we had to learn avout when it came to the numbers attending the inauguration of this Trump person in comparision to those attending Obama.
Earl of Cruise
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Even Alexander Hamilton,
whose bold innovations we’re hearing so much about, saw the enormity of
the gamble the founders were taking. Campaigning for the new
Constitution, he wrote that history seemed to have destined Americans,
“by their conduct and example, to decide the important question, whether
societies of men are really capable or not of establishing good
government from reflection and choice, or whether they are forever
destined to depend for their political constitutions on accident and
force.” He was skeptical enough about that to have considered calling
for an American monarchy.
Today’s conservatives may be equally
worried about freedom’s prospects, but they tend to blame the
overbearing state and its pensioners and pandering politicians, not the
rapacity of the rich and their other investors and managers. John Adams was wise enough to blame both predators and prey:
“Obsta principiis, nip the shoots of arbitrary power in the bud, is the only maxim which can ever preserve the liberties of any people. When the people give way, their deceivers, betrayers, and destroyers press upon them so fast, that there is no resisting afterwards. The nature of the encroachment upon the American constitution is such, as to grow every day more and more encroaching. Like a cancer, it eats faster and faster every hour. The revenue creates pensioners, and the pensioners urge for more revenue. The people grow less steady, spirited, and virtuous, the seekers more numerous and more corrupt, and every day increases the circles of their dependents and expectants, until virtue, integrity, public spirit, simplicity, and frugality, become the objects of ridicule and scorn, and vanity, luxury, foppery, selfishness, meanness, and downright venality swallow up the whole society.”
So here
we are. It has come to this. And please think carefully about who Adams
had in mind when he wrote “seekers.” He didn’t mean the pensioners,
whom he’d already mentioned.
True enough, were he alive today,
Adams might denigrate Franklin D. Roosevelt and Bernie Sanders as the
people’s “deceivers, betrayers, and destroyers.” But it wasn’t only big,
corrupt government that was challenged by the original Boston Tea Party
(led partly by John Adams’ cousin, Samuel Adams). To John’s
oft-expressed delight, the Tea Party acted directly against the
multi-national corporation, The East India Company, that the rebels
insisted had corrupted government. They seized that corporation’s
property, something they’ve yet to do with Pfizer’s drugs, for example.
When they break into that company’s headquarters on 42nd Street in
Manhattan and its warehouses around the country, I’ll cheer, too.
The
founders honored the Tea Party and denigrated corporations whose
practices had driven small business-people and consumers to desperation
worse than that of today’s Tea Partiers, who don’t want anyone tampering
with their government-provided Social Security and Medicaid.
Yet
Donald Trump, who holds today’s Tea Partiers and many other
conservatives in his thrall, has criticized the overbearing state but
not the omnivorous markets that corrupt it. In in his inaugural address,
he proclaimed
that, “For too long, a small group in our nation’s capital has reaped
the rewards of government while the people have borne the cost.
Washington flourished, but the people did not share in its wealth.
Politicians prospered, but the jobs left, and the factories closed.”
He
didn’t say that those politicians prospered because they were paid off
to pass laws that permit others to prosper in ways whose costs the
people are bearing, trapped like flies in a spider’s web of
800-numbered, sticky-fingered, pick-pocketing and surveillance machines.
A few years ago, a propane deliveryman installing a new tank to
replace an old rusted one told me that the new one was “really junk”
because the government had written substandard regulations on its size
and composition. “Who do you think really wrote those regulations?” I
asked. “Your own employer wrote them, through a national association of
propane dealers.” A fleeting look of surprise and then understanding
crossed his face. He’d probably been watching too much Fox News and
needed to be reminded of realities like the conservative, corporate
American Legislative Exchange Council, which writes such bills for
dozens of state legislatures controlled by Republicans.
But what
have neoliberal Democrats done to prevent such corruption? Not enough to
have given Hillary Clinton credibility with the people who are bearing
the costs. If breaking a corrupt structure’s glass ceilings doesn’t also
involve breaking up its walls and foundations, it will produce too many
glass-ceiling breakers such as Theresa May (Trump’s new friend), Elaine
Chao (Mitch McConnell’s wife and Trump’s transportation secretary), not
to mention the late Margaret Thatcher, Carly Fiorina, Linda McMahon,
Sarah Palin, Sheryl Sandberg, and on and on.
So much for the
raiment of “diversity” that liberal Democrats have been guilty of
draping over structures of inequality that they’ve done little to
challenge. But Trump’s promises to restore jobs that, even if they do
come, won’t come with the kinds of overtime pay, health benefits,
workplace safety protections, and unions that ensure them, are equally
hollow. Instead he’ll give his supporters more of the scapegoating and
Trumpian “bread and circus” hate-fests and spectacles that drew so many
to him in the first place. That kind of politics has a history no
honorable conservative wants to repeat.
You might answer that
Americans have been here before and that the republic has recovered, as
it did when the Civil War sparked what Lincoln called “a new birth of
freedom” or when the roaring nationalist capitalism that drove World War
I and the rampant consumerism of the Roaring ‘20s met its inevitable
implosion in 1929 and sparked the suffrage movement, the New Deal and,
in time, the civil rights movement at its best. Today’s Tea Party
conservatives are so named because they’ve vowed to revive and defend
the original, small-“r” republican faith of the Revolution and
Constitution against what they think have been the hollowness of the
post-Civil War Reconstruction and the New Deal, which they blame for
inducing the dependency and weakness that Adams lamented.
But if
they really want to recover the spirit of liberty that Adams cheered,
why aren’t they taking on Pfizer and the Goldman-Sachs billionaires in
Trump’s cabinet? Why is their William F. Buckley Program at Yale putting
19- and 20-year-old students into to tuxedos and ferrying them to
receptions and dinners at posh hotels such as the Pierre in New York,
where, over filet mignon
and seven-layered chocolate cake, they dine out on the follies of
elites (though never aspiring conservative elites like themselves) whom
the program’s director Lauren Noble holds responsible
for the “disconnect between elite institutions like Yale and the
American people. As long as our elite institutions remain so
close-minded and uncharitable to the anxieties and aspirations of so
many of their fellow citizens, the outlook of our civil discourse is
grim.”
Isn’t there a less-than-faint irony in staging these
lavish affairs to call out anyone for disconnecting from their fellow
citizens? Why aren’t more conservatives disowning the grim reaper of
civil discourse, Trump, and shedding their black ties for the dress and
posture of Nathan Hale, a 1773 Yale graduate and hero of the American
Revolution, who stood up against the established but corrupted British
monarchy of his time on behalf of a nascent republic and was hanged for
it after saying, “My only regret is that I have but one life to give for
my country.”
Every member of the Buckley Program has passed Hale’s statue
outside Yale’s Connecticut Hall, where he stands, hands and feet bound,
above an engraving of his last words. In 1967, I watched Ronald Reagan
pay homage to that statue in person as I looked out from the second
floor room in Connecticut Hall where I was attending a seminar on the
Constitution taught by Wilson Carey McWilliams. That same year, as I
recounted recently, I watched living Nathan Hales who were Yale students
in my own time resist the government in the name of the republic,
risking their future fortunes and public honor by refusing conscription
into the Vietnam War.
Why don’t conservatives stop dining out so
lavishly on the follies of liberals that they’ve abandon the kitchen to
Donald Trump? The reason is that, by trading on hatred and fear, he has
swept the Republican Party to power in ways that will enact enough of
its anti-government agenda to roll back the New Deal (and possibly even
Reconstruction) even more than Reagan was able to do, and enough to
neuter their readiness to defend the Constitution against him. They’ll
owe him. They’ll fear him. They’ll bow to him, as the Roman Senate did to Augustus. (If John McCain, Lindsey Graham and a few others find the courage and principle to prove me wrong, I’ll gladly say so.)
Conservatives
who recently and loudly championed “free speech” against “cry-bullies”
of campus political correctness will melt like snowflakes before Trump’s
encroachments on the First Amendment. Touting the liberation of a
“market economy,” they’ll remain silent about the original Tea Party’s
assaults on crony-capitalist corruption of government. They’ll keep on
seducing and rewarding legions of young students who seek to prosper,
not to emulate the courage and citizen-leadership of Nathan Hale.
Ben Franklin, Richard Henry Lee, Alexander Hamilton, and the Adamses are writhing in agony.
Jim
Sleeper, a lecturer in political science at Yale, is the author of
“Liberal Racism” (1997) and “The Closest of Strangers: Liberalism and
the Politics of Race in New York” (1990).
Donald Trump interview with BILD and THE TIMES
What impact will Mr. Trump have on the luxury market?
What impact will Mr. Trump, now President-Elect, have on the cruise and travel market?
Trump, the President-Elect of the USA after 2016s Presidential Election
What impact will Mr. Trump have on the luxury market?
What impact will Mr. Trump, now President-Elect, have on the cruise and travel market?
Trump, the President-Elect of the USA after 2016s Presidential Election
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