Sunday, June 10, 2018
Spreading Our Fake View of the World
It’s
no secret that a majority of European leaders “now consider Donald Trump and the reckless
nature of his governance their gravest near term threat — ahead of Putin,
ahead of refugee flows, ahead of climate change — and the question becomes
what might they do about that.” Daily Kos, June 4th. Yet one of the hallmarks of the Trump regime
is the exceptional hubris of uneducated and ignorant appointees, mirroring
their boss’ imperious arrogance, lecturing foreign leaders on what they should
be doing in their own countries.
In early May, fresh off the
plane that delivered him to Berlin to begin his tour of duty as Trump’s
ambassador to Germany, “In a tweet after President Trump’s announcement to leave the
Iran nuclear deal, [Richard] Grenell wrote that ‘German companies doing
business in Iran should wind down operations immediately.’ Germany, alongside
France and Britain, wants to stick to the deal Trump is seeking to scrap. And
while Grenell’s post may not deviate from the official White House stance on
future European business dealings with Iran, the timing and tone struck some
German politicians, journalists and business executives as offensive and
inappropriate…
“‘It’s not my task to teach people about the fine art of
diplomacy, especially not the U.S. ambassador. But he does appear to need some
tutoring,’ said Andrea Nahles, the leader of Germany’s mainstream Social
Democratic party, striking a sarcastic tone. The Social Democrats are part of
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government and are in charge of key
responsibilities, including the Foreign Ministry.” Washington Post, May 9th. Nahles’ perception was shared by German
leaders in every political party. Grenell began his tenure by making instant
enemies, making carrying his boss’ message to those who matter close to
impossible.
Indeed, the United States is increasing viewed as a plutocracy supported
by gun-crazy, science-denying evangelicals. Trump’s approval ratings, around
43% here, send shivers of fear around the world. Meanwhile, the American dream
appears all but dead except to those who have found their way into the elite
universities that ensure continuation of the power elite while allowing a
trickle of brilliant new lower class students who have risen above the system.
The rich have never been so rich, CEOs are peaking in their salary multiple
(over 300 times) against their own average worker salaries, and wealth is
increasingly concentrated in those one percenters. Just as 70% of Americans
have pretty much the same effective buying power they had 30 years ago, those
at the top of the food chain have never made so much money.
As trade wars, unaffordable healthcare, skyrocketing tuition for
college and escalating housing and food prices are eroding what few gains those
workers have generated, income inequality in the United States is among the
worst such disparity on earth. The United Nations seems to think that the U.S.
is on a very dangerous path, one that is accelerating to much, much worse. The
June 4th Los Angeles Times explains:
“Philip
Alston, the United Nations’ special rapporteur on extreme poverty and human
rights, published a damning report [in late May] on poverty in the United
States, condemning President Trump’s administration for exacerbating the
problem of inequality by rewarding the rich and punishing the poor.
“‘The
American dream is rapidly becoming the American illusion,’ Alston states in the
report. ‘The equality of opportunity, which is so prized in theory, is in
practice a myth, especially for minorities and women, but also for many
middle-class white workers.’
“Alston,
who toured the U.S. at the end of last year, condemned the ‘dramatic change of
direction’ in policies as the Trump administration pursues high tax breaks for
the rich and cuts welfare benefits for the poor.
“Alston,
a native Australian and law professor at New York University, spoke with The Times
about his report, which he will present on June 21 to the U.N.’s Human Rights
Council in Geneva. The interview has been edited for length and clarity[:]
My assumption was that poverty
problems were more severe in many other countries. But then gradually, it
became apparent to me that, in fact, the United States, which is a land of vast
differences or inconsistencies, actually combined all of the wealth and riches
that we see in some areas with stunning poverty in other areas.
In some ways, it was captured very
nicely in Los Angeles by the contrast between the central business district and
skid row. From skid row, you see the wealth, the opulence which is so close by,
but in skid row itself, you’ve got this really large community of completely
deprived people, where not even toilets were provided. The streets stank of
urine and despair because the government is not prepared to devote serious
resources to addressing the problem…
I started off in California, where
the emphasis was on homelessness. I then flew over to Alabama, where the focus
was on racial differences and the failure to provide even basic services, like
sanitation, in areas that were very close to large cities. What was shocking
was that even basic sewage facilities are not provided, and so I saw open
sewage flowing into back gardens. And that is just something you sort of expect
in a low-income developing country, but you don’t expect it in the United
States.
I then went to Puerto Rico, which
would definitely be the poorest state in the union if it were a state. The
situation was very grim, even before Hurricane Maria, but obviously exacerbated
greatly after it. I’m told I’m not supposed to use the term, but certainly, the
conditions were very much Third World. I met people who were living without any
real access to the basic services that we’ve come to expect. Government is just
not an actor. There’s no provision of social protections at all.
I went to West Virginia, one of the
states that did not take the Medicaid expansion, where they have relatively low
rates of health insurance, and I saw the extent to which very few government
services are provided for people generally — not just health, but access to the
internet and so on. As was explained to me by government officials, if we
propose any additional spending in the budget, it’s completely out of the
question. It’s not going to be accepted by the Legislature…
The United States has the highest
inequality of the richest nations. It has the highest incarceration rate by
far. It has among the highest child mortality rates. It has the highest youth
poverty rate. It has one of the lowest levels of voter registration in the rich
countries. In essence, it scores extremely poorly on almost all of the
comparative measures when compared with other developed states.
I visited China on one of these
missions about a year ago and what I found was a country that has huge problems
in terms of human rights but, in terms of extreme poverty, has made an
absolutely concerted and genuine attempt to eliminate poverty and has succeeded
to an important extent. By 2020, they will in fact have no one living in
extreme poverty, unlike the United States.
While I don’t for a minute want to
suggest that the political system [in China] is desirable or even compatible
with democratic standards, I would very much welcome an American government
that shows a determination to lift everyone out of extreme poverty. I think
that’s what politics should be all about, and it’s not happening in the United
States…
It is going to greatly exacerbate
extreme poverty rates. That means you’ve got an ever larger section of people
that are alienated, who don’t feel the system or the government is doing
anything for them. That, in turn, begins to undermine support for democracy
because people don’t see any value in voting, they don’t see any attempt to
ensure basic conditions of well-being.
The United States is storing up
immense problems for itself. It’s extremely shortsighted. Basically, you’re
going to see great rejoicing on the part of the wealthy — and we’re not just
talking about the 1%, we’re talking about the 20% — who are going to do
increasingly well and gain increasingly more of the wealth of society. But it’s
not sustainable politically. The upheavals that we’ve seen with the election of
President Trump, with the increasingly large-scale rejection of the key
institutions of society, I think will only become more extreme as the wealth
differentials become ever greater. We are building a society where wealth and
privilege will dominate everything, where you will start to move toward the
privatization of ever more government services.
American
carmakers don’t want Trump’s proposed deregulation of mileage and air quality
standards, his trying to kill California’s right to set separate set of standards
to deal with Southern California’s legendary smog. Medical professionals and
major insurance carriers also overwhelmingly reject his attack on the
Affordable Care Act (Obamacare): “More than 95% of healthcare groups that have
commented on President Trump’s effort to weaken Obama-era health insurance
rules criticized or outright opposed the proposals, according to a Times review
of thousands of official comment letters filed with federal agencies.
“The
extraordinary one-sided outpouring came from more than 300 patient and consumer
advocates, physician and nurse organizations and trade groups representing
hospitals, clinics and health insurers across the country, the review found.
“Kris
Haltmeyer, vice president of health policy and analysis at the Blue Cross Blue
Shield Assn., said he couldn’t recall a similar show of opposition in his more
than 22 years at the trade group, which represents Blue Cross and Blue Shield
health plans and is among the organizations that have expressed serious
reservations about the administration’s proposed regulations.” LA Times.
Trump
and the newly configured Trump-led-GOP are feeling their power. They’ve eroded
every policy that passed during the Obama administration. They revel as
Democrats fight between and among their own factions, making what once assumed
an easy Democratic takeover of the U.S. House of Representatives seem a whole
lot more challenging.
But
the rest of the world no longer recognizes the United States as leader of the
free world or even as an example of successful democracy. We’ve tumbled in
stature, losing power by the day, and have gathered so much international
resistance to anything that would be good for the United States, particularly
as defined in Donald Trump’s racist and misguided “America First” mantra.
I’m Peter Dekom, and you have to
wonder who will ever trust the United States again no matter who is in power
and if we can undo the damage that a single president will have inflicted on
this great nation.
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