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Montoliu: Profit is the name of the game PDF Print E-mail
Written by Raphael Montoliu   
Wednesday, 23 September 2009
Lately, we have seen government, first under Bush then under Obama, give away billions of dollars to Wall Street, to mitigate the damage caused to the nation by obscene and cynical greed. Republicans objected mildly, for good form and to placate their constituents.


Faced with possible and urgently needed health care reform, Republicans are becoming absolutely hysterical, screaming “socialism” every time an aspect of legislation appears to even mildly favor the people at the possible expense of industry.


Let’s put this in perspective: all forms of government bailouts, industry subsidies and corporate tax incentives, which by the way have always been equally endorsed by both parties although both are equally good at playing the blame game to fool the electorate, are for all intent and purpose socialism for the wealthy, what has also been called corporate welfare.


To heavily subsidize an industry with taxpayer money is a socialist policy, contradicting basic free-market principles. In true socialist nations, the government owns industry. In pseudo-socialist nations like the US as well as in fascist nations, industry owns the government. The end result is the same, which is that government and industry have a romantic love affair, and ordinary people get screwed.


The US government has always subsidized industry, in essence intervening heavily to favor and sustain unsustainable industries, such as industrial farms, and damaging or bankrupting others, such as small farmers.


This, obviously, invalidates all claims to the existence of an American free-market system. However it should be noted that the point here is not ideology, but profit. It is not about capitalism or socialism, but about the bottom line, as America is a highly pragmatic nation, not inclined to fight over concepts but over concrete results.


Profit at the very top is the name of the game, which is why there is no left in this nation, not even a center, but a “right” (Democrats) and “far right” (Republicans), because government of the people, by the people and for the people would be denounced as a radical leftist agenda and completely un-American if actually applied.


It is rather simple: in America, all policies that favor ordinary people are denounced as “socialist,” and all that favors the rich, even through blatantly socialist policies, is called “capitalism.”


We are told that we live under a free-market system. False. We are told that this is a form of representative government. Who is represented? Who benefits from the government anti free-market, socialist policies? The rich and powerful, such as Big Oil.


Who funds elections? The rich and powerful. Who controls government, who controls policies?


There is no need to come up with an elaborate conspiracy theory to plainly see that the crooks are in charge, and it requires a certain amount of naivety on the part of the public to still be disappointed by government, it takes a certain amount of denial to even give in to cynicism: would anyone become bitter learning that a thief steals, that a liar lies?


The American government is not worse than any other … as all governments are more or less corrupt. The problem is that it has more power than any other, and consequently has the ability to strongly influence world policies and global trends, such as subsidizing industries like oil that depend upon and lead to ever more wars and suffering, rather than subsidizing industries and technologies that would sustain peace.


According to the Women’s Environmental and Development Organization, the estimated funds needed to look after basic global human needs are as follow: to provide shelter, $21 billion; to eliminate starvation and malnutrition, $19 billion; to provide clean safe water, $10 billion; to eliminate nuclear weapons, $7 billion; to eliminate land mines, $4 billion; to eliminate illiteracy, $5 billion; to provide refugee relief, $5 billion; to stabilize population, $10.5 billion; to prevent erosion, $24 billion. Total estimated budget for human needs, $105.5 billion.


The actual global military spending comes to $900 billion … $900 billion spent to oppress, destroy, and kill with ever more efficacy, versus $105.5 billion to protect and sustain life. Is this such a difficult choice? Should we really keep calling subsidizing peace and harmony between nations a socialist agenda because it benefits ordinary people and the poor, and subsidizing conflict and war a capitalist agenda because it is extremely profitable to some industries and to the rich, while allowing for the expansion of governmental bureaucracies and powers, such as Homeland Security and the Patriot Act, and an ever more effective control of a populace made to live in fear?


Don’t be fooled by ideological labels … The only ideologies of the wealthy and powerful are power and money, by whatever means necessary. If you still believe in the relevance of political ideologies, you are believing in fairy tales.


Raphael Montoliu lives in Lakeport.


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


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Greed from all.
written by James, September 25, 2009
The fact was those that were to keep a eye on the "wall streeters" was taking money from them and there in office as of yet.Greed from them on the inside and on the outside.
excellent commentary
written by Baxter, September 25, 2009
I've been impressed by many of Raphael Montoliu's commentaries, but this is the best one yet. Mr. Montoliu, you have hit the nail precisely and eloquently on the head.

Among the most brainwashed foot-soldiers of the Corporatocracy are so-called "Libertarians" who do not grasp the most elemental principal driving the business world: Competition is Bad for Profits.

The religious belief that de-regulation will lead to a "free market" and promote a sounder economy is utterly false, and hopelessly naive.

Look at insurance -- massive buy-outs have reduced the field of competition steadily during the past several decades, while profits for the remaining few insurance companies have soared almost 500%.

Look at Monsanto -- massive buy-outs have allowed it to acquire 80% of the seed market, so now they can raise prices 42% and farmers have no choice but to pay the higher prices, because who else can they buy from...? And so it goes.

The business of business is to increase profits, period.

Competition keeps prices lower, so the way to maximize profits is to eliminate the competition (so consumers will have no choices). That is the single most elementary rule of economics.

But Libertarians don't get it. They want to give the whole system over to the foxes. Heaven help us hens.

Teddy Roosevelt said "Big business needs big government" because common people don't have any other means to protect them from being exploited by powerful business interests.

Today's fanatical right-wing-nut foot-soldiers have helped dismantle (through their naive support of anti-democratic, pro-corporate policies) systems and checks that were put in place after the Great Depression for the purpose of preventing the foxes from being given complete run of the henhouses.

Limbaugh, Beck, Fox News, et al, are promoting beliefs and actions gauranteed to end the existence of an American Middle Class, and to render 95% of the citizens of the USA into permanent Third World status.

But no matter how bad it gets, here, those same delusional right-wingnuts will still be chanting "America is Number One!" and threatening to beat up anyone who attempts to apply critical thinking to the equation.

So far as quality-of-life concerns go, we're already near-bottom in most world-wide Industrialized Nation rankings, but we could be ranked dead last, and those nuts will still believe we have it better than anyone else, because their brains are closed to reality. The happy residents of "socialist" nations in Europe will be living 100 times better than the average American, but such mere facts bounce off wingnuts like water off a duck. Wingnuts live in their own little insular fantasy world, so they will never be capable of understanding how bad it really is here.

There was a great quote in a documentary about student unrest in the 1960's, in which a now-middle-aged former "radical" explained his involvement in protests twenty years before. Paraphrasing from memory, it went something like this: "I was raised to believe that America was the best and fairest nation on earth, and that we Americans were the most free. When I got older and went out into the world, I found that in reality, America fell far short of the ideals of my youth. But that doesn't mean that we cannot make this a better country. That's why I got involved -- to help make America become the great nation I was raised to believe she was."

That is the very big difference between "the left" and "the right." The "right" refuses to see reality, prefers to keep the status quo (thus supporting the corporate power structure) while ignoring America's ills. The "left" sees the disparity between America's idealized self-image and the harsh reality, and seeks to find ways to make America live up to her own exaulted self-image.

While the "right" shuts its eyes, covers its ears and shouts "We're Number One!" over and over again, the "left" sees (and is not afraid to admit) that there is room for improvement.

it appears
written by Grace OMalley, September 25, 2009
we're still following a couple of outdated and pernicious pieces of advice:

“Sell the sizzle, not the steak.” Marketing guru Elmer Wheeler, circa 1938. An inspiration for the Mad Men

“If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.” -- Joseph Goebbels, Adolf Hitler's minister of propaganda
Alternative strategies?
written by Dante, September 25, 2009
Many have have commented, indeed written long outraged articles, on the problem. The problem is obvious. The reason it continues is because so few are working on effective strategies to turn things around.
Excellent
written by Donna Christopher, September 25, 2009
RM, very well put.

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