Okay, here we go.  This ought to earn me some enmity.  Today, the first post on politics – specific stuff, not just generally. Dirtier than a 900 chat line.

Someone asked me once what my politics were and my stock reply, which I thought a lot about beforehand and worked on, is that I don’t have politics… I have principles.  That may seem a bit pretentious, but I mean it.  To me, the current two-and-a-half party system offers almost nothing principled.  Republocrats, Democritans, it’s all the same.  Neither party can claim any real coherency in their principles.  I’ll save for another post, my thoughts on the internal illogic of both parties.  As a primer, just on the issues of civil liberties (Republicans: heavy on 2nd Amendment (guns-guns-guns!), light on 1st – except corporate “free $peech”!!  Democrats: Heavy on 1st Amendment (except corporate free $peech), light on 2nd Amendment – as in, give me your gun – big on… whatever Amendment gives us a freedom to abortion).

But the issue du jour for me is populism.  Specifically, both parties routine use of populist politics in their most vile forms to win an election.  The fractures in the party itself are illustrative of the worst parts of populism – their reliance on populist sentiment, and frequently emotions of the time, to generate political will.  This can turn populism quickly into not much more than a lynch mob.  Populism (The People’s Party was the official name of the original Populist Party of William Jennings Bryan back in the ’20s) devolved because they had strong racist elements within the party, trying to reconcile themselves to the women’s movement and the temperance movement.  That’s quite a combination – yet they were all united, at least for a brief time, against “the man,” as it were – both political and corporate entrenched interests.

Populism (more generally) is defined by the Cambridge dictionary as “political ideas and activities that are intended to represent ordinary people’s needs and wishes”.  It is essentially any political discourse that appeals to the general masses – the “people” – regardless of class distinctions and political partisanship.  As one author noted, it is “a folksy appeal to the ‘average guy’ or some allegedly general will”. Remember “Joe the Plumber” from the 2008 elections?

As Yale law professor J.M. Balkin has astutely pointed out:
“An excellent study of the Republican strategy and its consequences is found in THOMAS B. EDSALL WITH MARY D. EDSALL, CHAIN REACTION (1991), which describes how pathological populist tendencies towards racism have been manipulated by the Republican party. A blueprint of how conservative Republicans might be attacked by an economic populist is offered in KEVIN PHILLIPS, THE POLITICS OF RICH AND POOR (1990).”

Populism in its best form is nothing more than a demand for greater political input by the majority of the people, a little “more” democracy.  But in its worst forms, it can produce intolerance against unpopular minorities, have a very strong (and sometimes fanatical) religious overtone, and infuse economics with morality.

This last version of populism is the one heard most often today by our own President, who continues to rail against the boogeymen of “the rich.”  (Cue the Snidely Whiplash music).

OBAMA: “I’ve said to some of the Republican leaders, ‘You go talk to your constituents – the Republican constituents – and ask them, are they willing to compromise their kids’ safety so that some corporate jet owner continues to get a tax break?’ And I’m pretty sure what the answer would be.”
THE FACTS: Obama mentioned the tax break on corporate jets six times in a speech not long ago, enough so that someone might think eliminating it would be offer significant savings to the government.  (I had someone mention this to me in a conversation not long ago, for that very premise.) From USA Today: “The benefit, which relates to how corporations write off the value of private jets, is worth just about $3 billion over 10 years, according to Republican congressional aides. The White House doesn’t dispute the figure. That pales next to the $400 billion or so in additional tax revenue Democrats have proposed in budget negotiations, and it’s negligible compared with the $2 trillion-plus Republicans want to cut to match a two-year increase in the debt ceiling. There is also no direct relationship between preserving that tax break and cutting spending in any particular budget area, despite Obama’s suggestion that federal programs for child safety would be at risk.”  i.e. What the fuck does a tax break have to do with funding for “kids’ safety?”  How come no one called bullshit on this publicly?  It is so obviously and blatant a bullshit statement it’s hard to even believe he uttered it – because I also believe he’s pretty frigging smart – meaning he knew it was bullshit before he ever said it.
President Obama and Democrats have teed off on “millionaires and billionaires, oil companies and hedge fund managers.”  So, I posted the USA Today article on my Facebook page – along with some thoughts – and got an absolute screed from people I consider relatively intelligent, alumni of my college alma mater.  They could not offer one coherent, reasoned economic thought on why the “rich” need to be taxed more and aren’t paying their “fair share.”  Let me drop a few facts (those pernicious things) from that “Conservative” bastion, the Congressional Budget Office:
The top 10% of wage earners in America pay 70% of the federal income taxes.  Just think about that for a moment.  10% of the income earners are paying 70% of the federal income tax collected.
While 46% of the people who filed returns paid ZERO taxes.  Zero.  So… (ahem), who’s getting a free ride?  Who’s not paying their “fair share” again?  Last I checked, although I did leave Engineering after 4 semesters, I remember from Calc. 3 that a positive number (70%) is more than ZERO.  So, those complaining about the “millionaires and billionaires” who aren’t paying their “fair share” – I have a very simple question that needs only a number for an answer?  How much is “fair share” for the top 10% to pay of the taxes?  If 70% is not enough (and thus not a “fair share”, how much is?)  This is a very simple, mathematical (and philosophical) question – is it 75%?  82%?  92%?  Fuck ’em, make those “rich” bastards pay the whole thing?  100%?  Would that be “fair enough?”
I could go on and on about this, but I’ve done it before and have tired of the exercise, truly.  People who vilify “the rich” – and who believe that confiscating someone else’s goods/property and giving it to someone else is somehow morally justifiable – have to concede that (a) they don’t really believe in property rights (I can show this logically, but it takes some time and I’m running out of energy for this), and (therefore) they (b) disagree with our Constitution’s enshrinement of those rights in the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause (“…nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.”)  I’ve heard people bitch about Paris Hilton and others who “inherit” their wealth and don’t deserve it – and how it’s ‘morally’ wrong and not “fair” for some to get money via inheritance and that argument at its core is a claim against property rights.  It says that one may not own and dispose of property as one wishes – there’s no way around that.  It means, categorically, that the person believes that the government has the right (on behalf of the public or whatever group it favors) to take your shit, or mine, or anyone’s for any reason it sees fit at any time – because you can’t say that it’s only about wealth transferred upon death.  I can easily devise a way to transfer my shit just prior to my death via a trust.  And now if we try to capture that, we’re firmly in the realm of taking shit BEFORE death and essentially saying the government gets to decide who gets what, when, and how much, all in the name of “fairness” to those who clamor loudly enough that it isn’t “fair” that Paris Hilton gets to reap the benefits of Conrad Hilton’s hard work.  I can’t stand Paris Hilton, but I absolutely believe and support Conrad Hilton’s right to pass along the proceeds of his hard work to his children (or grandchildren, actually).  How did he not earn that money?  From whom did he steal?  Whom did he point a gun at and force into his hotels?  Ditto for Gates, and Jobs, and Buffett (who is a douche for his part in this whole political kabuki theater, by the way).

One other worthwhile note – Penn Jillette wrote one of the greatest OpEd pieces for CNN – EVER.  Here’s the salient part from it – though it is all great (even the parts I disagree with – because I am not an Atheist, but I respect his reasons for being one).

“It’s amazing to me how many people think that voting to have the government give poor people money is compassion. Helping poor and suffering people is compassion. Voting for our government to use guns to give money to help poor and suffering people is immoral self-righteous bullying laziness.
People need to be fed, medicated, educated, clothed, and sheltered, and if we’re compassionate we’ll help them, but you get no moral credit for forcing other people to do what you think is right. There is great joy in helping people, but no joy in doing it at gunpoint.
People try to argue that government isn’t really force. You believe that? Try not paying your taxes. (This is only a thought experiment — suggesting on CNN.com that someone not pay his or her taxes is probably a federal offense, and I’m a nut, but I’m not crazy.). When they come to get you for not paying your taxes, try not going to court. Guns will be drawn. Government is force — literally, not figuratively.
I don’t believe the majority always knows what’s best for everyone. The fact that the majority thinks they have a way to get something good does not give them the right to use force on the minority that don’t want to pay for it. If you have to use a gun, I don’t believe you really know jack. Democracy without respect for individual rights sucks. It’s just ganging up against the weird kid, and I’m always the weird kid.”

Bravo, Mr. Jillette.  And dude’s a pretty fucking good magician, too.