Dave Lindorff on the Bailout Scandal: 'The Power of No!'

In his new essay, Philly writer Dave Lindorff (thiscantbehappening.net) writes an excellent article about the proposed Wall Street bailout, and the power of our resistance to it.

--And also enjoy this classic Rage Against the Machine / Michael Moore video.


Read the full article here: http://phillyimc.org/en/node/75344

The Power of "No"!

By Dave Lindorff

The Congressional switchboard is jammed. You can get through, but it takes a dedicated finger on the redial button of your phone. Operators at the Capitol say it's been that way for a week now, as Americans across the country have been flooding their Congressional delegations with phone calls (and emails) urging them to vote "No" on the Bush/Paulson Wall Street bailout.

That today is no exception, after Democratic Party leaders (and both major party presidential candidates, John McCain and Barack Obama) bought into the plan after adding some window-dressing measures designed to make it look more palatable. This shows that the public is not fooled (calls are reportedly running better than 9:1 against a bailout, perhaps more like 99:1).

People see clearly that this is a trillion-dollar giveaway to the very people who have been hollowing out and destroying the US economy for over a decade or more by convincing both parties to let them do whatever they want to get rich, free of any kind of significant oversight or regulation......

Lindorff's Update on the Bailout Scandal

Whoa! It looks like public pressure worked for once, and at least for now, check out this update from Lindorff:

http://phillyimc.org/en/node/75430

Surprise! Congress Listened to the Voting Public!

By Dave Lindorff, reprinted with permission

The most entertaining thing about this Wall Street crisis and the refusal of the House of Representatives (not failure but refusal) to pass a bailout bill negotiated by the Bush White House and the House leadership is how shocked and upset those leaders and the pundit class have been by the idea that members of Congress would actually heed the wishes of their constituents!

The Founding Fathers always saw the lower house of Congress as voice of the people—the elected body that, because its members had to face the voters every two years, would be most responsive to public sentiment.

Because of the power of money and the role of the corporate media in filtering the information that voters get about what is actually going on, that close connection between public and public servant in the House has long ago broken down. This time, however, because the crisis hit within five weeks of the national election, and because the crisis involved something that everyone cares about—their money—it worked.

The public is paying attention, and most of us got it. It was obvious that Congress and the White House were out to screw us out of our money in order to protect the millionaire and billionaire traders and conmen who have been running the Wall Street casino for the last decade and a half without any adult supervision.

Now that people are paying attention, it will be interesting to see how these corrupt leaders, Democrat and Republican, will fashion that bailout and get it passed. Once aroused from their TV-induced slumber, the American public may not be willing to get rolled. If the anger grows, and the calls and emails to Congress—which brought down the Capitol website Monday and jammed the switchboard for several days beginning last week—continue to flood in threatening an electoral Armageddon for those who back a bailout, Congress may yet be unable to pass a bill.

It doesn’t get any better than this.

Now let’s make something clear. The stock market crash that happened on Monday was no crisis. The market can rise and fall with little or no significant impact on the broader economy, or even on those who have their retirement income invested in equities. While Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and House leaders like Speaker Nancy Pelosi or Minority Leader John Boehner may point frantically to the falling Dow as a dire warning to members of Congress to take action, it is all just scaremongering.

The real issue is not the stock market—it’s the credit markets. And these have been shut down to borrowers—both individuals and corporates—for months. Which means that there is no sudden urgency to pass a lousy, rip-off bailout bill in days without proper hearings and investigations into what is really needed.

The Bush Administration’s whole idea here from the start was to use scare-mongering and high-pressure tactics honed in the 2002 campaign to gin up a war against Iraq to get a bill through Congress that would make a virtual dictator out of the Treasury Secretary, and to siphon a trillion dollars or more out of taxpayers’ accounts and into the pockets of the already stunningly rich financial class. It was to be one final wrecking ball by the Bush/Cheney gang launched at the American economic and political system, allowing the people who have run the country into the ground over the last eight years, and their financial backers to walk away with all the cookies.

It could still happen if the public doesn’t stay fired up and angry. But for now, it’s at least exciting and deeply satisfying to see the Administration, and the cowards who run the so-called Democratic opposition in Congress, scrambling frantically to come up with a scheme to get this ripoff passed.

What should happen? Congressional Democrats should put a hold on any action until after Election Day, which after all is only five weeks off. They should say that the voters must be heard on this critical national issue of how to rescue the economy and fix the financial system. Hearings should be scheduled in the relevant committees—oversight, banking, securities regulation, housing, the elderly, health and human services, etc. (yes, Rep. Dennis Kucinich is right in observing that given that most bankruptcies in the US are caused by medical emergencies, if the US had national healthcare, we wouldn’t have the housing foreclosure crisis)—and a special prosecutor should be established to look into the corruption behind all the recent financial sector failures. The real victims of the deregulatory orgy need to be heard, as do some of the 200 economists (including at least three nobel laureates) who have opposed this bailout. Then when the true nature and extent of the crisis and its causes have been laid out in clear public view, along with some real solutions for real people, appropriate legislative reforms should be drawn up, debated and voted upon, to be finally enacted into law.

No rush to judgment! No short-circuiting of the critical process of hearings!

The economy will survive this process.

What we cannot survive is a continuation of secret government, backroom deals and trillion-dollar bailouts.

BACK TO THE PHONES!

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