Populism In America: "Follow The Money"
By Charles Hugh-Smith
December 08, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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If you want to understand today's populism, don't
look to the mainstream media's comically buffoonish
propaganda blaming the Russians: look at the four
issues listed below.
One of the most disturbing failures
of the mainstream media in this election cycle was
its complete lack of historical context for Trump's
brand of populism. If you
consumed the mainstream media's coverage of the
campaign and election, you noted their obsession
with speech
acts (as opposed to concrete actions),
personalities and conspiracy
theories pinning American populism on Russian
propaganda.
The mainstream media dismisses populism by pushing
two absurdly ignorant narratives:
1. Populism (we're told) always leads
to authoritarian rules and/or fascism (i.e. Nazism). All
populist movements are therefore tarred with the
Nazism brush: no
good could possibly come from Populist movements
because they always lead to fascism.
This is convenient for the apologists
of the embattled status quo, but it's utterly false: America's
enormous populist movements have never led to
fascism.
2. Since the status quo is wonderful
and America's economy is strong, dissent
or populism cannot be home-grown--it must be the
work of the Devil, in the guise of "foreign
propaganda."
Notice the classic propaganda ploy
being deployed here: since
dissent is impossible in a regime as well-managed
and prosperous as America's status quo, populism
must be driven and controlled by evil foreign
agents.
This is laughably absurd: America's
populist movements, including the present one, have
been revolts against the concentrated wealth and
power of self-serving status quo elites.
If the mainstream media actually employed
well-informed analysts rather than empty-headed
politically correct parrots, you might have learned
that America has a long and rich history of populism
that did not lead to authoritarianism or fascism.
There have been several major
populist movements against the ruling elites:Andrew
Jackson's election in 1828 stemmed from such a
revolt, and the Populist Party (a.k.a. People's
Party) and Socialist Party movements of the late
1800s and early 1900s were progressive/left-wing
reactions to the enormous concentrations of wealth
and power in the elites of the day.
Both movements attacked the money and
credit mechanisms of the elites: in
Jackson's case, the target was the Second Bank of
the United States; in the Populist Party era, the
issue was free
silver, i.e. the expansion of the money supply
via issuing silver coinage.
There are two dynamics at work
beneath the surface of populist movements.One
is a transformation in the dominant mode
of production, i.e. the organization and
ownership of the productive assets that power
economic growth, and the second is the political
realignment that results from a transformation
in the mode
of production.
In the 19th century, agrarian interests that were
losing power to industry and banking/ finance
typically found expression in populist movements.
Such movements included an elite
faction that saw its power and wealth being
threatened by new elites. For
example, England's landed gentry resisted the
political and economic power of industrialists, who
sought an expansion of the engines of their wealth:
global trade and a poorly paid, mobile urban
workforce.
The winds of change can be understood by tracking which
wealthy factions are funding the two political
parties. Author Thomas Ferguson makes the case
that Franklin Roosevelt won the presidency partly as
a result of the financial support of large
multinational corporations with global interests.
Roosevelt's opponents were typically domestic
companies that depended on cheap labor and stiff
tariffs to keep out competition.
The current era of populism is
perhaps best typified by Bernie Sanders,
who raised a phenomenal $234 million from
individuals, with Political Action Committees (PACS)
contributing a thin sliver of $6.3 million to his
campaign.
There is no better proof that today's
populism is deep-rooted and broad-based than
Sanders' astounding $234 million contributions from
individuals, not elites.Please
name me another presidential candidate who raised
97% of their funding from small donors.
Hillary Clinton raised a
gargantuan $1.3 billion,of which $188 million came
from Super-PACs. A tiny percentage of her total
funds came from small donors; her campaign raised
$556 million and the Democratic Party's (elitist)
fund-raising committees ponied up another $544
million. (source)
Trump's campaign raised about 27% of its funds from
small donors, compared to the Romney campaign's 6%.
Today's populism has drawn funding
from individuals and enterprises who have been left
out of globalism's massive increase in elitist
wealth. If we look for
issues that crossed party lines, i.e. that drew
support from both Sanders and Trump supporters, we
find four core issues:
1. Anti-globalism
2. disgust with the Establishment's
self-serving corrupt elites, i.e.
anti-elitism
3. Economic nationalism
4. Anti-endless-neocon-wars, drone strikes, foreign
entanglements
Issues 1, 3 and 4 were encapsulated in Democrat
George McGovern's 1972 campaign slogan come
home, America, a message disdained by today's
Democratic Party elites, who have skimmed
hundreds of millions in campaign contributions from
global finance and corporate interests.
Take a look at these charts of U.S.
corporate profits and the decline of labor's share
of GDP, and ask: isn't the
source of today's populist disgust and anger at
America's ruling elites rather obvious?
Is it coincidence that corporate
profits skyrocketed from about 2001, right when
labor's share of GDP fell off a cliff? If
you want to understand today's populism, don't look
to the mainstream media's comically buffoonish
propaganda blaming the Russians: look at the four
issues listed above and these two charts.
The views
expressed in this article are the author's own and do
not necessarily reflect Information Clearing House
editorial policy. |