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Micheline's Blog

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Tag Archives: Sally Kohn

Austerity the Republican Way

10 Saturday Dec 2011

Posted by michelinewalker in The French Revolution, United States

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

anti-tax extremism, dissidents in Congress, exporting jobs, les "croquants", Murray N. Rothbard, Sally Kohn, the debt, uprisings before the French Revolution

jacquou-le-croquant1

Sally Kohn

Sally Kohn

Sally Kohn:  “paid foot the bill”
On November 30, 2011, Sally Kohn (CNN) wrote:  “Consider, for instance, that the Republican austerity plan for the United States economy, advanced by U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan, chairman of the House Budget Committee.  About two thirds of the ‘savings’ he outlines comes from proposals to slash food stamps, Medicare and Social Security. But three fourths of that money would go not to paying down our government’s deficit but to giving bigger and bigger tax breaks to the rich.”

First, allow me to repeat the end of my quotation:

[b]ut three fourths of that money would go not to paying down our government’s deficit but to giving bigger and bigger tax breaks to the rich.

In other words, the United States

  • accrued an enormous debt under a Republican administration, and
  • supporters of the Republican Party would gain from an austerity plan.  Furthermore,
  • the debt incurred under a Republican administration would not be paid (the deficit would not be lowered).

Such a scenario is not only unacceptable, it is patently absurd, and matters could lead to civil disorder.

* * *

France in the seventeenth century

I may have written in a previous blog that in seventeenth-century France, the Sun-King’s century, aristocrats were exempt from paying taxes.  The peasants paid the bulk of taxes and also paid for the nation’s wars.  Moreover, when the tax-farmers came around to collect, they (the tax-farmers) often stole from the poor or were otherwise obnoxious.  In seventeenth-century France, it was possible to purchase a position and one of the more lucrative of these positions was that of the tax-farmer, or tax collector.

Line engraving by Louis Jean Desire Delaistre, after a design by Julien Leopold Boilly

Line engraving byLouis-Jean Désiré Delaistre, after a design by Julien-Léopold Boilly (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Victims

There were good tax-farmers and not-so-good tax-farmers, but the French revolted in 1789, and, on 8 May 1794, French scientist Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier (b. 26 August 1743) was guillotined.  Jean-Paul Marat had “accused him of selling watered-down tobacco, and of other crimes” (Wikipedia).  I suspect, however, that watered-down tobacco had little to with Lavoisier’s execution.

Lavoisier came from a rich family, but, more importantly, he had married the daughter of the co-owner of the ferme générale or tax-farmers.  Twenty-eight former tax-farmers were guillotined on 8 May 1794.  Ironically, a few years after he was guillotined, Lavoisier was pardoned.  But he was no guiltier than Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette.  All three were victims.

France’s peasants

But the peasants had long been victims themselves.  According to French essayist and moralist Jean de La Bruyère (16 August 1645 – 10 May 1696), the peasants did not even look human.  In his Caractères (1688), he writes that “[o]ne sees some timid animals, males and females, scattered about the countryside, black, pallid and burned by the sun…”

 L’on voit certains animaux farouches, des mâles et des femelles, répandus par la campagne, noirs, livides, et tout brûlés du soleil …

 

Murray N. Rothbard: “Rise Up! The ‘Croquants’ of the 17th Century”

In an excerpt from Murray N. Rothbard’s An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought, vol. 1, Economic Thought Before Adam Smith, entitled “Rise Up! The ‘Croquants’ of the 17th Century” (published by The Ludwig von Mises Institute, on Thursday, 22 July 2010), one can read that in seventeenth-century France, “[t]here were repeated rebellions by groups of peasants and nobles […] from the 1630s to the 1670s.  Generally, the focus of discontent and uprising was rising taxes, as well as the losses of rights and privileges.”

One rebellion, the Croquant‘s rebellion of 1636, in south-western France, “was precipitated by a sudden near-doubling of direct taxes upon the peasantry to raise funds for the war against Spain.”  French peasants protested not only about the taxes imposed upon them, but they “also protested that the royal tax-collectors carried off their cattle, clothes and tools, merely to cover the costs of enforcement, so that the principal of the tax debt could never be reduced. The result was ruin.”   The matter was investigated by un intendant.  In a letter to his superior, La Force, the intendant, wrote that he felt compelled to endorse their complaints: “It is not, Monseigneur, that I am not, by natural feeling, touched with very great compassion when I see the extraordinary poverty in which these people live.”

Fast forward: the US

Well, currently, matters do not seem much better in the United States.  As was the case in seventeenth-century France, aristocrats, i.e. the rich, want privileges exempting them from the taxes the poor and the middle class have to pay.  So four hundred years later, in the US, he poor and the middle-classes are also the ones to pay taxes and it seems they will continue to do so, while the deficit remains.

US citizens have lost fathers, daughters, sons, brothers, sisters, fiancé(e)s in wars that could have been avoided and now they pay taxes that do not even cover the unpaid cost of unnecessary wars.  It does not seem right, and, if Sally Kohn’s analysis is accurate, which it is, there will be no redress.

The time has come to put an end to the US Civil War and realize that the nation needs a government, a government the people elect.  We know from history that there can be corruption in high places, but not every president is a Richard Nixon.  Besides, Nixon was impeached.  The United States is a republic and a democracy.  It is not an absolute monarchy.

The Need for a government and regulations: self-evident, but…

Nations need a government and the government needs money because people require well-managed services: health-care, money for the elderly, money for the disabled, money for the unemployed, money to educate children, money to look after the roads, the trains, the airlines.  The government also requires funds to maintain forests and good farming land; funds to protect the environment; funds to protect the country from a would-be aggressor and, most importantly, funds to make sure everyone has a job and can afford nutritious food, clothing and an acceptable roof.

Exporting jobs: think of the consequences

Exporting jobs is one of the current ills.  Too many jobs are exported and that may have dire consequences.  Consider that if jobs are exported, the result is unemployment. Therefore having goods manufactured abroad may in fact be very costly.  If the government has to provide adequate and perhaps permanent unemployment benefits, it will levy more taxes on its citizens.  So, financially and in the long term, there may well be little to gain by exporting too many jobs.

There is considerable truth to the fable about the “Fox and the Goat” (La Fontaine (One.I.v).  Before jumping into the well, make sure you know how to get out.

Fortunately, one Republican, Senator Coburn of Oklahoma, recently stood up and said that tax deductions for the mortgage on mansions, all mansions if one owns more than one, was “welfare for the wealthy.”

Civil disorder: take a look at the US Congress

As for civil disorder, it may already be a fact.  There is a subversive element in Congress itself: the robotic naysayers.  An American President can declare war on another country, but Congress barks when he attempts to help the needy by creating jobs.

I am truly saddened by the attitude so many Republicans have adopted regarding taxes.  It is not for the poor to foot the bill.  Even the affluent have to contribute their share.  We are no longer in seventeenth-century France, where peasants supported the affluent, i.e. the aristocracy.

Could it be that the “American dream” is turning into a nighmare?

* * *

During the French Revolution, the means in no way justified the end.  But, as a musician, I enjoy Berlioz’s arrangement of Rouget de Lisle’s “Marseillaise.”  Not the words, the music.

Hector Berlioz (11 December 1803 – 8 March 1869)
“La Marseillaise”
 
La Liberté guidant le people, Eugène Delacroix

La Liberté guidant le peuple, by Eugène Delacroix (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Jacquou le croquant (2007)

© Micheline Walker
December 10, 2011
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Fraternité: Individual Needs and Collective Needs

17 Saturday Sep 2011

Posted by michelinewalker in United States

≈ Comments Off on Fraternité: Individual Needs and Collective Needs

Tags

anti-tax extremism, Bob Schlanger, Canadian boatmen, collective needs, healthy capitalism, individual needs, moderation, Sally Kohn, stimulus package, WordPress

statue 2
 
The Statue of Liberty
(Photo credit: Mrs. Yollis’ Classroom Blog) 
 
 

Liberté Égalité, Fraternité

The tripartite motto of France: liberté, égalité, fraternité started out as bipartite: liberté and égalité.  However, although it lagged behind, it is in no way the lesser third of the motto.

Two days ago, in a blog entitled: “It is the fate of princes to be ill-spoken of for well-doing.”  I suggested that a true democracy demanded equality and that such was also the case with capitalism, as capitalism was originally conceived.  However, I did not make “fraternité” or brotherhood the basis of both a true democracy and healthy capitalism.

Anti-Tax Extremism

Now, if “anti-tax extremism” (Sally Kohn, CNN, September 14th, 2011) militates against both democracy and capitalism, it seems to me that it does so because it encourages runaway individualism, thus negating the importance of collective needs.   For instance, it is legitimate to keep people away from one’s backyard.  But it is also legitimate for people to expect the town or city to keep sidewalks and streets clean.  This is why citizens pay municipal taxes.

Otherwise said, we are all individuals, but we live in a collectivity, hence the importance of brotherhood and the wrongs of ill-conceived and undiluted individualism.  Individualism and collectivism are the two faces of the same coin and any lack of balance between these two jeopardizes a democracy or a republic (France).

Moderation

In Ancient Greece wisdom was moderation and moderation, in the current case, is a middle-course between serving the needs of individuals as well as collective needs.  Problems arise when one goes too far from moderate and reasonable goals.  Extremism must therefore be contained as energetically as terrorism, because terrorism is a violent manifestation of extremism.  As for “anti-tax extremism” (Sally Kohn, CNN, September 14th, 2011), it is unbridled individualism.  It counters the reasonable, the civil and, ultimately, the diplomatic.

John Jacob Astor & the Voyageur

When, after the War of 1812, John Jacob Astor (1763 –1848) was “getting Congress to legislate the North-West Company out of the upper Mississippi Valley,” Ramsay Crooks, his “pupil and successor,” convinced him that “Congress must make an exception in the case of voyageur [Canadian boatmen] when passing a law excluding all foreigners from the American fur trade.”[i]

Crooks also pointed out  that “[i]t will be good policy to admit freely & without the least restraint the Canadian Boatmen.  these [sic] people are indispensable to the successful prosecution of the trade, their places cannot be supplied by Americans, who are for the most part are [sic] too independent to submit quietly top a proper controul [sic], and who can gain any where a subsistence much superior to a man of the interior and although the body of the Yankee can resist as much hardship as any man, tis only in the Canadian we find that the temper of mind, to render him patient docile and perserving [probably persevering].*  It could by that the Canadian boatmen were too “docile,” but they did not misunderstand individualism.

Accountability

The United States is currently experiencing its worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, because the previous Republican Administration made injudicious decisions: generous tax cuts for the rich and two unfunded wars.  In other words, Republicans created the economic crisis President Obama is trying to end, and the world remembers.  So the time has come for these hardline Republicans to be held, not entirely, but partly accountable for the harm a Republican administration has caused their nation.

Please note that I am not using the word “punish.”  Punishment is out the question.  Accountability, however, is of a higher and more dignified order.  If these Republicans will not take responsibility for the current state of the US economy and, therefore, not assist President Obama in helping pass the stimulus package their nation requires, the verdict is in.  These hardline Republicans have strayed from a middle-course and, given that the poor and the middle-class suffer, not to mention other economies, one wonders whether or not they have a conscience.

Conclusion

Even anti-tax extremists would fight anti-tax extremism if they could view it as self-serving and as a threat to the health and survival of the nation  as a democracy or res publica, things belonging to the public, including the environment.**

Think about it.

—ooo—

[i] Grace Lee Nute, The Voyageur (St Paul: Minnesota Historical Society, 1955 [1931], pp. 203-204.

statue 2© Micheline Walker 
17 September 2011
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“It is the fate of princes to be ill-spoken of for well-doing”

15 Thursday Sep 2011

Posted by michelinewalker in United States

≈ Comments Off on “It is the fate of princes to be ill-spoken of for well-doing”

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capitalism, criticism for well-doing, democracy, greed, President Obama's stimulus package, President Roosevelt, Sally Kohn, tax-cut extremism, the middle-class, WordPress

Marcus Aurelius

Marcus Aurelius (Photo credit: Google Images)

“It is the fate of princes to be ill-spoken of for well-doing.”

Marcus Aurelius credits Antisthenes (c. 445 BCE- c. 365 BCE) for stating that “it is the fate of princes to be ill-spoken of for well-doing” (Meditations, VII, 36).

Exceptions to the above quotation are so numerous that its validity is mostly lost.  Moammar Gadhafi of Libya has just been deposed and, earlier, Saddam Hussein of Iraq met an end he never expected. Earlier still, we had Hitler, Mussolini and similar tyrants.

But there have been good princes.  Roman Emperor and philosopher Marcus Aurelius was a good Emperor, one of only five good Roman Emperors.  And Lincoln was a good President, but he faced severe difficulties when he became President of the United States.  Seven States seceded between the day of his election and the day of his inauguration.  These are the circumstances that led him to sign an executive order emancipating the slaves of these States.

In the more recent past, Franklin Delano Roosevelt (30 January 1882 – 12 April 1945), also battled huge obstructionism from Republicans in having the New Deal approved.  The New Deal meant taxation and far too many rich Americans did not want to pay their fair share of taxes.

Sally Kohn (CNN, 14 September 2011) reports that “anti-tax extremism is nothing but blatant greed masquerading as lousy economics?”  Besides, the rich are taking too many jobs away from the United States.  If a product can be manufactured less expensively abroad, the product is manufactured abroad.  This is unenlightened capitalism or corporate behavior, and it eventually leads to “policies that help the rich cheat the middle class[.]” (Sally Kohn).  Does this sense to anyone?

There is nothing wrong with having a Japanese automobile maker manufacture vehicles in a US plant.  American workers are usually remunerated adequately.  There are times, in other words, when a nation shares markets with other nations for the benefit of its citizens.

But it is obvious that “anti-tax extremism” is making the rich richer and that, as Sally Kohn writes, it is time “to realize that class warfare isn’t a liberal goal but in fact a conservative reality, advanced through decades of policies that help the rich cheat the middle class[.]” The US is becoming a two-class nation: the rich and the poor, and may, as a result, soon cease to be a democracy.

Democracy demands equality and it also demands fraternité, or brotherhood, between the citizens of a country.  At this time, “anti-tax extremism” so benefits the rich that they will support political candidates, who, once they are in power, will reward their affluent benefactors with tax cuts.  Tax cuts take money away from the people and lead to gross inequality.

To make matters worse, money used to support political candidates is tax-deductible. It would therefore seem reasonable that persons who have invested tax-deductible money in a political campaign should not also reclaim their money by expecting tax cuts and other privileges.  Their money would be better used if they paid taxes commensurate with their earnings.  Money levied through taxation is money that allows an administration to serve the nation.  It is essential money.

Nor should the rich support political campaigns in the hope that they will be allowed to pollute the environment!  It is worth remembering that Michele Bachmann claimed that the planet was not melting.  Global warming has long ceased to be a matter of opinion. I would ask therefore that hardline Republicans not pull the wool over the eyes of Americans by re-arranging reality to suit the needs of the affluent.

It may be in the best interest of hardline Republicans to blindfold the electorate.  But kindly refrain from selling to the nation the seeds of its own destruction.  If extremists like Michele Bachmann and other hardline Republicans are willingly selling damaged goods to the American people, shame on them!

On the other hand, if the electorate can see that hardline Republicans are playing games to the point of manipulating reality so the rich can buy “more yachts and luxury villas” (Sally Kohn) and nevertheless vote such people into office, the nation might well deserve its sorry fate.

If the rich support political candidates that will allow further harm to the planet, fund-raising borders on corruption.  As I wrote in a previous blog, a nation does not eat its children’s bread.  Moreover, doing so by keeping the electorate in the dark is debasing and manipulative in the extreme.

Not only will hardline Republicans who fight taxation eat away at democracy, but unrestrained capitalism will run the economy amuck.  Capitalism was aimed, originally, at pooling money to build businesses and factories.  These businesses or factories hired people locally and, having earned their salary, workers usually spent it mostly locally. Current well-heeled citizens do not create jobs.

Initially, capitalism was not aimed at concentrating money in the hands of the rich and the privileged.  On the contrary!  Capitalism was aimed at putting an end to the concentration of money in the hands of the few.  We are therefore seeing the rich getting richer and the middle-class rapidly losing ground.  As for the poor, well, “let them eat cake,” as Marie-Antoinette is purported to have said, which is probably apocryphal.

No wonder, hardline Republicans look like wax museum versions of themselves: they’re intellectually dead.  It is as though they had stood still since the Civil War of 1860.

—ooo—

In short, President Obama is being “ill-spoken of for well-doing.”  President Obama needs a stimulus package that will create jobs, and citizens who have jobs will spend their money and boost the economy.

I hear that some Americans are considering moving to Canada to flee the economic perils of the United States:  a disappearing democracy and thwarted capitalism.  Canada is a nation of refugees, so Americans seeking an escape are looking in the appropriate direction, except that Canadians also fear a recession because of the ill-conceived policies of Tea Party Republicans.

Let me ask those who are considering flight to give the US another chance.  Let me ask that you to support President Obama.  There is a great deal of cash equity in the United States.  In fact, I would surmise that, at this very moment, there is sufficient wealth in the US to pay in full the debt incurred by the former Republican administration.  That debt might well be the proverbial drop in the bucket.  Help President Obama put into place policies that will make the wealthy pay their fair share of taxes.

It would be my opinion that President Obama has read Marcus Aurelius and knows that he is “ill-spoken of for well-doing.”  He is, therefore, not fully, but partly, protected, which does not mean, people should prevent him from his “well-doing.”  But do note that, except for the wealthy, the people of the US are very much at risk.

Sally Kohn, please allow me to quote you again.  Your message is my message, but you are the economist:  “But in light of the depth and breadth of our economic crisis, continuing to put the interests of a few wealthy people and big corporations ahead of the needs of millions and millions of struggling and suffering Americans isn’t just insane.  It’s immoral.” 

 

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