Thursday, December 26, 2019

Worse Than Scrooge



Over the holidays, Paul Krugman wrote that some people are comparing Donald Trump to Scrooge. But they're wrong. By Trump era standards, Scrooge was a nice guy:

While Dickens portrays Scrooge as a miser, he’s notably lacking in malice. True, he’s heartless until he’s visited by various ghosts. But his heartlessness consists merely of unwillingness to help those in need. He’s never shown taking pleasure in others’ suffering, or spending money to make the lives of the poor worse.
These are things you can’t say about the modern American right. In fact, many conservative politicians only pretend to be Scrooges, when they’re actually much worse — not mere misers, but actively cruel. This was true long before Donald Trump moved into the White House. What’s new about the Trump era is that the cruelty is more open, not just on Trump’s part, but throughout his party.

The Republicans are, indeed, full of humbug:

After all, the explosion of the budget deficit under Trump shows that Republican claims to care about fiscal responsibility were always humbug, that they’re perfectly willing to slash taxes on the rich without offsetting spending cuts. Furthermore, because America spends relatively little money helping the poor, even harsh cuts — like the Trump administration’s new rules on food stamps, which will hurt hundreds of thousands — will at best save only tiny amounts compared with the cost of tax cuts.
And in important cases, the right is so eager to hurt low-income Americans that it’s willing to do so even if there are no budget savings at all.
Consider the case of Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act, which a 2012 Supreme Court decision made optional: States could choose not to participate.
Why would any state make that choice? After all, the federal government will pay 90 percent of the cost, and experience shows that expanding Medicaid produces indirect cost savings — for example, by letting states reduce aid to hospitals for uncompensated costs.
Furthermore, the federal funds brought in by Medicaid expansion boost a state’s economy, which raises tax revenues. So expansion is, from a state fiscal point of view, neutral or even net positive. Why would any state turn it down?
Yet 14 Republican-controlled states, many among the nation’s poorest, are still refusing to expand Medicaid.
At the same time, a number of states are trying to limit access to Medicaid by imposing stringent work requirements. This may sound like a cost-saving measure, but it isn’t — trying to enforce work requirements, it turns out, costs a lot of money.
The point is that these state governments are only pretending to be penny pinchers. In reality, they’re actively trying to make peoples’ lives worse, and they’re willing to lose money to accomplish that goal. But why?

The answer is painfully clear. In the end, it's all about cruelty:

In 2018, The Atlantic published a memorable essay by Adam Serwer titled “The Cruelty Is the Point,” about the political importance of shared pleasure from other people’s suffering. Serwer was inspired to write that essay by photos of lynchings, which show groups of white men obviously enjoying the show. Indeed, in America, gratuitous cruelty has often been directed at people of color.
But as Serwer also noted, it’s not just about race. There are more people than we like to imagine who rejoice in the suffering of anyone they see as unlike themselves, especially anyone they perceive as weak.

The ugly truth is that today's Republicans are sadists -- led by the Sadist-in-Chief:

What Trump has brought to his party is a new willingness to be openly vicious.
Their attempts to justify cruelty as being somehow in the national interest are low energy, especially compared with the enthusiastic nastiness Trump exhibits at political rallies. Trump has celebrated and reportedly wants to campaign with servicemen he pardoned after our own military convicted them of or charged them with war crimes, clearly because he likes the idea of indiscriminate killing — and so do some of his supporters.

Ebenezer Scrooge was a mean, sad, old man. Donald Trump -- and the party he leads  -- are much worse than Scrooge.

Image: Quotefancy

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm not sure if this post is about tax cuts or cruelty by politicians, but I'd like to make a quick comment about tax cuts.

In the last 1 - 2 decades, cutting taxes has become very popular by politicians to attract voters. I'm not that familiar with Ontario, but in BC, the provincial Liberals (conservatives in disguise) cut income taxes several times. The first time was just after they ousted the NDP in 2002(?), and it was a fairly large tax cut. Federally, the current government has indicated that they will cut taxes for the "middle class". Now, everybody likes more money in their pocket, but it seems to me that people are not thinking this through. For example, in BC health care is getting pretty sketchy in correlation with tax cuts. I have heard that 30% of the people cannot find a family doctor. I know from experience that going to a walk-in clinic requires queuing long before the clinic opens and then requires a long wait once you get inside. Some clinics fill up and close their doors before noon. Going to emergency is usually an all-day affair. It was not like this 20 years ago.

Now we are in big do-do because raising taxes will be political suicide, so we are stuck.

Yet when you read comments (say on the CBC news website), people are still complaining that we are being "taxed to death".

GDN

Owen Gray said...

The American jurist Oliver Wendall Holmes, Jr. was famous for declaring that "taxes are the price we pay for civilization," GDN. That statement is as true today as it was when Holmes made it.

Anonymous said...

Well, at least the general scrooge-ness of modern top-down society hasn't yet extended to ending Boxing Day as a holiday in Nova Scotia. No crazy Boxing Day scrums at stores here -- that starts tomorrow! It's turkey and ham sandwich day here, and what's on TV, anyway?

I still cannot get it through my head why regular folk in the US and UK think that voting in right wing governments is a good idea. Tax cuts for the rich, austerity for the rest. It seems on the face of it to be masochism. Ontario? Well, you guys wanted rid of Wynne and too bad Ford was the answer, while Alberta lives in its own bubble. I have no idea what Saskatchewan's excuse is.

The US of course doesn't even have the vague excuse of matching tax cuts for the wealthier people with budget cuts -- the military gets half of the expanded-deficit federal budget, and the Dems thought giving the military even more money than Trump requested was a damn fine idea. So they voted alongside the Repubs for that giveaway. Military bases in virtually all states plus a Defense contractor plant in most states seems to have been the rationale. Even Bernie likes having F-35's stationed near Burlington, VT.

The West seems to running down a rabbit-hole of neoliberalism. Macron is privatizing France at a great rate, and cutting back long-established bennies and pensions, even cutting away at France's month off -- August. He tells his countrymen they must be more efficient to compete. Compete at what is the question.

Who knows when and if the nonsense will end? Meanwhile, Happy New Year!

BM

Owen Gray said...

That's the overarching question, BM. When will it all end? Probably when it all comes down around our heads. That said, Happy New Year.