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Ned Sublette in Portland on the World That Made New Orleans

Today's Stories

April 9, 2008

Paul Craig Roberts
The Fading American Economy

Winslow T. Wheeler
Congressional Theater: the Petraeus / Crocker Hearings

April 8, 2008

Mike Whitney
Should Khalid Sheikh Mohammed be Set Free?

Nikolas Kozloff
Bush Bullies Congress on Colombia Deal

Greg Moses
Migrant Detention in South Texas

Joshua Frank
The Other Military Draft

John Ross
Mexico City's Urban Tribes Go on the Warpath Against EMOS

Michael Donnelly
Hillary's Western Swing

John V. Walsh
Why Obama Lost Massachusetts

Jeff Nygaard
Health, Security and Mandates

Bill Piper
Last Shot for a Bush Legacy?

Sen. Russ Feingold
Legal Representation and the Death Penalty

Website of the Day
Catonsville 9, Forty Years Later

 

April 7, 2008

Ishmael Reed
The Irish Black Thing

Harry Browne
Irish Peace Activist Acquitted; Deported

Uri Avnery
Tibet and Palestine

Lenni Brenner
Obama's Constitution, His Pastor and His Unbelieving Mom in Heaven

Ayesha Ijaz Khan
America Must Respect Pakistan's Democracy

Robert Fisk
Fearful Lives in the Land of the Free

Edwin Krales
Ensuring the Success of Fascism in Spain: the US Corporate Role

Chris Genovali
Vancouver Island's Dwindling Ancient Forests

Website of the Day
LA Artists Against War

 

April 5 / 6, 2008

Alexander Cockburn
Did the Elites Want MLK Dead?

Ramzy Baroud
There are No Checkpoints in Heaven

Ralph Nader
Runaway Bailouts

David Yearsley
How Scott Joplin Had Wall Street Down

Saul Landau
Sex Politics in America

Paul Craig Roberts
The Petraeus and Crocker Show

Lawrence Korb / Ian Moss
Rev. Jeremiah Wright, a True Patriot

Seth Sandronsky
Meet America's Promise Alliance: Colin Powell's New Gig

John Ross
La Cumbia de la Doctrina Bush: Colombia Kills Four Mexican Students in Ecuador Bombing

Robert Fantina
McCain, Republicans and Family Values

David Michael Green
Back to Disaster: Hoover at Home, Tet Abroad

Missy Beattie
McCan't

Patrick Bond
Vultures Circle Zimbabwe

Dr. Susan Block
The New American Pot Dealers

Phyllis Pollack
The Stones Meet the Press

Adam Engel
The Boobus in the Lie

Jeffrey St. Clair
Booked Up

Poets' Basement
Diamand and St. Clair

Website of the Weekend
Richard Pryor Goes to the Gun Shop

 

 

April 4, 2008

Dave Lindorff
The Night I Heard King Had Been Shot

Greg Moses
Missing King

Ron Jacobs
Two Murders, 40 Years On: Bobby Hutton and Martin Luther King, Jr.

Alan Farago
Show Me the Size of Your Bail Out and I'll Show You Mine

Alison Weir
Funding Our Decline: U.S. Aid to Israel

David Rosen
Rape as an Instrument of Total War

Robert Weissman
The Unrealized Dream

Jacob Hornberger
Was Killing Iraqi Children Worth It?

Jackie Corr
Hillary and Obama Head for Butte

Carl Finamore
Taking On United Airlines

Laray Polk
We Are All Dith Pran

Susie Day
Advice for the War-Torn

Website of the Day
Winter Soldiers: a Video Portrait

 

April 3, 2008

Peter Morici
The Deepening Recession

Joe Bageant
The Audacity of Depression

Andy Worthington
Cleared But Still Detained: The Ordeal of Moroccan Prisoner Said al-Boujaadia

Nikolas Kozloff
Condi's Divide and Rule Strategy in South America

Rannie Amiri
The U.S. Disdain for Mideast Democracy

David Macaray
More Labor Strife in Hollywood

Stephen Lendman
Lynne Stewart's Long Struggle for Justice

Website of the Day
The True Face of Da Vinci?

 

April 2, 2008

Diane Farsetta
Indian Point on the Potomac

Harry Browne
Bertie Ahern Laid Low by Secretary

Wajahat Ali
The Folly of Attacking Iran: a Conversation with Steven Kinzer

George Wuerthner
Open Season on Wolves

Col. Dan Smith
The Militarization of America

Philippe Marlière
The Politics of Bling-Bling in France: Sarkozy's Cultivated Anti-Intellectualism

Steve Early
A Purple Uprising in Oakland

Bernard Chazelle
Saving the American Left

Reza Fiyouzat
Bowling in Hell

 

April 1, 2008

Jeff Leys
Fracturing the Peace to End the War

Thomas P. Healy
Restoring the Constitution: a Conversation with Daniel Ellsberg

Winslow T. Wheeler
When Pigs Sprout Wings: Mangled Rationales for a Fatter Defense Budget

Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
New Deal Nostalgia

Patrick Irelan
Cocaine, Colombia and the Cartels

Andy Worthington
The Case of Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani

John V. Walsh
The Shunning of Ralph Nader

Michael J. Smith
Woolly Mamet

Robert Weissman
The New Philip Morris--Even Worse Than the Old?

Dave Lindorff
Bush's Defining Moments

Martha Rosenberg
Brain Mist Disease: Boss Hog's Gift to Humanity

Website of the Day
Support Briana!

 

March 31, 2008

Mike Whitney
Dead on Arrival: Paulson's Fixit Plan for Wall Street

Mats Svensson
Walls, Tunnels and Daily Humiliations

Paul Rockwell
Hillary's Lies About Outsourcing

Paul Craig Roberts
A Third American War in the Making?

Patrick Cockburn
Sadr Calls for Ceasefire

Peter Dale Scott
The Showdown

Alfredo Molano
Cultura Mafiosa in Colombia

Peter Morici
Why Paulson's Reform Plan Falls Short

Uri Avnery
Day of the Land, 32 Years Later

Michael Simmons
The American Bard in New Orleans

Betsy Roberts / Karen Orr
The Clorox Coup

Phyllis Pollack
First the Sun and Then the Moon: Scorsese Does the Stones

Website of the Day
Five Years Too Many

 


March 29 / 30, 2008

Alexander Cockburn
When They Pick Up the Phone at 3 AM, What Will They Say?

Patrick Cockburn
Iraqi Police Refuse to Back Maliki's Attacks on Medhi Army

Mike Whitney
Bernanke's Next Big Bail Out Plan

Christopher Brauchli
The Pastor of Armageddon and the Slave Sale: McCain, Lieberman and Rev. Hagee

William Blum
China, Tibet and the Propaganda Olympics

Robert Fantina
Iraq Troika: McCain, Obama and Clinton

John Ross
AMLO, the Comeback Kid? Fighting the Privatization of Mexico's Oil

Allison Kilkenny
Shady Lending Hits Home

Nelson P. Valdés
Cuba, the Beatles and Historical Context

Suzanne Baroud
The Great Lake of Gaza: a New Crisis in the Making

Richard Rhames
Social Security: Throwing Granny from the Gravy Train

Christopher Fons
Transcending the 60s? Obama and the Baby Boomers

Carl Finamore
Misery at 35,000 Feet: Mergers Stall, Fares Soar, Services Slump and Consumers Sour

Eamonn McCann
Hillary Misremembers Again!

Missy Beattie
Justice and the Monsters of War

Fred Gardner
Jim Thorpe, All-American

Kim Nicolini
Cock Chuggers and Cheese Curls: Richard Kelly's "Southland Tales"

David Yearsley
"All the World's a Hospital"

Jeffrey St. Clair
Booked Up

Poets' Basement
Valentine and Ko Un

Website of the Weekend
Hidden Iraq

 

March 28, 2008

Saul Landau
Growing Dread About Iraq

Alan Farago
Other People's Money: the Chop Shop Economy

Peter Morici
Knocking Down False Economic Gods

Andy Worthington
Plight of the Uyghus: a Chinese Muslim's Desperate Plea from Guantánamo

Felice Pace
Ashes of Lies: Why No One Trusts the US Forest Service

Peter Montague
Sierra Club Cleans House -- With Clorox!

Dave Lindorff
The Mumia Exception


March 27, 2008

Patrick Cockburn
Basra Erupts

Binoy Kampmark
Free Market Apostates

Joanne Mariner
"Was George Washington a Terrorist?"

Norman Solomon
NPR News: National Pentagon Radio?

William S. Lind
Mars Only Knocks Once: a Prognosis for Iraq

John V. Walsh
Obama's Speech: a Touch of Bigotry?

Robert Weissman
How Things Work

Ron Jacobs
Meeting Charlie Ehlen

Ralph Nader
Put Impeachment Back on the Table

David Macaray
Court Rules Against Grocery Workers

John Borowski
Clearcutting the History of Forest Destruction

Website of the Day
Going Out for an English

 

March 26, 2008

Stan Cox
The Germs Next Door

Sharon Smith
Greed Pays: Welfare on Wall Street

Anita Sinha / Jill Tauber
Dreams Turned into Rubble in New Orleans

Matt Vidal
So Much for the Self-Regulating Market

William S. Lind
Operation Cassandra

Joe Mowrey
The Audacity of Hypocrisy: Obama's Pandering to Israel

Dave Lindorff
Duck and Cover (Up): Hillary Under Fire

Ray McGovern
Frontline's War: Too Timid, Too Little, Too Late

Justin Smith
Why Race and Gender are Separate Issues

Sam Husseini
The Winter Soldier Hearings and Indy Media

Martha Rosenberg
Blood on Ice: Gentlemen, Pick Up Your Clubs

Michael Dickinson
Politicians as Dogs

Website of the Day
The Wal-Mart Virus: How the Infection Spread

 

March 25, 2008

Ishmael Reed
The Crazy Rev. Wright

Corey D. B. Walker
The Politics of Jeremiah Wright

Linn Washington Jr.
Racism in America and Other Uncomfortable Facts

Alan Farago
The Money Launderers: a Picnic for Wall St. Insiders

Vijay Prashad
A Glimmer of Hope From the Gulf Coast

Joshua Frank
A Silver Lining to the Bush Years?

Ralph Nader
How Public Servants Can Help End This War

David Rovics
If I Can't Dance: Why is the Left So Boring?

Peter Morici
America's Banks are Broken

Dave Zirin
Olympic Flames: China's Crackdown in Tibet

David Krieger
The Crisis in Tibet

Website of the Day
Memorializing Iraq

March 24, 2008

Jeffrey St. Clair
Blonde Ambition: Hillary's Berserker Campaign for 2012

Peter Morici
Digging Out of the Recession

Uri Avnery
Two Americas

Wajahat Ali
First of the Mohicans: an Interview with Rep. Keith Ellison

Paul Craig Roberts
Inside the Shell Game

George Ciccariello-Maher
The Coming War on Venezuela

Stephen Lendman
Sami Al-Arian's Long Ordeal

Christopher Brauchli
Possessing Someone Else's Country

Cat Woods
A Letter to Mom on Obama

Stacey Warde
Tax Burden

Dave Lindorff
The American Dead Hits 4,000, But Who's Counting?

Website of the Day
Live from the Longest Walk

 

March 22 / 23, 2008

Ralph Nader
Bush Blisters the Truth on Iraq

Nicole Colson
Can You Afford to Feed Your Family?

James Petras
The Cost of Unilateral Humanitarian Initiatives

Laura Carlsen
From Bombs to Markets: The Andean Crisis and the Geopolitics of Trade

Greg Moses
Tolerance and the American Pulpit

Andy Worthington
Torture Stories Dog Guantánamo Trials

Michael Dickinson
Art on Trial

John Ross
Bush's Surge Hits Mosul

Missy Comley Beattie
Killer Economics

David Michael Green
Happy Anniversary, America!

Ramzy Baroud
The Coming Uncertain War on Iran

Martha Rosenberg
Easter Egg Shells from Hell

Paul Watson
Evolution is Going to the Dogs in the Galapagos

Isabella Kenfield
Monsanto's Raid on Brazil

James Murren
Logging v. Water in Honduras

Jacob Hornberger
Sex and the Immigration Officer

Kathlyn Stone
Ben Heine, Master of the Art of Resistance

Seth Sandronsky
Rethinking New Mexico's History

Kim Nicolini
Class, Gender and Abortion in Communist Romania

Jeffrey St. Clair
Booked Up: What I'm Reading This Week

Poets' Basement
Wilson, Woods, Gibbons and Orloski

Website of the Weekend
Merci, McCain!

 

March 21, 2008

Marleen Martin
Land Behind Bars: the Hidden Casualties of America's "War on Crime"

Peter Montague
Run Your Car on Coal? Maybe Not

Saul Landau
Monroe's Deadly Doctrine

Anis Hamadeh
Merkel in the Knesset

Jacob Hornberger
McCain's Al Qaeda Scare: Slip or Tactic?

Khalil Nakhleh
Al Nakba of 1948: How Long Will It Persist?

Adam Isacson
Colombia, Paramilitary Threats and Assassinations

Kenneth Couesbouc
Money for Nothing

Madis Senner
Will the Feds Underwrite the Stock Market?

Monica Benderman
The Costs of Freedom: What Are You Willing to Pay?

Website of the Day
Stop Foreclosures and Evictions

March 20, 2008

Damien Millet /
Eric Toussaint
The Triple Failing of the Big Private Banks

Mike Whitney
Winding Up Bear

John Ross
What Do We Owe Iraq?

Dave Lindorff
Paying the Piper: the Bodies and Bills are Piling Up

Wajahat Ali
Pakistan on Fire

Jill Nagle
Memo to Sex Workers: Stop Financing Shock Journalism

Manuel Garcia, Jr.
Obama and the Psychic Auto-Shrink-Wrapping Called Race in America

Dan La Botz
Obama's Race Speech

Robert Weissman
Alternative Power: Shutting Down the API

Stella Dallas /
Jennifer Matsui

Apostasy Now! Mamet, Enter Stage Right

Website of the Day
The Angry Monk

 

March 19, 2008

Patrick Cockburn
A War of Lies

Robert Fisk
The Little Men and the Inferno

Jeff Taylor
Five Years of War in Iraq

Ed Ruggero
From Pinkville to Iraq: the Dark Anniversary of My Lai

Ron Jacobs
Who'll Stop the Rain?

Christopher Fons
Obama Takes the Race Bait

Sherwood Ross
In Defense of Rev. Wright

Cynthia McKinney
An Urgent Crisis: Confronting America's Racial Disparities

Joshua Frank
The Kool-Aid That Kills

Robert Weissman
Monsanto's Genetic Food Gamble

Walter Brasch
It's a Welfare State--If You're Rich

Yifat Susskind
Iraqi Women Resist the Occupation

Andrew Wimmer
War Demands Its Due

Website of the Day
Glimpses of Nature

 

March 18, 2008

David Price
The Military "Leveraging" of Cultural Knowledge

Paul Craig Roberts
The Collapse of American Power

Tim Wise
Of National Lies and Racial America: Jeremiah Wright, Barack Obama and the Unacceptability of Truth

Patrick Cockburn
One of the Most Disastrous Wars Ever Fought

Conn Hallinan
Afghanistan, a River Running Backward

James T. Phillips
Monsters: Past, Present and Wannabe

Uri Avnery
The Killing in Bethlehem

David Macaray
Could Wal-Mart Revive the Labor Movement?

Marjorie Cohn
Beware an Attack on Iran

Peter Zinn
Obama in New Orleans

Dan La Botz
The Economic Crisis, Labor and the Left

Monica Benderman
Where are We Going?

 

March 17, 2008

Pam Martens
The Fed's Wall Street Dilemma

Sasan Fayazmanesh
The US, Iran and the Policy of Dual Containment

Nelson P. Valdés
The Imperial Branding of Simon Bolivar and the Cuban Revolution

Peter Morici
The Corrosive Consequences of the Trade Deficit

Wajahat Ali
Disrobing the Nine: a Conversation with Jeffrey Toobin on the Supreme Court Since 9/11

Ronnie Cummins
Beyond Progressive Malpractice: Taking Down Big Pharma

Shaun Harkin
Saint Patrick's Day in Fortress America

Ali Khan
No Pardon for Musharraf

Robert Jensen
Beyond Peace

P. Sainath
Oh, What a Lovely Waiver!

Greg Moses
Jeremiah was a Bullhorn

Dr. Susan Block
Advice for Eliot Spitzer

Website of the Day
No Cowboys

 

March 15 / 16, 2008

Patrick Cockburn
How to Destroy a Country in Five Years

Mike Whitney
Bearly Alive: Investment Giant Rushed to ICU by Panicky Fed Chief

Ralph Nader
Of Laws and Men

Robert Pollin
It's Still the Economy, Stupid

Diane Christian
The Poetics of Perversity: From Boccaccio to Spitzer

Wajahat Ali
Faking the Hood: a Conversation with Ishmael Reed

Tom Wright /
Therese Saliba

Rachel Corrie's Case for Justice

Alan Farago
Back to Florida: Where Bushtime Began

Greg Moses
Raiding the Family Room in Texas

Michael Hudson
A Grand Global Bargain?

Martha Rosenberg
Why Hillary's Favorite Chicken Company is Eying China

John Goekler
Fourth Generation Warfare in a Fifth Generation Conflict

Uzma Aslam Khan
A Letter to Barack Obama: Where's the Change, Barack?

Oren Ben-Dor
The Silencing of Gilad Atzmon

David Underhill
Mammon, Morals and the Mobile Tanker Deal

Fred Gardner
The Education of Eliot Spitzer

David Michael Green
Why Spitzer Should Have Resigned (and Why He Shouldn't Have)

Rev. William E. Alberts
Jesus, Entombed in Heaven

Gail Dines
It's All About the John: Prostitution and Male Power

David Yearsley
Conducting, Anarchy and the Problem of When to Begin

Chris Clarke
Walking with Zeke: the Luckiest of Dogs

Poets' Basement
Anderson, Lodge & Subiet

Website of the Day
Deviant Art

 

March 14, 2008

Paul Craig Roberts
Watching the Dollar Die

Don Santina
Vichy Democrats: Pelosi and the Politics of Collaboration

Patrick Cockburn
Iraqi Mother Vows Revenge on US: How She Lost Her Husband and Her Sons

Tim Rinne
StratCom Rules! The Next War Will Start in Nebraska

Robert Fantina
In Torture We Trust

Saul Landau
Letter to the Presidents-in-Waitings

David Macaray
Common Myths About Labor Unions

Franklin Lamb
Is the Bush Administration Switching Horses in Lebanon

Michael Neumann
The One State Illusion: Reply to My Critics

March 13, 2008

Paul Craig Roberts
Republicans and "Free Market" Zealots Bring Disaster to America

Mike Whitney
Meltdown Looms Larger As Credit Markets Freeze

Assaf Kfoury
"One-State or Two State?"- Sterile Debate on False Alternatives

Andy Worthington
Afghan Hero Who Died in Guantánamo: The Background to the Story

Adam Federman
From Autopia to Autogeddon: Cars Reach the End of the Road

March 12, 2008

Dave Lindorff
Bringing Down Spitzer: It's the Big Brother Who Should Bother US

R.F. Blader
The Spitzer Backlash

Yonatan Mendel
How to be an Israeli Journalist. Never Write "Murder" or "Palestine"

Jonathan Cook
One State or Two? Neither. The Issue is Zionism

Bill and Kathy Christison
Fallon and Gates -- At Least One Cheer

James J. Brittain
Was the U.S. Involved in Killing the FARC-EP Leaders

Ron Jacobs
"All the Money You Make Will Never Buy Back Your Soul"

March 11, 2008

Paul Craig Roberts
How to End the Subprime Crisis

Ed O'Loughlin
How Israeli Troops Invade Homes in Gaza, Brutalize, Smash and Steal

Ramzy Baroud
'Unwavering Commitment' to Inequality

Kathy Christison
One State or Two? The Debate Over Israel and Palestine

China Hand
PRC Plays it Cool, as U.S. Tries to Amp Up Pressure on Iran

John Joslin
Thank You, Nafta! Welcome to Weirton, Home of the Discount Cigarette

Mike Averko
Serb Politics, Kosovo and the Moscow-Washington Divide

Ben Rosenfeld
Gavin Newsom's Kneejerk Plan

Thierry Paquot
High Rise, Low Spirits:The Curse of the Tower Block

March 10, 2008

Uri Avnery
"Kill A Hundred Turks and Rest": The Five-Day War in Gaza

Col. Dan Smith
Scoring the "Surge" and What Lies Beyond

R.F. Blader
Why "Lock Them Up and Throw Away the Key" is Losing its Sheen

Michael Neumann
The One-State Illusion: More is Less

Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
Did the Republicans Give Hillary Her Victory in Ohio?

James J. Brittain
Anti-Uribe Protests in Colombia and the World

Missy Comley Beattie
The Passion of John McCain

March 8-9, 2008 Weekend Edition

JoAnn Wypijewski
The Only Way to Fight the Clintons

Mike Whitney
Sorting Through the Rubble in Post Bubble America

Peter Morici
Fed and Treasury Fiddle as Economy Plummets

Ralph Nader
The Silent Violence of Gaza's Suffering that Candidates Ignore

Jonathan Cook
The Meaning of Gaza's Shoah

Steve Niva
Behind the Israeli Escalation in Gaza

Bill and Kathy Christison
Crisis over Teheran's Alleged Nuclear Plans Nearing Climax

Hervé Do Alto and Franck Poupeau
Bolivia: Morales is Checked

Eric Walberg
To Leave and Stay at the Same Time: Putin to Medvedev to…?

Scott Johnson
City of A Thousand Foreclosures

Mark Scaramella
James Brown's Gate

Bill Clinton
President Clinton's Remarks on Naming William M. Daley as NAFTA Task Force Chairman

Poet's Basement
St. Thomasino, Engel, Davies and Willson

Website of the Weekend
Hillary Blackens Barack

March 7, 2008

Patrick Cockburn
Why Iraq Could Blow-Up in John McCain's Face

Robin Blackburn
Question for Barrack Obama: Why Afghanistan is the'Right War'?

Saul Landau
The Stupid Economy

Binoy Kampmark
When Competition is Good: McCain and the Muddled Democrats

Chris Floyd
Crushing the Ants: Admiral Fallon and His Empire

Andy Worthington
Spanish Drop "Inhuman" Extradition Request for Guantánamo Britons

Will Potter
Before the Smoke Even Clears in Seattle: Bringing Out the T Word

March 6, 2008

 

March 6, 2008

Vincent Navarro
The Next Failure of Health Reform

Forrest Hylton
High Stakes in the Andes: Colombia's Cornered President

Peter Morici
Why the Dollar is So Cheap

George Ciccariello-Maher
Counter-Attack of the Bureaucrats

John Ross
Taxi! Taxi! The Dark Side of the Oscars

Jacob Hornberger
No Standing to Lecture on Justice

Paul Watson
Illegal Japanese Whaling by the Numbers

Dan Bacher
Off the Deep End

Website of the Day
A Katrina Reader Online

 

March 5, 2008

Cockburn / St. Clair
A Great Day for John McCain (and Maybe Nader)

Joanne Mariner
After Guantanamo

Fidel Castro
The Raid on Ecuador: Underestimating Rafael Correa

Christopher Brauchli
The Turkish Invasions

Steven Sherman
Obama and the Prospects for a Renewal of the Left

Dave Lindorff
Busting Bush & Co. in New England

James Murren
Bombing Somalia

Adam Engel
Necropolis Now

Website of Day
Remember Song

 

March 4, 2008

Wajahat Ali
Mumbo Jumbo: Naming Names with Ishmael Reed

William Blum
How Could Hillary Have Known?

Bill Quigley
The Cleansing of New Orleans

Ralph Nader
The Prince Harry Solution

Patrick Irelan
Oil and Health in Venezuela

James J. Brittain /
R. James Sacouman

Uribe's Colombia is Destabilizing a New Latin America

Norman Solomon
The War Election

Jacob Hornberger
Hillary in Waco: the Missing Apology

Andy Worthington
Guantánamo and the European Parliament

Mike Averko
Kosovo and the Press

Website of the Day
Tex-Mex Primary

 

March 3, 2008

Jennifer Loewenstein
Gazan Holocaust

Alan Farago
American Politics and the Faltering Economy

Richard Gott
Colombian Deaths in Ecuador

Wajahat Ali
Who Speaks for a Billion Muslims? Analyzing the World Gallup Poll with John Esposito

Paul Craig Roberts
The Mukasey Conspiracy: a Bi-Partisan Attack on the Constitution

Robert Weissman
When Multinationals Say Adieu

Uri Avnery
Good Morning, Hamas

Martha Rosenberg
When Your Meat is a Downer

Eva Liddell
Leave the Next Dance for Bill

Michael Donnelly
Will Ferrell Does Flint

Website of the Day
Muddy Waters: Train Fare Home Blues

 

 

 

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Apri1 9, 2008

The New Deal at 75--Lessons for Today

Confronting the Economic Crisis

By DAN LA BOTZ

When I was growing up in the 1950s, a photo of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1932-1944) still hung in the homes of some family members and friends. Our only four-term president was remembered by them as the leader-and even the savior-of the country. Those like my parents, who experienced the Great Depression and World War II, were transformed by the experience of Roosevelt's New Deal into life long Democrats. Union members, immigrants, and African Americans, and then their children, stuck with the Democrats through thick and thin for fifty years, largely held in place by their experience of the New Deal.

Seventy-five years ago President Franklin Delano Roosevelt began to put together that series of social and economic institutions that he called the New Deal, measures that profoundly transformed American society. At the same time under FDR's leadership, the Democratic Party succeeded in constructing that bloc of social classes, ethnic groups, and organizations that came to be called the New Deal Coalition and that constituted the party's social base of political power into the 1970s. FDR's New Deal-both the program of reforms and the coalition of forces-represented the most dynamic, durable and ultimately successful political achievement of America in the twentieth century. FDR's New Deal also laid the basis for what Henry Luce of Time Magazine called the American Century, less than a century, but more than fifty years of American supremacy.

A New New Deal?

Today, as the nation once again confronts an economic crisis, some are turning to look back at Roosevelt's New Deal in the hope of finding a solution to our country's current problems. Perhaps this is in part because some see in Barack Obama a Rooseveltian figure, one who might be the broker of new social pact. We naturally then look back to the 1930s.

The Nation, for example, under the heading "Toward a New New Deal," recently asked a dozen prominent Americans, including Rev. Jesse Jackson, SEIU President Andy Stern, and historian Howard Zinn, to comment on the New Deal on its anniversary. By and large those commentators suggested that we might turn to the New Deal for inspiration, as a model for taking political power, and as a program to resolve the country's economic difficulties. Zinn suggested that today's presidential contenders might ask the American people to undertake a new New Deal and wondered if, "Perhaps the momentum of such a project could carry the nation past the limits of FDR's reforms, especially if there were a popular upsurge that demanded it."

But does the New Deal of the 1930s represent the way forward for America in the 2000s? Did it even represent the best way forward for America in the 1930s? Do we want to go that route again? And, if we did, would it even be possible? The answers to these questions, I think, point in another direction. What we need today is not a New New Deal but a different sort of coalition under different leadership and with altogether different objectives: a Different Deal. Turning to look back at the New Deal of the 1930s we find that there was another path, a road not taken, an alternative for the country which we might pursue today.

The Crash, the Depression, Roosevelt

Many think of Roosevelt as a man who took office planning to help workers and to create a fairer economic system. In truth, Roosevelt had no plan. The New Deal emerged from a series of conflicts between the government, the corporations and working people. And much of the initiative for change came from below.

The Great Crash of 1929 devastated the American economy: banks failed, businesses closed, and within a short time 25 percent of workers were unemployed. The government of Republican Herbert Hoover failed to respond to the economic crisis, so in 1932 voters elected to the presidency Franklin D. Roosevelt, descendant of a patrician family, cousin of former president Theodore "Teddy Roosevelt," and governor of New York. FDR, who took office without a plan, surrounded himself with advisors of differing ideologies and indicated his willingness to experiment. His approach would be pragmatic; he would see what worked. What was clear from the beginning was that Roosevelt's goal, while alleviating some of the pain of the depression, was to save American capitalism.

The Crash and the Depression set America's working people in motion. The Communist Party organized the unemployed to demand relief and jobs under the slogan "Fight Don't Starve!" Farmers formed the Farm Holiday Association and, carrying signs reading "Be a Picket or a Peasant," struck and rioted in the Midwest. American veterans, unemployed and desperate, descended on Washington, D.C. in the Bonus March of 1932-only to be driven out of town by tanks and troops with bayonets. Socialists, Communists and Trotskyists formed unemployed workers councils in cities throughout the country.

By 1934 a new labor movement began to emerge as workers succeeded in organizing city-wide general strikes in San Francisco, Minneapolis and Toledo and won recognition for new unions of industrial workers. Conservative leader of the United Mine Workers John L. Lewis jumped in front of the workers parade and proclaimed the founding of the CIO, the Congress of Industrial Organizations. Many people throughout the country wondered if capitalism had failed and would now be replaced by socialism through a working class revolution.

The New Deal resulted from the interplay between the Roosevelt administration, the corporations, and the mass movements of farmers and workers. FDR's particular genius was in his ability to contain and capture the energy and ideas of those mass movements and to use them for his own ends. Forces that initially chartered their own path, or that challenged or threatened his administration were brought around to support it through a brilliant combination of populist rhetoric, social reforms, and the building of a multi-class coalition.

The Roosevelt Style: Pragmatism and Experimentation

Breaking with the conservative past, Roosevelt was willing to use government to inhibit the market, to restrain corporations, and to build social welfare programs, though, as would soon become clear, he would not threaten the fundamental capitalist character of the economy. His creativity in using the government, the Democratic Party, and the mass media, through his famous fireside chats, allowed him instead to become the broker of a new coalition and the author of a new social pact.

Roosevelt was imaginative and dynamic. During his first 100 days he pushed through Congress an unprecedented series of measures that provided emergency assistance, jobs, and mortgage relief for homeowners and farmers. By the mid-1930s programs such as the Civil Works Administration, Works Progress Administration, and Civil Conservation Corps employed millions in planting trees, building roads and bridges, schools and airports.

Roosevelt's attention was particularly focused on the problem of preventing capitalist competition from bringing down the entire system. He established the FTC to regulate big business and then the National Industrial Recovery Act to stop cutthroat competition by imposing market shares, production levels, prices, and wages on the corporations. After the Supreme Court declared the NIRA/NRA unconstitutional, Roosevelt continued to try to use government to regulate capital, to build public works programs, and to expand social welfare. To do so, however, he had to rebuild the Democratic Party.

The Roosevelt Coalition: The Cross-Class Alliance

Some think that Roosevelt transformed the Democratic Party into a progressive coalition of unions, immigrants and blacks on order to move America to the left. But that was simply not what happened.

True, Roosevelt realized that if he was to succeed in reforming and reconstructing American capitalism, he would have to broaden the social base of the Democratic Party. The Democratic Party that had elected him in 1932 had been based on the corrupt political machines of big cities like Chicago and New York, on the white votes of the Solid South, on the American Federation of Labor, and on financiers like Bernard Baruch who reportedly "owned" sixty congressmen whose campaigns he had financed. That base was simply too narrow to deal with the upheavals in the industrial cities of the Great Lakes region and among the farmers of the Midwest.

The patrician Roosevelt had by 1936 adopted a populist discourse, calling for the overthrow of America's "economic royalists," as symbolized in the public mind by the Morgan Bank. But his radical rhetoric belied the reality, for FDR was also courting capitalist power. Unlike the Republicans who saw the revival of the economy coming through heavy industry and high finance, FDR and his inner circle had become convinced that revival would come through capital-intensive industry and consumer goods. He was constructing a new coalition that included Rockefeller's Chase National Bank, and other non-Morgan banks, Lehman Brothers, Standard Oil, Sears Roebuck, Remington Rand, Bendix, and other banks and corporations like them. Roosevelt worked with these capital-intensive industries which were driven by consumer demand to find a way to save the capitalist system. The key to reviving those industries would be through Keynesian policies of deficit spending, programs providing jobs for workers and welfare benefits for the unemployed and the elderly.

At the same time FDR also worked to expand his coalition by incorporating more plebeian forces. Roosevelt, his Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins, and Senator Robert Wagner carefully maneuvered to contain the worker upheaval-sit-down strikes, mass picketlines, conflicts with the police and National Guard-that swept the nation. At the same time, Congress passed the Wagner Act which for the first time at the federal level gave workers the right to unionize, but also channeled their organizing efforts into legal structures that subordinated the unions to the corporations whose workers they represented. The National Labor Relations Board shaped a pattern of industrial relations that brought about a management-labor partnership in the principal industries. Roosevelt's labor policies, ambivalent as they were, nevertheless succeeded in bringing into his coalition the Congress of Industrial Organizations with its new unions made up of millions of immigrant and African American workers.

Roosevelt, however, refused to reach out to African Americans, believing that he could not even appear to sympathize with them-that was his wife's role-since any gesture toward blacks would jeopardize political support in the Solid South where blacks were not permitted to vote. Consequently African Americans in the South remained trapped in Jim Crow segregation and disfranchisement, and continued to be the victims of lynching, all of which enforced the labor regime based on low-wages. Blacks got no New Deal from FDR, but they voted for him because some of the jobs and relief programs, though rife with racism, still improved their situation. By 1936 they had left the party of Lincoln for the party of Roosevelt where they have stayed ever since.

A New Social Pact

Roosevelt succeeded in expanding the Democratic Party to include industrialists from the capital-intensive industries-the dominant force-as well as the workers of the CIO unions, immigrant communities, and even African Americans. And he did so without giving up the backing of the corrupt big-city machines or the southern white supremacists. This broadened support made it possible for Roosevelt to win large majorities in the 1934 congressional and the 1936 presidential elections. By the end of the 1930s Roosevelt and the Democratic Party in Congress had succeeded in laying the foundation of a new social pact based on the pillars of the National Labor Relations Act and Social Security.

Some believe that Roosevelt's New Deal ended the Great Depression, but that was not the case. By 1938 unemployment levels had risen once again to nearly 20 percent. Roosevelt only brought the country out of the depression by leading the United States into war, the same war for the division of the planet between the great powers that had begun in 1914, paused between 1918 and 1939 so that the rival powers could rearm and harvest a new generation of youth, and then started up again, this time not only in Europe but also in Asia. The multi-class coalition of the Democratic Party and the social pact between capital and labor that Roosevelt had begun to bring together were forged in the crucible of the war. Government brought capital and labor together to win the war of production and that led to a capital-labor partnership that would last into the 1970s.

The war which destroyed European and Japanese capitalism through massive bombing, and which did away with a whole generation of class-conscious workers, left the United States virtually the only capitalist power on the planet. Just after the end of the war, the United States with 5 percent of the world's population collected 50 percent of its wealth. The U.S. domination of the world economy made it possible for American corporations to produce the revenues that financed the New Deal social pact, but that was only possible by the adoption of a permanent war economy, military Keynesianism, the production of weapons for the permanent war on Asia: from Japan to Korea and Vietnam.

What was the Social Pact?

Roosevelt's social pact, breaking with the laissez-faire past, represented a profound reform of American capitalism. Government regulated corporations to a much greater degree and established the first major national social program: Social Security. At the same time the NLRB created the framework in which labor unions came by the 1950s to represent 35 percent of America's work force. The American prosperity which lasted from 1940 to roughly 1970, based on U.S. dominance in the world economy, meant that many Americans' lives improved under first the New Deal and later under its expansion with Johnson's Great Society.

Yet the New Deal pact was not all it seemed to be or might have been. While about one-third of working Americans came to benefit from labor unions with their pensions and health and welfare funds, two-thirds of Americans remained in the other economy of the Old Deal. The New Deal, augmented by the Great Society, congealed into a system that could not deliver America from the capitalist boom-bust economic cycle and that could not be separated from the American drive to militarism and war. By the early 1960s writers like Michael Harrington had discovered The Other America of profound poverty in the nation's inner cities and the rural hollers.

Even the expanded version of the American welfare state, however, never approximated the programs of the social democratic governments of Western Europe with their four- to six-week vacations for all, national public health programs, and free higher education. Western European states created those social programs during the post-war period in competition with Soviet and Eastern European Communism where workers had guaranteed jobs, nearly free housing, and free medical care. The New Deal was not such a great deal when compared to the European states where labor and socialist parties had led the fight for change.

Most importantly, the New Deal turned out to be not only a social pact; but also a social trap. Roosevelt had succeeded in capturing the CIO unions and the left as well; the Socialists joined the Democrats virtually en masse, and the Communists, who came to see in the New Deal an American version of the Popular Front, were absorbed into the coalition too. Once inside the Democratic Party the unions and social movements found that it became impossible to reassert their independence. The Democratic Party was not just a coalition; it was also a kind of cage.

That New Deal Coalition evolved into the contemporary alliance of the Democratic National Committee, banks and corporations, bureaucratic labor unions, African American civil rights organizations bereft of the movement that had made them, and the National Organization for Women which institutionalized the former feminist movement. By the 1980s the Democrats has lost the social support they once had and had given up on fighting to defend and expand the welfare state. Ronald Reagan and the Republicans, adopting the neoliberal model, committed themselves to dismantling the New Deal social welfare programs and returning to laissez-faire.

New Deal Redux?

Is a New New Deal Possible? To envision another New Deal is to envision a reform that makes possible the continuation of capitalism with its periodic economic crises and its foreign wars. It is to conjure up another cross-class coalition dominated by capital and subordinating labor. It is to imagine a system that makes life somewhat better for some, but leaves many with the Old Deal. In any case, it is not clear that such a path is possible.

A modern replication of the New Deal would require not only the construction of a new regulatory system and new social welfare programs, but also the bolstering of the American economy sufficient to produce the revenues and the profits to pay for it. The expansion of American capitalism today can only come through economic victory in the competition with the European Union, Japan and China and the gaining of control over the world's natural resources and raw materials.

Central to an American victory in the economic realm is the struggle to control the oil fields of the Middle East and the geopolitically strategic trade routes of the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea. That is, the Democrats' hope for a New New Deal lies through the Republicans' dream of a New American Century. This is precisely the reason that the Democratic candidates can give no straight answers about the future of the U.S. in Iraq.

The Road Not Taken

How do we find the right road forward this time? Well, that is our project. Looking back on the 1930s, we find that there was also a road not taken, a trail that was being blazed by the industrial unions, independent workers' parties, and an incipient socialist movement. We might take the path not taken in the 1930s. The alternative to the New New Deal involves envisioning a society founded on equality, democracy, and a peaceful foreign policy. The way forward does not lie through a New New Deal, but through the struggles of the social movements and the building of a working people's party to fight for a Different Deal: the end of capitalism and the construction of a democratic socialist society.

Dan La Botz is a Cincinnati-based teacher, writer and activist. He can be contacted at DanLaBotz@gmail.com



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