Life in the time of Trump.
The trade war has begun.
A tariff here;
A quota there;
We’ll all lose when it’s done.
To disregard consumers
To save steel jobs is dumb.
But that’s the way the world works
When trade is zero-sum.
Life in the time of Trump.
The trade war has begun.
A tariff here;
A quota there;
We’ll all lose when it’s done.
To disregard consumers
To save steel jobs is dumb.
But that’s the way the world works
When trade is zero-sum.
The German CDU/SD coalition is finally a done deal. In the short run, this guarantees stable, reasonable, and mildly progressive government. In the long run, it’s a disaster; the far right will become the focus of the opposition, and will have a chance of being the largest party at the next election.
In Italy, the election has brought chaos, and a very large anti-EU vote. That will present a challenge the likes of which the EU has never seen, to my knowledge. More on that tomorrow.
Reactionaries have long taken the position that the GOP represents the opinion of a majority of real Americans, and that Democratic victories must therefore be attributable to voter fraud on the part of minorities and illegal immigrants. That is the reason the GOP continues to pound the voter fraud drum and promotes inappropriate restrictions on voting even though there is absolutely no evidence of fraud making even the slightest difference in any election since 1960.
It occurred to me this morning that there is a real danger that Russian meddling in our elections, whose practical impact has probably been grossly overblown, could well turn into the left-wing version of the same phenomenon, particularly if the GOP manages to hang onto both houses of Congress this November. If we get to the point where large segments of both parties reject the legitimacy of our elections, the system is in real trouble.
Putin and Xi would love that.
The analogy to the Thirty Years’ War looks better by the day. As it stands today, there are no less than four separate, but occasionally overlapping, conflicts in Syria:
The first conflict is coming to a close. The second is winding down, but will not be finally resolved as long as the rebels have international support and a place of refuge in neighboring countries. The third will never really end, at least as a political issue. The final one is the one that matters to everyone who doesn’t live in Syria.
When it’s all said and done, my best guess is that the analogy will hold, and Syria will return to something similar to the status quo ante, only as a complete ruin.
Imagine that you are a London businessman doing extensive business with EU countries. Jeremy Corbyn has just announced that he supports a very soft Brexit, while the government keeps staggering on to what looks like a disaster. What do you do?
On the one hand, you know that Corbyn, in his heart of hearts, hates capitalists like you. You can expect nothing good from him. On the other hand, the government doesn’t know what it’s doing, and Corbyn would have to govern in a coalition that would restrain the worst of his impulses.
It’s a tough choice. My guess is that British business will continue to support the Conservatives and hope that sanity prevails in the end. It may not.
Here’s what I take away from Trump’s announcement on steel and aluminum tariffs:
The great would-be emperor Xi.
From his term limits he’s become free.
He’s shown he’s the man.
Does that come with a plan?
For the rest of us, what does it mean?
Here’s how it could all go wrong:
Assume, for purposes of argument, that conditions in 2020 are pretty much the same as they are now: there is no war or recession, and Trump’s approval ratings are around 40 percent. How will the Democrats go after him?
The task, in a nutshell, is to either entice large numbers of new voters into the system, or peel off enough 2016 Trump voters to prevail. Conceptually, there are two ways to do this:
1. The Competence Coalition: The objective here is to win over the CDs and some disaffected PBPs–particularly suburban women–who held their noses and voted for Trump in 2016 because they simply couldn’t swallow Hillary. The candidate in this scenario would be a realo, and the program essentially would be to restore the Obama status quo, with the exception of the tax cut, whose more popular features would be retained. No new large spending programs would be proposed. The focus of the campaign would be on putting an end to Trump’s corrupt, divisive, incompetent, and faux populist administration. “Stop the madness” would be an appropriate slogan.
In other words, it is the 2016 Clinton campaign, minus Hillary, and with four years of experience with Trump.
2. Vive la Revolution! In this scenario, the Democrats nominate a fundi, who blows off the CDs and PBPs and attempts to win by flipping the Reactionaries on economic issues and by bringing new voters into the system. The Democratic platform proposes to roll back the entire Trump tax cut and to use the money for new spending programs, including single-payer. The premise is that a full-throated left-wing platform is necessary to motivate the opposition. Trump is attacked primarily as a faux populist who sold out to Wall Street.
This is the Sanders scenario. How it ends will be discussed in my next post.
The Trump tax cut is a gamble at two levels. In the short term, the GOP is hoping that the small increase in net earnings that most people will experience will give them a boost in the 2018 elections even though the bill will cost other people money and primarily benefit the donor class. In the long run, the hope is that the bill will encourage new investment to the point that productivity and wages will rise dramatically and the deficit will actually fall.
Will it work? The evidence thus far predictably indicates that most of the corporate tax cut will be spent on dividends and share repurchases, not on new investment. As a result, asset prices will rise and inequality will increase. The scene will thus be set at some point for the next Great Recession, not a productivity boom.
The eminent conservative Edmund Burke was once quoted as saying that society was a partnership of the dead, the living, and the unborn. What he meant by that was that we live on the intellectual and physical capital given to us by our ancestors, and we thus have a moral obligation to pass on that, and perhaps a bit more, to succeeding generations. Risky experiments that threaten the species’ inheritance are not, therefore, a good idea.
The current GOP clearly does not believe that. The Trump tax cut essentially is an invitation to party today at the expense of our children, who will have to deal with the implications of a much larger deficit. The GOP’s stance on climate change is to do nothing in the face of pending disaster because it might reduce our standard of living slightly in the short run. It’s the opposite of conservatism.
Trump apparently told the world today that he would have run into the school to protect the students even if he didn’t have a weapon.
How could he, with the bone spurs that kept him out of the military?
Billy Graham learned fairly early on in his remarkable life that it was a mistake to drag religion into partisan politics. It was ironic, then, that a few days after Graham’s death, a man named David Brody had a column in the NYT that essentially said that Trump, regardless of his personal weaknesses, was the evangelical movement’s best friend, because he delivered consistently on the “macro” level.
Evangelical Christianity, at this rate, is becoming the white nationalist wing of the GOP at prayer. That has two impacts, both extremely negative, on our country. From a political perspective, it means that the left is viewed not just as misguided, but as the devil’s spawn, which makes compromise and bipartisanship much more difficult. On the religious side, the association with Trump is bound to accelerate the decline of Christianity in this country, particularly with younger people.
With his fixation on “macro” issues for Christians, Brody is basically saying that Christians aren’t out to save souls; they’re just another right-wing interest group, like the NRA and the Chamber of Commerce, protecting their own endangered sphere and imposing their views on the rest of us by force. They will pay for it in the end, and, in all likelihood, so will we.
In the winter of 1984, Sarajevo was the center of the sports world. It is where Katarina Witt and Torvill and Dean worked their magic. Eight years later, it was a war zone, and the Olympic facilities were nothing more than a macabre reminder of what had been. The city is still trying to recover today.
The same fate, only exponentially worse, could befall Pyeongchang, and soon. The best solution to the conundrum has always been a Chinese-inspired coup, but that doesn’t seem to be on the table. Barring that, the only hope for Korea is for Trump’s ability to blame his predecessors for his failure to stop the North Korean nuclear program to overcome his desire to lash out and salve his wounded pride.
If you live in Korea, and that’s all you have going for you, you should be very worried.