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David Sirota
David Sirota
25 May 2012
A Rare Admission That Money Trumps Everything Else

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11 May 2012
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State Crises Mean New Language of Deceit

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For most of history, we had undebatable definitions of words such as "bailout" and "bankruptcy." We understood the former as an undeserved public grant, and the latter as an inability to pay existing bills. Whatever your particular beliefs about these concepts, their meanings were at least agreed upon.

Sadly, that's not the case during a deficit crisis that is seeing language redefined on ideological terms.

"Bailout" was the first word thrown into the Orwellian fire. As some lawmakers recently proposed replenishing depleted state coffers with federal dollars, the American Conservative Union urged Congress to oppose states "seek(ing) a bailout" from the feds. Now, Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., says, "Should taxpayers in Indiana who have paid their bills on time, who have done their job fiscally be bailing out Californians who haven't? No."

Ryan, mind you, voted for 2008's TARP program — a bank bailout in the purest sense of the term. But one lawmaker's rank hypocrisy is less significant than how the word "bailout" is being used — and abused. Suddenly, the term suggests that federal aid would force taxpayers in allegedly "fiscally responsible" Republican states to underwrite taxpayers in supposedly irresponsible Democratic ones.

Aside from stoking a detestable interstate enmity, this thesis ignores the fact that state-to-state wealth transfers are already happening. According to the Tax Foundation, most Republican-voting states receive more in federal funding than they pay in federal taxes, while most Democratic-voting states receive less federal money than they pay in federal taxes.

That means traditionally blue states like California are now perpetually subsidizing — or in Ryan's parlance, "bailing out" — traditionally red states like Indiana. Thus, federal aid to states could actually reduce the state-to-state subsidies conservatives say they oppose.

Congressional Republicans will undoubtedly ignore these facts. Their proposed solution to the budget emergency could instead be a Newt Gingrich-backed initiative letting states default on outstanding obligations by declaring bankruptcy. Again, the word is fraught with new connotations.

Whereas sick or laid-off individuals occasionally claim a genuine inability to repay debts and thus a need for bankruptcy protections, states can never legitimately claim such a need because they are never actually "bankrupt." Why? Because they always posses the power to raise revenue. The power is called taxation — and destroying that authority is what the new bankruptcy idea is really about. It would let states avoid tax increases on the wealthy, renege on contractual promises to public employees and destroy the country's creditworthiness.

Blocking state "bailouts" and letting states declare "bankruptcy" are radical notions, especially in a bad economy. One would result in recession-exacerbating public layoffs; the other would institutionalize an anti-tax zealotry that destroys tomorrow's middle class in order to protect today's rich. That's why advocates of these ideas have resorted to manipulating language. They know the only way to make such extremism a reality is to distort the vernacular — and if we aren't cognizant of their scheme, they will succeed.

David Sirota is a best-selling author whose upcoming book "Back to Our Future" will be released in March of 2011. He hosts the morning show on AM760 in Colorado. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com, follow him on Twitter @davidsirota or visit his website at www.davidsirota.com.

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Comments

5 Comments | Post Comment
"According to the Tax Foundation, most Republican-voting states receive more in federal funding than they pay in federal taxes, while most Democratic-voting states receive less federal money than they pay in federal taxes."

Is Sirota saying that wealth re-distribution doesn't work too well? Is not fair? No one is obfuscating terms, only the truth. Back in the '70's California decided that public phones should be strung along highways. Spent millions on it and you can still see the remnants of them along freeways. Cell phones happened. Expect the worst and you get it.

If my neighbor is a crack addict am I duty bound to pay his mortgage?

Policies matter. If California and New York want to adopt policies Indianic that is wonderful. We'll hold webinars for them. But we shouldn't have to pay their mortgage. Tough love and all that, you know.



Comment: #1
Posted by: Tom
Fri Mar 4, 2011 12:49 PM
I'm continually reminded and amazed by the "it's all about me and not about we" framing that has taken place in large part due to mainstream media emphasis. We live in America. We are a people of We the People. We were never a people of Me and only Me against You. We owe our country our loyalty and our taxes and our scrutiny of bad policy and bad politics because We are the government, except of course, we aren't. Jamie Dimon and his cronies refuse to acknowledge their complicity in the mortgage crisis, and then we hear from some yahoo who says he doesn't want to pay for his neighbor's mortgage! Of COURSE he doesn't -- and he will never have to! In the light of day when the mortgage crisis is unraveled and focused like a laser beam on the fraud within the investment banking community (commonly referred to as "the banks") we will return to normal. Until then...we're off the cliff, folks, and the White House doesn't care.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Julie Stroeve
Sat Mar 5, 2011 3:49 PM
I'm continually reminded and amazed by the "it's all about me and not about we" framing that has taken place in large part due to mainstream media emphasis. We live in America. We are a people of We the People. We were never a people of Me and only Me against You. We owe our country our loyalty and our taxes and our scrutiny of bad policy and bad politics because We are the government, except of course, we aren't. Jamie Dimon and his cronies refuse to acknowledge their complicity in the mortgage crisis, and then we hear from some yahoo who says he doesn't want to pay for his neighbor's mortgage! Of COURSE he doesn't -- and he will never have to! In the light of day when the mortgage crisis is unraveled and focused like a laser beam on the fraud within the investment banking community (commonly referred to as "the banks") we will return to normal. Until then...we're off the cliff, folks, and the White House doesn't care.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Julie Stroeve
Sat Mar 5, 2011 3:51 PM
Re: Julie Stroeve: "when the mortgage crisis is unraveled and focused like a laser beam on the fraud within the investment banking community (commonly referred to as "the banks") we will return to normal."

There's already been a lot of focus upon what caused the mortgage crisis. We all know what happened, why and who's to blame.
If you're writing about crime and punishment here (not sure you are, but Sirota and others have), then understand that none of that will prevent the Too-Big-To-Fails from working another TARP-like act of extortion upon us.

The cure is to break up the big banks. There is precedent enough under the 1890 Sherman Anti-Trust Act: AT&T most recently in 1985, and the various Trusts (oil, tobacco, steel, rail, cattle) during the 1st two decades of the 20th Century.
The idea is not to punish the banks, but to create more competition between them.
Better local lending practices and increased employment will be among the happy by-products.

Too-Big-To-Fail is Too-Big-To-Begin-With.
Comment: #4
Posted by: oddsox
Sun Mar 6, 2011 7:26 AM
Re: Tom
Do you seriously think a crack addict would have a mortgage?
Comment: #5
Posted by: N
Tue Mar 8, 2011 10:17 AM
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