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David Sirota
David Sirota
25 May 2012
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The Money Paradox

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If there's one thing you can still count on from today's increasingly erratic politics, it is pure unadulterated paradox. In a Washington circus that features as many morons as oxymorons, we have self-described deficit hawks who promote tax cuts, alleged war opponents who back war escalations, and supposed anti-government conservatives who press to expand the National Security State. Heck, we even have senators who famously brag of voting for things before voting against them.

That said, for sheer Ringling Brothers-grade flamboyance, none of those contradictions matches the one relating to money. With spectacular regularity, cash is now simultaneously billed as both all-powerful and completely powerless, depending on whom the particular definition serves.

Exhibit A is the December fight on Capitol Hill over spending and tax cuts. A standard back and forth over macroeconomics, the debate saw politicians of both parties assert that different ways of deploying taxpayer resources would guarantee different results from economic actors. Pass more tax cuts, said Republicans, and profit-seeking small-business owners will be motivated to hire more workers. Provide more unemployment benefits, said Democrats, and the jobless will be moved to spend more on consumer goods.

These messages, unflinchingly transcribed by a servile press corps, all echoed the basic assumption that money is the prime motivator of human action. The underlying theory is simple: Cash goes in, actions automatically come out. It makes basic mechanical sense ... until you listen to what else is being said at the same time.

A week after the tax cut bill passed, the Washington Post reported that Montana Sen. Max Baucus (D) had held a big fundraiser on the day the Senate was voting on the legislation. Since the measure disproportionately benefited Baucus' rich donors, the question was simple: Did the campaign cash influence his "yes" vote in the same decisive way that his Senate colleagues said tax-cut cash would affirmatively influence employer hiring?

"Money has no influence on how Sen.

Baucus makes his decisions," said the senator's spokesperson.

The refrain epitomizes how Washington regularly writes cash out of the political narrative. But it's merely one of many examples, and not just from politicians either. The whitewashing pervades much of the political press, too.

Last week, for instance, The New York Times' Matt Bai penned a slobbering paean to Rahm Emanuel that simultaneously omitted the Chicago mayoral candidate's investment banking career and aggressive corporate fundraising, while definitively declaring that Emanuel has "spent most of his adult life doing the people's work."

This week, most of the political press touted two prospective White House staffers, Bill Daley and Gene Sperling, primarily as "former Clinton officials" rather than as a JPMorgan executive and a Goldman Sachs contractor, respectively. Next week, you can bet it will be more of the same.

"The political and media class says money never motivates anyone in politics at the same time they insist we live in a free market whose only motivating factor is money," says MSNBC's Cenk Uygur, summing up the paradox.

Which is reality? Does money play a major role in human behavior — and specifically in both economic and political decision-making? Or does money play no role at all? It simply cannot be both at the same time. So which is it?

The answer should be obvious in this golden age of political corruption. As alien and bizarre as Washington, D.C.'s culture has become, money is still money — even in the nation's capital. It buys, incentivizes and persuades, no matter if the transaction is documented on a grocery-store receipt or a campaign finance report. The paradox may distract us from that axiom, but it is, indeed, an axiom — and it holds true regardless of whether a widget or a congressman is up for sale.

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 and blogs at OpenLeft.com. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com or follow him on Twitter @davidsirota.

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Comments

4 Comments | Post Comment
David - Great article.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Charles
Fri Jan 7, 2011 6:01 AM
Are you saying we can't trust politicians when it comes to money? Wow, that is... wonderful. I've been down with this for so long that I don't even want to trust them with my healthcare. I know that liberals distrust the rich and powerful, but they never seem to consider that rich and powerful enemy #1 is government. The founders knew this. Keep reading the Constitution. It's language is much less ambigous than any recent federal legislation. And because it doesn't need 2,000 pages to explain itself it is better for the environment. Political and otherwise.

Comment: #2
Posted by: Tom
Fri Jan 7, 2011 8:44 PM
Conservatives always simplistically (and naively) pretend that government and the “rich and powerful” are two independent entities, always at odds with each other. They will claim it's not the rich and powerful who are subverting the American Dream, it's always “The Government!” But there is nothing inherently wrong with the concept of government. On the contrary, it is necessary for the proper functioning of society. Without it we would have anarchy. On a theoretical level, government is just “We The People”. In practice, at its best it is a body of people who represent the will of We The People and who are working in our best interest. So when government becomes corrupt, and starts working against the public interest, what is it corrupted by? Conservatives never ask (or answer) this question. But it is simple. Government is corrupted by the rich and powerful. When has government ever been captured by the poor or middle class? Remember when the poor and homeless corrupted our government and started passing all those anti-poverty laws? Oh wait, THAT NEVER HAPPENED! One can make the case that there have been times when our government has been more democratic and acted in the best interests of the people, as when we got The New Deal. But those times have been rare and are the times that conservatives hate the most! They are most happy when government is acting in the best interests of Big Business and the rich and powerful and screwing the rest of us. Conservatives hate democracy. They want either a small, weak and toothless government that can't stand up to the rich and powerful or a corrupt government that acts on behalf of the rich and powerful. This is why Republican's hate the Obama administration so much -- because it has actually tried to stand up to the Big Bank and Big Insurance industries. And to conservatives, that is just unacceptable.

Comment: #3
Posted by: A Smith
Sun Jan 9, 2011 11:02 AM
"SHTF America predicts that the people in power are going to keep tightening the screws on average American citizens until some citizens, angry and incensed, go off the deep end and start shooting Members of Congress; and not just one, but many, in a well orchestrated “domestic terror attack”. Dazed, the survivors will wonder what craziness could have provoked such an outrage! Gentlemen: look to your own souls when it happens. See the self serving, unsatiable greed, vanity, and self indulgent ways in which you govern." Dated November 29, 2010 from the Post: Where In The World Is Robspierre?

www.shtftimesepitaph.blogspot.com
Comment: #4
Posted by: Drake Pendragon
Mon Jan 10, 2011 8:51 PM
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