Debt Ceiling Debate "Fraud"
by TRNN
In Washington, the battle over the debt ceiling
continues. And the debate, on one side we have the Republicans, which iscut, and we have, on the other side, the Democrats saying let's
cut a little less. And that seems to be more or less the scope of the
debate. Sorry to be a little cynical about it.
At any rate, now joining
us to give us his take, and probably even more cynical about it than I
am, is David Swanson. David is the author of the book War Is a Lie. He's also a founding member of WarIsACrime.org. And he also campaigns for RootsAction.org.
David Swanson: polling shows majority of Americans want to tax the rich and cut the military before making social program cuts
David Swanson is the creator
of ImpeachCheney.org, co-founder of AfterDowningStreet.org and
Washington Director of Democrats.com A writer and organizer, Swanson has
worked for ACORN, the International Labor Communications Association, Dennis Kucinich 's 2004 presidential campaign and many others.
PAUL JAY, SENIOR
EDITOR, TRNN: Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Paul Jay in
Washington. And in Washington, the battle over the debt ceiling
continues. And the debate, on one side we have the Republicans, which iscut, and we have, on the other side, the Democrats saying let's
cut a little less. And that seems to be more or less the scope of the
debate. Sorry to be a little cynical about it. At any rate, now joining
us to give us his take, and probably even more cynical about it than I
am, is David Swanson. David is the author of the book War Is a Lie. He's also a founding member of WarIsACrime.org. And he also campaigns for RootsAction.org. Thanks for joining us, David.DAVID SWANSON, COFOUNDER, WAR IS A CRIME: Thanks, Paul.JAY: So what do you make of the great debt ceiling debate?
SWANSON:
I think it's a fraud. You know, we have had this country and other
countries in deeper debt before without catastrophe, and the debt
ceiling has been raised many times without catastrophe. And I think
there's absolutely no earthly reason to have the debt or the deficit. I
think you could allow the so-called Bush tax cuts (I call them the
Bush-Obama tax cuts at this point) to expire. You could otherwise tax
the rich, as three-quarters of the country wants to do, and fix the
problem. You could stop the outrageous spending of seven times the
nearest competing nation on the military, as most of this country wants
to do, and fix the problem. They don't want to fix the problem. They
want to use this crisis that's been manufactured as an excuse to go
after Social Security and Medicare.
JAY: Yeah, you watch
CNN, and every fourth or fifth word about this is designed to strike
terror in your heart, apocalypse in August. But, as you say, there's
actually fairly straightforward things that could be done. There is no
reason to raise the debt. And apparently there was a poll that said 69
percent of Americans are against raising the debt ceiling. And I don't
think they're so wrong about it.
SWANSON: Well, and they've
got people scared about, you know, the irresponsibility of raising the
debt ceiling--people who have no idea it's been done before, what it
means, what's at stake. But, again, if you look at what people want done
in terms of public policy, people want to tax the rich. People want to
end the wars, to cut the military. They do not want--there are much,
much smaller percentages of people willing to go after Social Security
or Medicare or Medicaid. We have homelessness rising, foreclosures,
bankruptcy, unemployment, suicide. This is a time to be talking about
helping people, strengthening our government, not weakening it.
JAY:
Okay. So hang on. So let's say I'm working for President Obama. And
here's what I would say. And for those of you that didn't catch that, I
said if I was working for President Obama, 'cause I'm not. But
they would say this: we're dealing with real politics, and you're
dealing with a lovely utopian vision of what could be. We Democrats
actually lost the House, and as a result of that, can't do all the
things you're saying we should do. We have to deal with the reality
there are Republicans that have a third of the government. And in August
we are going to run out of money and close down government departments
and programs. Yes, perhaps the international banking community isn't
going to freak out, 'cause they know eventually we will honour these
debts, but in the meantime a lot of people are going to suffer. So,
yeah, we got to raise this and we got to come to some accommodation on
this debt issue 'cause that's the real politics of the day. As President
Obama said in his press conference several times, you know, this isn't
my choice of how we should be governing, but more or less this is the
hand we have been dealt.
SWANSON: Well, or dealt himself.
And this is a president who had a Democratic majority in both houses and
did little to nothing good with it. This is a president who did not
open these negotiations by pushing for heavy taxation of the wealthy or
cutbacks in the military. In fact, this is a president who three times
in three years has enlarged the military beyond what we'd seen before,
who chose to do that, didn't get pushed into it. And so this is not a
case of having compromised back to a middle-ground position; this is a
case of a president who has made it his routine practice to open the
bidding with where he thinks the other side is and then watch the other
side move further away from him. So he's willing to cut Social Security
and Medicare and Medicaid. The other side is willing to have further tax
cuts. You know, this is not a negotiation, this is giving away the
game, that President Obama is not starting out where you and I and the
majority of Americans are.
JAY: Well, he's not getting much
pressure to do otherwise. There's some disgruntlement amongst more
progressive members of the House. Some of the sort of grassroots
organizations he depends on for support during elections have been, you
know, opposing this. But, obviously, his number one objective, I think,
his administration's number one objective, is to get reelected. They do
the math, and they've decided the math works this way: you play to the
center, you play the center-right; the left will be disillusioned, but
they have nowhere else to go. You know, when they actually look in the
face that there might be a President Romney, or even someone they find
more objectionable, they'll have no choice. And the math works. So are
they wrong?
SWANSON: They might very well be wrong.
Presidents have made that calculation before and been wrong. You can
look back to Bush senior or LBJ. There's a history of presidents making
the wrong calculation and having to leave in disgrace or in defeat.
That's certainly possible. And we actually don't have to be pundits; we
can be citizens and help to make that a reality, not picking who's going
to be president next, but what the agenda is going to be that these
politicians have to move in the direction of. And so--.
JAY:
But one of the big issues here is the national trade union leadership.
The trade union leadership on the whole, not all, but on the whole, have
clearly decided that a Republican president is such a threat to their
interests that they will simply put up with not getting what they hoped
out of the Obama presidency and they will defend him. And it's--you
know, on camera, at least, is very difficult to get even the slightest
critical word out of one of the major trade union leaders. What do you
make of all that?
SWANSON: I think they are facilitating
the right-wing Republican agenda by acting out of fear of it and
refusing to push for what they really want, because one side is in
power, or at least in the White House, rather than the other side. I
think it's a counterproductive, failing strategy that most members of
the labor union movement question. It's the officers at the top that
have to be pushed, as in many other organizations as well.
JAY:
And what is--you're a campaigner for RootsAction.org. So just tell us
really quickly what it is. And what are you guys doing about all this?
SWANSON:
Well, Roots Action is attempting to be, and having some initial success
at being an online movement that doesn't alter its positions to favor
partisan interests, that pushes for peace and justice regardless.
JAY: That's another way of saying you don't want to be an appendage of the Democratic Party.
SWANSON:
Yes, very well put. And when we pushed to take out of the Defense
Authorization Act this language that was going to empower presidents
from here on out, largely to be able to make wars on their own, and were
successful, that was something that we were pushing of our own
initiative apart from any party. Both parties want presidents to have
the power to make wars on their own. And when we push back against this
concentration of wealth in the hands of a very few plutocrats, when we
push back against cutting Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, we're
doing it without bowing to the agenda of either party. And that's going
to make for a stronger movement, and it's going to make for a better
policy discussion and better members, perhaps, of both parties.
JAY: Thanks for joining us, David.
SWANSON: Thank you, Paul.
JAY: And thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.
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