Voodoo Economics

Drilling Down Into Reagan's Big Lie About The Economy

by: Paul Rosenberg

Sat Nov 08, 2008 at 13:16

In my earlier diary, "Three Lies of Saint Ronnie And One Truth From Michael Moore", I cited three lies that played crucial roles in defining the misdirection of our nation under conservative rule.  The third one ways:

(3) The lie that we could cure our economic ills by slashing government regulation and spending, through the twin miracles of deregulation and trickle-down economics.

While much has been written about this lie--and much more needs to be said in order to give it the burial it deserves--there's a deeper aspect that is seldom discussed.  It's not just regulation is absolutely vital if the economy is to be the servant of society rather than the master.  Nor is it just that conservatives don't actually cut government budgets--much less deficits.   No, the deeper point is that massive government deficits--which conservatives purportedly abhor, yet always produce--are actually a pathological form of Keynesian economics, the very core of the liberal economic philosophy that conservatives are supposedly opposed to.   Thus, even the limited success that conservatives sometimes can claim for job growth, rising GDP or whatever, is due to them following fundamentally liberal economic policies, however bastardized and distorted those policies may be in the particular forms they are twisted into.

There's More... :: (11 Comments, 767 words in story)

The Big Lie And The Rightwing's Neo-Feudal Vision (A Supplement To The Political Duality Series)

by: Paul Rosenberg

Sun Oct 07, 2007 at 01:44

One key to why movement conservatives are so successful is that they are playing a different game than everyone else-even most conservative voters, who really have no idea what they've signed on for.

What they are after, at a minimum, is a return to the Gilded Age system, when big business owned Congress outright, and the country was run directly for their benefit, and little else.

I'm going to be talking about this in an upcoming diary, but to illustrate it a little more fully, I created this standalone diary.

There's More... :: (15 Comments, 2106 words in story)
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