By
C.J. Atkins
A specter is haunting Donald Trump—the
specter of socialism. A century and a half ago, Karl Marx and Frederick Engels
opened their Communist Manifesto with a similar line. In their time, it was the
rising workers’ movement and communist groups of Europe that were putting the
ruling class on notice across the continent.
Judging by the red-baiting jabs that
President Donald Trump included in his 2019 State of the Union address, it
seems that the elites who dominate today’s economic and political system are
also starting to feel some pressure from below.
Using Venezuela’s economic crisis as
his launch pad, Trump jumped into a “noble quest for freedom” against the
supposedly socialist goals of “government coercion, domination, and control.”
By that, we can assume he must be
referring to things like making billionaires and corporations pay their taxes,
getting profit out of health care, or passing regulations that keep bosses from
mistreating their employees. Nothing so radical that it amounts to socialism
really, but the typical stuff Republicans oppose.
He expressed alarm that there are “new
calls to adopt socialism in our country” and set himself up as the bulwark
against creeping leftism. “Tonight,” he declared, “we renew our resolve that
America will never be a socialist country!”
The mostly male Republican caucus,
with big smiles on their faces, burst into rowdy chants of “USA! USA!” Speaker
Nancy Pelosi offered applause, and even erstwhile progressive leader Sen.
Elizabeth Warren jumped to her feet, clapping for Trump’s declaration of war against
socialism.
The following morning, Trump Treasury
Secretary Steve Mnuchin kept up the offensive, telling reporters that the
president’s economic plan was working and that “we’re not going back to
socialism.” When exactly did America have this socialism of which he speaks?
Haven’t seen it. Mnuchin said Republicans “don’t believe in a centralized
planned economy,” as if any such proposal had been made by anyone. (Medicare
and Social Security are the two closest things we have to socialism and both
those programs are popular with almost all Americans.)
All of it—Trump’s patriotism-laced
declarations and Mnuchin’s dire straw-man warnings about state planning—is a
sham. By resurrecting the old anti-communism and red-baiting that were
trademarks of the Cold War, Trump and the Republicans are trying to divert,
distract, and divide.
The GOP and its big business backers
hope that raising the Soviet ghost from its grave will blunt the rapidly
growing public support for ideas like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s proposal
to raise the top marginal tax rate to 70 percent. That it will put the brakes
on the Schumer-Sanders plan to restrict corporate stock buybacks, which only
funnel more money into the hands of executives and shareholders rather than
putting it toward job creation. That it will stop anyone from getting the idea
we could have a health care system that covers everyone while also getting rid
of private insurance companies.
They want to give their (shrinking)
far-right base a villain to unify against in 2020 and turn attention away from
the investigations that are closing in on Trump. And by blaming socialism for
the economic horrors of Venezuela being broadcast on the mainstream television
networks every day, they hope to dampen any opposition to U.S. intervention in
that country.
For decades, capitalists and their
ideological supporters have deployed lies about socialism in order to maintain
the economic and political status quo. They have tried to make people believe
that socialism equates to government tyranny and the elimination of liberty.
They want to hide the reality of what
a socialist America might look like—a country where people democratically
decide their own future together, rather than have their fates determined by
bankers, executives, shareholders, and landlords.
They don’t want people to imagine a
society where human needs rather than private profits shape public policy. They
don’t want people to think about redirecting the billions spent on weapons of
war to public needs like health, education, and green jobs. And perhaps above
all, they don’t want working people to ever contemplate a future where the
products of their labour are their own, rather being than the property of the
big owners of capital.
That is the socialist specter haunting
Donald Trump and the Wall Street crowd. But if they want to know what’s driving
people to question capitalism, they need only look to the extremes of their own
system. 80 percent of Americans live paycheck to paycheck. Wages are lower than
they were forty years ago. Medical bills are still the biggest cause of
bankruptcy. Students are drowning in debt. Millions have no idea how they will
ever retire. Yet, all we hear from Trump is bragging about the supposedly
booming economy.
While he may think his State of the
Union tirade will help stem the tide of socialism’s growing popularity, Trump
is actually helping it along. By once again putting the idea of socialism on
the table before a national audience, he reminds people that there is an
alternative to what we have now.
Trump’s red-baiting, Ocasio-Cortez
argues, proves he’s scared. Let’s hope so. Turning again to the words of those
two old socialists Marx and Engels, “Let the ruling classes tremble.” (IPA Service)
Courtesy:
People’s World
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