Here's why plutocrats control our politics: Corporate America knows both parties are up for sale
David Sirota
“What is most striking about the present is not the virtues of
moderation but of the potential power of conviction. One detects, behind
all the anxiety about ‘extremists,’ ‘radicals,’ and ‘militant
minorities,’ a degree of envy. On the Right there is a group with enough
commitment to a shared project that is willing and able to disrupt the
ordinary functioning of government. If only the Left had such
wherewithal. We might, at the very least, get something more than than
the economically stagnant, politically oppressive Mugwumpery of the
Democratic Party.” — Jacobin’s Alex Gourevitch
This
trenchant passage about liberals’ reaction to the Tea Party summarizes a
hugely significant yet little discussed truism: American politics has
been
inexorably lurching to the right
not only because of the extremism of the Tea Party, but also because of
a lack of Tea Party-like cohesion, organization and energy on the left.
There are, of course, many factors that contribute to that sad reality
including a successful war on the labor movement; a campaign finance
system that makes conservative oligarchs even more powerful than they
already are; and a mediasphere that ignores principles and tells
liberals everything must be seen exclusively in partisan red-versus-blue
terms. One factor, though, stands out for how it so destructively
shapes the assumptions that define our political discourse. That factor
can be called “liberal washing.”
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