Not just America, sadly. Same thing happens here in the UK.
That's discouraging. I can understand the U.S. descending into a pit of near-fascist conservatism, but I had hoped the U.K. would be more stable.
It seems to be easier to look at the person on benefits and ask why they get more than me than to ask why I don't get more than them: a subtle difference in the framing of the question that makes all the difference in where the attention is focused.
And I think there's more to the comparative approach. It seems to be human nature to want to achieve priority, not matter how slight and no matter how much the absolute values. It's not enough for me to be rich; you must be poor. It's not enough for me to be powerful; you must be weak. It's not enough for me to succeed; you must fail. Endemic to American capitalism is the notion that one's success must come at the cost of another person's failure, and that person's failure is because of his laziness or some other moral flaw.
I understand there's a school of economic thinking in Latin American countries that an economy has a fixed size, and so the only way someone can gain an economic benefit is at someone else's expense - the idea that an economy can grow and thus benefit everyone isn't apparent to them.
Do you think this sort of thinking occurs in the USA too? Or is it simply that the USAnian view of capitalism is inherently predatory?
Also, would you care to comment on how this seemingly win-at-all-costs attitude meshes with well-known American courtesy and hospitality?
That way the top tiers can keep the attention off their practices and on whichever slice of the population they feel like vilifying at the time.
In the specific terms of labor, the top tiers freely admit trying to reduce their labor costs. This means paying American workers as little as they can get away with and making unions politically unpalatable. It means offshoring to cheaper labor markets. It means automation. Every single economic indicator I can imagine points to conscious, deliberate effort on the part of upper management to reduce the amount of money the combined American labor force will earn, if only as a consequence of minimizing the money it will spend on labor overall. Yet for some reason the story is that people can't find jobs because they're too focused on smashed avocado and social justice, or because jobs are being taken by scary illegally-resident minorities.
It baffles me to read comments from Trump supporters over at UM that on the one hand castigate big business for off-shoring jobs (which they say Biden would help with), while at the same time praising big business for all the hiring and wage rises they do.
But then again, these are the people who simultaneously dismiss Biden as harmless, hapless and helpless and fear him as the stalking horse of the Green New Deal. A recent episode of the Australian ABC TV show 'Planet America' (Google it with "iview") screened an amusing fake Republican attack ad against Biden which mashed up Trump's two views of Biden as helpless and dangerous.
...at every turn we see top executives abdicating all responsibility and deflecting blame to their underlings when things go wrong.
And getting away with it, because most corporations are actually run by boards of directors to whom the CEO reports. And there is a cadre of upper-level business leaders in the U.S., all of whom sit on each other's boards. No CEO is going to be held meaningfully accountable by a board composed of CEOs from other companies on whose boards he sits. Nothing less than a catastrophe will unseat a CEO, and in most cases the exit arrangements for these positions pretty much set you up for life even in the event of gross malfeasance. This arrangement is what partly tied Pres. Obama's attempts to restructure the financial industry after the crash of 2008. The collective power of the U.S. industrial oligarchy outstrips the power of its government.
The Dodd-Frank Act and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act attempted to bring more actual accountability into the corporate boardroom and executive office suites, but naturally the Trump administration and the Republican-controlled Congress (in Pres. Trump's early term) have largely eviscerated those measures. And because of the unique structure of the U.S. executive branch, Pres. Trump can largely forestall enforcement of any provisions that remain.
Interestingly, this has started happening in Australia in the last few months. The latest case was just last week, when three senior figures at mining giant Rio Tinto had to fall on their swords after the company was found to have destroyed an indigenous site of tremendous cultural value.
It happened because one of Rio Tinto's major shareholders is an industry superannuation fund, the sort of fund which has considerable union representation on the board. Here in Australia employers have to contribute 9.5% of each employee's income into a superannuation fund of their choice, and the total value of super funds is around $3 trillion (about US$63 I believe
). While historically many super funds have been run by banks, they've generally been out-performed by the industry funds, which are not-for-profit. So, given their financial success and their management structure, the industry funds have increasingly had the economic muscle to force companies to listen to them when they voice their objections to lenient punishments of bad behaviour.
Trump is the absolute epitome of that, now going so far as to blame Joe Biden for the state of the country he is supposed to be running! What staggers me is just how few people seem to either see it or be willing to change it.
My über-conservative father-in-law texted, at the beginning of the BLM demonstrations, "Welcome to Biden's America." People who would otherwise be smart are literally falling for the rhetoric that the state of the country under Trump -- now, today -- is what it's going to be in a Biden administration. I frankly can't understand how people can be so uncritically susceptible to that sort of nonsense.
And yes, the campaign seems to be ramping up the rhetoric, criticizing Joe Biden's lackluster response to the coronavirus crisis. What, literally, was he supposed to do? He holds no elected office. He has no power to order or bring about a single thing. Literally all he can do is advocate action, which his campaign is certainly doing, and illustrate how he will handle the crisis differently when and if he does have the power to do anything. This reminds me of when people tried to blame Obama for not taking charge more forcefully on 9/11.
With respect, was that actually a thing? I got the impression it was a satire.
I'm fully convinced that rank-and-file political advocacy in the United States really rises no higher than, say, sports fandom. People cheer for the Republicans or the Democrats with no more thought and no less fervor than cheering for Manchester United or the Sacramento Piggers. You want your team to win because victory is sweet, not because there's actually a future at stake. Americans in general don't ever face existential (or even serious) crises, and so political contests aren't considered to matter, because everything in America will always be okay for us no matter what. I hold out hope that the pandemic will convince some people that these decisions matter. But it's bleak hope.
And yet there seem to be many more opportunities to get involved in politics in the USA, especially at the local level, than just about anywhere in the world.