The Hippie Stimulus
Occupy Wall Street, funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.
By JAMES TARANTO
The so-called Occupy Wall Street movement is drawing some support from beyond the standard assemblage of superannuated hippies, dopey college kids and fatuous liberal journalists. Yesterday "several prominent unions, struggling to gain traction on their own, made their first effort to join forces with Occupy Wall Street," the New York Times reports: "Thousands of union members marched with the protesters from Foley Square to their encampment in nearby Zuccotti Park."
"Several major labor groups--including the Transport Workers Union, the Service Employees International Union, the United Federation of Teachers and the United Auto Workers--took part in the march," the Times adds, although "some more traditionally conservative ones, like those in the construction trades, stayed away."
[botwt1006] Associated Press
Your tax dollars at work.
One common characteristic of the four unions the Times cites is that they all include members who work for the government or, in the case of the UAW, for corporate welfare cases. As Michael Barone noted in a February 2010 column: "One-third of [2009's] $787 billion stimulus package was aid to state and local governments--an obvious attempt to bolster public-sector unions."
Thus far Occupiers have been carrying around largely hand-lettered signs saying things like "I could lose my job 4 having a voice" or "Bank's got bailed-out We got sold out!!!" to quote verbatim a couple of examples from a recent slide show from London's Daily Mail.
In the interest of truth in advertising, the unions ought to print up signs that read "Project funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act." And now of course President Obama is demanding yet another stimulus, which would subsidize these protests further.
The fatuous lefty journalists are convinced that the Occupiers are going to prove helpful to Obama's re-election effort. "The anti-Wall Street demonstrators have created a new pole in politics," exults E.J. "Baghdad Bob" Dionne. "Both Obama's [Stimulus Jr.] initiative and the revolt against Wall Street mark a shift on the progressive side from defense to offense. . . . For conservatives, the days of wine and roses are over."
Prog ventriloquist Rich Yeselson, speaking through Journolist founder Ezra Klein, says the one thing the Occupiers are missing is "an articulate exposition." That, of course, means "the brainy liberal left infrastructure's time has come. . . . [Former Enron adviser Paul] Krugman's Army may be on its way."
Hang on a second here. Wasn't the man in the White House supposed to have been a community organizer and a brainy expositor himself, not to mention a hell of a lot more charming than the splenetic former Enron adviser? Why does the left need a populist movement when it has such a great leader?
That last question, of course, is both rhetorical and facetious. This morning, and into the afternoon, found us professionally obliged to sit through another Obama press conference, and it was a pitiful spectacle. As Politico notes, NBC's Chuck Todd summed things up when he asked the president: "Are you worried about your own powers of persuasion and that the American public is maybe not listening to you anymore?"
"Blah blah blah blah," the president replied. Just kidding--that would at least have shown a little wit. Instead, Obama said: "So if the question is are people feeling cynical and frustrated about the prospects for positive action in this city? Absolutely."
And if the question is the one that Todd actually asked? No comment.
Not all fatuous liberal journalists have given up on Obama. Greg Sargent insists that "Obama is clearly winning the argument . . . with the public . . . Obama has made big gains over Republicans on the specific question of who is more trusted to handle jobs. . . . Today's poll shows strong support for Obama on jobs among moderates and independents. . . . Obama is persuading the public to back his plan."
Oh, but on the other hand: "Obama's overall approval numbers are very bad. . . . You can't sugarcoat the fact that Obama's overall approval numbers on the economy are very bad, including among independents."
How does Sargent square this circle? Simple: "Those numbers are a referendum on the economy, and the failure to fix it so far--and not a referendum on his current policies, which have strong public support, even as they're being blocked by Republicans."
So the voters love Obama's policies, they just think he's done a poor job because so far his policies have failed. Or something like that. What definitely does not come through in either the survey results Sargent cites or his analysis of it is a sense that Obama has provided strong leadership.
Hence the eagerness to believe that the Occupiers represent some sort of true populist uprising. The Hill reports that some Democratic politicians are joining in:
"We share the anger and frustration of so many Americans who have seen the enormous toll that an unchecked Wall Street has taken on the overwhelming majority of Americans while benefiting the super-wealthy," Reps. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.) and Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) said in a joint statement.
"We join the calls for corporate accountability and expanded middle-class opportunity."
The fourth-ranking House Democrat, Caucus Chairman John Larson (Conn.), released a statement Wednesday saying, "The silent masses aren't so silent anymore. They are fighting to give voice to the struggles that everyday Americans are going through."
This could easily end up backfiring on Obama. One of the reasons he was able to win so resoundingly in 2008 was that, once he dispatched Hillary Clinton, all of liberaldom was united behind him, particularly including the media, who seem now to be aligning with the Occupiers.
If a ragtag protest movement--or, in Baghdad Bob's words, "an active and angry band"--plays a central role in the campaign of 2012, Obama may find that, like Lyndon Johnson in 1968 or John Kerry in 2004, he is at the mercy of events beyond his control. An example may be found in this Politico report:
Several influential New York state lawmakers have received threatening mails saying it is "time to kill the wealthy" if they don't renew the state's tax surcharge on millionaires, according to reports.
"It's time to tax the millionaires!" reads the email, according to WTEN in Albany. "If you don't, I'm going to pay a visit with my carbine to one of those tech companies you are so proud of and shoot every spoiled Ivy League [expletive] I can find."
The email, with the threatening subject line of, "time to kill the wealthy," was detailed and disturbing.
"How hard is it for us to stake out one of the obvious access roads to some tech company, tail an employee home and toss a liquor bottle full of flaming gasoline through their nice picture window into their cute house," wrote the author of the email.
The email references terminology that has been used in the "Occupy Wall Street" movement--that the 1 percent, the super rich, are exploiting the remaining 99 percent of Americans. The angry message demanded that Albany politicians "stop shoveling wealth from the lower 99 percent into the top 1 percent" and "set aside your 'no new taxes on anybody' pledge."
It may be that "Krugman's army"--and Obama's inability to pacify it--will end up scaring the hell out of Americans. Or, as Gen. Krugman himself says: "This might be the start of something both big and good."