Thursday, June 7, 2012

Some lessons gained in Wisconsin


Scott Walker and his ilk can win no matter how outrageous he behaves so long as he can out-spend his adversaries 8-to-1. And where did all that money come from? Certainly not from Wisconsin. There are super-rich people out there (like the Koch brothers) who are buying up political power all over the country.

But money doesn't do everything. Unions have over-stretched their demands and power and now people are down on them. That's a shame because history well documents the fact that unions are necessary in order to give workers a fighting chance against raw Capitalism. Unfortunately, we seem to be in a position of re-living history every century or so because most people do not learn history anymore. Probably half the people alive today were born after the Vietnam War. There is no memory of how labor was treated back in the late 19th Century.

Another fact is that wealthy conservatives are buying up political power in the states. They have not given up on the Federal government but they have realized that they can do a great deal of their damage through control of the states. Look at what has been happening to women's issues around the country, especially in Southern states where this strategy has been successful.

In an odd sort of way, what is happening now is a violation of the old conservative principle of "states rights." Except that it is not the Federal government that is intervening in self-determination of the states. It is big money from out-of-state. What would have happened in Wisconsin had the people of the state been able to exercise their own political choice without the intervention of foreign economic and political power?