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Saturday, August 29, 2015

"... talking nonsense about economic crises is essentially a job requirement for anyone hoping to get the Republican presidential nomination."

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COMMENTS:
*  Republican dishonesty about China would be shocking -- if they hadn't been lying about everything for the last 30 years.  The Chinese didn't "steal" or "take" millions of American factory jobs. American capitalists sold them for quick short-term profits, with the American government's lassaiz faire approval.  The capitalists cashed in, the politicians were paid to look the other way, the Chinese economy boomed and American workers got screwed.  Republicans now want to prove to the world what hypocritical idiots we are by punishing the Chinese for buying what we were selling.  
    *  Tremendous point.  All this talk about China distracts from the reality you mentioned......corporations are to blame for offshoring American jobs and the GOP policies have rewarded them.  The GOP are experts at creating diversions and straw men and the media cow tows to them, never hold them accountable.  The GOP and their media machine hit sqads are consistently wrong in their dooms day predictions while the democrats are condemned for acting responsible. 
*  Sigh. I remember when the GOP used to be the "Party of adults." I rarely agreed with them, but a lot of them were reasonable people, at least below the national level.
    *  They don't seem quite so reasonable in retrospect, but it was hard to see where they were going.  They have gotten much worse - see Mann & Ornstein, "It's Even Worse Than It Looks," and Kabaservice, "Rule and Ruin."
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Paul Krugman: “Talking nonsense” is job requirement for GOP presidential nomination

When it comes to money, Republicans would rather "embrace fantasy" than deal with hard truths

By Scott Eric Kaufman, August 28, 2015

Paul Krugman unloaded on the Republican Party’s “deep bench” in his New York Times column Friday, excoriating the presidential hopefuls for their nonsensical views on all matters economic.

“How would the men and women who would be president respond if crisis struck on their watch?” he asked, answering that on the GOP side, the answer is all “bluster and China-bashing.” He singles out Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, who said that he if he were president, he’d “solve” the China-problem by telling its leader, Xi Jinping, to cancel his planned visit to the United States. “That would fix things!” he added.

Donald Trump’s non-solution is no better, Krugman argued. He constantly says that he wouldn’t let China “dictate the agenda,” but no one — not even Trump — knows precisely what that means. It is, however, an almost perfect talking point, playing as it does both to the GOP delusion that Obama’s a weak president and the party’s rampant xenophobia. “Not only can Obama not stop the Chinese, but they’re Chinese!” is the general impression they’re attempting to create.
“Obama is endangering America by borrowing from China” is a perfect political line, playing into deficit fetishism, xenophobia and the perennial claim that Democrats don’t stand up for America! America! America! It’s also complete nonsense, but that doesn’t seem to matter.

In fact, talking nonsense about economic crises is essentially a job requirement for anyone hoping to get the Republican presidential nomination.

To understand why, you need to go back to the politics of 2009, when the new Obama administration was trying to cope with the most terrifying crisis since the 1930s. The outgoing Bush administration had already engineered a bank bailout, but the Obama team reinforced this effort with a temporary program of deficit spending, while the Federal Reserve sought to bolster the economy by buying lots of assets.

And Republicans, across the board, predicted disaster. Deficit spending, they insisted, would cause soaring interest rates and bankruptcy; the Fed’s efforts would “debase the dollar” and produce runaway inflation.

None of it happened. Interest rates stayed very low, as did inflation. But the G.O.P. never acknowledged, after six full years of being wrong about everything, that the bad things it predicted failed to take place, or showed any willingness to rethink the doctrines that led to those bad predictions. Instead, the party’s leading figures kept talking, year after year, as if the disasters they had predicted were actually happening…
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