Who Are The GOP / What Do They Stand For?
Apparently millions continue to harbor the
strange delusion that the Republican party is the party of free
enterprise, and, at least since the New Deal, the party of conservatism.
In fact, the party is and always has been the party of state
capitalism. That, along with the powers and perks it provides its
leaders, is the whole reason for its creation and continued existence.
By state capitalism I mean a regime of highly concentrated private
ownership, subsidized and protected by government. The Republican party
has never, ever opposed any government interference in the free market
or any government expenditure except those that might favour labour
unions or threaten Big Business. Consider that for a long time it was
the party of high tariffs — when high tariffs benefited Northern big
capital and oppressed the South and most of the population. Now it is
the party of so-called “free trade” — because that is the policy that
benefits Northern big capital, whatever it might cost the rest of us. In
succession, Republicans presented opposite policies idealistically as
good for America, while carefully avoiding discussion of exactly who it
was good for.
There is nothing particularly surprising that there
should be a party of state capitalism in the United States. And
certainly nothing surprising in the necessity for such a party to
present itself as something else. Put in terms the Founding Fathers
would have understood, the interests Republicans serve are merely the
court party — what Jefferson referred to as the tinsel aristocracy and
John Taylor as the paper aristocracy. The American Revolution was a
revolt of the country against the court. Jeffersonians understood that
every political system divides between the great mass of unorganized
folks who mind their own business — that, is, the country party — and
the minority who hang around the court to manipulate the government
finances and engineer government favours. It is much easier and quicker
to get rich by finding a way into the treasury than by risk and hard
work. That is mostly what politics is about. Of course, schemes to
plunder society through the government must never be seen as such. They
must be powdered and perfumed to look like a public good.
— Clyde Wilson, “The Republican Charade: Lincoln and His Party” (14 November 2014)
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