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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

McCain Is Robin Hood in Reverse

By Joshua Holland, AlterNet. Posted October 31, 2008.


McCain wants to be the great "re-distributor": He takes money from poor people and sends it upward.
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John McCain is a firm believer in a philosophy of governance that's been responsible for the most dramatic redistribution of American income and wealth since the New Deal. For the past 30 years, the conservative movement has focused relentlessly on redistributing income, but always upward, toward the top. It's a great irony of the 2008 campaign: Nobody is more dedicated to redistributing wealth than adherents of the ideology that McCain represents.

The numbers don't lie. In 1972, the top 1 percent of Americans took in 8.7 percent of all earned income, but that figure skyrocketed to more than 20 percent in 2006. Recently, the Wall Street Journal reported the results of all this conservative redistribution: "The richest 1 percent of Americans in 2006 garnered the highest share of the nation's adjusted gross income for two decades, and possibly the highest since 1929."

Meanwhile, wages have stagnated for most of us. Economists Thomas Piketty and Emmanuel Saez sliced and diced the American economy, going back to the beginning of the last century, and they found that between 1973 and 2005, despite several periods of healthy growth, the average income of all but the top 10 percent of the economic ladder -- 9 out of 10 American families -- actually fell by 3 percent.

The Corporate Right achieved that through systematic union-busting, fighting increases in the minimum wage, drafting so-called "free trade" agreements that placed American workers in competition with working people overseas, abusing the immigration system and gaming the tax code so that more of the burden would fall on wage earners than on people who sit back and make most of their scratch from investment income.

Conservatives are often accused of being obsessed with keeping government's nose out of the free market. But Dean Baker, co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, argues that progressives are off the mark when they accuse economic conservatives of "free market fundamentalism." "When we say they're 'market fundamentalists,'" he told me in an interview, "we're acting like they're willing to accept market outcomes." In reality, he continued, "they've rigged the deck. They've made sure that certain people come out ahead, that income flows upward, and that other people are put at a disadvantage -- and these things are built into the rules of the system."

So it's an irony that, desperate to find an attack that might have some traction in the closing days of the race, the McCain camp has seized on the idea that -- gasp! -- Barack Obama is a "redistributor"; in a campaign stop in Iowa this week, McCain referred to his opponent as the potential "redistributor in chief."

This, after the McCain camp failed to move the polls by charging that Obama -- a centrist Democrat by inclination as well as experience -- is a crypto-socialist. That charge led to moments that were nothing short of bizarre, like when CNN explained to its viewers that socialism is a system in which the state controls the means of production and the private sector doesn't exist (if you missed Obama's call to do away with capitalism, you're not alone).

Of course, everyone in government is a "redistributor." The redistribution of wealth is what political scientists call a "defining function" of the state -- it's one of the reasons states exist. Every time a government spends a tax dollar to build a school, repair a road or deploy a military unit, wealth is being redistributed. If it weren't, those who could afford it would have private police forces, fire departments, schools and all the other organs of government, and the rest of us would be out of luck.
But the McCain camp is trying to paint Obama as a "radical" bent on taking money out of hardworking Americans' pockets and giving it to the lazy and indolent (there's no small amount of classism and racism implied in the charge). The reason: When Obama suggests that spreading the wealth around a little bit more equitably would be good for our entire society, he's talking about redistributing income downward.

It doesn't appear to be a debate the Obama camp is uncomfortable having. With deep structural problems in the global economy, a terrible federal balance sheet and two costly wars, the Bush years have been bad for most working people. As economist Jared Bernstein -- one of Obama's advisers -- noted, when one compares the economic peak of the past business cycle, in 2000, with the high point of the business cycle that just ended, in 2007, households in the middle actually lost ground, earning $300 inflation-adjusted dollars less than they did in 2000. The worst they had ever done in previous business cycles was during the 1970s, when median income "only" increased by about $2,000. In comparison, the income for a family in the middle rose by almost four grand during the 1990s.

It's the first time since they started keeping records of family income after World War II that the economy has gone into a recession before the middle class, those iconic "American families" that dominate our political discourse, had rebounded fully from the previous downturn. That represents an immensely painful double-dip for those in the middle and at the bottom -- only those in the top one-fifth of the economic ladder have seen any gains whatsoever since the last recession (officially) ended in 2001. And those in the top 1 percent saw their incomes increase by about half during that time (which some conservative economists have called the "Bush Boom").

Ultimately, it's this reality that has softened the impact of the McCain campaign's charges and damaged his chance to win the presidency. Americans are more pessimistic about their economic prospects than they've been at any time since they started tracking those trends, and, according to a Gallup poll released Oct. 30, 6 out of 10 of them agree that "money and wealth should be more evenly distributed among a larger percentage of the people."

AlterNet is a nonprofit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed by our writers are their own.

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Joshua Holland is an AlterNet staff writer.

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The title hits the nail on the head
Posted by: veig on Oct 31, 2008 1:29 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But this is not only John McCain, folks: the whole free-market system is designed to work that way.
The most prominent features of that system are:
- heavy tax-breaks for corporations and rich people (in the name of a "trickle-down" pipe-dream that never came true);
- allowing lobbies (I.E. corporate interests) to meddle with the democratic process;
- the existence of tax havens;
- a bailout guaranteed by the taxpayers should any of the major corporations fail
- the policies of major financial institutions like the IMF making sure that no financial help can be obtained without giving away public services and national goods to the private sector.

Reverse-RobinHoodism has been a world trend over the last 30 years. Let us hope that the convergence of concerns such as global warming, the depletion of water and energy resources, and the obvious failure of the neo-liberal free-market policies will help nations come to terms with that catastrophic ideology.

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McCain gives a Tax Cut to Himself! Make the TAX cuts Perminent!
Posted by: Ottomatic on Oct 31, 2008 3:26 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
TAX cuts for Billionaires!

Rabid-Reptilians!
Projects for a Old American Century
Rovien Stink Tank Propaganda
Military-Media-Banker Complex and
Neo-Zio-CON Extremists

Bill Gates needs a TAX CUT?
Get the Funk out of my computer first!
The Richest person in America needs a Tax Cut?
Tinkle Down Economics
Works for the Rich and
Really Sucks for the Poor:
Singing in the Rain!

Foreign BANKS need Government Handouts?
Who dreams up this SH-T?

BUSH-ZARRO America:
Where everything is done backwards!
Where the CROOKS that robbed you get to steal even more.
The people are so over Worked,
Hypnotized, Brainwashed and Conditioned that
They still believe this BU__! SH__!
Uniquely American!
And for what?
No Money for Health care,
No Money for Infrastructure
No Money for Green Energy
No Money for College
But we’ve got TWO STINKING WARS!

How poor do you have to be?
To realize that the cards are stacked against you?
Either we get dramatic sweeping change right NOW or
Tear it DOWN!
Down to the Foundation
Brick by Brick

W 4 WRONG Bush belongs in PRISON
He is an Abomination!

BUSH/Cheney and the Forty Thieves:

Committed Treason, Spied, Lied and Terrorized!
Killed your kids,
Picked your Pocket and
Emptied your Wallets.

MISSION ADMONISHED!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Robbin' the hood
Posted by: Quasar on Oct 31, 2008 6:22 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
McCain's entire campaign has been an (abject) lesson in just how much the rich want to stay rich.

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True enough, but...........
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Oct 31, 2008 7:04 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I will be gratified to read the names of all politicians that stood in opposition to it. I can think of a scant few and perhaps you can name another or two BUT the redistribution tsunami didn't even provide the innocents with a siren warning and all of the king's horses fell down and were swept away.

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I think you have not read the story of Robin Hood
Posted by: Ky Lake Dave on Oct 31, 2008 7:10 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It was the Sheriff and the Tax Collectors (goverment) that Robin Hood would take from. Then return money back to the citizens (tax payers) the thieving tax collectors originally stole from. If Robin Hood was not a fictional charactor and here today he would be a Repubilcan. McCain is more Robin Hood like than Obama. Obama would be more of the Sheriff of Nottingham. He will tax (take from) the citizens to poverty for his own gain (goverment).

Take from the rich (Goverment) and give to the poor (tax payers).

I LOVE ROBIN HOOD!

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John "Dennis Moore" McCain
Posted by: kiel on Oct 31, 2008 7:49 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Adapted from the classic Monty Python sketch:

John McCain, John McCain
Riding through the land
John McCain, John McCain
Without a merry band
He steals from the poor
And gives to the rich
Stupid bitch

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Reverse Robin Hood McCain -- more correctly, the "King of Greed"
Posted by: USAFVeteran1966 on Oct 31, 2008 7:56 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
His seven homes and 13 cars aside, nothing is more telling about McCain's greedy nature than his favorable opinion of Bush’s 2001 tax cuts.

Previously, McCain asserted several times that the reductions unfairly favored wealthy people and should not be approved. Now he wants the cuts to be made permanent.

Since the lowered IRS rates did not change after enactment, McCain either no longer believes in fairness or he is dishonestly appealing to his Republican base.

To show how extreme was his flip-flop on income taxes, consider the following reductions that were reported by the Los Angeles Times on August 21, 2008:

The top 1% of wage earners: - $31,943
($619,561 and above)

Lowest 20%: - $21
($19,700 and under)

In other words, the richest wage earners received enough tax relief under the 2001 plan to buy a new SUV, while the bottom 20% could barely afford five gallons of gasoline.

Any reasonable person -— Democrat or Republican —- would have to agree that McCain’s proposed tax plan is grossly unfair. It also speaks volumes to his character. A presidential candidate that indifferent to America's working poor should not become their leader.

As further proof of McCain’s unfitness to command, he continues to allege in his TV campaign ads that “Barack Obama will raise your taxes!”

Oh really, Mr. Straight Talk Express?

Here are Obama's tax reductions reported by the L.A. Times, compared to McCain’s:

Lowest 20%:
Obama = - $617; McCain = -$21

Second 20%:
Obama = - $950; McCain = - $124

Middle 20%:
Obama = - $1,035; McCain = - $282

The numbers make crystal clear McCain's true character. In addition to being a "reverse Robin hood," he's a pandering politician who will say anything to get elected.

Vietnam vet/Obama supporter
Eight reasons to vote against John McCain

PS: Hugh Scott asked me to thank the many AlterNet readers who visited his NONPROFIT website, www.UnfitMcCain.com, which received nearly two million hits since being launched in May 2008. As Scotty emailed me about his AlterNet promotional efforts, "Mission Accomplished!"

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McCain = Fascist, Most Americans = Socialists
Posted by: QQOblivion on Oct 31, 2008 9:40 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the news: McCain says Obama's economic policies are "far left".

Let me tell you something. Obama's economic philosophies are to the RIGHT of not only my own economic philosophies, but probably to the right of many, if not most, of Americans' personal economic philosophies as well.

Obama is a capitalist and a corporate shill.
But McCain, who would think that Obama is far left by comparison, is a FASCIST in his economic philosophies.

According to McCain, anyone who believes that someone on minimum wage should pay lower taxes than Donald Trump does (or than John McCain does, for that matter) is on the FAR left, so far left that that believer in the American status quo is actually a "socialist" or maybe even a "communist".

That says more about John McCain than it says about anyone else.

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Josh, I don't owe you that beer yet... I think
Posted by: DaBear on Oct 31, 2008 3:31 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nice piece... now get something in there about the owning class and housing for craptasm's sake.

There's free beer in it for ya, at least one anyway. member my offer?

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Get a little even
Posted by: Jeanne on Oct 31, 2008 5:27 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Somehow or other my name has made its way onto the RNC's mailing list. Don't know how since I've never participated in anything that whiffs Republican in my life. No matter. I have been receiving questionnaires and donation requests with their postage-paid self-addressed return envelopes. In addition to giving real answers to their questions, I have been returning boxes and large envelopes to the RNC on their dime. I simply tape the pre-addressed, postage-paid envelope onto a box or large envelope, stuff said package with anything heavy -- old catalogs, shoes, bricks, whatever will fit -- and take it to the post office to mail (because it is too heavy to simply drop into a mail box). The RNC pays, I recycle. I look on it as small revenge.

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McCain is the Village Corporate Idiot
Posted by: OrwellMan on Nov 1, 2008 1:45 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Robin Hood in reverse" makes for a splashy headline and is completely inaccurate. McCain's only real power as Senator was to play his pretend role as a "conservative" which is to say a clod underling for corporate Mafia dons.

Obama's role as a "change you can believe in" so-called "progressive" is a joke with people like Robert Rubin, George Soros and Zbignew Brzezinski as corporate Mafiosi handlers dictating his every policy move for the bloody old oligarch class.

It was Obama who urged every democrat on the hill to vote for carte blanche Wall Street extortion “bailout” that has put corporatist crime into the business of running U.S. government. That’s not Robin Hood. It’s more like a bottom rung corporate Mafia capo working for the usual suspects.

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