Saturday, May 09, 2020

America's Other Epidemic - Madness.


It's a question that needs to be asked, even if the answer is obvious. Have Americans gone crazy?

Bruce Livesey, writing in the National Observer, explores the signs of a nation in the throes of abject lunacy.
Andy Borowitz is a humourist who writes short satirical “fake news” stories for The New Yorker. When scrolling the magazine’s website, you often come across headlines for his pieces – “Trump blames plummeting poll numbers on people paying attention when he talks” or “Trump advises states facing bankruptcy to borrow millions from their Dads” – and momentarily your brain processes these as real news stories. 
And then it sinks in that it’s just another one of Borowitz’s humourous send-ups. But that second of believing the headline is real is a symptom of watching the United States descend into a surreal state of madness, where reality and fiction (and satire) have blended into a crazy mélange that defies any precedent. Sometimes it feels like we’re living through one of those 1970s dystopian sci-fi movies. 
Indeed, here’s a real headline in the Washington Post from the other day (and not from Andy Borowitz) - “Republican-led states signal they could strip workers’ unemployment benefits if they don’t return to work.” Or what about the story of a security guard shot and killed at a Flint, Michigan discount store because he asked a shopper to wear a state-mandated face mask.

I mean, that’s madness.
A people divided, at each others' throats.
Today, I don’t think a lot of Canadians are feeling envious of Americans or wish they live south of the border. The closest in Canada we’ve come to such lunacy is Premier Jason Kenney flailing away (in Trumpian fashion) at phantom enemies as Alberta slides towards bankruptcy, having gone all-in on a stranded asset no one wants.

In the U.S., though, the madness has been pushed to the surface by COVID-19, which has found a nation ill-prepared to cope with the virus, despite being a global superpower.

Now we're confronted with images similar to ones conjured by Stephen King in his novel The Stand – stories from New York of unclaimed bodies being buried in mass graves, or of up to 60 rotting corpses being discovered in two unrefrigerated U-Haul trucks outside a Brooklyn funeral home. Neighbours discovered the bodies because they could “smell death.”

Meanwhile, unlike previous crises (9/11 and the 2008-09 credit crisis come to mind), the political class has descended into partisan bickering. The Republicans, naturally, are to blame, having done everything possible to exacerbate the pandemic by initially claiming it was a hoax, refusing to give states supplies and money they need, and demanding people return to work as soon as possible.

Trump realizes the only play he has to win re-election in November is a strong economy. It’s clear he’ll risk voters lives and force them to return to their jobs before the pandemic is under control in the hopes the economy recovers in time for election day.
Institutional madness.
America has been rotting from the inside for a very long time. Don’t take my word for it. The journalist and author George Packer noted in a piece entitled “We Are Living in a Failed State” in The Atlantic recently: “when the virus came here, it found a country with serious underlying conditions, and it exploited them ruthlessly. Chronic ills—a corrupt political class, a sclerotic bureaucracy, a heartless economy, a divided and distracted public—had gone untreated for years.”

And esteemed Columbia University economist Jeffrey Sachs recently told The New Yorker: “Basically, American politics has become deeply corrupt over decades, and it became so corrupt that normal governance already collapsed many years ago. Nobody here has viewed government as actually very functional for a long time, and not because it couldn’t be. It has been increasingly designed to fail. Specifically, it’s been designed to respond to powerful lobbies that want deregulation or tax cuts or some special privileges rather than to function in a normal way… We’ve had widening inequalities and massive suffering.” 
Due to this dysfunction, America is now ground zero for the pandemic. Of the world’s 3.6 million known cases of COVID-19 (with 251,000 deaths), more than 1.2 million are in the U.S., with 70,000 fatalities. And this is only the first wave of the virus. 
Madness is caused by many things. But I would argue capitalism encourages mental illness. And no other country has bound itself more tightly to a brutal, heartless form of capitalism than America. So much so that, against all reason, it still doesn’t have a socialized health care system, which means 87 million Americans have no or inadquate medical coverage. And many of those Americans being thrown out of work because of COVID-19 are also losing their health insurance.
Capitalism breeds madness because it generates relentless stress. The stress from competition to make money, the insecurity of never knowing whether your job, company or entire industry will collapse or be moved offshore.  
Stress from not making enough money is enormous. In the U.S., almost 40 per cent of Americans don’t have enough to cover an unexpected $400 expense. By mid-March, 33.6 million didn’t have paid sick leave. The typical American worker now earns around (US) $44,500 a year – not much more than what they made in the 1970s, if adjusted for inflation. In 2018, 38.1 million Americans lived in poverty, while the wealthiest one percent control (US) $35 trillion
The U.S. political system and both Republican and Democratic parties have been bought by corporations, billionaires and bankers. Former U.S. President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton received vast sums from Wall Street during their runs for the White House, while the Republican Party is a subsidiary of Rupert Murdoch and Koch Industries. 
All of this cash has, by design, ensured that Congress can’t govern any longer. This was seen in Trump’s impeachment hearing where, despite overwhelming evidence he’d conspired with a foreign power to meddle in this year’s election, the Senate refused to throw him out. Forget meaningful legislation on anything important. 
Hence, when COVID-19 arrived, the government was no longer functioning to properly confront the pandemic. 
Imagine living in that kind of society? You would be driven mad too.

5 comments:

  1. When visiting the USA I see RV parks with full time residents.
    These people are so poor they cannot afford to live in a 'trailer/mobile home park'.
    They do so whilst flying or displaying the stars and stripes.
    These same people are the ones with mobility issues that sees so many wobbling in the streets struggling to go from the superstore to their AMC Gremlin.

    With these glaring deficiencies these same people still declare; we are #1 and claim US healthcare to be the best .
    Adding to the illusion of US supremacy they brag that they are the most powerful country in the world; this after losing yet more battles in Iraq and Afghanistan.
    Yet the illusion continues and many in central America still seek to move to the USA.

    It's amazing what good advertising will do!

    We are fed lies from cradle to grave.
    Some lies are short lived, others stick.
    In that respect America really is #1.

    TB





    ReplyDelete
  2. I really worry that Alberta and also Ontario and Quebec are following in suit. I fear that the re-opening of store and, in Quebec, of schools, is going to be disastrous.

    ReplyDelete
  3. TB, I worry that America's mental illness may not be reversible. Livesey's treatment of its hopelessly, paralytically corrupt government that no longer functions isn't going to be changed at the ballot box, not when both parties are in on this "bought and paid for" form of government. From the legislative branch to the regulatory/administrative branch to the judicial branch, it's rigged.

    ReplyDelete
  4. So tRump 'got elected' (supposed to be impossible)
    So tRump survived Impeachment (was strengthened by?)
    Russia-gate has now completely collapsed (while MSNBC etc hide their embarrassment)

    Our 'salvation' could be the pandemic.
    tRump's real & political life is finally on the line.

    I give tRump 50/50 odds to still be President come Jan/2021 via either
    - re-election*
    - an emergency extension of his mandate

    *ie If Biden retains a shred of coherency (like he did in the final Bernie debate), picks a progressive VP ... and if the election takes place ... tRump's chances take a dive - exactly the conditions where the 'emergency' postpones/cancels the election.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hi, Marie. I think that Alberta has already been laid too low to go this same route. We had Kenney's temper tantrums aplenty until his government got hit by the pandemic and, worse, the collapse of world oil prices that sealed bitumen's fate as a "stranded asset."

    With that, JK, begging bowl in hand, flew off to meet JT. Could Alberta rise again and come storming back with calls for Wexit? I suppose but I think it unlikely.

    Ontario and Quebec? I'll have to take your word for what's underway there. Ford seems to have redeemed himself with the virus thing. Perhaps he'll realize the honey v. vinegar thing. He never struck me as particularly astute.

    Legault? He's a bit of an unknown quantity to me but if he blunders on re-opening the economy and schools I doubt he'll be forgiven.

    What of you, Marie? Does early retirement beckon?

    ReplyDelete