See also:

The New Know-Nothingism, by Eric Alterman, October 30, 2003
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20031117&s=alterman

Shrill Conservatives, by Richard Blow, Oct 28 2003
http://www.tompaine.com/feature2.cfm/ID/9250


http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=17169

The Professor Takes the Gloves Off

By Terrence McNally, AlterNet
November 12, 2003

Accustomed in economic circles to calling a stupid argument a stupid 
argument, and isolated (in Princeton, New Jersey) from the Washington 
dinner-party circuit, Paul Krugman has become the most prominent 
voice in the mainstream U.S. media to openly and repeatedly accuse 
George Bush of lying to the American people to sell budget-busting 
tax cuts and a pre-emptive and nearly unilateral war.

Krugman cannot be dismissed by opponents as some dyed-in-the-wool 
lefty. He's a moderate academic economist who's been radicalized by 
the Bush White House and the right wing it represents. Krugman joined 
The New York Times in 1999 as a columnist on the op-ed Page and 
continues as professor of Economics and International Affairs at 
Princeton University. His new book, "The Great Unraveling: Losing Our 
Way In The New Century" (#9 on the New York Times best-seller list 
and a top seller on Amazon) is a collection of his op-ed pieces from 
January 2000-January 2003.

McNally: How did your role in the op-ed pages of The New York Times 
happen and how has it evolved?

Krugman: I was brought on to write about "my real home," economics 
and business, specifically international economics. There were a lot 
of international crises in the '90s and The Times thought I'd be 
writing about policies and disasters overseas, as well as about stuff 
at home, typically the follies of the new economy. But it was 
election season, and it pretty quickly became clear to me - and more 
and more so as we went along - that the really scary follies, the 
potential disasters that were the greatest risks of concern were at 
home.

I came on thinking it would be a largely non-political column. I 
think The Times thought that, too. And then during the campaign, 
because I knew my stuff - basically, because I could do my own 
arithmetic - I found myself saying: "You know, these guys are 
lying...This is a fundamentally irresponsible and dishonest economic 
program." Then after the election it increasingly became clear to me 
that it wasn't just economics.

So it's a very strange thing. I'm no wild-eyed radical. Actually, The 
American Prospect, a very liberal magazine, ran a story in the 
mid-90s attacking me for my support of Free Trade.

McNally: I remember that.

Krugman: So I was kind of a bad guy from the point of view of more 
consistently reliable commentators on the left. But of course now all 
of that seems insignificant compared with the awesomeness of the 
fraud that they [the Bush Administration] are trying to perpetrate on 
all of us.

McNally: Exactly. Could talk a little bit about the introduction to 
your book and the context it sets? I assume you would never have 
written that at the time you wrote the first op-eds that appear in 
the book.

Krugman: You're right. I put a date on the introduction: April 10, 
just to make it clear that this is what I thought at that date. If 
we'd found a nuclear program in Iraq or the budget picture had 
improved, then I would've looked like I didn't know what I was 
talking about. But of course everything has turned out even worse 
than I expected. What I realized looking back over my own writings is 
that it's pretty easy to identify some very radical intents on the 
part of the coalition that now runs the country. It's not just a 
single group. It's the religious right, it's the hard-line 
conservatives, it's the anti-environmental industry groups and so on.

Put it all together and what you see is the outlines of an extremely 
radical program. Maybe reactionary would be the word because a lot of 
it would be rolling us back to where we were before the 1930s, before 
Franklin Roosevelt. In any case, a very radical program that would 
un-do the America that we've all grown up in.

I end up quoting Henry Kissinger because his writings gave me the key 
to why it's so hard for people - even liberals - to accept what's 
going on. He wrote about how when faced with a revolutionary power - 
who really doesn't accept the rules of the game, the legitimacy of 
the system - people who have been accustomed to the stability make 
excuses. They say: "Oh, well, they may talk that way but they don't 
really mean it. If we give them some partial concessions we can 
appease them, they'll be satisfied and all of this stuff would stop." 
That's exactly what's been happening now.

The true radicalism of the Bush Administration - cutting taxes to a 
level that will not support social programs and dangerous adventurism 
in foreign policy - has been right in front of our eyes, but most 
pundits and much of the public are saying: "Oh, let's not get too 
extreme here. I'm sure we can work this out. We can find a middle 
ground." And there isn't one.

McNally: Do you think that appeasement approach, that inability to 
believe that these people are as far out as they say they are, has 
been exacerbated by September 11? It's my take that had the economy 
continued as it was, had the lies continued as they were without Bush 
in the Commander-in-Chief role, people would've picked up on this 
sooner...

Krugman: Probably, although it's hard to say. We can't re-run the tape.

If you say what is actually obvious: that these people took September 
11 as a great political opportunity and used it to push both a 
domestic economic and social agenda and a foreign policy agenda that 
had nothing to do with September 11 - that's an extraordinary charge. 
And the very fact that it's such a harsh thing to say makes people 
unwilling to see it. It was obvious in the fall of last year that 
they were hyping the case for a war with Iraq. But it just seemed too 
harsh, too extreme to say that the President of the United States 
would do that. So there was a tremendous soft pedaling in the 
reporting.

McNally: I've talked about this with [UC Berkeley journalism 
professor] Mark Danner and others... Is it because the press is 
afraid of Bush's popularity and basically the media don't want to be 
caught ahead of the people? Is it corporate profits? Is it just a 
loss of true journalism? What do you attribute it to? You must talk 
with your colleagues about this.

Krugman: Well, actually, less than you might think, in terms of 
talking with colleagues. I'm based in Central New Jersey...

I'm not even sure I believe that the corporate influence thing is 
important yet. It may be at some future date, but I think that - 
outside of Fox News, which is of course simply part of a machine - 
it's not that crucial. By the way, I insult Fox News whenever I can, 
hoping that they'll sue me.

McNally: Best if they can do it while the book is fresh in the stores, right?

Krugman: That's right. But meanwhile, I think a better story is two 
things. One is that the media are desperately afraid of being accused 
of bias. And that's partly because there's a whole machine out there, 
an organized attempt to accuse them of bias whenever they say 
anything that the right doesn't like.

So rather than really try to report things objectively, they settle 
for being even-handed, which is not the same thing. One of my lines 
in a column - in which a number of people thought I was insulting 
them personally - was that if Bush said the earth was flat, the 
mainstream media would have stories with the headline: "Shape of the 
Earth - Views Differ." Then they'd quote some Democrats saying that 
it was round.

Journalistic organizations are afraid of being accused of bias. 
There's also a fair bit of low rate intimidation of journalists 
themselves. I have received a couple of elliptical death threats but 
they weren't serious. The real stuff is the hate mail that comes in 
enormous quantities. Organizations try their best to find some 
scandal in your personal life and disseminate it. I don't think a lot 
of journalists are sitting around saying: "I better not cross these 
guys, they'll ruin me." But they do know that every time they say 
anything the right doesn't like to hear, they get the equivalent of a 
nasty electric shock. They sort of get conditioned not to go there.

McNally: Your initial op-eds dealt with Bush's campaign economics, 
but now you've grown to believe that the lying and the other things 
are basic approaches across the board, haven't you?

Krugman: Sure. Whatever you think about the Iraq war, the way it was 
sold was exactly the template they use for selling the tax cuts. The 
hyped evidence, the misleading statements, the bait-and-switch, the 
constantly shifting rationale. And the same things can be seen in 
less politically hot issues...the "Healthy Forests" plan, for 
instance.

In terms of naming things, Orwell had nothing on these guys. So the 
"Healthy Forest" plan turns out to be a plan to allow more logging of 
the forests. The "Clear Skies Initiative" turns out to first, get rid 
of new source review, which is an integral part of the Clean Air Act, 
and so on down the line.

So it's definitely a pattern. And if you step back a moment and look 
at it, you start to realize that, although looking at selling of the 
2003 tax cut and what it does to our physical future is a bad thing, 
looking at the whole picture makes you feel a whole lot worse.

McNally: You point back to Reagan who had ideas you didn't agree with 
but at least sold them on what he believed to be their merits. 
Whether it was true or not, it was the actual case.

Krugman: That's right. Reagan, I think sincerely believed in 
trickle-down economics. Look, it's funny. Not only do I miss Reagan 
who I thought had bad policies but didn't approach the skullduggery 
of these people, I actually miss Nixon. Although God knows he did 
skullduggery, as John Dean says, even Nixon didn't go after the wives.

McNally: The CIA leak of Ambassador Joe Wilson's wife...

Krugman: Yeah. Also Nixon seemed to be at least sincerely interested 
in governing. He was actually trying to run the country. He didn't 
think anybody else should have a chance to run it, but he actually 
tried to solve problems. The old hands of the Environmental 
Protection Administration will tell you that the Nixon years were a 
golden age. These people now... they're ruthless, they're dishonest, 
and they haven't actually tried to deal with any of our real problems.

McNally: I read one quote where you said: "Tell me one real problem 
that they took on and offered an actual solution." Can we narrow our 
focus to economics? What is most alarming about the deficit? We know 
in Keynesian economics deficits are okay... What's the real problem 
here? Why is it as bad as you think it is?

Krugman: I'm sorry, there's one-and-a-half problems. It's still a 
jobless recovery. That's a very nasty prospect and we have seen no 
real sign of turn-around there. But beyond that... Look, deficits are 
okay, but Keynes never said it was okay to run deficits forever. He 
said that deficits are good for stimulating the economy temporarily 
during downturns.

What we have is the prospect of deficits that are not temporary. The 
last estimate is, of the $500 billion-plus deficit, only about $60 or 
$70 billion would go away even if the economy does recover. And it's 
much worse once the baby boomers retire, which happens in about 10 
years. We have the finances of a banana republic right now. If 
current tax rates and current programs continue, at some point the 
U.S. government will simply be unable to pay its debts - and long 
before that point happens, industries will pull the plug.

And we have the same thing internationally as well. We have a huge 
trade deficit. It roughly matches the domestic deficit, and 
foreigners are lending the country money to cover that. At some point 
they will pull the plug. Some people say we now have a faith-based 
currency. I think we have a faith-based government. People believe 
that we're going to get our act together, but there's no sign that we 
will.

McNally: So perhaps a lulling effect - similar to the one we were 
talking about earlier - may be working right now to cover our butt 
for a while, but it could turn quickly.

Krugman: That's right. At the moment, the actual fiscal state of the 
federal government is substantially worse than that of the state of 
California. The laws are different: the state of California is 
obliged by law to balance its books each year. It'll fudge a bit but 
eventually it has to clear the books. The federal government does not.

Also, you might say that Bush has some un-earned credits from the 
responsibility of his predecessors. In the past, U.S. presidents have 
always in the end done enough of the right thing so that the solvency 
of the government was never at stake. And it comes back to this 
denial that I talk about. People can't believe that we're dealing 
with something completely different now, but we are.

McNally: Let me get this straight. You're not saying that we will 
actually go bankrupt, but that we are too dependent on foreign 
investors and at some point, they'll say: "You know what, I'm putting 
my money elsewhere."

Krugman: Well, in fact, that does produce something that looks like 
bankruptcy. When you have a huge debt, not only do you have to pay 
interest on it, but you have to keep rolling it over. The point comes 
when investors say: "I don't trust these Americans. They don't seem 
to be responsible." Then all of a sudden you cannot raise the money 
to service the debt when it comes due.

McNally: We've watched this happen in other countries and the thought 
is - that's Thailand, that's not the U.S.

Krugman: That's Argentina. This is my specialty. I watched it happen 
in other countries and you look at the numbers and you say: "Geez, we 
have a budget deficit that's bigger compared with the size of our 
economy than Argentina before their 2001 crack-up. We have a trade 
deficit that's bigger compared with the size of our economy, than 
Indonesia before its 1997 crack-up." You say: "Well, yeah, but this 
is America and it can't happen here." But there's a lot of things we 
didn't think could happen here. Something very seriously wrong is 
going on now.

McNally: What I haven't heard quite yet is the point which you make 
very strongly in the book, that the purpose behind the tax cuts is to 
bankrupt the government, to undermine social programs, so that no one 
who comes into office after them will have an easy time restoring 
them.

Krugman: I'm not making that up. That's exactly what the lobbyists 
and the others behind these people say. The program that the 
Administration is following looks as if it was designed to implement 
their ideas. I think it is.

McNally: What would you do? And let me ask it two ways. What would 
Paul Krugman's solution be? And then, if Paul Krugman were Howard 
Dean or Wesley Clark or John Kerry - if he were running for office, 
what would his solution be?

Krugman: Okay. First off, you have to have a plan to get the budget 
back into balance. It's not possible to have a plan that doesn't 
include phasing out the bulk, if not all, of the Bush tax cuts. Not 
all in the first year, we're still in a recession. But a gradual plan 
to eliminate those tax cuts, bring the tax system back to about where 
it was in 2000. This would get us most, though not all, of the way to 
a balanced budget. You could talk about other things on the side, but 
that would have to be the core of it.

Meanwhile, we need to get the economy moving. To do that, you have to 
do the things that governments always do during recessions, but this 
government hasn't. Aid to state and local governments so they aren't 
laying off schoolteachers and firemen just when the economy is 
slumping. Public works programs. As it happens, we have a whole 
backlog of homeland security spending: ports and so on that we should 
be doing that the government is nickel-and-diming away.

McNally: And a huge amount of federal infrastructure that we just 
ignore completely.

Krugman: That's right. Just go and do these things which we need done 
anyway and particularly now. They would also help create jobs. Maybe 
on top of that we need another round of rebates, but rebates that are 
fully refundable and go to the people most likely to spend the money.

Is that guaranteed to work? I don't know. But it's certainly has a 
good chance of working and we haven't tried any of these obvious 
things.

McNally: How much of that do you think a candidate could say and get away with?

Krugman: I think a candidate has to be fairly forthright. We can 
argue about whether the whole Bush tax cut or just the upper brackets 
need to go. But at least they have to say that the upper brackets 
must go.

And look, I don't know that we'll win. I don't know what tricks the 
Administration will come up with to divert people's attention, but I 
think that unless a candidate is really prepared to come out 
swinging, to say these people are doing the wrong thing by the 
country, there's no chance. Saying "I'm like Bush only less so" is 
not going to win this election.

Interviewer Terrence McNally hosts Free Forum on KPFK 90.7fm, Los 
Angeles (streaming at kpfk.org), where he interviews people he 
believes can help create "a world that just might work."

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