Where Were You in the Elitist War, Daddy?

by Philip Weiss on October 22, 2007 · 3 comments

On his book tour, Alan Greenspan has been talking about the dangers of capitalism. Sounding the socialist, he sees a moral problem with the rising gap between rich and poor. The unprivileged will begin to question the rightness of capitalism and globalization. Any system has to be consensual in a democracy, says Greenspan, and capitalism is in danger of losing that legitimacy. It seems unfair. There are different rules for the wealthy and the poor, and no sense of shared burdens.

This is of course one of the main problems with the Iraq war.  How many of the people who signed off on this mess or pushed for it had anything beyond an intellectual stake in the aftermath? I heard that neocon Eliot Cohen has a son in the service, and so does neocon David Gelernter, but they’re the great exceptions. To most everyone else who thought this was a good idea, it’s a parlor game. Even the liberal media that stake out a position against it, what do they have to lose? There’s something idle about their posturing. Everyone calls it a tragedy, but for whom is it a tragedy? Not the decision-makers… If people really took the war seriously, as a mistake, they’d have to engage Walt and Mearsheimer’s theory more honestly.

When I was in college, all us ambitious journalists wanted to emulate a startling essay on Vietnam that a guy we knew had written: Jim Fallows’s piece "What Did You Do in the Class War, Daddy?" It appeared in the Washington Monthly in 1975 or so and said that the privileged and wealthy had largely escaped service in Vietnam. I know, today that seems obvious; but the backdrop then was World War II– when George Bush and John Kennedy and other blueblood scions served.

I can’t find the piece on-line, but Fallows’s not-so-obvious point was that the Vietnam War dragged on because the people who were making decisions about the war didn’t have children serving there. His essay needs to be revisited today. How many of the people who form opinions and policy about Iraq go to sleep tortured by fears about that conflict? Very few…

Related posts:

  1. Elitist Journalists Dis Populist Iowa Caucuses As Elitist
  2. Obama’s an Elitist, Intellectual Progressive. Where’s the Downside?
  3. Yes, Obama Is an Ambitious Elitist. So What?
  4. Obama: Elitist, or Just Elite?
  5. By Dismissing Walt & Mearsheimer, MSM Fosters Alienated Groundswell

{ 3 comments }

1 Christopher Brown October 22, 2007 at 10:03 pm

Greenspan:

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18595.htm

Still, can we really blame “Maestro” for what appears to have been a spontaneous flurry of “free market” speculation in real estate?

To a large extent, yes. Apart from Greenspan’s tacit endorsement of all the dubious loans (subprime, ARMs etc) which flourished during his reign; and despite his brusque rejection of the Fed’s role as regulator; the Federal Reserve’s own documents (“House Prices and Monetary Policy: A Cross-Country Study”) indicate that housing was “specifically targeted” acknowledging that it would serve as “a key channel of monetary policy transmission”. This is not even particularly controversial any more. In fact, we can see that this same scam has been used in England, Spain and Ireland—all now suffering the effects of massive real estate inflation. Low interest rates continue to be the most efficient way of stealthily shifting wealth from one class to another while decimating the foundations of a healthy economy.

2 Seth Roberts October 23, 2007 at 1:00 am

What do you think of what Fallows has written about Walt-Mearsheimer?

http://jamesfallows.theatlantic.com/archives/2007/10/armenians_cubans_and_aipac.php

3 MM October 23, 2007 at 10:00 am

Be sure to see his next post, too, where the Lobby criticizes him for singling out Jews!

http://jamesfallows.theatlantic.com/archives/2007/10/now_this_truly_amazes_me_comme.php

Twain was right, truth stranger than fiction.

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