General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsGOP Push to Replace Obamacare Reflects Radical Right's Stealth Plan for America
Democracy Now
June 29, 2017
As Republicans attempt to revive a bill to overturn Obamacare, we look at the radical right's attempt to reshape the role of the federal government - from healthcare to education to housing.
We speak with Duke University historian Nancy MacLean, author of the new book,
"Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right's Stealth Plan for America"
MacLean also uncovers the instrumental role the late libertarian economist James Buchanan played in the right's campaign to eliminate unions, suppress voting and privatize schools.
NERMEEN SHAIKH
While the Congressional Budget Office predicts 22 million would lose health insurance as a result of the Senate healthcare bill, some forces in the Republican Party, including the billionaire Koch brothers, say the bill does not go far enough.
This comes as the Koch brothers recently announced plans to spend between $300 million and $400 million in the 2018 midterm elections.
During a retreat last week, Charles Koch said: "We are more optimistic now about what we can accomplish than we have ever been."
AMY GOODMAN
Well, as the Koch brothers gear up for the 2018 elections, we turn now to look at the idealogical roots that have reshaped the Republican Party in recent decades.
A new book by the historian Nancy MacLean uncovers the instrumental role the late libertarian economist James Buchanan played in the right's campaign to eliminate unions, suppress voting, privatize schools and curb democratic majority rule.
Her book is titled "Democracy in Chains:The Deep History of the Radical Right's Stealth Plan for America."
MacLean is a professor of history and public policy at Duke University.
Nancy MacLean, welcome to Democracy Now.
NANCY MACLEAN
I'm so pleased to be with you.
AMY GOODMAN
Let's start with today's headline, the healthcare bill..Deeply unpopular.
Let's just look quickly at the polls, across the board.
You have the Quinnipiac poll that says 16 percent of the people in this country approve the Republican plan.
You've got the USA Today poll, only 12 percent.
You've got NPR/PBS/Marist poll, 17 percent.
And yet the Republicans are attempting to revive it and push it through once again.
In your book, Democracy in Chains, you lay out the deep history of the radical right's stealth plan for America.
Talk about this as an example of what you have found.
NANCY MACLEAN
Yes..I had never encountered James Buchanan before I started the research that ultimately became this book.
But what I learned in the course of that research is that this economist, who was trained at the University of Chicago, who was part of the same milieu as Milton Friedman, Friedrich Kayek and so forth, he went a distinctive way.
And he used the economic tools he got at the University of Chicago to look at politics in a new way.
And he produced, ultimately, the kind of pernicious cynicism that we see all around us today and that Donald Trump's candidacy and rhetoric embodies.
And in the healthcare debate, what we see is that Buchanan gave the advice to others on the right and to his corporate funders and donors and the people that he talked to that for capitalism of a kind they wanted to thrive, that democracy must be enchained.
Democracy must be, in effect, shackled, to prevent the majority will from being expressed, because it would take too much from people of great wealth, and that would be a problem for them.
More:
http://www.democracynow.org/2017/6/29/republican_push_to_replace_obamacare_reflects
dawg
(10,624 posts)Matthew28
(1,797 posts)-18th century
-Turn us into a religious fascist state
-Limit the rights of the poor
-Turn us into serfs
-Give everything to the rich
That is the plan
bresue
(1,007 posts)as to why Senators and Representatives are pushing their health care bill when it is only polling at a 14%? What is their end game...?
The Genealogist
(4,723 posts)That is always their end game.
bresue
(1,007 posts)They are overplaying their hands...but not sure why? Surely, they are not that naive to believe they won't be punished in 2018.
The Genealogist
(4,723 posts)And now the White House has its disenfranchisement committee set up, who knows what will happen by 2018. I don't mean to say that all this will spell success, but they are certainly doing all they can to keep the gravy train moving.