Sunday, March 24, 2019

Misinformation and Fearmongering


Because the Democrats are proposing to actually do something about global warming, health care, runaway student debt, and rampant wealth inequality, the Republicans have trotted out the only response they can come up with: “Socialism!” We even hear cries of “Venezuela!” As if providing health care for all Americans would somehow turn us into a failed petrostate. On the right, there tends to be a lot of misinformation and fearmongering about what socialism even is. Perhaps a bit of personal history might shed some light on the question.
One sunny afternoon in August 1984, my wife and I passed through Checkpoint Charlie, where we were required to trade 50 Westmarks for 50 worthless Ostmarks. As we wandered the streets of East Berlin, we witnessed the somber, hopeless faces of the city’s few pedestrians. We marveled at the cheap-looking Trabants that motored loudly up and down the streets and belched foul fumes out of their tailpipes. We passed soldier after soldier, each fully armed, each exuding an almost tangible assurance that the Cold War was as real as any hot one. We watched people stand in lines a block long to buy produce. We tried to spend our allotted Ostmarks in the city’s most prestigious department store but couldn’t find even a souvenir we wouldn’t have thrown away. We finally bought a cheap noodle press and a metric measuring cup. We ate at a state cafeteria where the food tasted as unappetizing as it looked, then stopped at an ice cream parlor on Unter den Linden that was already out of practically everything on the menu by 4 p.m. By evening we were more than eager to return to the hustle and plenty of West Berlin. We left with most of our East German currency and absolutely no illusions about communism.
I can still remember later that evening visiting a little Slavic restaurant in a quiet corner of Neukölln and how ecstatic I was over a tossed salad with tomatoes and green peppers. “I could never get a salad like this in East Berlin!” I exulted. That one afternoon behind the Iron Curtain had made me see the world with new eyes. I marveled at how many stores and shops there were in the West, and at how fully stocked they were. In fact, because of that one afternoon, I can perhaps dimly imagine what the East Germans must have felt that November day five years later when the Wall came tumbling down. I can understand their desires for reunification and prosperity. I can understand their blind assumption that capitalism is right—because communism is definitely wrong. But there are many types of capitalism, and not all of them look like our top-heavy American form of corporate capitalism.
How many times have we heard from Republicans that socialism is evil, just one step, or perhaps even a half-step, away from communism? But is socialism really just a half-step away from communism? Remember the contrast I drew between the scarcity of goods in East Berlin and their abundance in West Berlin, between the oppression in the East and the freedom in West? Yes, this was a contrast between two opposing systems. But it was not a contrast between communist East Germany and capitalist America; it was a contrast between communist East Germany and socialist West Germany. West Germany in the 1980s was a solidly socialist country, with a universal multipayer health-care system, high marginal tax rates, a statutory guarantee of four weeks’ paid vacation every year (compared with none in America), and a substantial social safety net. Yes, West Germany was what Republicans would deride as a welfare state. It also had one of the strongest economies and highest standards of living in the world. It was strong enough to absorb the crumbling mess that was East Germany and still remain the strongest economy in Europe. Even today, Germany is solidly socialist, and in 2014 all German states also began offering free university tuition.
So, when you hear cries of “socialism” or “Venezuela,” please remember that this is simple partisan fearmongering by a party that has no solutions to the most pressing issues of our day.

5 comments:

  1. Well said! I note, however, that the Scandinavian States are more truly representative socialist Democracies today than is contemporary Germany.

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  2. Roger, This is a very superficial look at the problem. First of all, bashing one or the other political party only entrenches the divide between them, increases the partisan divide. It happens on both sides as well as the misinformation game. Germany does have some things we could look at to get ideas as to how to improve our health system, etc. But it is nowhere near a utopian system. It is not a fully socialist system. It's industry is decidedly capitalist. There seems to be a relatively low percentage of people on welfare as it is in reality an unemployment compensation benefit where a person unemployed must continually look for work and face reductions in benefits if a person turns down a job offer. The healthcare system has advantages and drawbacks also. Everyone pays into a mandatory insurance system or purchases private insurance. People using the mandatory insurance system have problems with long delays when scheduling outpatient services and with doctor care as doctors have to observe pretty strict time limits with each patient or be sanctioned while seeing patients that subscribe to the mandatory system. People that can afford private insurance enjoy shorter waiting times and longer times actually being seen by a doctor.
    Care for the elderly also is lagging, with a sever shortage of nurses. Nurses complain that that they are underpaid and just do not want to work in that field.
    The percentage of people living at or below the poverty level in Germany is something like 15.7 percent of the population. The percentage of people living in poverty in the U.S.was 12.3 in 2017.
    Now that was a pretty superficial list of the German culture. It is much more complex than those snippets I listed. And our own system and culture is too complex to be summarized with a few snippets. But I am going to throw a couple of ideas out here.
    There are a lot of things that we can do in the United States to make life better for the poor. One of the greatest things is to improve the educational level and with job training. Incentives to work would help as policies that encourage a strong family unit with a mother and father in the home.
    But we will never realize those goals with continued partisan bickering. So, can we start with us?

    Glenn

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  3. Partisan bickering doesn't begin to capture the nature of the many foul and ridiculous emails and facebook postings sent to me (and many others) by LDS Republicans. That Roger had the courage to say something (largely true even if not precise in every detail) against the dominant political narrative is hardly partisan bickering.

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  4. @Glass onion, I have seen and continue to see your experience with immature Republicans on facebook mirrored by immature Democrats interacting with a lot of people that I am facebook friends with. Disinformation and fearmongering comes from both sides (the world is going to end in twelve years???). And that is the point I have been trying to make. We will never have a useful dialogue if we all continue to espouse the idea that the beam is in the other person's eye.

    Glenn

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  5. Glenn, when you say that Germany is not a fully socialist system, you are conflating socialism and communism, which are two different animals. In today's world, socialist countries embrace capitalism where it makes sense, but allow socialist ideas to work where they work best, as in health care and education, to mention just a few. In America, we also have various forms of socialism. It's just that we don't permit it to function in some areas where it really should, such as health care. And pointing out the obvious deficiencies in one particular political party is not entrenching the divide. I've tried reaching out to a Republican extremist neighbor of mine to try to have a conversation on the issues. She gave up after a couple of email exchanges, because all she could offer was anger and vitriol and hatred of our government. That's a big difference I see. Democrats are seriously trying to use government to solve some of our worst problems. Republicans, and especially Fox News and conservative talk radio, are simply stoking fear and anger and racism and hatred of our government, and taking us backward to a place none of us really want to be. Take the Green New Deal for example. It is an ambitious goal for a desperate time. And look at the Republican response. Is it productive in any way? Is there any effort to acknowledge the seriousness of the problem and offer any sort of solution? There is only denial, except for Mike Lee, who made the whole Republican side look ridiculous. When the GOP can come to its senses and start addressing our serious problems, then maybe there can be some healing of the divide, but as long as they languish in Trumpism and a feed-the-wealthy and starve-the-poor mentality, I can't take them seriously.

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