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Why The American Public Rejects the Bush Economic "Plan" (Part 2)
AmericanEconomicAlert.org ^ | Friday, February 24, 2006 | William R. Hawkins

Posted on 02/25/2006 5:45:53 AM PST by Willie Green

For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use.

"It's unbelievably tone deaf politically at this point in our history," said South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsay Graham on Fox News Sunday February 19. He was speaking about the Bush Administration's willingness to see management of several major American ports turned over to a company based in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) . But the Senator's complaint could be applied to a much wider variety of economic issues in the international sector that help explain why the American people have such a negative view of President George W. Bush's economic policies.

In the specific case of the state-owned company Dubai Ports World (DP World), this foreign enterprise would control the ports of New York, Newark, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Miami and New Orleans, and would also supervise, on a separate U.S. Army contract, the movement of armor, helicopters, and other military materiel through the Texas ports of Beaumont and Corpus Christi.

DP World gains this business by purchasing the British firm Peninsula and Oriental Steam Navigation Company. Concern for whether an Arab firm could be trusted with the security of major ports and military cargo has ignited a bipartisan firestorm of protest. Yet, the issue is even larger. With the United States having racked up an enormous $726 billion trade deficit last year, why would the Bush administration grant contracts to any foreign firms, since doing so only makes the trade deficit larger. And this is in the service sector, which we have been told for years is the source of America's strength and which will offset to the decline in the industrial sector.

When England went into industrial decline, it was able to offset its trade deficit with "invisible"earnings from shipping and port operations. The U.S. has lost its commercial shipping business and turned over as many as 90 port terminals to foreign companies. Japan and China are the world's largest shipbuilders, as well as major trading nations, earning money from both exports and their transport. The United States, whose leaders disavow any interest in international economic strategy, loses out on all fronts.

The new Federal Reserve Chairman, Ben Bernanke, gave a perfect example of the Bush Administration's lack of thought regarding the greatest threat to the U.S. economy when he testified before the Senate Banking Committee February 16. Bernanke had been chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisors, a gaggle of academics chosen for their adherence to laissez faire free trade theory. He stated that since it has taken 10 years for the current account deficit to reach 6% of gross domestic product, "it might take that long to reverse." He said, "It's desirable for us to bring down that ratio over time." Yet, he offered no advice as to how to even start that process.

To change course would require a change in policy, and the taking of direct action to reduce imports and boost domestic production. Bernanke, articulating the administration's point of view, said, "It's not a good idea to break down some of the gains we've made in terms of freeing trade in the world economy." The shift in focus from questions about the American economy, to answers about the world economy indicates the root of the problem. The constant attempt to change the frame of reference leads people to wonder where do Bush administration economic officials place their loyalty?

On the same day Bernanke was testifying, Treasury Secretary John Snow was telling the Chicago Council of Foreign Relations, "The current positive outlook for the world economy has made this an opportune time to push for progress on trade liberalization." He warned "the potential rise of protectionism represents the most significant risk to the global economy today." Protectionism has become a prejudicial term in the globalist vernacular, to be used without reference to its content or meaning. It is one of the terms (along with mercantilism and economic nationalism) used historically to describe an economic policy meant to maximize the position of a nation within the competitive international arena. "Protectionists" seek to dominate the largest market shares in key industries both at home and abroad to boost income flows. How the principle of protecting a nation's economic base from foreign rivals has fallen out of favor can only be attributed to the rise of a new elite with stronger personal ties to global banking and transnational corporations than to the American nation and its people.

The new cosmopolitan elite sees the world economy as a blank slate, where the actions of private enterprise have no larger consequences for society. It is an academic sophistry used as cover by those in the business community who do not want any interference in their private affairs. The cosmopolitan view has been pushed forward many times in the last three centuries, always to fail in the end. As the well-known British reference, The Penguin Dictionary of International Relations, states, "The mercantilists' fundamental ideological commitment to the view that foreign economic policy is about the accretion of wealth, capability and putative power is still valid today. Their belief that economic capabilities provided the 'war potential' for the state was widely accepted within the strategic tradition as a fundamental tenet. Their contention that international economics were, at bottom, inseparable from political considerations continues to receive much endorsement today."

The average citizen knows this by instinct. Seeing factories close or move overseas, and watching domestic assets transferred into foreign hands, are clearly not the signs of a country positioning itself for a better future. That is why the revolt against the White House on the ports comes from the grassroots, amplified by talk radio.

Yet, the Bush administration, despite claims that it is a "war time presidency" has repeatedly given cosmopolitan "free trade" priority over national security. For example, Michael Chertoff, Director of Homeland Security, told CNN Feb. 19, "We have to balance the paramount urgency of security against the fact that we still want to have a robust global trading system." But since this balance always seems to favor transnational or foreign business interests, which consideration is truly paramount?

The system set up to monitor economic security threats is structured to downplay such concerns. The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) is chaired by the Treasury, a department whose function is to make effortless for foreigners the recycling of all those dollars that have gone abroad courtesy of ill-advised trade policies and the trade deficits. A 2005 report by the General Accountability Office (GAO) concluded, "Treasury – as Chair of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States – has narrowly defined what constitutes a threat to national security," and "The Committee's reluctance to initiate an investigation [is] due in part to concerns about potential negative effects on the U.S. open investment policy."

President Bush has threatened to veto any legislation blocking the deal with DP World. He has never vetoed a bill on any subject during his five years in office, so his first veto would attract special attention. To cast it to protect a foreign firm's right to take over major American ports would drive public trust of his priorities even further into negative numbers. But this is not the only case where has threatened to veto legislation to protect business deals at the expense of security concerns.

In 2003 and 2005, President Bush threatened to veto legislation from the House Armed Services Committee that would have restricted the outsourcing of military contracts – in order to maintain a stronger domestic defense industrial base. His threat was not tested because Republican leaders in the Senate, lobbied heavily by corporations that favor the overseas outsourcing of defense work, blocked the House initiative. So today we buy components for our precision-guided bombs from China.

The Bush administration is happy to play on the patriotic impulses of the American people when it comes to rhetoric, but in its day-to-day operations it rejects the idea of giving Americans a "home field advantage" in economic decisions. Indeed, it seems to go out of its way to embrace transnational and foreign interests at the expense of U.S.-based firms and workers. That President Bush defended the outsourcing of jobs to India on Wednesday, while the port issue was still boiling, again indicated his insensitivity on these topics.

No wonder the American people give the administration low marks on its economic policies. The White House has thrown away the public's trust by demonstrating its own lack of loyalty to those who live and work here. The proper role of government is to protect the interests of its own citizens first – a role that the Bush Administration consistently declines to play.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: cfius; corporatism; globalism; nationalsecurity; ports; thebusheconomy; uae
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To: catpuppy

Your "free trade" system isn't spreading freedom, its actually bolstering slavery and human trafficking. Its making millionaires out of communist dictators. That is factually correct.


61 posted on 02/25/2006 9:34:58 AM PST by hedgetrimmer ("I'm a millionaire thanks to the WTO and "free trade" system--Hu Jintao top 10 worst dictators)
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To: catpuppy; hedgetrimmer
the Chinese will eventually have to send those dollars home to Uncle Sam.

Well since we already know that Dubya has hung up the "For Sale" sign on Washington DC,
Maybe the Chicoms will rename it "Tiananmen West" in his honor.
Afterall, it's all about "spreading democracy", you know.

</sarcasm>

62 posted on 02/25/2006 9:47:45 AM PST by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: TheCrusader; endthematrix; joanie-f; planekT

ping


63 posted on 02/25/2006 9:57:25 AM PST by B4Ranch (No expiration date is on the Oath to protect America from all enemies, foreign and domestic.)
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To: Willie Green

Now you are asking neocons to give a damn about the future of America. Quit being ridiculous! As long as we have a Republican Party, that'll never happen.

The Democrats want socialism so bad they can taste it and we're going to make sure they get it.


64 posted on 02/25/2006 10:06:04 AM PST by B4Ranch (No expiration date is on the Oath to protect America from all enemies, foreign and domestic.)
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To: catpuppy; Willie Green

Real median household income remained unchanged between 2003 and 2004 at $44,389, according to a report released today by the U.S. Census Bureau. Meanwhile, the nation’s official poverty rate rose from 12.5 percent in 2003 to 12.7 percent in 2004.

http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/income_wealth/005647.html

Real median household income remained unchanged between 2002 and 2003 at $43,318, according to a report released today by the U.S. Census Bureau. At the same time, the nation’s official poverty rate rose from 12.1 percent in 2002 to 12.5 percent in 2003.
http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/income_wealth/002484.html


65 posted on 02/25/2006 10:11:50 AM PST by B4Ranch (No expiration date is on the Oath to protect America from all enemies, foreign and domestic.)
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To: Willie Green
Whats that train coming down the track Willie? Could it be the Acela Express?




Nope, it's the "Sellout Express!"



"All aboard, the Sellout Express is now departing for Amnesty, Dhimmitude and Mexifornia."


"Dhimmitude, Dhimmitude, the next stop is Dhimmitude..."

66 posted on 02/25/2006 10:45:40 AM PST by fallujah-nuker (America needs more SAC and less empty sacs.)
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To: A. Pole; Willie Green; Nowhere Man; Paleo Conservative; yoe; afraidfortherepublic; Old Sarge; ...

George W. Bush's dedication to national security in military affairs is laudible. What he fails to recognize is that the protection of economic sovereignty is also an aspect of national security.


67 posted on 02/25/2006 10:50:29 AM PST by Clintonfatigued (Bob Taft for Impeachment)
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To: Clintonfatigued
George W. Bush's dedication to national security in military affairs is laudible.

Trading American blood for oil has little to do with national security.

Bush said he is continuing his commitment to seek out alternative fuels and lessening the dependence on foreign oil. However, that does not mean he's going to support offshore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico.
"I made a commitment that nothing is going to happen within 100 miles of this coastline, and I'm honoring that commitment," Bush said. "I don't care what people might be saying.
It's a commitment that this government has. There's a lot of technologies that are coming on the market, and we're spending money. It's a good use of taxpayers' money it seems like to me in order to achieve some big objectives."
(source)
It looks like the "big objectives" that he has in mind is to protect the OPECKers in exchange for selling them our ports.
IMHO, that's not a good deal for Americans -- at least not while he's refusing to peacefully utilize our OWN petroleum resources.
68 posted on 02/25/2006 11:08:03 AM PST by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: Willie Green
The Democrats could get their traditional constituencies back if they moved to the right on social issues. Since the anti-American whackos have taken over the national party and they want to destroy America even more than the Republicans, that's not going to happen, which is why the Republicans are in no rush to change.
69 posted on 02/25/2006 11:16:54 AM PST by Question_Assumptions
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To: Willie Green

I'm a little surprised to see this guy William Hawkins writing an article so full of erroneous information about the Dubai Ports World deal -- long after even most third-rate media outlets have figured out the real story and started reporting on it accordingly.


70 posted on 02/25/2006 11:24:28 AM PST by Alberta's Child
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To: G.Mason
The "average citizen" knows little of foreign policy and what it should, or should not be.

How "elite" of you.

The average citizen, on the other hand, is well aware of how difficult it is to find meaningful jobs. We're also aware that employers can now "bend us over backward" and pay us 75% of what we made just three years ago.

We are fully aware that the elite are making better money now because they don't have to factor higher paid countrymen into their profit formulas.

As for foreign policy: America first! The rest can eat our garbage.

71 posted on 02/25/2006 11:24:40 AM PST by GingisK
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To: GingisK
" How "elite" of you."


Elite my ass!

The average American doesn't know what foreign policy is all about, plain and simple. I speak for myself in that number, BTW.


Your whine about "meaningful jobs" is typical of the under educated, under achiever. Were you out of school the day you were to meet your guidance councelor, or didn't you bother going to school?

Either way, I don't care, so you needn't sob anymore.






72 posted on 02/25/2006 12:35:09 PM PST by G.Mason (Duty, Honor, Country)
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To: hedgetrimmer
Show me what is irrational about keeping American's national security resources away from access/ownership by foreign governments?

Nothing. But since when are the computers, files and loading equipment associated with managing our ports considered to be national security resources?

What's next? The pencils and ballpoints?

73 posted on 02/25/2006 4:32:51 PM PST by catpuppy
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To: hedgetrimmer
Your "free trade" system isn't spreading freedom, its actually bolstering slavery and human trafficking. Its making millionaires out of communist dictators. That is factually correct.

Really? Were those "communist dictators" just poor indigents before my free trade made them wealthy?

As for "bolstering slavery and human trafficking," care to provide a little "factually correct" evidence that the people of those nations with which we trade are more enslaved today or more subject to "human trafficking" than before they were victimized by our free trade?

74 posted on 02/25/2006 4:43:21 PM PST by catpuppy
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To: Willie Green
Well since we already know that Dubya has hung up the "For Sale" sign on Washington DC....

"We" know no such thing. Perhaps you've spent too much time licking envelopes for the Kerry campaign.

75 posted on 02/25/2006 4:50:42 PM PST by catpuppy
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To: catpuppy
But since when are the computers, files and loading equipment associated with managing our ports considered to be national security resources?

They can be when associated with biometrics, radio frequency identification ((RFID) and radiation sensor technology when used for port security.
76 posted on 02/25/2006 4:57:20 PM PST by hedgetrimmer ("I'm a millionaire thanks to the WTO and "free trade" system--Hu Jintao top 10 worst dictators)
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To: hedgetrimmer
... port security

A function of the United States Coast Guard.

The United States Coast Guard is a military, multi-mission, maritime service and one of the nation’s five Armed Services. Its mission is to protect the public, the environment, and U.S. economic interests – in the nation’s ports and waterways, along the coast, on international waters, or in any maritime region as required to support national security.

Semper Paratus

77 posted on 02/25/2006 5:10:23 PM PST by catpuppy
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To: catpuppy
Port security-- a function of US customs and the US treasury department.
78 posted on 02/25/2006 5:41:08 PM PST by hedgetrimmer ("I'm a millionaire thanks to the WTO and "free trade" system--Hu Jintao top 10 worst dictators)
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To: catpuppy
What evidence do you have that "our bills" are not being paid?

Looks to me like you answered your own question.

Seems like borrowing when rates are low is a good thing. If I were not doing so well in this good economy, I might be tempted to borrow a few bucks myself.

Our bills are being paid with borrowed money. If we were doing well, like you, we wouldn't need to borrow so much to pay the bills.

79 posted on 02/25/2006 9:05:49 PM PST by lucysmom
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To: catpuppy
Tell that to the next Democrat who comes knocking at your door with a bill from the IRS.

Where do you suppose the money is going to come from to pay the debt taken on in the name of American citizens?

80 posted on 02/25/2006 9:16:16 PM PST by lucysmom
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