Posted by Rajan Menon at
8:04am, March 30, 2017
http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176260/tomgram%3A_rajan_menon%2C_making_america_insecure_again/#more
Terror attacks like the
recent one in London send a shudder through Americans. Since 9/11, they have
been the definition of what TomDispatch regular Rajan Menon calls “national
(in)security.” They've also been the lifeblood of a media machine that loves to
focus 24/7 on immediate and obvious horrors (especially against folks like
“us”). In the age of Donald Trump, preventing such attacks has, if anything,
become even more the essence of what American security is all about.
And yet, in the context of the
insecurity to come in this world, they are essentially nothing. It is, of
course, a terrible thing when some disturbed fanatic or set of fanatics gun
down or run down innocent civilians in London, Berlin, Paris,
or San Bernardino (as it should be, but in our American world
isn’t, when a U.S. plane or drone kills innocent civilians in distant lands). But if, for a moment, you stop to think in
either nuclear terms (as in the pairing of North Korea’s unnerving leader Kim Jong-un and
Donald Trump) or in climate change terms, then those attacks are the smallest
of potatoes when it comes to national insecurity. If you really want to think
about acts of “terror,” consider what Donald Trump and his climate-denying crew at the Environmental Protection Agency
and elsewhere in his administration would like to do to the environmental
policies of the world’s second-largest emitter of greenhouse gases.
Trump's urge is clearly to negate every positive act of the Obama administration when
it comes to reining in the use of fossil fuels -- from the Paris climate
agreement to the Clean Power Plan aimed at shutting down coal-fired power
plants. In the end, if a Trump presidency takes this country out of the climate
change sweepstakes entirely, if it opens the flood (and fracking) gates yet wider on the development of fossil
fuels of every sort while tamping down the development of alternative energy sources,
you’re talking about an act of terror on a scale that would once have been
inconceivable. What the Trump administration is already trying to do should
lead to constant headlines of a sort that would put the recent London ones to
shame. However, because the full impact of Trump’s climate terror won’t
strike home until the era of our grandchildren or even great-grandchildren,
because his version of terror will be enacted on a time scale that plays havoc
with our usual sense of history and of our own lives, he’ll undoubtedly get only
the most modest of attention for it -- while Khalid Masood, the London killer,
and his successors will remain the eternal headliners du jour.
Still, make no mistake about
it, in his rented vehicle of choice President Trump will run over future
generations. Even on a less drastic time scale, as Rajan Menon makes vividly
clear today, he will certainly prove to be a heavyweight in the national
(in)security business. Tom
National (In)security
What a Trump Presidency
Really Means for Americans at the Edge
By Rajan
Menon
Donald Trump’s supporters
believe that his election will end business as usual in Washington. The
self-glorifying Trump agrees and indeed his has, so far, been the most unorthodox
presidency of our era, if not any era. It’s a chaotic and tweet-driven
administration that makes headlines daily thanks to scandals, acts of stunning
incompetence, rants, accusations, wild claims, and conspiracy theories.
On one crucial issue, however, Trump has been a complete conformist. Despite
the headline-grabbing uproar over Muslim bans and the like, his stance on
national security couldn’t be more recognizable. His list of major threats --
terrorism, Iran, North Korea, and China -- features the usual suspects that
Republicans, Democrats, and the foreign policy establishment have long deemed
dangerous.
Trump’s conception of
security not only doesn’t break the mold of recent administrations, it’s a
remarkably fine fit for it. That’s because his focus is on protecting
Americans from foreign groups or governments that could threaten us or destroy
physical objects (buildings, bridges, and the like) in the homeland. In
doing so, he, like his predecessors, steers clear of a definition of “security”
that would include the workaday difficulties that actually make Americans
insecure. These include poverty, joblessness or underemployment, wages
too meager to enable even full-time workers to make ends meet, and a
wealth-based public school system that hampers the economic and professional
prospects, as well as futures, of startling numbers of American children. To
this list must be added the radical dangers climate change poses to the health
and safety of future citizens.
Trump may present himself as
a maverick, but on security he never wavers from an all-too-familiar externally
focused and militarized narrative.
Conjurer-in-Chief
Barack Obama wrote a
bestselling book titled The Audacity of Hope. Perhaps Donald Trump should
write one titled The Audacity of Wealth. During the presidential campaign
of 2016 he morphed unashamedly from plutocrat to populist, assuring millions of
people struggling with unemployment, debt, and inadequate incomes that he would
solve their problems. The shtick worked. Many Americans believed
him. Fifty-two percent of voters who did not have a college
degree chose him. Among whites with that same educational profile, he did
even better, winning 67% of their votes.
Unemployment,
underemployment, stagnant wages, and the outsourcing of production (and so
jobs) have hit those who lack a college degree especially hard. Yet many
of them were convinced by Trump’s populist message. It made no difference
that he belonged to the wealthiest 0.00004% of Americans, if his net worth is the widely
reported $3.5 billion, and the top 0.00002% if, as he claims, it’s
actually $10 billion.
Former Louisiana Governor
Huey Long, perhaps the country’s best-known populist historically speaking, was
born and raised in Winn Parish, a poor part of Louisiana. In the 1930s,
his origins and his far-reaching ideas for redistributing wealth gave him
credibility. By contrast, Trump wasn't cut from humble cloth; nor in his
present reincarnation has he even claimed to stand for the reallocation of
wealth (except possibly to his wealthy compatriots). His father, Fred Trump,
was a multimillionaire who, at the time of his death in 1999, had a net worth
of $250 million, which was divided among his four surviving children. The
proportional allocations are not publicly known, though it’s safe to assume
that Donald did well. He also got his start in business -- and it wasn’t
even an impressive one -- thanks to lavish help from Fred to the tune of millions of dollars.
When he subsequently hit rough patches, Dad’s connections and loan
guarantees helped set things right.
A man who himself benefited
handsomely from globalization, outsourcing, and a designed-for-the-wealthy
tax code nonetheless managed to convince coal miners in West Virginia and
workers in Ohio that all of these were terrible things that enriched a "financial elite" that had made itself wealthy at the
expense of American workers and that electing him would end the swindle.
He also persuaded millions
of voters that foreign enemies were the biggest threat to their security and
that he’d crush them by “rebuilding” America’s military machine. Worried
about ISIS? Don’t be. Trump would “bomb the
shit out of them.” Concerned about the nuclear arms race? Not to
worry. “We’ll outmatch them at every pass and outlast them all.”
Yet few if any Americans lie
awake at night fearing invasion by another country or the outbreak of nuclear
war. Fifteen years after 9/11, terrorism still ranks high on the American list of concerns
(especially, the polls tell us, among Republicans). But that danger is
not nearly as dire as Trump and the U.S. national security state insist it is.
A litany of statistics shows that deaths from car crashes leave
death-by-terrorist in the dust, while since 2002 even bee, hornet, and wasp
stings have killed more Americans annually in the United States than “Islamic
terrorists.”
Since 9/11, only 95
Americans -- 95 too many, let it be said -- have been killed in terrorist
attacks in the U.S. Not one of the perpetrators was a tourist or someone on
another type of temporary visa, and several were non-Muslims. Nor were
any of them refugees, or connected to any of the countries in Trump's two
Muslim bans. Indeed, as the journalist Nick Gillespie notes, since the adoption of the 1980
Refugee Act no refugee has been involved in a terrorist attack that killed
Americans.
Still, Trump’s hyperbole has
persuaded many in this country that terrorism poses a major, imminent threat to
them and that measures like a 90-day ban on travel to the United States by the
citizens of certain Muslim countries will protect them. (A recent poll
shows that 54% of the public supports this policy.) As for
terrorist plots, successful or not, by white far-right extremists, the president simply hasn’t
felt the urge to say much about them.
In other words, President
Trump, like candidate Trump, embraces the standard take on national
security. He, too, is focused on war and terrorism. Here, on the
other hand, are some threats -- a suggestive, not inclusive, list -- that genuinely
make, or threaten to make, millions of Americans insecure and vulnerable.
Poverty: According to the U.S. Census Bureau, in 2015, 43 million Americans, 13.5% of
the population, lived below the poverty line ($11,700 for an individual and $20,090 for a
three-person household) -- an increase of 1% since 2007, the year before the
Great Recession. For children under 18, the 2015 poverty rate was 19.7%.
While that was an improvement on the 21.1% of 2014, it still meant that
nearly a fifth of American children were poor.
The working poor: Yes, you
can have a job and still be poor if your wages are low or stagnant or have
fallen. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) uses a conservative definition for these individuals: “People who spent at
least 27 weeks in the labor force during the year -- either working or looking
for work -- but whose incomes were below the poverty level.” Though some
studies use a more expansive definition, even by the BLS’s criteria, there
were 9.5 million working poor in 2014.
Even if you work and bring in wages above the poverty line,
you may still barely be getting by. Oxfam reports that 58 million American workers make less
than $15 an hour and 44 million make less than $12 an hour. Congress last
raised the minimum hourly wage to $7.25 in 2007 (and even then included exceptions that applied to several types of workers).
That sum has since lost nearly 10% of its purchasing power thanks to inflation.
Wage stagnation and economic
inequality: These two conditions explain a large part of the working-but-barely-making-it
phenomenon. Let’s start with those stagnant wages. According to the
Economic Policy Institute (EPI), for about three decades
after World War II, hourly wage increases for workers in non-supervisory roles
kept pace with productivity increases: at 91.3% and 96.7%, respectively.
Then things changed dramatically. Between 1973 and 2013,
productivity increased by 74.4% and wages by only 9.2%. In other words,
with wages adjusted for inflation, the average American worker made no more in
2013 than in 1973.
As for economic inequality,
the EPI reports that from 1980 to 2013 the income of the top 1% of wage earners
increased by 138% compared to 15% for the bottom 90%. For those at the
lowest end of the wage scale it was even worse. In those years, their hourly
pay actually dropped by 5%.
When was the last time you
heard Donald Trump talk about stagnant wages or growing economic inequality,
both of which make his most fervent supporters insecure? In reality, the defunding of federal programs that provide energy
subsidies, employment assistance, and legal services to people with low incomes
will only hurt many Trump voters who are already struggling economically.
Climate change: There is a
scientific consensus on this problem, which already contributes to droughts and floods that reduce food production, damages property, and threatens lives, not
to speak of increasing the range of forest fires and lengthening the global fire season, as
well as helping spread diseases like cholera, malaria, and dengue fever.
Trump once infamously described climate change as a Chinese-fabricated “hoax” meant to reduce the competitiveness of American
companies. No matter that, in recent years, the Chinese government has
taken serious steps to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Now, President Trump is
gearing up to take the U.S. out of the climate change sweepstakes entirely. For
instance, he remains determined to withdraw the country from the 2015 Paris
Agreement (signed by 197 countries and so far ratified by 134 of them)
aimed at limiting the increase in global temperature to a maximum of two
degrees Celsius during this century. Scott Pruitt, his appointee to run
the Environmental Protection Agency, denies that climate change is significantly connected to
“human activity” and is stocking his agency with climate change deniers of like
mind. Needless to say Pruitt didn’t balk at Trump’s decision to cut the EPA’s
budget by 31%.
Nor do Trump and his team
favor promoting alternative sources of energy or reducing carbon emissions,
even though the United States is second only to China in total emissions and among the globe’s largest emitters on a
per-capita basis. Trump seems poised to scale back President Obama’s plan to increase the Corporate
Annual Fuel Efficiency Standard -- created by the government to reduce average
automobile gas consumption -- from the present 35.5 miles per gallon to 54.5
miles per gallon by 2025, end the 2015 freeze on leases for coal mining on federal land, and ease power plant emission limits. Worse yet, Trump’s America
First Energy Plan calls for producing more oil and gas but contains nary a
word about climate change or a green energy strategy. If you want a failsafe
formula for future environment-related insecurity, this, of course, is it.
Bogus Remedies
Candidate Trump certainly
did tap into a deepening sense of insecurity about wage stagnation, the
disappearance of good working-class jobs, and increasing economic
inequality. But in the classic national security mode, he has artfully
framed these problems, too, as examples of the economic hardship that foreign
countries have inflicted on America. And the four remedies he offers, all
rooted in a nationalistic economic outlook, won’t actually help American
workers, could hurt them, or are at best cosmetic.
First, he favors
renegotiating multilateral trade deals like NAFTA and wasted no time
withdrawing the United States from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, accords which
he believes hurt American workers. Second, he wants to impose tariffs of
35% to 45% on imports from countries such as Mexico and China that he accuses
of unfair trade practices. Third, at least on the campaign trail he pledged to
punish countries like China, Japan, and Germany for supposedly devaluing their
currencies in order to boost their exports unfairly at America’s expense.
Fourth, he’s high on slapping a border tax on companies that import from their branches or
subcontractors abroad the components needed to make products to be sold in the
United States, as well as on firms that simply import finished products and
sell them locally.
Some of these punitive
moves, if actually pursued, will only provoke retaliation from other countries, harming American
exporters and consequently the workers they employ. Tariffs will, of
course, also increase the cost of imported goods, hurting consumers with low
incomes the most, just as taxing U.S. corporations for importing from their
subsidiaries abroad will increase the prices of locally made goods, possibly
reducing demand and so jobs.
Even the nullification of
trade pacts, whatever positives might be involved, won’t bring industries like
steel, textiles, and basic machine-making that once provided good jobs for the
working class back to the United States. Trump blames China for the
decline in manufacturing employment, as does one of his top economists, Peter
Navarro. (Despite holding a Harvard Ph.D. in economics, Navarro evidently
doesn’t grasp that trade deficits don’t have a major effect on
employment and that protectionism doesn’t cut trade deficits.)
What’s really required are
policies that help displaced manufacturing workers to get decent jobs now,
while addressing wage stagnancy, which has been significantly aided and abetted
by a sharp decline in union membership in recent decades. According to
the Bureau of Labor Statistics, between 1983 and 2015
membership in public-sector unions held reasonably steady. Not so for
private-sector union membership, which plunged from 12 million in 1983 to 7.6
million in 2015. As a result, workers have been increasingly incapable of
combatting wage stagnation through collective bargaining. Tellingly
enough, however, as of 2015, the median weekly paycheck of unionized workers
was still 21% larger than that of workers who did not belong to a
union.
Consider Trump’s business history when it comes to labor (including the hiring and stiffing of undocumented workers), as well as
the make up of his immensely wealthy, Goldman Sachs-ified economic team, and the Republican Party’s attitude toward unions. Then ask yourself: How likely
is it that this administration will be well disposed toward unionization or
collective bargaining?
And don’t forget automation,
a subject Donald Trump has essentially been mum about. It has contributed
decisively to job loss and wage stagnancy by reducing or even eliminating the
need for labor in certain economic sectors. As economists
Michael Hicks and Srikant Devraj have demonstrated, increased productivity
through automation has been far more crucial in reducing the need for human
labor in U.S. manufacturing than outsourced jobs and imports. Thanks to
labor-displacing technologies, U.S. manufacturing output actually increased in
value by 17.6% between 2006 and 2013 while the workforce continued to shrink.
Another source of wage
stagnancy is rising economic inequality, which stems partly from the fierce corporate focus since the 1980s on boosting quarterly
earnings and paying dividends that will keep shareholders happy, even if that
requires incurring debt, rather than increasing workers’ wages.
Alternative Policies
Trump claims that he will
create more jobs by lowering the corporate tax rate. At 35% -- 38.9% including the average state tax -- the
American corporate tax rate is significantly higher than the global average
(29.5%). Nonetheless, the familiar high-corporate-taxes-kill-jobs
narrative that Trump trumpets is simplistic. More than 60% of American
companies are so-called S corporations. They pay no corporate tax: they pass
their profits on to stockholders who then report the gains when filing income
tax returns. And even the corporations that do pay taxes manage to reduce
the burden significantly through such steps as claiming accelerated
depreciation on equipment and establishing offshore companies whose books
reflect their profits. As a result, their true tax rate isn’t anything
like 38.9%. High corporate taxes aren’t what stops companies from
creating jobs or paying workers more, which means that changing that rate won’t
fix any problems, not for American workers anyway.
There are other solutions to
low wages and unemployment, even if President Trump will never favor them.
Investing more in public
education, for example. Local property taxes and state monies still count
heavily in funding public schools. (Federal support is less than 15%.)
So the quality of a school can depend greatly on the zip code in which
it’s located, especially because parents in wealthy neighborhoods normally
raise more money to help their schools than their non-affluent counterparts
can. School quality can also depend on how wealthy your state is.
Though other factors
doubtless play a role, in
general, the better the quality of the school, the greater the likelihood
that a child will go to college and the stronger his or her income and
prospects will be. Increasing federal funding to schools that lack
adequate resources could improve matters. But if you expect President
Trump and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos to consider such a proposition,
think again.
Raising the minimum wage
significantly could also help reduce income inequality and the number of
working poor. Democrats have favored raising the minimum wage to $10.10,
which, it is believed, would reduce the number of people living in poverty by
an estimated 4.6 million. That’s hardly an outlandish proposal.
Some experts, like former Labor Secretary Robert Reich,
have called for a minimum wage of $15 an hour, though they are in the
minority. But even certain mainstream economists, like Princeton’s Alan Krueger, support a $12 rate and reject the right-wing
claim that it would kill jobs.
Don’t expect the Trump
administration (or the GOP) to push for any form of such a policy. Take a look
at the members of the president’s Strategic and Policy Forum (SPF), whose duties include
providing advice on job creation, and you'll realize that such a relatively
modest goal will be off the table for at least the next four years.
You’ll find representatives from the Blackstone Group, Walmart, IBM, General
Motors, Boeing, and General Electric in the SPF, but not one labor
advocate. Case closed.
Prepare for Business as
Usual
The net worth of Trump’s
cabinet (the president excluded) is $5 billion, and that’s a conservative estimate (no pun
intended). By some calculations, it may be $13 billion. According to Politifact’s Tom Kertscher, that “modest” $5 billion figure exceeds the
net worth of the bottom one-third of all American families. Now, what
likelihood do you think there is that Trump would ever implement policies that
threatened to transform the distribution of wealth and power in America to the
detriment of the economic class from which he and his cabinet hail? (In
that spirit, remember that candidate Trump proposed a tax plan that would focus on the wealthiest Americans by
cutting the top tax rate from 39.6% to 25% and eliminating the estate tax, 90% of which is paid by the country’s wealthiest 10%.)
It’s much easier to
scapegoat outsiders, whether China, Japan, Mexico, and Germany (whose
government Trump trade adviser Navarro has also accused of currency manipulation), or
undocumented workers who generally hold jobs in the U.S. that require lower skills, pay less, and
that most American citizens avoid. It’s also easier to stick with the
standard militarized conception of national security and, for good measure,
hype the perils posed by Islam, which for Steve Bannon, Trump’s chief political
strategist, and Stephen Miller, his senior adviser on policy, amounts to a synonym for extremism and violence, even if Islamic
terrorists pose the most miniscule of threats to most Americans.
Not surprisingly, Trump proposes to increase the country’s already staggering
defense spending for next year by another $54 billion. To put that increment in perspective,
consider that Russia’s total defense spending in 2015 was $66 billion and Britain’s $56 billion, while the
United States already spends more on defense than at least the next seven
countries combined. (In fairness to Trump, Senators John McCain and Mac
Thornberry, respectively the chairmen of the Senate Armed Services Committee
and the House Armed Services Committee, want to bulk up the defense budget even more.)
Trump also seems determined
to stay the course on America’s forever wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Neither
he nor his generals show any sign of abandoning the Obama-era strategy of
whack-a-mole drone strikes and raids by Special Operations forces against
terrorist redoubts around the world (as witness a recent failed special ops raid
in Yemen and 24 drone strikes -- half of the maximum number that the United States launched
against that country in any preceding year). Trump has already deployed 400
Marines as well as Army Rangers to fight ISIS in Raqqa, Syria, and another thousand troops may soon be heading that way.
And General John Nicholson, commander of the US-led military coalition in
Afghanistan, has called for “a few thousand” additional troops for that country.
So expect President Trump to
dwell obsessively on threats that have a low probability of harming Americans,
while offering no effective solutions for the quotidian hardships that actually
do make so many citizens feel insecure. Expect, as well, that the more he
proves unable to deliver on his economic promises to the working class, the
more he’ll harp on the standard threats and engage in saber rattling, hoping
that a continual atmosphere of emergency and vulnerability will disarm critics and
divert attention from his failures.
In the end, count on one
thing: voters who were drawn to Trump because they believed he would rein in
interventionism abroad and deal with festering problems at home are in for a
disappointment.
Rajan Menon, a TomDispatch regular, is the Anne and Bernard Spitzer
Professor of International Relations at the Powell School, City College of New
York, and Senior Research Fellow at Columbia University’s Saltzman Institute of
War and Peace Studies. He is the author, most recently, of The Conceit of Humanitarian Intervention.
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