And the winner is:
Wal-Mart!
Presidential
Election Day in United States
By Daniel Paquet
dpaquet1871@gmail.com
“In a last-ditch effort to rally his supporters and
deter his opponent, Donald Trump repeatedly called Hillary Clinton a liar and denounced
her actions as criminal as he sought to prevent the presidential contest from
slipping out of his grasp.”[1]
However, the US remains the single most powerful
democracy (sic) in the world. A Hillary Clinton victory in November would
mean an entirely different global environment to the one that would emerge if the
US were to end up with a presidency of the type imagined in the 2004 Philip Roth
novel, The Plot Against America, in which
the pilot Charles Lindbergh defeats Roosevelt in the 1940 election.”[2]
How could we assess the current economical situation
in the U.S.A. nowadays?
“The US economy is expected to strengthen in the
second half of 2016 after growing more slowly than potential in the first
half. After five successive quarters of
being a drag on growth, inventory investment is expected to contribute
positively in the second half. In addition, business should regain
momentum. Specifically a rising oil rig
count suggests an improvement in energy investment. Residential investment also contracted in the
second quarter as the composition of housing construction shifted toward
smaller homes. It is expected to resume
growing, in line with demographic demand for housing. Meanwhile, consumption growth has been
strong, underpinned by robust consumer confidence and a strong labour market,
with ongoing robust job gains over the past several years.
Economic growth is expected to pick up to about 2 per
cent on average over 2017 - 2018, as forecast in the July Report. However, the expected composition of growth
has shifted. Business investment is a
projected to expand at a more moderate pace than previously forecast, and the
profile for residential investment is expected to be lower. Offsetting these revisions is a slightly
faster pace of consumption growth.
Business investment is now projected to grow about 3 per cent per year
over 2017-2018, in line with the anticipated recovery in aggregate demand. Growth in exports should also pick up as the
drag associated with the past appreciation of the US dollar continues to
dissipate.
Core PCE (personal consumption expenditure) inflation
has risen from its recent trough of 1.4 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2015
and is projected to reach 2 per cent by 2018, as wage pressures rise and the
disinflationary effects of the past exchange rate appreciation ease.”[3]
The question is:
what would America look like after fascist-like governments having been
in power?
“It may be that national populists and cynical
autocrats, but new forms of resistance to bigotry are also emerging. It may be that national populist have
overreached (Trump’s racist and misogynist antics); or that memories of a dark
past and the need to avert political catastrophe have come to the fore (Germans
wanting to counter the far-right Alternative for Germany, French citizens
worried about Le Pen). (…)
But from Clinton’s lead to the surprising strength of
Europe’s political centre-ground, and with the novelty of Russia being
discredited on many fronts, the picture is not just doom and gloom for the
democratically minded. If this is an
interconnected world, then the pushback against national populism may be
stronger than we think.”[4]
“A vital lesson of the modern era is that
internationalism (e.g. imperialism, -Ed.) has stabilized the world, while
lapses into bellicose nationalism have wreaked havoc. (…)
Through the 1990s, for the most part, economies
continued to grow, median incomes climbed, jobs were plentiful and markets
signaled a bright future. In 2007, the
Dow Jones industrial average soared to a record high. A year later, the euro
reached its maximum value against the dollar.
But within a few months, America’s banking and housing sectors had
crashed, prompting the worst financial crisis since the 1930s. Close to nine million Americans lost their
jobs and a similar number of homeowners were forced to foreclosures, surrenders
of their homes or distress sales. The
decline in national wealth hit the poor and middle class hardest. (…)
The election campaign in the United States has
revealed a similar malaise. Many
Americans, especially in rural and blue-collar areas, are pessimistic about the
future and nostalgic for a seemingly better past. (…)
(On the other hand), the NATO alliance needs beefing
up to help prevent Europe’s political disintegration – and this must be a major
priority for any incoming United States administration.
The next president will have domestic challenges as
well, given the gridlock between the executive and legislative branches, and an
inward turn in the public mood. The current
polarization and dispiriting presidential campaign may also cast a pall over
the future.”[5]
As some Canadian columnists put it, there is a resemblance
between Donald Trump and some candidates to the leadership of the Conservative
Party of Canada; out of them, Kellie Leitch.
“Long on bombast and short on details, Ms.Leitch’s
Canadian value s proposition (to the House of Commons, -Ed.) has a certain
Donald Trump-like whiff to it. And much like
Mr. Trump’s various utterings, it might play well for a segment of her party’s base
but hasn’t yet proven to be successful with the voting public at large. Even so, that she sees dividends in
exploiting Canadian values says more about that old cliché than many would care
of admit If Ms. Leitch’s campaign gains
support, it would as in the case with Mr. Trump’s candidacy, make Canadians
acknowledge the level of their hostility toward the very kind of people who built the country in
the first place.”[6]
Surely, several Sanders’ organizers regret even more
deeply the resignation of their candidate.
They probably think that he would have done it better. Ms. Clinton’s
coziness with Wall Street confirms it unfortunately.
“Some of Mr. Sanders’s admirers have been compelled to
consider again what might have been.
With a couple of beaks and more fortunate timing, many of t hem believe,
the rumpled socialist really, truly could have been president. (He had the support of unions, such as) the
National Nurses United… (They said) ‘It’s going to look like change. But it’s not change’.”[7]
Nevertheless, it seems obvious that many voters will
express themselves by electing the less of the two evils.
One commentator wrote: “I just wish more of that (meaning strongly in favour of
capitalism, -Ed.) Hillary were campaigning right now and building a mandate for
what she really believes. WikiHillary?
I’m with her. Why? Let’s start with what Wikileaks says she said
at Brazil, Banco Itau event in May
2013: ‘I think we have to have a
concerted plan to increase trade… and we have to resist protectionism, other
kinds of barriers to market access and to trade.’ She also said, ‘My dream is a hemispheric
common market, with open trade and open borders, sometime in the future with
energy that is as green and sustainable as we can get it, powering growth and
opportunity for every person in the hemisphere.’ That’s music to my ears. A hemisphere where nations are trading with
one another, and where more people can collaborate and interact for work, study,
tourism and commerce, is a region that is likely to be growing more prosperous
with fewer conflicts, especially if more of that growth is based on clean
energy.”[8]
Nevertheless, “we must also note that Engels is most
definite in calling universal suffrage an instrument of bourgeois rule. Universal suffrage, he says, obviously
summing up the long experience of German Social-Democracy, is ‘the gauge of the
maturity of the working class. It cannot
and never will be anything more in the present-day state”.[9]
“What is now happening to Marx’s teaching has, in the
course of history, happened repeatedly to the teachings of revolutionary
thinkers and leaders of oppressed classes struggling for emancipation. During the life time of great
revolutionaries, the oppressing classes constantly hounded them, received their
teachings with the most savage malice, the most furious hatred and the most
unscrupulous campaigns of lies and slander.
After their death, attempts are made to convert them into harmless icons,
to canonize them, so to say, and to surround their names with a certain halo for the ‘consolation’ of the oppressed
classes ad with the object of duping the latter, while at the same time emasculating
the essence of the revolutionary
teaching, blunting its revolutionary edge and vulgarizing it. At the present time, the bourgeoisie and the
opportunists within the working -class movement concur in this ‘doctoring ‘of
Marxism. They omit, obliterate and distort the revolutionary side of t his
teaching, its revolutionary soul. They
push to the foreground and extol what is or seems acceptable to the bourgeoisie.”[10]
Communist News
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Le sourire de l’Orient
www.lesouriredelorient.blogspot.com
ARCHIVES
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Pour la KOMINTERN now! www.pourlakominternnow.blogspot.com
[1] Slater,
Joanna, Trump, Clinton trade attacks in final
debate showdown, The Globe and Mail, Toronto, Thursday, October 20, 2016,
front page
[2] Nougayrède,
Natalie, Backlash against bigotry is
under way, The Guardian Weekly 21.10.16, page 19
[5] Solana,
Javier (former foreign minister of Spain, high representative for the European
Union’s common foreign and security policy and secretary general of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization); Talbott, Strobe (president of the Brookings
Institution and a former United States deputy secretary of state), How to stop the decline of the West, The
New York Times, International Edition, Thursday, October 20, 2016, page 12 and
14
[6] Patriquin, Martin (Québec bureau
chief for Macleans’s), TheTrump side of Canada, The New York Times, International Edition, Thursday, October 20,
2016, page 12 and 14
[7] Flegenheimer,
Matt; Alcindor, Yamiche, Some Sanders
backers still feeling regret, The
New York Times, International Edition, Thursday, October 20, 2016, page 4
[8] Friedman,
Thomas L., Supporting WikiHillary for
president, The New York Times, International Edition, Thursday, October 20,
2016, front page
[9] Lenin,
V.I., The State and Revolution,
Foreign Languages Press, Peking 1970, Reprinted by Red Star Publishers, U.S.A.,
2014, page 10
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