Nice Squirrel writes:
I don't think this is that controversial. After all, the chief business of the American people is business. They are profoundly concerned with buying, selling, investing and prospering in the world1. The main error you make is citing it as a wholly progressive issue. It's a power issue that runs deep within our system. Anyone who wants to win a powerful position must cozy up with corporate interests. I mean look at Mitt Romney and tell me he was an outsider to this system. Isn't this what Ayn Rand's novels are about: big business using government for it's own purposes? Even House of Cards uses this as a plot device.
Business is one thing and free enterprise is quite another. Fascism advocated business, but it was opposed to free enterprise. The same is true of progressivism. It exists to promote the interests of big business against the interests of the people. In a free enterprise system the government is neutral. So progressives demanded regulation of business, supposedly in the interests of protecting consumers. But big business knew very well that they would be able to control the regulators so they pushed for the creation of regulatory state, not to protect consumers, but to protect themselves against up and coming competitors.
As for Ayn Rand's novels, it was VILLAINS who were using government to aid their businesses. It was the truly creative people who didn't seek government protection who chose to drop out and bring the system to a halt.
You are also making the mistake of equating the historical progressive movement with socialism. Granted they did share some platforms that were radical in their day: women voting, collective ownership of natural resources (such as forests and parks), opposition to child labor, workplace safety but the progressives were not socialists (although they were labeled socialists by their opponents). They also supported many th not so controversial platforms that are controversial today: the gold standard, universal healthcare, a strong navy, balanced budget, and imperialism.
There is both a broad and a loose definition of socialism. Most "socialist" parties of Europe today, for example, do not argue for socialization, or even government ownership, of industry. Kolko classified himself as a socialist. I don't know if he was using the broad or the strict definition of the term. Most likely he's speaking broadly since he includes both Lenin and Tony Blair in his classification. But my point is that Kolko is a man of the left, and he studied progressivism from the point of view of the left and concluded that there was nothing leftist about it, and that included nothing leftist about its origins. It was, and still is, a scam. It claims to be a movement for the common people when, in fact, it is system designed by the elites for the elites.
Also, beware of modern punditry. they use they term "progressivist" as derogatory label as most conservative viewers have no idea of what the progressivists actually stand for (Hint: there have been no post WWII Democratic progressivists elected to the presidency. Obama could best be described as a New Democrat, but I suspect he is somewhat of a Blue Dog.)
I don't think you're claim can be justified by any reasonable reference to the historical record. LBJ's Great Society clearly fit within the progressive agenda as does Obamacare. Big business supported all of these things. They also supported environmentalism and feminism and are aggressively pushing for immigration reform including amnesty for illegal aliens.
None of this is controversial, and if you are shocked by how much corporate interests influence government, I recommend you take a more objective non-partisan look at the influence of people like the Koch Bros. David Koch does do a lot of good in this world, but it is overshadowed by his dark room political influence. Remember when the Tea Party started and many were duped into believing it was a grassroots libertarian movement? Surely you've noticed that the Tea Party often opposes libertarian ideals when it displeases their masters? Have you not noticed how they change their tune quickly after making statements that might undermine their support from these individuals? Have you noticed that they rant about small government but are willing to give these interests billions of dollars in corporate welfare? Why deny climate change when we could encourage new industries in solar and wind? Could it be that embracing climate change hurts profits or may provide these industries with competition? No look across the aisle.
The Koch brothers are two rich people among a hoard of rich people, and they aren't doing anything different that what many politically-involved rich people do. Look at Tom Steyer. He's promising to raise $100 million for the Democratic Party. Half of it will come from his own pocket. Look at George Soros and Warren Buffet. They also contribute and help raise big money for Democrats.
Sheldon Adelson spent $90 million in the last election. Most of it went to Republicans but only people he deemed to be sufficient pro-Israel so he gets little criticism from the media.
The idea that libertarians were somehow duped into supported Tea Party candidates is nonsense. Libertarians are well aware of who is libertarian and who is not. If they supported a Tea Party candidate, it was because that candidate satisfied them on non-Tea Party issues.
Have you actually looked into how Tea Party members of Congress have voted on corporate welfare? Have you checked out how ANY congressmen have voted on corporate welfare? It was mostly Republicans who voted against TARP and Democrats overwhelming supported it., although the Tea Party hadn't been created then. I think if you actually check out the votes, you'll find that Democrats are pretty solidly behind corporate welfare, and Tea Partiers are the ones leading the fight against it.
Al Gore was one of the guys who had a ton of money invested in carbon credits. So he stood to gain as much as anyone from passage of carbon credits, but I imagine that there were lots of big business who had similar investments. As for solar power, check out Solyndra and tell me how much money was to be made there. Even with their subsidies, they couldn't begin to make solar panels for less than we can import them from China.
But the big reason Tea Partiers, and Republicans, and Libertarians, and anyone else who has bothered to study the facts, don't support global warming legislation is because the whole thing is a scam. And its a scam by oil company people! Al Gore only divested himself of his interest in Occidental Petroleum shortly before he ran for president. The creator of the IPCC, Maurice Strong, was an oil company executive. The current head of the IPCC, Pachauri, is a former oil company executive.
So in conclusion, the ideas put out are not new or controversial. It is the way business gets done. The dirty, sickening way business gets done in America.
So why would anyone want to be a progressive under those circumstances? The last thing you should want is for big business to be writing the regulations that are supposed to restrain big business. The first thing you should want to do is repeal those regulations that they have written.