|
What is the unreported
cause of the majority of the 2,000 deaths that occurred after the levees
broke last year on August 29? Catch Greg Palast's investigative exposé
this Monday, August 28 on Amy Goodman's
Democracy Now!
And on Tuesday, watch his one-hour Special on
LinkTV.
America
went through a terrible year. The levees broke in New Orleans. When bodies
floated in the streets, the Republican Congress saw an opportunity for
more tax cuts and consolidation of the corporatopia they had created for
their moneyed donors. The Democratic Party was clueless, written off,
politically at death's door.
The year was 1927.
Back then, when the levees broke, America awoke. Public anger rose in a
floodtide, and in that year, the USA entered its most revolutionary period
since 1776. The 34-year-old utility commissioner of Louisiana, Huey P.
Long, conceived of a plan to rebuild his state based on a radical program
of redistributing wealth and power. The ambitious Governor of New York,
Franklin D. Roosevelt, adopted it, and later named it The New Deal.
America got rich and licked Hitler. It was our century.
It's 1927 again.
But this time, the Haves and Have-Mores have something better for you than
a New Deal. They are offering "opportunity" -- a lottery ticket instead of
a guarantee. Like double-or-nothing in the stock market instead of Social
Security -- will the suckers go for it? There's one born every minute. I
can't believe they're the majority, but at last count, they numbered over
59 million. And they vote.
Years from now, in Guantánamo or in a refugee relocation "Enterprise
Zone," your kids will ask you, "What did you do in the Class War, Daddy?"
We may have to admit that conquest and occupation happened before we could
fire off a shot.
The trick of class war is not to let the victims know they're under
attack. That's how, little by little, the owners of the planet take away
what little we have.
On Tuesday, your President, George W. Bush, will return to New Orleans, on
the anniversary of the levee breach.
There is nothing new under the sun. A Republican president going for the
photo op as the Mississippi rolls over New Orleans. It was 1927, and
President Calvin Coolidge sent Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover, "a
little fat man with a notebook in his hand," who mugged for the cameras
and promised to build the city a wall of protection. They had their photos
taken. Then they left to play golf with Ken Lay or, rather, the Ken Lay
railroad baron equivalent of his day.
In 1927, the Democratic Party had died and was awaiting burial.
As The Depression
approached, the coma-Dems, like Franklin Roosevelt, called for, of all
things, balancing the budget.
Then, as the Mississippi waters rose, one politician, the state's
electricity regulator, stood up on the back of a flatbed truck rigged with
loudspeakers, and said, roughly,
"Listen up! They're lying! The President's lying! The rich fat jackals
that are drowning you will do it again and again and again. They lead you
into imperialist wars for profit, they take away your schools and your
hope, and when you complain, they blame Blacks and Jews and immigrants.
Then they drown your kids. I say, Kick'm in the ass and take your share of
the wealth you created."
Huey Long was our Hugo Chávez, and he laid out a plan: a progressive
income tax, real money for education, public works to rebuild Louisiana
and America, Social Security old age pensions, veterans benefits,
regulation of the big utility holding companies, an end to what he called,
"rich men's wars," and an end to the financial royalism of the elite One
Percent.
Huey Long even had the audacity to suggest that the poor's votes should
count, calling for the end to the poll tax four decades before Martin
Luther King succeeded in ending it. Long recorded his motto as a musical
anthem: "Everyman a King." The waters receded, the anger did not, and, in
1928, Huey "Kingfish" Long was elected Governor of Louisiana.
At the time, Louisiana schools were free, but not the textbooks. The elite
liked it that way, but Long didn't. To pay for the books, the Kingfish
levied a special tax on Big Oil. But the oil companies refused to pay for
the textbooks. Governor Long then ordered the National Guard to seize the
oil fields in the Delta.
It was Huey Long who established the principle that a government of the
people must protect the people, school them, build the infrastructure,
regulate industry and share the nation's wealth -- and that meant facing
down "the concentrations of monopoly power" of the corporate aristocracy
-- "the thieves of Wall Street," as he called them.
In other words, Huey Long founded the modern Democratic Party.
FDR and the party establishment, scared witless of Long's ineluctable
march to the White House, adopted his program, albeit diluted, called it
the New Deal and later the New Frontier and the Great Society. America and
the party prospered.
What happened to the Kingfish? The oil industry and local oligarchs had
few options for responding to Governor Long's populist appeal and the
success of his egalitarian economic program. On September 8, 1935, Huey
Long, by then a U.S. Senator,
was shot dead. He was 42.
It's 1927 again.
Greg Palast
is an investigative journalist and author of, most recently,
Armed Madhouse: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the Class War,
from which this commentary is adapted. To view Palast's investigative
reports for BBC Television and to order Armed Madhouse visit:
www.GregPalast.com.
Other Articles by Greg
Palast
*
Loser Nation
* An
Election Spoiled Rotten
* Republican
"Caging List"
* The Real
Lt. Col. Burkett in His Own Words to BBC Television
* The Grinch
That Stole Labor Day
* Still
Unreported: The Pay-off in Bush Air Guard Fix
* Venezuela
Floridated
* Kerry
Discovers Black Voters!
* One
Million Black Votes Did Not Count
* Bush Spiked
Probe of Pakistan’s Dr. Strangelove, BBC reported in 2001
* BBC At War:
Hutton Blesses Blair's Attack on BBC's Investigation of Iraq War Claims
* No Child's
Behind Left: The New Educational Eugenics in George Bush's State of the
Union
*
Jessica Lynch Captures Saddam: Ex-Dictator Demands Back Pay From Baker
*
The Grinch that Stole Labor Day
HOME
|
|