Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Wednesday, 30 November 2016
Frightened by Donald Trump? You don’t know the half of it
Many of his staffers are from an opaque corporate misinformation
network. We must understand this if we are to have any hope of fighting
back against them
‘For years, Myron Ebell has attacked efforts to limit climate change, through lobbying, lawsuits and campaigns.’
Photograph: Jonathan Becker
Yes,
Donald Trump’s politics are incoherent. But those who surround him know
just what they want, and his lack of clarity enhances their power. To
understand what is coming, we need to understand who they are. I know
all too well, because I have spent the past 15 years fighting them.
Over this time, I have watched as tobacco, coal, oil, chemicals and
biotech companies have poured billions of dollars into an international
misinformation machine composed of thinktanks, bloggers and fake
citizens’ groups. Its purpose is to portray the interests of
billionaires as the interests of the common people, to wage war against
trade unions and beat down attempts to regulate business and tax the
very rich. Now the people who helped run this machine are shaping the
government.
I first encountered the machine when writing about climate change.
The fury and loathing directed at climate scientists and campaigners
seemed incomprehensible until I realised they were fake: the hatred had been paid for. The bloggers and institutes whipping up this anger were funded by oil and coal companies.
Among those I clashed with was Myron Ebell of the Competitive
Enterprise Institute (CEI). The CEI calls itself a thinktank, but looks
to me like a corporate lobbying group. It is not transparent about its
funding, but we now know it has received $2m from ExxonMobil, more than $4m from a group called the Donors Trust (which represents various corporations and billionaires), $800,000 from groups set up by the tycoons Charles and David Koch, and substantial sums from coal, tobacco and pharmaceutical companies.
For years, Ebell and the CEI have attacked efforts to limit climate change, through lobbying, lawsuits and campaigns. An advertisement released by the institute had the punchline “Carbon dioxide: they call it pollution. We call it life.”
Former campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, like other members of Trump’s
team, came from a group called Americans for Prosperity. Photograph:
UPI/Barcroft Images
It has sought to eliminate funding for environmental education, lobbied against the Endangered Species Act, harried climate scientists and campaigned in favour of mountaintop removal by coal companies. In 2004, Ebell sent a memo to one of George W Bush’s staffers calling for the head of the Environmental Protection Agency to be sacked. Where is Ebell now? Oh – leading Trump’s transition team for the Environmental Protection Agency.
Charles and David Koch – who for years have funded extreme pro-corporate politics
– might not have been enthusiasts for Trump’s candidacy, but their
people were all over his campaign. Until June, Trump’s campaign manager
was Corey Lewandowski, who like other members of Trump’s team came from a group called Americans for Prosperity (AFP).
Understandably, there has been plenty of coverage of the racists and
white supremacists empowered by Trump’s victory. But, gruesome as they
are, they’re peripheral to the policies his team will develop. It’s
almost comforting, though, to focus on them, for at least we know who
they are and what they stand for. By contrast, to penetrate the
corporate misinformation machine is to enter a world of mirrors. Spend
too long trying to understand it, and the hyporeality vortex will
inflict serious damage on your state of mind.
Don’t imagine that other parts of the world are immune.
Corporate-funded thinktanks and fake grassroots groups are now
everywhere. The fake news we should be worried about is not stories invented by Macedonian teenagers
about Hillary Clinton selling arms to Islamic State, but the constant
feed of confected scares about unions, tax and regulation drummed up by
groups that won’t reveal their interests.
The less transparent they are, the more airtime they receive. The organisation Transparify runs an annual survey of thinktanks. This year’s survey reveals
that in the UK only four thinktanks – the Adam Smith Institute, Centre
for Policy Studies, Institute of Economic Affairs and Policy Exchange –
“still consider it acceptable to take money from hidden hands behind
closed doors”. And these are the ones that are all over the media.
When the Institute of Economic Affairs, as it so often does, appears
on the BBC to argue against regulating tobacco, shouldn’t we be told
that it has been funded by tobacco companiessince 1963? There’s a similar pattern in the US: the most vocal groups tend to be the most opaque.
As usual, the left and centre (myself included) are beating ourselves
up about where we went wrong. There are plenty of answers, but one of
them is that we have simply been outspent. Not by a little, but by
orders of magnitude. A few billion dollars spent on persuasion buys you
all the politics you want. Genuine campaigners, working in their free
time, simply cannot match a professional network staffed by thousands of
well-paid, unscrupulous people.
You cannot confront a power until you know what it is. Our first task
in this struggle is to understand what we face. Only then can we work
out what to do.
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