An edited version appeared in New America Media.
The mightiest democracy in the world has grounded to a screeching halt by the tyranny of few.
The mightiest democracy in the world has grounded to a screeching halt by the tyranny of few.
Somehow the Tea Party members,
roughly 10% of the House, were able to hold the Speaker of the House of
Representative hostage and force him into an impasse with the White House.
The US Federal government can
no longer operate because the political leaders of the two political parties
cannot find common ground and agree.
Instead the parties are now feverishly
engaged in explaining to the public why the other side is to blame. Nobody has
a solution.
Befuddled observers around
the world watch in morbid fascination even though they are hard put to explain
how or why this can happen to the only superpower still standing.
The US is worse off than
Italy: not even a person of Silvio Berlusconi’s ilk is around to bail out the
American impasse and avert a government shutdown. (Berlusconi “saved” Italy by
not bolting from the ruling coalition.)
The people of Lebanon are
saying, “Hey, you Americans come and learn from us, we have gotten along
without a functioning government for decades.”
To the Egyptians, this was an
aha moment, namely how to get rid of a government without bloodshed.
Other western democracies
such as France, Germany and U.K. are congratulating themselves for having the
parliamentary form of democracy where the prime minister stays in power so long
as a majority of the parliament supports him or her.
When the prime minister no
longer has majority support and loses the confidence vote, the government falls.
But, unlike the U.S. a minority cannot violate the basic tenet of democracy and
shut the government down.
The bloggers in China seem to
be having the most fun seizing the shutdown as an opportunity for a twofer.
On the one hand, the bloggers
are praising the American civil society to the sky for its ability to go about
business as usual, in contrast to China where a shutdown would assuredly lead
to chaos and disorder.
On the other, some slyly
suggested that a shutdown of the Chinese government wouldn’t be such a bad
thing.
Tourists visiting the U.S. do
not find the shutdown amusing. Many from China left for the US around October
1, China’s national holiday and the beginning of China’s Golden Week.
For many that scrimped for
the trip of their lifetime, they will be going home without the customary
photos of Yosemite and Statue of Liberty and other popular icons from the land
of the free.
The bad taste of disappointed
tourists is hardly the only damage to international relations for the U.S.
Because of the shutdown,
Obama had to cancel his visit to Malaysia and Philippines and possibly the
entire trip to Southeast Asia just to pivot back to Washington—further shaking
the confidence of the region in the leadership of the U.S.
In contrast, China’s
President Xi Jinping went to Indonesia and became the first foreign leader to
address Indonesia’s parliament where he spoke for nearly an hour (and then he went
on to Malaysia).
The Taiwan based Apple Daily
made a fuss over one of the phrases Xi used in his speech. He said jilidangjitianxiali, which the
English China Daily has translated as, “The interests to be considered should be the
interests of all.”
The cause of the excitement
is because the same exact phrase used to be one half of the operating motto
belonging to Chiang Ch’ing Guo when he succeeded his father, Chiang Kai Shek,
and became the second president of Republic of China in Taiwan.
Indonesia would seem to be an
unlikely venue to send a coded message to Taiwan. More likely Xi was using a
phrase in common usage to emphasize the principle that one should consider the greater
good over the narrow interest of a select few.
This, of course, is the very
message that the political leaders of the U.S. are ignoring, namely, total
focus on their individual agenda and not at all on national interest.
The gridlock continues and
the U.S. is expected to hurtle over the fiscal cliff around October 17. Without a Congress to work with the White
House and raise the debt ceiling, the U.S. will have to default.
When the world sees the full
faith of the U.S. Federal Government as worthless, there will be a worldwide
financial Armageddon. Perhaps the crazies in Congress relish the idea of an
Armageddon, but no one else will.
The
self-inflicted wounds to American prestige will take time to recover. But if
the United States actually defaults, the damage will be fatal and the world
will never trust the U.S. ever again.
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