A political commonplace
Apr. 1st, 2007 10:25 pmI believe Josh Marshall was the first person to publicly identify the Cheney/Bush governing strategy, in a December 2003 piece for The Hill. When searching for it earlier this evening, I discovered that the piece is now only to be found in Google's cache, so I'm preserving the key point here:
What we're seeing in Washington today has an uncomfortable resemblance to what, in mafia lingo, is called a bust-out.
It goes something like this.
Say you're a gambler and I'm a mobster. I've lent you lots of money. But now you can't cover your debt. I could pursue the matter through your kneecaps or toss you out of an office window, but instead I take a more constructive approach.
You own a shoe store. I take it over your operation, order everything under the sun and fence all the merchandise for as much money as I can get as quickly as I can. I run out every line of credit you have and generally squeeze the place of every dollar I can get out of it. And then when I can't squeeze anymore, I torch the place and collect on the insurance money.
Sure, it's not the most sustainable business model. But I have my money back, and what happens to you is your problem.
no subject
Date: 2007-04-02 07:37 am (UTC)Who's Tommy in this scenario? Maybe right wing hate radio, maybe something else, but I think this is a much better description of why the Americans vote Republican than that they've somehow incurred a debt to the Republicans. They just get tired of the endless abuse and install them to get it to stop.