Musk and Trump Are Cutting Popular Programs. That’s Deliberate.

May Be Interested In:When John and Yoko Came to Ontario to Figure Out How to Change the World | The Walrus



Most likely, their popularity is precisely what the Trump-Musk
administration dislikes about them. For anti-government ideologues, it’s
important that people not have good experiences with the government. Every
clean energy investment in your community, every Social Security check, every child
enrolled in Head Start, every improvement in air and water quality, is a threat
to right-wing ideological dominance. They know it, and they want to stop
Americans from having those positive associations.

In Franklin D. Roosevelt’s time, the conservative
elements in business class hated the New Deal—which was so
popular that FDR was elected three times—for the same reason. They knew that
it would give rise to generations of Americans who felt fondly about the
government programs that had fed
their hungry families during the Depression, put their unemployed young people to work, and
built beautiful public buildings and parks.
The ruling class began mobilizing against the New Deal’s most beloved programs;
an industry group called the Liberty League, as historian Kim Phillips-Fein wrote
in her 2009 book, Invisible Hands: The Making of the Conservative Movement From the New Deal to Reagan, “took special pleasure in attacking Social
Security.” And while some business interests used popular persuasion to try to
fight what they saw as essentially a socialist consensus—using radio,
billboards, and newspaper editorials to evangelize about “free enterprise”—many
realized they couldn’t win that way. Instead, they relied instead on court
challenges to labor protections and prepared for class conflict by stockpiling
tear gas and machines in their factories. Like our current-day oligarchs, most New
Deal opponents didn’t expect to win what they wanted through the democratic
process.

The ruling class of the 1930s and ’40s would have loved to be
in Elon Musk’s position. Although he and his young minions may seem merely like
nihilistic psychos, they’re also conservatives doing something that makes
rational sense for their political movement. By going after the most popular government
programs, they are thinking long-term, planning for a world where no one
defends government agencies because these agencies don’t do anything that we
value. Elon Musk isn’t just trying to bypass all checks and balances, ignore
popular will, plunder our public goods, and wreck the world, though he is doing
all that. As we protest this vandalism, we need to remember that he aims to build
a future in which we have nothing left to defend.  



share Share facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Call of Duty Dr. Squatch soap
I became a Real Gamer™ with Dr. Squatch’s Call of Duty soap
This Paris theatre gave free tickets to hundreds of migrants. Now they won’t leave
This Paris theatre gave free tickets to hundreds of migrants. Now they won’t leave
FILA 2025: Tricky Time Needs Trickier Decision-making - Forbes India
FILA 2025: Tricky Time Needs Trickier Decision-making – Forbes India
Trump’s Tariff Threats Revive Interest in $44 Billion Alaska L.N.G. Project
Trump’s Tariff Threats Revive Interest in $44 Billion Alaska L.N.G. Project
FILE - Salwan Momika speaks in Malmö, Sweden, Sept. 30, 2023. (Johan Nilsson/TT News Agency via AP, File)
An Iraqi man who carried out several Quran burnings in Sweden has died
The Biggest Shows Coming in 2025 - IGN
The Biggest Shows Coming in 2025 – IGN
Daily Highlights: The Stories Making Headlines | © 2025 | Daily News