A Trump-Putin alliance would be good for capitalism
By: Rachel Marsden
Critics of Donald Trump are apoplectic about the possibility that the
Republican presidential nominee could align himself with Russian President
Vladimir Putin. Ever since the two men offered words of praise for each other --
Putin referring to Trump as "bright," and Trump praising Putin's leadership
ability -- critics have parlayed their own fear and discontent into a smear
campaign against both.
The question is: Why do these critics consider possible U.S.-Russian cooperation
to be so apocalyptic?
The Washington Post recently ran an opinion piece titled "The secret to Trump:
He's really a Russian oligarch." (Oh, really?)
"(Trump) is, rather, an oligarch in the Russian style -- a rich man who aspires
to combine business with politics and has an entirely cynical and instrumental
attitude toward both," Anne Applebaum wrote.
That seems like a better description of Hillary Clinton. I'll explain in a
minute.
Oligarchy, by definition, is state-sponsored welfare. Putin has made no secret
of the fact that he despises the class of oligarchs who were handpicked for
their political connections, then mismanaged and abused the massive wealth and
assets entrusted to them under the leadership of former Russian President Boris
Yeltsin as the country transitioned to a free-market economy.
In America, Wall Street-style corporatism similarly corrupts true capitalism and
the free market. The politically well-connected score themselves cushy Wall
Street gigs, then influence democratically elected representatives through
campaign donations. This results in laws that subsidize and benefit Wall Street
over the interests of the average American.
Trump is a self-made entrepreneur who built a business empire, not a crony who
was installed atop one. While he has admitted to availing himself of lobbying
and borrowing provisions to further his business activities, Trump is now saying
that he's the right person to blow up the system at its key trigger points since
he knows exactly where they are.
"I am 'the king of debt,'" Trump wrote on Twitter two months ago. "That has been
great for me as a businessman, but is bad for the country. I made a fortune off
of debt."
So why isn't Hillary Clinton, who has spent virtually her entire life among
establishment elites, being likened to an oligarch? If you're looking for
someone whose team can go toe-to-toe in a perpetual game of footsie with the
oligarchs, then perhaps Clinton is the president for you.
Emails released last week by the conservative organization Judicial Watch
revealed that Clinton aide Huma Abedin fielded requests from wealthy and
powerful Clinton Foundation donors seeking access to then-Secretary of State
Clinton.
Back in April, The New York Times ran an article highlighting some interesting
Clinton Foundation connections. The Times had received an advance copy of the
book "Clinton Cash: The Untold Story of How and Why Foreign Governments and
Businesses Helped Make Bill and Hillary Rich," by Peter Schweizer.
In 2006, the Clinton Foundation received a $31.3 million donation from Canadian
businessman Frank Giustra, who owned a significant stake in the company Uranium
One, which had uranium-mining assets in Kazakhstan, among other places.
Presumably, the Russians weren't happy about uranium assets in their backyard
being entirely foreign-controlled. A subsidiary of the Russian atomic energy
agency Rosatom acquired a 17 percent ownership stake in Uranium One in 2009.
Rosatom obtained majority ownership of Uranium One in 2010, then acquired full
control in 2013 and took the company private. Because Uranium One had mines in
the U.S., the sale to Rosatom had to be approved by the Committee on Foreign
Investment in the United States, of which Clinton was a member as secretary of
state.
Why doesn't the Clinton campaign take a page from the Trump playbook and run ads
promoting her talents at playing all the angles? Perhaps because they realize
that people are sick of scheming and backroom dealing and want more transparency
and integrity from their elected representatives. That's a tall order, to be
sure -- maybe even idealistic. But Clinton has left no reason for us to believe
that she's the right candidate to give it a shot.
Perhaps the Russians wouldn't need to scheme if they weren't constantly pitted
against schemers.
Newsweek ran an article this week titled "How Vladimir Putin is using Donald
Trump to advance Russia's goals." Can't we consider the possibility that no one
is "using" anyone, and that Russia's goals are simply aligned with those of
Trump and the many Americans seeing to upend an establishment that rigs the
system against the interests of the average citizen.
Putin and Trump both come off as proponents of capitalism -- not the corrupted
version of it that we're seeing these days, but rather capitalism in a pure,
free-market form. So you have to wonder why Trump critics are so afraid of these
guys working things out. It's almost as if they're afraid that a cooperative
approach will end up being successful. And then what? The military-industrial
complex that has made a fortune on Cold War fear-mongering and deterrence would
suffer a massive financial blow.
Fear is a very lucrative industry for some. For the rest of us, it's
exasperating.
COPYRIGHT 2016 RACHEL MARSDEN