Steve Bannon’s Done – But It’s Way Too Late

Guest Post by David Stockman

Good riddance to Steve Bannon. The last thing America needed was a conservative/populist/statist alternative to the Welfare State/Warfare State/Bailout State status quo. Yet what Bannonism boiled down to was essentially acquiescence to the latter — even as it drove politicization deeper into the sphere of culture, communications and commerce.

Stated differently, the heavy hand of the Imperial City in traditional domestic, foreign and financial matters was already bad enough: Bannonism just gave a thin veneer of ersatz nationalism to what was otherwise the Donald’s own dogs’ breakfast of protectionism, nativism, xenophobia, jingoism and strong-man bombast.

-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)

By the latter, of course, we mean Trump’s essentially content free notion that America was falling from greatness mainly due to stupidity, corruption and a penchant for bad deals among Washington pols; and that the undeniable economic malaise, if not decline, of Flyover America was due to some kind of grand global zero sum-game.

That is, what rightly belonged to America was being stolen by immigrants, imports, and the nefarious doings of foreign governments and globalist elites. What was needed to make America Great Again (MAGA), therefore, was a Washington-erected moat to hold back the tide of bad people and unfair foreign economic assaults and a new sheriff in the Oval Office with the “smarts” (with which he believed himself amply endowed) to start “winning” again.

In truth, Trump had it upside down from the beginning. The unfortunate arrival of Steve Bannon to his campaign in August 2016 only served to give the Donald’s disheveled basket of bromides, braggadocio, and bile a rightist political edge and proto-intellectual rationalization.

The real problem, in fact, was not the evil flowing into the American homeland from abroad — whether imports, illegals or terrorists. Rather, it was the outward flow of Washington’s monetary and military imperialism that was gutting capitalist prosperity domestically and generating terrorist blowback abroad.

Needless to say, Bannonism never identified the real culprits: Namely, the Wall Street-enriching Bubble Finance policies of the Fed, which forced foreign central banks to buy dollars and trash their own currencies to keep exports “competitive”; the military-industrial-intelligence-foreign aid complex of the American Imperium; and the massively insolvent institutions of the Welfare State social insurance system (Social Security and Medicare) and prodigious spending on means-tested entitlements (Medicaid, food stamps EITC, etc.).

Consequently, the Bannonized agenda had no inkling, either, that fiscal catastrophe was imminent. And that the Trump administration had no real choice except the politically unpalatable path of cutting spending and/or raising taxes — or eventually getting buried by the inherited fiscal tidal wave cresting at the end of a failed ((102 month old) recovery.

Nor did it grasp that the real cause of Flyover America’s distress is the Fed’s multi-decade regime of financial repression and Wall Street price-keeping policies which: (1) deplete the real pay of workers via the FOMC’s absurd 2 percent inflation target; (2) savage the bank balances of savers and retirees via ZIRP; (3) gut jobs, investment and real pay in the business sector via the C-suites’ strip-mining of corporate balance sheets and cash flows to fund Wall Street-pleasing stock buybacks, fatter dividends and M&A empire building; and 4) impale the bottom 80 percent of households on a unrepayable treadmill of (temporarily) cheap debt in order to sustain a simulacrum of middle class living standards.

At the same time, these pernicious monetary central planning policies did fuel the greatest (unsustainable) financial asset inflation in recorded history, thereby showering the top one percent and 10 percent with upwards of $35 trillion of windfall wealth (on paper). At bottom, Fed policy amounted to “trickle-up” with malice aforethought, and it was sponsored and endorsed by the beltway bipartisan consensus.

It is no wonder, therefore, that Trump’s flawed candidacy and pastiche of palliatives and pettifoggery appealed to the left-behind working classes of western Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin and Iowa—as well as to the retirees of Florida and culturally-threatened main streeters domiciled in the small towns and countryside of Red State America.

In these precincts, the election was not especially won by Trump. Rather, the electoral college was essentially defaulted to him by a lifetime denizen of the Imperial City who had no clue that war, welfare and windfalls to the wealthy were no longer selling in Flyover America.

Reprinted excerpt with permission from David Stockman’s ContraCorner.

As an Amazon Associate I Earn from Qualifying Purchases
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
17 Comments
unit472/
unit472/
January 9, 2018 1:19 pm

Its way past time to vomit out ‘Dave Stockman’ too. For far too long people have listened to political extremists whose observations are consistantly wrong

Anonymous
Anonymous
  unit472/
January 9, 2018 3:39 pm

Read the title, goofball. He says Bannon should have quit before he gave Baby Huey the stamp of validity. Now we have a moran in the Oval playpen who has no practical agenda or policy beyond using the office to benefit Trump Enterprises. Steve thought he could ride this behemoth to the top, neglected to verify if he really could control the beast. Nyet.

unit472/
unit472/
January 9, 2018 1:20 pm

Oh yeah, and this shit head had the nerve to want me to pay him $300 per year for his rantings.

RiNS
RiNS
  unit472/
January 9, 2018 1:49 pm

I agree unit.

Really like this bit and back handed ad hominem

“we mean Trump’s essentially content free notion”… blah, blah blah!

Yeah he takes it back in later paragraphs, sort of, but the pacing and leading he is doing there is quite intentional.

So Stockman is happy Bannon is gone.
Kinda sorta happy with Trump.
Not not! Maybe!
Geeze I am in the wrong racket…

I don’t even know what to make of this. Just 300 bucks a year. Whatta deal eh unit472/!
Where do I sign up. Simple formula.
To be successful in the prediction racket just straddle the fence instead of sitting on the post.

[imgcomment image[/img]

Stephanie Shepard
Stephanie Shepard
January 9, 2018 2:02 pm

I still don’t believe the Trump/Bannon feud is real. It makes no sense for them to be arguing openly in the press after Mueller’s investigation took a swan’s dive and the passage of the tax cuts bill.

Since the beginning of Trump’s presidency I’ve always seen Bannon as our modern version of Benjamin Franklin. Both were press savvy and worked behind the scenes with financiers. I guess time will tell if my hunch is right.

Dan
Dan
  Stephanie Shepard
January 9, 2018 3:24 pm

Did Bannon *actually* say the stuff in Crying-Wolfe’s little fairy tale book? And if he did, under what circumstances? Sounds like a manufactured or taken out of context quote to me….

Stephanie Shepard
Stephanie Shepard
  Dan
January 9, 2018 3:34 pm

Bannon said his quotes were about Paul Manafort, not Don Jr.

But what’s baffling to me is Trump denounced Wolff’s entire book as a work of fiction, but took issue with Bannon’s quotes? The whole feud is incongruent with past statements and actions. Steve Bannon/Breitbart has been Trump’s sole ally in the press but he’s suddenly “Sloppy Steve” after this hack job?

Makes no sense.

Unsure
Unsure
  Stephanie Shepard
January 9, 2018 4:16 pm

I agree Steph. Something does not smell right about the feud. Why would Bannon commit political and ideological seppuku in such a grand fashion. He looks like a little bitch right now. Did he really lose his mind in the aftermath of Judge Moore’s loss in Alabama? But his issues with trump occurred during the time he served in the White House? But when he left the white house, he said he was going to fight for Trump from the outside?

Very strange.

Bannon either 1.) had a nervous breakdown or 2.) the dark powers have planted child porn on his computer or 3.) he and trump are playing games and Bannon played his role out of love of country more than self-concern.

If # 3 it will all come out soon and Bannon will be vindicated and restored to respectability at that time.

Or maybe we’ll never know.

starfcker
starfcker
  Unsure
January 9, 2018 4:35 pm

Unsure, easy to answer that. Ideologically, Bannon is a burn it down guy. In that way he’s similar to many posters here, he sees the only way to fix are currently screwed up situation is to crash the whole thing and rebuild from scratch. Trump has never been about that. Trump prefers more of the neutron bomb approach. Nuke out the corruption, keep the institutions standing. Bannon had an office in the west wing of the White House. He had to feel like he was on the verge of winning the argument. However, burn it down was never going to sell with Trump. Obviously, it hurt Bannon to be that close, and not feel that his ideas were heard. They were heard, but they were rejected. These things happen sometimes when people within an organization forget their position in an organization. I like Trump. I like Bannon. But I’m not a burn it down guy either.

Unsure
Unsure
  starfcker
January 9, 2018 5:06 pm

Thanks Star. I see your point.

Still, Bannon looks so bad with all of his vacillating, not to mention his association with the snake-like Wolff. Perhaps Bannon made a hail-mary pass in an attempt to tear it all down but, in a way, that’s like Charlie Manson trying to start a race war by ordering the murder of Sharron Tate. Not only is it weak, but crazy. If that is the case, then Bannon had me fooled. He seemed like a smart, common sense, down to earth, guy. Now he seems at the very least, confused; and, in the extreme, mentally ill.

If he believed and acted as you say, why apologize to Trump after the fact? Where is Bannon’s integrity? Either he never had it or he lost it or he threw it out the window for a crazy run at Caesar. Epic miscalculation? Or something else? Either way, as it stands right now, he appears less than the court jester; because his antics appeared serious.

starfcker
starfcker
  Unsure
January 9, 2018 6:11 pm

It might be less complicated than that. Certainly Bannon got competitive with the Roy Moore situation. He thought he was going to teach Trump something, and failed spectacularly. But I doubt his intentions were ever less than honorable, even though they might have been misguided. And I think all the problems with the Wolff guy, were just him getting careless venting his frustrations, and Bannon not realizing that Wolff would knife him. I believe Bannon’s contrition is sincere. I hate to see him fall like this. He’s been fighting the good fight for a long time. There will be a second act for him. There always is.

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
January 9, 2018 2:02 pm

Breitbart, for which Bannon is a creature, was created in Israel specifically to provide a nativist, pseudo nationalist distraction to Israel-first policies. Being anti-immigrant fits right into that narrative.

AC
AC
January 9, 2018 2:16 pm

Bannon’s biggest problem, is his dedication to serving the interests of another nation, over American interests. The same is true of most of Trump’s staff and Congress.

FTA: “Needless to say, Bannonism never identified the real culprits: Namely, the [Jews].

Stockman’s marital situation prevents him from being honest about a great many things, just as Bannon’s unhinged dedication to ‘Christian Zionism’ prevents him from being honest about a great many things – perhaps even to themselves. To see them at odds with each other is rather amusing.

Dan
Dan
January 9, 2018 3:21 pm

Stockman is really off his rocker with this peice. Bannon isn’t going anywhere… he hurt his stock some with the latest kerflufle, but he seems to forget who strategized Trump’s messaging.

Stephanie Shepard
Stephanie Shepard
January 9, 2018 4:22 pm
Overthecliff
Overthecliff
January 9, 2018 9:49 pm

Men are just a means to an end. Trust your principles and not politicians or preachers.men will disappoint you almost every time.

Truther
Truther
January 10, 2018 8:25 am

I have always seen Brannon as John Galt……anyone else???