Posts Tagged ‘scam’

The DeSantis Scam of the Consultancy Class

Friday, May 19th, 2023

“You expect me to beat him?”

One of the things you learn about Washington DC is how fake everything really is.  If you’re a conservative, you generally discover this early, and you’re reminded of it often as you wonder why every campaign of consequence for federal office gets steered to the left, and loses all its vigor and fight.  There is a broad class of political consultants in Washington DC that don’t much care about ideology or policy, or to the degree they do, they tend leftward, but what they do care intensely about is candidacies.  They ultimately don’t care much about the success or failure of the candidates with whom they contract.  They don’t have any notion of loyalty, and in many cases, they actually revile the candidates for whom they work, or hold their candidates’ supporters in absolute contempt.  Republicans find this to be the case much more often than Democrats, but the source of it is something simple and unavoidable:  These political consultants are entirely a band of mercenaries, and they’re an industry unto themselves.  They don’t serve candidates, elections, or electorates.  Their only actual client is themselves.  An “uncontested election” is a serious problem for them.  Who will hire all the flunkies of alleged political wisdom?  Who will pay their bills?  This is the crowd currently fundraising for Ron DeSantis, and they’re abusing him nearly as much as his donors and supporters, but for the fact that he likely already knows.  And there’s the catch: If he knows, he’s a villain just like them, but if he doesn’t, he’s too big a fool to deserve voters’ support.

Ron DeSantis likely knows all of this.  He’s been in and around Washington DC for a long while, and he knows how the game is played.  It’s hard to imagine that he’s spent so much time in politics, particularly in Washington DC, without knowing all of this quite intimately.  He knows how the fund-raising works, and he knows how the consultants use it.  DeSantis is raising money, and he may well be raising it for a campaign he intends to run in 2028.  Understand, I am not suggesting that he won’t announce a campaign for President for 2024, but that unless he has some sort of corrupt inside information about the demise of President Trump, whether real or merely political, he has to know his chances here are poor.  Yes, he’ll get a post-announcement bounce, maybe a media/DC-supported mega-bounce, but it’s all hot air. Every candidate gets a bounce, never mind a thoroughly engineered candidate like DeSantis.  Well, except Mike Pence.  Even Nikki Haley got a micro-bounce.  The problem is that all else remaining equal, he cannot overcome Trump.  DeSantis isn’t a fool, so he knows all this.  Why bother?

DeSantis may be playing a shrewd fund-raising game, both on behalf of his own future prospects, but also on behalf of his friends in DC who do not wish to see President Trump re-elevated into that office.  You see, a 2024 campaign can be quite useful in banking money to be used in 2028, having spent only a token amount of his growing war chest on 2024.  More, it takes money that would in large measure be available to Trump for 2024.  This splitting-away of approximately Republican resources may be the more important part of the goal, because the GOP insiders do not want Trump, though they’ve resigned themselves to that probability.  Their “plan B” is that they will undermine him with a bloody primary to make sure his sort never rises again.

DeSantis’ campaign, if launched, isn’t going to be a fruitful one for anybody except Ron 2028, and the entirety of the vaguely Republican-ish consultancy class. They will make millions.  They’ll rake in the money, knowing from the outset that their is a losing effort from the start.  They’ll waste the money of rank-and-file DeSantis supporters and even some up-scale money guys because these are the people who have perfected the narrative that Trump isn’t a nice, traditional, bend-over-and-take-it Republican, but have packaged it in a way that these bend-over-and-take-it Republicans don’t feel as though they’ve been so thoroughly debased.

Honestly, when you think about it, these consultants, despicable though they may be, enjoy the perfect racket: They needn’t produce victory.  They needn’t give sound advice.  They need only create the impression that they “got close” with their candidates, and they seldom pay a professional price.  When I think back on the tortured stupidity of Steve Schmidt and Nicolle Wallace from 2008, insisting that McCain suspend his campaign “to deal with the financial crisis,” and then blaming the debacle they created on Sarah Palin, you need look no further.  These exemplars of the type should serve as reminders to future candidates that they have no loyalty to their candidates, no ideology they firmly hold, and no person they will not stab with a shiv in order to try to preserve their own reputations against the backdrop of their colossal failures and poor judgement.  The real clue, of course, is the money.  All of these people care only about money, so that when they talk one of these politicians into making a run, they insist that the candidate begin raising money immediately, and as much as possible.  You’d think that this is wise, inasmuch as the candidate will need the money for their eventual campaign, and that’s true, but the real cause is much worse: None of the people who comprise the political consultancy class in and around DC wish to hitch their own wagons to an underfunded candidate, because most importantly, they want a big payday.

I’m not telling you that it will be purely impossible for DeSantis to enter the race, overcome a two-to-one margin of support, and gain the Republican nomination.  I’m telling you that whether he wins the nomination(this time) or not really is not all that important to DeSantis himself, and it certainly doesn’t matter to the consultancy class now swarming him like flies to a turd. The key is that he’s in the race, and spending money on all the consultants and their friends in the political campaign industrial complex. Marketers, ad producers, pollsters, and the whole suite of people who feed like leeches on the body politic swarm any new campaign, hopeful to sink their claws into the meaty flesh of a big campaign war chest.

DeSantis, without the intervention of currently unknown circumstances, cannot wrest the Republican nomination from Donald Trump.  More importantly though, even if he were to somehow capture the support of all the moderates, the NeverTrump/ProjectPedo phalanx, and the entirety of Swamp Republicanism, what he cannot do in 2024 is to win the Presidency.  This is because far too many of Trump’s MAGA coalition recognize the nature of the game DeSantis and others are playing, and simply will not, under any circumstance, support anybody in 2024 who’s name isn’t Donald J. Trump.  It’s really simple.  It’s that simple.  DeSantis and his forthcoming campaign is a scam, brought to you by professional charlatans, but whether DeSantis is knowingly in on the scam or not, he already knows the outcome, and that should deter you from supporting him with your time, money, or vote.

 

Disability: The New Welfare

Monday, February 20th, 2012

Giving You All You Want

This has been the trend since the end of the 1990s, when “welfare reform” was enacted by a Republican Congress and President Bill Clinton.  Rather than remaining stuck in a system that pays in commodities and benefits, more and more people have been moved into a permanent welfare class defined by disabilities.  Some are legitimate disabilities, of course, but as I suspected then, much of it is trumped-up nonsense.  One of the biggest has been the growth among psychological disabilities, with vast numbers of people receiving benefits on the claim of ADD/ADHD.  This has created whole families who receive monthly stipends, each, as individuals, and a whole cottage industry of attorneys specializing in winning these claims has come into being.

According to one Fox News report, the number has ballooned even more in the wake of the financial crisis of 2008. In fact, according to the source article in the New York Post, many people are applying for disability just as their unemployment benefits are running out. This is simply another case of people seeing the public trough, and figuring out ways to get access to it.  Sure, there are certainly disabled people, but the numbers now applying for benefits as permanently disabled people defies credulity.  This has become the new permanent welfare subsidy, and most of the people who now receive it are able-bodied, but claim disabled minds.  If you wonder how the Obama administration is managing to bring down unemployment, this is part of the formula.  As people’s claims to the Social Security administration are approved, they drop off the roles of jobless, thus rigging the numbers a bit more in favor of the Obama administration.  All the while, disability claims have hit a record $200billion, as of January.

Everybody is entitled to their opinion, but I’ll gladly tell you mine:  I’ve said since the early 1990s that had I been born three decades later, I’d have been diagnosed with ADD/ADHD and pumped full of Ritalin, if my parents would have been gullible enough to fall for it.  Most of the kids diagnosed as such are just normal kids who need a little stern discipline, and while there will be those of you who will argue I am a Neanderthal for the suggestion, I’ve seen this up close, and I know what nonsense lies behind most of it.  Now, that diagnosis is being carried over into adulthood, and adults are likewise being newly diagnosed with these dread afflictions of the psyche.

Let me tell you the truth: Most of the people thus diagnosed as adults actually suffer a different affliction, and it’s called “Needaswiftkickaritis.”  In short, they’re children in the bodies of adults who are avoiding responsibility for the conditions of their lives, and passing on the duty to fund their materials needs to those of you who work.  I know a person who is part of this profile, right now, not one mile away, and that’s only because he brags about it.  He knows he’s scamming the system, and he’s actually proud of it.  Somebody at the SSA actually challenged his claim, I believe denying it, and then he went out and found himself one of the ambulance-chasers who specializes in these matters.  Bingo!  He won the lottery, and now, at 26 years of age, he will spend his days being fed, clothed, and housed by you because he “won’t hit a lick at a snake,” as goes the central Texas colloquialism.

This is one more instance where a big government program has been taken from its early intended purpose to something it was never intended to do, and we wonder why we’re going broke?  Where I work, we’ve even had people who came in, applied, went through our extensive training program, and then as they should commence work, announced that they would not be working for us after all, because their claims of disability have been approved.  Ladies and gentlemen, we cannot permit this sort of thing to go on.  When we reformed welfare in 1996, we failed to reform other programs to close loopholes that were even then being habitually abused.  Many of those who went off the welfare rolls in the intervening period have merely found another teat on the giant sow of government at which to nurse.  It’s time we wean some of these piglets, as they’re now milking the sow to death, and us with her.