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Blaming Liberalism for EnronConservative pundits rise to the challenge.

With the Bush administration taking heat for its ties to Enron, and pointed questions being raised about whether Enron's collapse suggests that accountants and pension funds require tighter regulation, conservatives have gone on the counterattack. The main strategy has been to point out that many Democrats and/or liberals also fed at the Enron trough, which is certainly true. (Chatterbox continues to believe that in the "government sleaze" department, the only scandalous nugget so far is that former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin lobbied Treasury on behalf of Citigroup, a major Enron creditor.) In the long run, though, arguing that Bob Rubin can be bought with corporate lucre just as easily as Larry Lindsey won't help conservatism's twilight struggle against liberalism. It's a liberal argument. If the Republicans push this line too hard, they'll be heading down the slippery slope toward support for campaign-finance reform.

Rising to this ideological challenge, the more entrepreneurial conservative commentators have begun to argue that liberalism itself created the Frankenstein monster known as Enron. So far, the argument has taken two forms:

1) The 1960s created Enron. Social conservatives have long argued that the Woodstock generation's If-It-Feels-Good-Do-It ethic destroyed the nation's moral fiber. It was a useful tack against homosexuality, abortion, and various other Christian-right bugaboos, but not really helpful when the cause was greater latitude for the free market to wreak creative destruction. In a Jan. 21 column, though, the Wall Street Journal's Robert Bartley attempts a bold synthesis:

The systemic failure is not a matter of economic arrangements, but of the societal collapse of standards and morality over the last three decades or so. As a society we seem increasingly incapable of sitting in judgment of each other—certainly not on the behavior of prominent entertainers, sports figures or presidents. We have a legal profession that tolerates and even promotes abuse of the legal system in class action suits—in the current Microsoft claims settlement enriching lawyers while not even trying to give a cent to supposedly injured plaintiffs. What kind of behavior can an "I'm OK, you're OK" society expect from its professionals or business leaders?

"Presidents" is of course a sly reference to Bill Clinton, the pre-eminent political poster child for 1960s self-indulgence. A Jan. 18 editorial in the Journal blamed Clinton more explicitly:

We'd say it's also impossible to understand Enron outside of the moral climate in which it flourished. Those were the roaring '90s, when all of America reveled in the economic boom. They were also the Clinton years, when we learned that "everybody does it." The culture wanted to believe in Enron's promises, which helps explain why 16 of 17 Wall Street analysts rated Enron a "buy" as recently as last October.

Not only was Clinton bad, but his economic boom was bad, too! The obvious problem here is that railing against prosperity is a liberal thing to do. Worse, it's a dumb liberal thing to do. Back to the drawing board.

2) Environmentalism created Enron. Blaming environmentalism is more shrewd than blaming the 1960s because while Timothy Leary and Ken Lay never made common cause, Timothy Wirth and Ken Lay did. A Jan. 17 column by Robert Novak made much of the fact that Wirth, a former Clinton point man on global warming who is now president of Ted Turner's United Nations Foundation, spread the Kyoto Treaty gospel from Ken Lay to Paul O'Neill when the latter was still running Alcoa. That Enron stood to benefit from the Kyoto Treaty's international limits on carbon emissions is indisputable:

To burn coal, it would be necessary to purchase credits for the emission of CO2. That would create a market for Enron, buying and selling emission credits. Internal memos show that Enron envisioned a profit here as early as 1996. … [A Dec. 1997 Enron memo] asserted that the Kyoto treaty ''will do more to promote Enron's business'' than any other regulatory initiative. It called the treaty's authority to trade in CO2 credits ''another victory for us,'' adding: ''This agreement will be good for Enron stock!!'' Enron's advocacy began years earlier. On Dec. 5, 1995, Lay wrote Environmental Protection Administrator Carol Browner pressing for the trading of emission standards. O'Neill can be accused of being a misguided idealist about global warming, but Lay saw Kyoto's green as the color of money.

But the mere fact that Enron stood to benefit financially from the Kyoto Treaty, and therefore was pushing energetically for its passage, doesn't in itself constitute an argument against the Kyoto Treaty. What really worries conservatives like Novak is that other companies might be harmed by the treaty. To the extent that potential harm is real, it needs to be weighed against the potential benefits that would come from reducing carbon emissions. And that has nothing to do with Enron.

A more challenging variation on this theme is the argument by Jerry Taylor, director of natural resource studies at the Cato Institute, that overregulation of the electricity industry created Enron. He makes his case in a Jan. 21 op-ed in the Wall Street Journal:

[W]hile donning the garb of Ronald Reagan on the one hand, the company was donning the mantle of Ralph Nader when it came to the transmission and distribution side of the energy business. Enron, you see, was worried that the incumbent utilities would either under-price the non-utility competitors that Enron wanted on their trading floors or, alternatively, would charge such high prices for access to their transmission systems that non-utility gas and electricity providers would be unable to effectively compete for business. So Enron insisted that electric utilities be forced by law to get out of the generation business, that strict price controls be set for the rates charged for access to the various transmission grids, and that the day-to-day operation of the electricity distribution systems be handed over to state officials who were directed to govern those systems at the behest of the system's "stakeholders" (read: Enron and friends).

The problem here is that Taylor doesn't acknowledge the liberal argument that none of this would have come up had utilities remained fully regulated in the first place. But since Chatterbox suspects the deregulation of electricity will ultimately prove beneficial, he won't make that argument himself.

E-mail Timothy Noah at .

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Timothy Noah is a senior writer at Slate.
Photograph of Enron logo on the Slate home page by James Nielsen/AFP/Corbis.
COMMENTS

Notes From The Fray Editor:

If you're going to look at one thread, look at the one that starts with Thrasymachus's post below, and moves through the issues to Will Allen's post (also below, titled "Now who has a dim view of human nature?") which attempts to sort out what kinds of illegal behavior are acceptable. New star Mfbenson made great contributions to the same thread, and Ananda Gupta also looks at campaign finance reform, here, with his usual sharp eye.


Reader Comments From The Fray:


For once, just maybe, the conservatives are right--sort of. I'm inclined to agree with them that the Enron debacle was the result of a breakdown in social morality; but I don't think that the 60s were the source of it. Instead, I posit that our woes in re Enron come from the 1980s, when America started linking wealth and honor more tightly than ever before. There was a time (I'm told) when it was possible to be poor and yet retain a scrap of dignity and honor. By working honestly and hard, let's say. Now, of course, we have an entire society dedicated to mocking and belittling such people. Inability to afford the "finer things in life" is viewed as synonymous with a lack of the taste required to appreciate them.

On the other side of that coin, we have the demise of the "wealthy scumbag" as a plausible social type. In the "old days", folks who obtained their money in disreputable or dishonorable ways (dealing drugs, personal injury law, sketchy marketeering, fraud... you know the drill) were shunned, and refused admission to the social circles of the overclass. Today, though, anyone with a hefty bank account is viewed--and presented--as a pillar of society, worthy of emulation, and can expect to be treated with honor and deference wherever he goes…

Whatever else you can lay at their doorstep, the social revolutionaries of the 1960s weren't easy on corporate fatcats, oligarchs, or other "Establishment" scions. To find the culprits behind this degeneracy, we need look no further than the Reagan Revolution, and its doctrine of wealth at any cost. The conservative fixation on "sins of the torso" would seem to have left little room for concern over what I'd regard as more serious forms of moral turpitude, what Dante would have called the "Sins of the Soul". Things like dishonesty, disloyalty, avarice and malice. You know… the kind of things that Enron will be remembered for.

Frankly, I think it's high time the liberals took back a chunk of the preachy moral high ground from the conservatives. After all, nobody's consensual sexual predilections ever did me a lick of harm (no pun intended) but the "Enron Ethos" has already done me plenty.

--Thrasymachus

(To find or answer this post, click here.)


Just as legal efforts to quell the demand of millions of drug users are doomed to failure, the legal efforts to quell the demand of millions of citizens to seek favor from elected officials will be doomed to failure. People do not see influencing politicians by helping them be re-elected as a fundamentally illegitimate act, in the manner that they see bank robbery as such, therefore any regime you cook up to prevent it will be relentlessly, successfully, evaded, just as attempts to prevent drug use are relentlessly, successfully evaded. Furthermore, the more you attempt to make illegal that activity that millions of citizens wish to engage in, the more the valuable will become those third parties that help in the effort. It really is simple black market behavior…

--Will Allen

(To find or answer this post, click here.)

(1/23)

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