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Now the Rich Get Richer Quicker
The new year requires an inventory of the old. Mostly, this is an individual impulse, leading to resolutions and renewal. Such reckoning can seem an intensely private exercise. But what of a whole society? Can we assess the year just past with an eye on the entire land? Morally, how fares the United States of America?
If a just society is defined by the relationship between the well off and the very poor, we have big trouble. US Census data for 2010 show the widest rich-poor income gap on record. In 1968, the top 20 percent of Americans had about 7 times the income of those living below the poverty line. By 2008, that disparity had grown to about 13. By 2010, it had grown even further, to more than 14. The poverty level in 2010 was put at $21,954 for a family of four. In 2010, the percentage of Americans living below half of the poverty line (or about $11,000) had grown from 5.7 percent in 2008 to 6.3 percent. That the rich get richer while the poor get poorer can seem a timeless cliché, yet something is steadily corroding America. The mythic land of equality has the largest income disparity of any Western nation. How can that be?
These figures show that the shocking economic collapse of the last two years has been no collapse whatsoever for the most affluent, even while it remains traumatic for most, and catastrophic for many. Yet instead of generating a sense of moral urgency, this condition has produced a spirit of entitlement among the privileged, complacency among the struggling middle, and resignation among the impoverished. How else account for the most decisive judicial act of 2010 - the Supreme Court ruling in January that elite-protecting political spending by corporations must be unrestrained - and the most decisive legislative act - the December extension by Congress of massive tax cuts for that wealthiest sub-minority? And who can deny that the court decision led directly to the congressional act?
What's worse, instead of prompting a reconsideration of the untrustworthy twin pillars on which America's financial culture stands, the 2010 responses artificially reinforced them. The war economy is the first of these, with current annual military expenditures now exceeding $1 trillion - the most ever. Ironically, nothing undermines American security like the cuts in public spending (infrastructure, schools, libraries, etc.) made necessary by exploding budgets for outmoded weapons. Not guns over mere butter now, but over bread - and books and bridges. This monetary calculus leaves aside the most corrupting dynamic of the war economy, how the nation is driven into unnecessary wars simply by the unleashed momentum of hyper-war-readiness. Over-investment in arms leads to their use, period.
The second pillar of America's economic culture is the reduction of the pursuit of happiness to shopping. A tragedy, classically speaking, is when something good leads to something bad. Early numbers suggest that retail sales over the last few weeks of 2010 are up significantly, as the economic stimulus pays off. This means job growth, mortgages paid, careers rescued - the Obama recovery taking hold. And who can bemoan that? Yet looking deeper, we see that consumer confidence remains a confidence game. Emerging from the economic meltdown, we are still chained to the hamster's wheel of earning-in-order-to-spend. Manufacturing in America has faltered in all but the manufacturing of imagined needs which, once met, only manufacture more, leaving people consumed by consumption. Our idea of the good life, even as it sets up a next economic collapse, is destroying us.
This bleak inventory can extend to other facets of culture - how the once-proud institution of journalism increasingly confuses entertainment and politics, celebrity and news, with the result that, even as information explodes, the citizenry is less critically informed than ever. Hence the public gullibility to the Know-Nothing Tea Party movement, which so dangerously swamped the 2010 elections. What's that odor in the air - harmless swamp gas, or the whiff of fascism?
The point of a dark reckoning like this is not to wallow in defeat, but to confront the actuality of the national condition. At New Year's, the individual takes a good look in the mirror and resolves to change. So with our common life. America is better than this.
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24 Comments so far
Show AllWe are DEFINITELY NOT living in a "just society," in fact, the complete opposite. The wealthy have taken over America through the machinations of the millionaires in Congress (over 50% of the congressional membership), backed by the Supreme Court's odious attack on the middle class. That attack is most despicable and contemptible in the Court's insideous label "Citizens United" when it is in every respect the opposite!
Does anyone honestly believe that the Congressional representation of our citizenry will ever be legitimate in any respect as long as we have more millionaires "representing us" than "average citizens?"
Our country has been completely sold out to the wealthy and there is NO REASON WHATSOEVER to believe that will ever be reversed.
As I listen to the meaningless palaver coming from the phonies in Congress, it repulses me in the deepest manner. We are watching a staged production which has a very predictable ending.
Congressional membership should be such that it reflects EXACTLY the economic status of our citizenry, not the complete OPPOSITE!!!!
It won't be long before Carroll and other authors won't keep reminding us that "the US has the greatest income disparity of any Western nation"...they will be comparing US income disparity with the third world nations that by many metrics the US is more comparable to.
"Congressional membership should be such that it reflects EXACTLY the economic status of our citizenry, not the complete OPPOSITE!!!!"
Have you seen the story of "Mouseland," a brief parable by the greatest Canadian, Tommy Douglas, who brought single payer health care to Canada? In this brief video, Douglas explains why the mice in Mouseland got nowhere when they put cats in office. Actor Kiefer Southerland, Tommy Douglas's grandson, introduces the video, Douglas's speech set to animation:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqpFm7zAK90
An excellent parable. I hope the "mice" in America soon wake up!!!!
Off topic: I just read that none other than Condoleezza Rice is a leader in the orientation of new house members. !!!!
As the rich get richer, at an ever accelerating pace, then more and more of the wealth is in fewer and fewer hands. The rich have little left to buy and the poor have little to buy anything with. Commerce slows down and goods and services are not exchanged. Sad part is that people are still there to do the work and people need the work done so badly, but the economy fails and people can starve to death in the midst of plenty.
We need alternative economics to get things running again. Search for a paper by me, Fred, and the title "The Secret of Money: Beyond Socialism" for more details. I don't know how much longer I'll be online, but I'll talk about this while I am still able.
I read your thesis, Fred. "The Secret of Money".
The problems of changing the system starting on a local level of money for everyone and keeping track of everyone's activity by having meetings would be very difficult to get going and grow.
Have you tried this in your community?
Has it been hard to convince your friends and neighbors that money is not really real?
You have good Ideas about why the economy is not working for most of the people in the world and this is summed up in my mind and the article of topic here "the rich get richer" as Its the War Economy that is the main problem and I think and hope and work on the theory that eventually even if it takes a complete collapse of the war economy, that the true human nature of love and cooperation will have a chance to shape a new peace economy over the old system of war and force as the answer to all conflict.
I don't know how long this war economy will last but the sooner it falls the better is about all a skeptical realist can hope for.
@Jim Glover: Dr. Gabor Mate, who has worked with durg addicts in Vancouver, BC, for many years, appeared on Democracy Now with Amy Goodman and had something to say on the point you made in your third paragraph regarding love and cooperation:
"What we have to understand here is that human beings are not discrete, individual entities, contrary to the free enterprise myth that people are competitive, individualistic, private entities. What people actually are are social creatures, very much dependent on one another and very much programmed to cooperate with one another when the circumstances are right."
-- Dr. Gabor Maté, from an interview with Amy Goodman of Democracy Now.
http://www.alternet.org/story/149325/trauma%3A_how_we%27ve_created_a_nation_addicted_to_shopping%2C_work%2C_drugs_and_sex
Those on the left, including myself, these days tend to be cynical, waiting for the next jackboot to drop, but we could be wrong. We may instead be going through the growing pains of a new progressive beginning as the minority of tenacious ignorant bigots and wealthy power-brokers desperately try to hang on to an old world that is dying. Thirty years ago I worked with seniors who were young men and women during the Great Depression -- all of them thought things would get much worse, and were pleasantly surprised when they didn't. I don't think we'll have to go through the pain of a WWII, but an economic collapse exposing the rotten foundation of our present form of ruthless sociopathic capitalism -- or 'crapitalism,' as I like to call it -- might be just the thing to wake America out of its long nightmare.
Some links to make us all feel good today -- not! This is the reality. This is the foreclosure map -- how your economy is doing. I live on Long Island and the NYS map is very interesting. Long Island is made up of Nassau County and Suffolk County. I live in Suffolk. I have written many times before that out here you don't see signs that say "foreclosure" or "bank owned" -- it would offend the well-to-here. However, Suffolk County has now joined the majority of counties in New Jersey and elsewhere in having a high foreclosure rate. Check out the rest of the map on NYS and you find out that, indeed, the hottest foreclosure activity is NYC and Long Island and it's environs -- not Westchester, though. Sometimes I think all this doom and gloom may just be in my head, but then a map sadly confirms that I'm right.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=111494514
This, of course, doesn't take into account the vast amount of empty commercial properties on Long Island. What is really choking places like Long Island and New Jersey -- and will continue to -- is the viciously high property taxes.
Here's the latest NPR story on foreclosures from this morning, January 3, 2011. Actually, there's a lot of good reads here that paint the bleak picture and the comments are worth reading, too. We really need to harness all these angry and despairing people into change agents. I have no idea how we do this, but it obvious that the "big screw" is continuing:
http://www.npr.org/2011/01/03/132523689/u-s-home-foreclosures-may-top-100-000-in-january
Having travelled around the US a bit recently I noticed that realtors just about everywhere are avoiding posting "foreclosure" signs for fear of spooking the real estate market and further depressing prices.
It is encouraging to see that something so direct has been published by a major city newspaper.
It is very encouraging to see something so direct published in a major city newspaper. I could not agree more with Elizabeth H. If one wonders why there is seemingly little outrage out there, they don't have to look far. Facts and information are in short supply with our mainstream media. Period.
The question still remains and frustrates the hell out of me, just what can we do? Where does one start?
Royce
Yes, I make it a point to read Carroll thoroughly whenever his writing appears on CD. I never remember to link to the Globe and search for his column. Just another plus for having CD sort these things out for me. Thank you.
we quit playing the game, and take our stand where we live...
Global Start Date: September 22, 2012...worldwide, unanimous rejection of the modern world...cessation of industry and property ownership...power down...
we stop recognizing the legalities we have created, and begin living by directly interacting with the natural world...
Corruption, stupid religion and a very successful campaign of class warfare that has been waged for the last 30 years has brought the United States to the brink of a corporate theocracy where poor people will have to defend for themselves and women will be put back in their place. The fact that their is no progressive political party willing to defend the working class has just made it easier for the right wing to drive the agenda.
The Bank of America is even foreclosing on the homes of people who have never missed a payment. Citi-bank has done much the same wherein all that was needed for them to get the process started was learning the borrower was seeking to re-finance with another institution.
Indeed in Florida they seized a home of a couple who had paid CASH for the house and owned it outright free and clear.
Financial institutions actually make more profits when they foreclose on a home then when they refinance it. They have deep pockets and persons mistreated by them can NOT afford long and drawn out legal battles without Financial aid and where do people think they will go to get that aid?
I can see this day coming. It no stretch of the imagination that those in Government will push for retroactive laws to make this legal.
A person is locked into a long term loan at a low interest rate.
The US dollar suffers inflation wherein the dollar rapidly loses value and the person with such a long term loan at low interest rates in essence "inflating his way out of debt".
The bank siezes the home outright using the flimsiest of excuses because the home and property will retain its Value better then the value of the loan being repaid in Dollars.
"Indeed in Florida they seized a home of a couple who had paid CASH for the house and owned it outright free and clear."
err .... How can that be?
They CLAIM they got the address of the home mixed up and intended to foreclose on one ten houses away.
The owners came back to find their stuff in the streets and the locks changed and THEN had to go through the courts to fight it.
The owners had indicated they told the bank several times over that they were foreclosing on the wrong home and the "Efficent Private Bank" just never got the information to the department that initiated the foreclosure.
Now keep in mind with MERS and the "Robo signing" procedures this crap is going on all the time.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010/oct/14/wells-fargo-mortgage-foreclosure-robo-signer
This a brief article on the Robo-signers. These people do not even check if what claimed to be owed is accurate.
This is on how the house paid for with cash on which there was no mortgage was foreclosed on.
http://www.tampabay.com/news/business/realestate/bank-of-america-forecloses-on-house-that-couple-had-paid-cash-for/1072632
When there are no more natives to kill,
And the world has wised up to your tricks,
When the last oil treasure loses its thrill,
It is time to turn on your own hicks.
The great financial swindles spin no more,
Its time to extract blood from your own poor.
As the great American dollar dives for the floor.
Now your own peoples can find out their score.
The game is played to die with the most toys.
Only the most powerful are one of the boys.
To serve the system that brings wealth to a few,
docility and obedience are wanted from the crew.
The Pirates of the great Accountant Sea,
Are the strongest nation to deal with mutiny,
Shark banks gather in blood fueled frenzy.
Around the plank that drops their food for free
"Overinvestment in armaments leads to their use. Period"
Can't help but think about Madeline Albright's statement/rhetorical question(not quite verbatim but close:
"What's the use of having a powerful military if we're not going to use it?"
Yes, indeed, the more we spend on our military the more we should wage war!!!
"Yes, indeed, the more we spend on our military the more we should wage war!!!"
oldscold:
“In its Yearbook 2010, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) documents that the United States accounts for 43 percent of world military spending and 30 percent of global arms exports, making it preeminent in both categories.” (Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Yearbook 2010
http://www.sipri.org/yearbook/2010/05)
It appears the U.S. isn't looking to end its occupations and wars any time soon.
Happy New Year and tell me something I don't know. Seriously. This type of article is seemingly in almost every installment of CD. I find myself drawn like a moth to a flame, in my daily dose of CD. Getting to the point where I might have to unsubscribe. I just yawn. Eyebrows raise less and less. The sky is falling. BIG DEAL. WOLF WOLF ! Ah, next please. I mean seriously. Reading about this gloom and doom over and over and over. Numbness is setting in. Just give me a glass of my favorite beverage, and easy chair and I will just sit on the front lawn and watch the world collapse around me like watching Survivor or American Idol. (of which I watch neither). What is the point of reading this day after day. Seeing the new year open with articles just like I read 50 times over already last year. Set the alarm clock and wake me when it is time to grab the pitchforks and torches. Gotta go. Several other horror stories left to read in today's installment. Yawn !
op cit
ibid
Having battled the largest and oldest "multi-level-marketing" company in the world for over 5 years with my website "AMO's-The Nightmare Builders" (exposing its predatory practices) I came to realize that at some point the Wealthy Elite (Who I call the Pollute-ocrats) corrupted the idea of The American Dream into a Ponzi Scheme - bastardizing the subtle reference to The American Dream in the 2nd line of the Declaration of Independence and corrupting the essence of the notion put forth by James Truslow Adams in his 1931 book "The Epic of America". Truslow was the first to coin the phrase The American Dream and this is what he wrote: "The American Dream is that dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement. It is a difficult dream for the European upper classes to interpret adequately, and too many of us ourselves have grown weary and mistrustful of it. It is not a dream of motor cars and high wages merely, but a dream of social order in which each man and each woman shall be able to attain to the fullest stature of which they are innately capable, and be recognized by others for what they are, regardless of the fortuitous circumstances of birth or position."
Unfortunately, The Wealthy Elite had already begun, since the industrial revolution, to brainwash the working class into believing that achieving The American Dream meant working hard for low wages and buying the goods and services that the Wealthy Elite were making and providing to sell to the masses. The fatal flaw of a Ponzi scheme, of course, is that only the originators of the scheme end up living their idea of The American Dream and they do so at the expense of the middle and lower classes. The income gap between the wealthy and the middle class, hence, grows exponentially.
I believe we've past the point of no return.
We live in a world of virtual everything: including a virtual economic system based on virtual money. By Sept. 24, 2011 the Global House of Cards will collapse and the world will become a Global Haiti. This will be initiated by a terrorist attack on America which is now well into the planning stages. The rich will fly off to their private islands in their private jets and sit back and watch as Marshall Law is declared in every country where there is law and the price of a loaf of bread will be $20 dollars because the U.S. dollar will not only lose it's status as the international currency but will become near worthless.
The U.S. is the only country that simply prints more money whenever money is needed with nothing to back it up. Reminds me of Bob Dylan's song: A Hard Rain Is Going To Fall to which I'll add "On everyone but the Global Pollute-ocrats."