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State of the Union: Why Do We Act Against Our Own Self-Interest?
It's time to speak hard truths. The U.S. is the richest country on earth. But the way we spend our money makes us one of the poorer.
The State of the Union Address President Obama Should Have Given:
Mr. Speaker, Vice President Biden, Members of Congress, Distinguished Guests and Fellow Americans.
Let me begin with a cautionary note. I'm not here tonight to deliver a pep talk. If I'm interrupted with standing ovations I'll know you're not listening.
I'm here to offer some hard truths. The vast majority of you may not want to hear them. Many will reject them out of hand. Some may feel like rising out of your seats and shouting, "You Lie!" But I hope that in the days and weeks ahead as much light as heat will be generated from the conversations spurred by my remarks.
Let me begin with a statistic that, if viewed alone, would bring this audience to its feet. America is the richest country on earth, measured by per capita income (aside from a handful of small oil or gas-rich nations). But money is a means to an end, not an end in and of itself. What are the ends? A more secure and contented and fulfilling life. With these ends in mind, how do we measure up to other nations? We find we're no longer number one. We're not even in the top ten.
Since most of us spend the majority of our lives at work let me begin by comparing the security and comfort of the average worker in the United States and Europe.
American workers earn about as much annually as their counterparts in France and Germany and Denmark, but work almost three months longer.
We are the only advanced economy that does not guarantee at least some paid vacation. In fact, about a quarter of US workers in the private sector receive no paid vacation at all.
We are one of only a handful of nations that does not guarantee paid sick leave. Almost half the private sector workforce has no paid sick days.
The US has the dubious distinction of being virtually alone among the planet's 173 countries in not guaranteeing some form of paid maternity leave.
And if you lose your job in the United States, unemployment benefits pay a much smaller fraction of your wages here than in most countries in Europe and are paid for many fewer months.
And what about life outside of work? How do we measure up on promoting a secure, contented and fulfilling life?
In the United States day care is expensive. Pre-school programs for parents without means are few and far between.
In Europe almost all countries offer low cost or free childcare and pre-school programs. In France, for example, almost 100 percent of three-, four-, and five-year-olds are enrolled in free full-day schools staffed by teachers paid good wages.
For most of us, a primary non-work concern is access to affordable health care. Here the United States stands out. We are the only industrialized nation that doesn't make access to health care a basic right.
Does Generosity Undermine Competitiveness?
I know what many in this audience are thinking. The extensive and handsome social benefits offered by other countries to their workers and citizens may enhance their quality of life in the short term, but in the long term their cost undermines their competitiveness. What we think is self-evident turns out to be empirically false. European economies are as competitive as ours. Their worker productivity is about as high. Their trade balances are usually better. And their per capita income is similar.
The evidence is clear. Treating ourselves with dignity and generosity enriches our lives without reducing either our economic output or our economic competitiveness.
Indeed, it is America's paucity of social benefits that may be undermining our own economy. Consider the costs of our lack of access to health care.
People stay on jobs they detest out of fear they will lose health coverage, a situation that depresses productivity and innovation. Collectively we spend billions of hours a year appealing to a private health insurer to cover a medical procedure or bill, a stupendous waste of time that is all but non-existent in other countries.
For U.S. corporations trying to compete internationally, health care costs constitute a major handicap. For state and local governments trying to balance their budgets, health care costs constitute the fastest growing component.
The sobering truth is that we spend more than any other industrialized country on health care but on virtually any health measure-infant mortality, longevity, morbidity-we rate very poorly.
One yardstick for measuring the relative merits of health systems is to answer the question, if I have a heart attack in which country are my chances for survival better? According to the American Heart Association the United States ranks 22nd in the world for men and 23rd for women.
Dr. Christopher Murray, Director of WHO's Global Program on Evidence for Health Policy offers this blunt assessment of U.S. health care. "Basically, you die earlier and spend more time disabled if you're an American rather than a member of most other advanced countries."
The bottom line is that social generosity doesn't hurt; it helps. Why then, in the face of such evidence, do we continue to act against our own self-interest and more often than not choose to shrink the social sector?
It is not that we lack the money. Collectively we have more money than those countries that offer their citizens so many more basic services.
Why Do We Act Against Our Own Self-Interest?
Perhaps it is because we are guided by a different set of values than the reset of the world? Certainly a key characteristic of American culture is the belief that anyone can make it if they work hard enough. Recent public opinion polls here and abroad have found that Americans are twice as likely (60 percent) as Europeans (29 percent) to believe that the poor can get rich if they only try hard enough.
The flip side of the coin that says that if you work hard you can get rich is the American belief that if you are poor it is your own fault and help would be counterproductive, breeding idleness rather than fostering initiative.
The Preamble to the U.S. Constitution may state, "We the people of the United States, in Order to...promote the General Welfare". But the term "welfare" has always been viewed with hostility and suspicion.
Our economists have elaborated complex mathematical models to prove the counterintuitive proposition that helping our neighbors undermines the economy and results in all of us ending up poorer. To offer but one example of how successful their sales pitch has been, consider that the minimum wage in the United States, in real terms is now lower than it was in the 1950s.
America is the land of opportunity we are taught. We invented the Horatio Alger stories about poor boys who by dint of persistence and industry become rich. Anyone can make if they want it bad enough is our motto.
The irony is that we continue to believe this long after the period of relatively easy upward mobility in American history stopped being true. Pulling oneself up by one's bootstraps is harder in the United States today than in many European countries. If you are born into a poor family your odds of ending up in a poor family are far greater in the United States than in other countries.
The same models that purportedly "prove" that assisting the poor undermines the economy also "prove" that taxing the rich, however modestly also undermines the economy and results in all of us becoming poorer.
John Kenneth Galbraith once remarked on the inherent and self-serving contradiction in these two conclusions. If we help the poor we undermine their initiative we are told. We presume that poverty spurs enterprise. If we reduce the income of the rich we also undermine initiative we are also told. But here we presume that being poorer does not foster greater resourcefulness.
This unusual way of thinking has led us to be one of the most miserly countries when it comes to helping the needy while being one of the most generous when it comes to elevating those with more than enough. The result is concentrations of wealth of biblical proportions.
The combined wealth of the 400 richest Americans is a record-breaking $1.25 trillion, about the same amount of combined wealth held by the 57 million households who make up half the U.S. population. America boasts almost 400 billionaires while 37 million people have incomes below the poverty line.
From 1993 to 2007, the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans captured half of the overall economic gains. From 2002 to 2007 their share rose to two thirds.
Meanwhile, the average wage of Americans, adjusting for inflation, is lower today than it was in the 1970s.
We all rightly applaud the remarkable gains made by the stock markets this last year. But we should not assume that these gains will be widely shared. The richest 10 percent of Americans who own about 98 percent of all financial securities will benefit. For the rest of us, the extent to which most Americans have any assets at all their net worth is mostly in their homes, and most of those homes are still worth considerably less than they were in 2007.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt summed up the ethical sentiments that guided US public policy for more than a generation. "The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little."
Today any politician that expressed such sentiments would be widely attacked, as I can attest from personal experience. When I was running for President I observed, "I do think at a certain point you've made enough money". I added, "I think when you spread the wealth around, it's good for everybody." Wow, was I ever raked over the coals for those remarks. They became the basis for many fundraising appeals by Republicans. They thought, and perhaps they were right, that they had an issue that would resonate with the general public. How dare I tell Americans that a billion dollars, or even a hundred billion dollars, is enough! How dare I declare that taking a little money from billionaires and using it to care for the common welfare could prove beneficial!
Warren Buffett, a billionaire who does not believe it wise public policy for him to be taxed at a lower rate than his secretary, has observed, with his tongue firmly in his cheek. "I'm making $80 million a year-God must have intended me to have a lower tax rate." A number of his brethren, unfortunately but instructively, have expressed the same sentiment without a trace of self-mockery. Wall Street billionaire Charles Munger, for example, informed the nation, "You should thank God" for bank bailouts. But he made it clear that broader government intervention to help others would destroy the country. "Now, if you talk about bailouts for everybody else, there comes a place where if you just start bailing out all of the individuals instead of telling them to adapt, the culture dies." People in economic distress, he advised, should, and I quote, "suck it in and cope".
When the Democratic Party tried to close a loophole in the tax code that allows billionaires to pay taxes at half the rate their chauffeurs and secretaries do, multi-billionaire Stephen Schwarzman exhorted his colleagues on Wall Street to battle, "It's a war. It's like when Hitler invaded Poland in 1939." Wall Street won that battle. The loophole remains.
Today the stark fact is that total Wall Street compensation is about equal to the combined deficits facing state and local governments. We are choosing to close down clinics and libraries and schools and lay off tens of thousands of public employees rather than ask millionaires and billionaires to make even the smallest sacrifice.
In American politics today the regrettable fact is that to pass legislation that gives a dime to those who need help we must include a measure that gives a dollar to those who most assuredly do not. Last month Congress was able to extend unemployment benefits to millions of workers living on the edge only after it agreed to maintain tax cuts for millionaires that will save them more money than the average American will make this year.
What Did the Election Results Teach Us?
As the dramatically new composition of this audience reflects, this country experienced a political earthquake this past November. I am as chastened as any Democrat by the results. Many view the election as a referendum on government. I think that is true in part. Certainly there are reasons to be angry with the government. We in Washington made a number of policy decisions that should have been upsetting to many.
Consider the requirement that everyone must buy health insurance. You may recall I opposed this mandate in the Democratic primary. So why is it in the law? Because the private insurance companies demanded it as the price for their acquiescence to the bill's passage. The mandate is will be enormously profitable to them, expanding their customer base by tens of millions, most of whom are healthy.
I agreed to the mandate in order to get a health reform bill passed. If Republicans want to delete only that part of the health reform bill, I will support that effort.
Our bailout of the financial sector also had major shortcomings. Remember, there were in effect two bailouts. One was intended to overcome a liquidity crisis that threatened to quickly grind the entire economy to a halt. That bailout was successful. The second was intended to shore up huge banks and insurance companies that were, in effect, bankrupt. Whether we should have done that second bailout at all is open to debate. That we did so without insisting on fundamental changes by the financial sector in return for the bailout is unconscionable. We never exercised our power to demand, for example, that the incentive structure that led to the financial collapse be changed. We asked, but never insisted, that the firms should restart their lending to businesses. We asked, but never insisted, that they modify their mortgages to slow the rate of foreclosures.
We did our policies come up short? Most observers would agree that it was a result of the inordinate influenced of big money and large corporations. But the fact of the matter is that the grassroots movement that arose a few months after I took office did not focus its anger on the abuse of self-serving power by private corporations but on the exercise of public authority intended to help the general welfare.
Recall that the Tea Party Movement was launched by a rant on the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange against the federal government's effort to help people stay in their homes. "Do we really want to subsidize the losers' mortgages or do we want to buy houses in foreclosures and give them to people who can actually prosper in the future", roared Rick Santelli in February 2009. A few months later Michelle Malkin summed up the conservative thesis: "foreclosure ‘victims' (the word victims was in quotes) don't deserve an ounce of sympathy - or a cent of our money." The message was clear and classic. Those who were losing their homes were at fault. They deserve no help.
This message was repeated over and over again, even when we learned that only a generation ago banks routinely altered a mortgage for a customer in distress, even when we learned that most people who took out sub prime mortgages actually qualified for far better fixed rate mortgages but were deceived by mortgage brokers into signing a far riskier and more costly contract, even when we learned that many people were being thrown out of their homes not because they were behind on their mortgages but because they were behind in paying the exorbitant and unanticipated fees mortgage servicers imposed on them.
The facts weren't going to change our minds. To paraphrase Pogo, we knew who the enemy was. He was us.
That same message extended to the other major political issue debated over the past two years: health care. Speakers at rallies denounced the idea that the government should extend health care for tens of millions of Americans. To be sure, there was and should have been a vigorous debate about how we might do so. But these rallies opposed the very idea that we should try. And as we know, the first order of business for the new Congress has been to repeal the modest health reform we were able to pass last year.
Perhaps it's simply a coincidence, but a study cited in a recent issue of Scientific American comes to mind. The study finds that college students' self-reported empathy has declined since 1980 and there has been an especially steep drop in the last 10 years. We care about others much less than we used to and that is reflected in our rhetoric and our politics.
Europeans often use the phrase "social market economy" or "social capitalism" to describe their mix of economic and social policies. On this side of the Atlantic we label those who promote an expansion of the social sector socialists, a word that is perfectly acceptable in European discourse but is far outside the pale of American politics.
Defending the Public Good
Today the word "public", like the word "government", is under attack. We are witnessing a full-fledged assault on everything public: public television, public radio, public arts, public libraries, public employees in general, public services of all kinds.
The new code word is privatization. At every level of government, privatization is being seriously debated and often embraced. One would expect that in such a debate the burden of proof would rest on those who would sell public assets for it is a decision very difficult to reverse and it means relinquishing our control, usually over a basic service, to a corporation whose policies are made by owners located often thousands of miles away from their customers and driven by goals that do not put the needs of the community first.
Unfortunately, even tragically, the burden of proof often does not rest on those who would privatize but on those who would defend the public.
That is regrettable for many reasons, not the least of which is that the arguments in favor of privatization are singularly unpersuasive.
Some argue for privatization as a way to spur competition. The argument is disingenuous. The vast majority of public services do not lend themselves to competition. If we sell our public water company to a private firm we don't end up with two water companies. We still have a monopoly.
Some argue the private sector is more efficient. There is little empirical evidence to back up this claim if by efficiency we mean getting more productivity per employee rather than cutting an employee's wages and benefits.
Sometimes privatization is promoted as a desperation measure; a way to inject urgently needed cash into municipal or state coffers. But as with most actions driven by desperation, these may bring short-term benefits but almost always result in high long-term costs. Which is to be expected. Private investors demand a high return on their investment.
Often privatization is a way for politicians to avoid making hard decisions. Rather than raise fees or taxes to maintain or upgrade basic infrastructure, they sell the infrastructure to private firms who then raise the rates. In the long term we pay a high price for such cowardice. But it is a price we will continue to pay so long as a politician gets thrown out of office for proposing to raise taxes but is warmly supported when he advocates privatizing a service that will result in a huge increase in rates.
These are difficult times. We no longer act as if we are in this together. We are losing faith in our ability to collectively address our problems. Even more tragically, a growing number of us no longer believe we even should.
Changing the Future, Facing Hard Truths
These are sobering thoughts, but the future need not be so gloomy. Alexis de Tocqueville, the Frenchman whose insights into the American character in the early 19th century continue to resonate, once remarked, "The greatness of Americans...is in their being able to repair their faults."
I propose that we undertake this repair. The first step is to accept the need for repair. Here again we might be guided by an insight offered by Franklin Roosevelt. "We have always known that heedless self-interest was bad morals", he told the nation some 75 years ago, "now we know that it is bad economics".
Consider but two examples that prove his point.
In the 1960s, the US and Canada were home to very similar health systems. We were spending similar proportions of our respective gross domestic budgets on health care. That decade Canada did away with private profit making health insurance companies. Today Canada has a single insurer, or more accurately, 12 Provincial insurers that share several core principles.
The United States has continued to rely on hundreds of private, profit making insurance companies.
Canada is now spending about a third less on health care than the US. Much of the difference is a consequence of the enormous administrative cost from having hundreds of insurance companies and thousands of individual and extraordinarily complex health policies. As much as 30 percent of our health dollar is spent on paperwork and administration alone.
Other countries have adopted different structures for universal health coverage than Canada. All have universal coverage. All are significantly less expensive than ours.
When the economic crisis hit, Germany responded not by laying off workers but by encouraging employers to reduce their hours with two-thirds of the lost wages being made up by a social fund. German workers do not experience a precipitous drop in income. Companies were able to keep workers on, retaining their institutional memory and skills that will be needed when the economy improves. Germany's unemployment rate never soared and remains significantly lower than ours.
The United States created no comparable mechanism. Private companies laid off millions of employees. Foreclosures soared, as did personal bankruptcies. Domestic violence rose. And now as an economic recovery begins, US companies are largely hiring temporary, not permanent workers to shield them against the risk of a new downturn.
This might be the time to face some hard truths.
The hard truth is that the best era for the middle class in this country was from 1950 to 1973, a time when a single wage earner could earn enough to buy a house and send the kids to college. That was also an era in which the percentage of the work force in unions was almost 4 times what it is now. And the top income tax rate never dropped below 70 percent, double today's rate.
The hard truth is that inequality is economically as well as socially harmful. Stark inequality breeds stress and social isolation and sickness. Growing evidence indicates that inequality was a key driving force behind the latest financial and economic collapse. And the historical evidence is clear: inequality undermines economic growth.
The hard truth is that we are interdependent and social investments that help our neighbors almost always end up helping us as well. Ask your father and mother what social security means to them or how their lives changed when Medicare began shielding them and their parents from catastrophic medical bills.
"The good we secure for ourselves is precarious and uncertain until it is secured for all of us and incorporated into our common life", Jane Addams, the first American woman to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize once remarked.
This is a moment for us to relearn this basic truth.
Thank you for listening. I'm grateful and frankly, pleasantly surprised that so many of you remain in your seats. I know this has been a very unusual State of the Union Address. But then this is a very unusual moment in American history.
I look forward to the vigorous, but I hope civil, debate that will inevitably follow.

44 Comments so far
Show AllWow! What a great 'Stake in the Union' sermon.
It made me crave s'more, with my beer.
So, now I wonder, why the aftertaste?
The statistic that 60% of Americans are so deluded that they believe the poor can get rich if they try hard enough enabled the economic paradigm to change and are exacerbating its negative impacts.
But who are the "we" that need to face some hard truths? The Horatio Alger Myth is not pervasive is all classes of society but it is nearly universal in the sincerity and depth of belief held by the wealthiest Americans and those who aspire to wealth and power. Boehner wails. "I've worked every rotten job there ever was in pursuit of the American Dreams." And then of course he chokes up in self pity and next lashes out in resentment of any who didn't make it the way he did. Self pity and resentment-- a dominantly Republican but almost universally held sentiment among those who earn more than $100,000/yr. And they are the ones that have political power.
So true! So true!
Self-pity and resentment are along with a sense of selfishness-as-a-virtue, are the defining features of the US bourgeois conservative.
And among the liberal bourgeois, the same selfishness apepareds too, but it manifests itself in all that embracing of California-style narcissistic new-age astrology/yoga/dietary/self-improvement mumbo-jumbo.
And, the word "solidarity" is now as unknown a word among young people as as "Sputnik".
SaboCat, that is so true! I've nearly always wondered how, after attaining spiritual and psychological peace, physical fitness, sexual satisfaction, self esteem, and a perfectly functioning colon, members of my generation would finally engage the awful Reality in which we live and do something about improving it. Generally, their idea of self-improvement involves remodeling their homes and, perhaps getting some plastic surgery. At the same time, it has been pointed out that a million Bodhisattvas would probably do little to extract ourselves from the mess we've made. It does make me wonder.
Isn't it interesting that the Horatio Alger stories appeared during the time the wealth of the nation was being consolidated in the hands of the few for the first time. It has happened again. The perversion of Darwinism that is Social Darwinism also appeared during this time. Its tenets are rampant today. Both of these social mythologies benefit the wealthy class. Is it any wonder that most of its members are the strongest proponents of them.
It is all about ideology. In the European countries cited here, an opposing ideology has held sway for several generations. One may believe that is because they are older and wiser countries. It should be acknowledged that the clash of ideologies is on-going even in Europe and past victories cannot be taken for granted. The political battles continue. In the US, greed and self-interest still hold sway when it comes to dividing up the wealth generated by labor. The downward drift of the US will continue until the many believe that it is better for 100 people to buy a new washing machine than for 1 person to buy another Rolex.
Rove helped to elect the current Swedish PM and others as France are swinging right.
This excellent article deserves to be printed in every major newspaper in this country. But in all likelihood it won't because it has one major flaw: it is too honest.
The only hope of Restoring the Public Good is to start recall movements in every congressional district!!
Obama is too much of a coward to give a speech like that. His feel-good concession to Republicans and Tea Partiers ignored every important issue, from climate change to jobs to wars. This guy is concerned about one thing only: to be liked by people who despise him.
Apparently you have missed the real message of the last thirty years which is that there is no more WE.
A fantasy certainly too verbose!
Here's the Libertarian response to Obama and the GOP
http://www.lp.org/news/press-releases/libertarian-response-to-state-of-the-union-and-republicans
I find Libertarian politics to be anathema, as it should be to anyone who thinks that the poor, the disenfranchised and the children have rights too. I read that response and found myself nodding in agreement, right up to this sentence:
"Libertarians would stop spending billions on bailouts, the War on Drugs, federal education programs, and we would end mandatory Social Security and Medicare."
That the left shares certain goals with libertarians is moot. That libertarians share much with the Tea Party is as obvious. In my own opinion governments exist precisely to help those who need it, and that help is increasingly necessary and increasingly rare.
Passive-aggressive conservatism by any other name is still as horrible. Libertarianism is clever labeling. No more. And, yes, it sucks.
Europeans don't have FOX news
'Europeans don't have FOX news'
. . . because they don't allow it. They had their run with Fascism.
Right. And now, unfortunately, it is our turn. Heil Palin! Heil Palin! Heil Palin! Get used to it ....
David Mooris you make a great Monday morning quarterback and thats about the extent of it. I wonder how many of you people formed a different opinion last night before you where told what to think by David today. And He Did Talk About Green Technology Jobs. That sounds like Jobs and Climate to me and as far the Teabaggers go he took their own arguments and used those arguments against them. The list goes on and on and on...
Windy and doesn't touch the big problem the military industrial complex and America's love of manly war and guns.
That's ignoring the 800 pound gorilla in the room.
It was a great speech for reelection and disarming the Republicans. Nothing new and no ideas about jobs though.
More here on the Good, the Bad and the Ugly of the speech:
http://texshelters.wordpress.com/2011/01/26/the-presidents-address-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly/
Peace,
Tex Shelters
I don't know how many more times I can read these types of articles...
somehow, they manage to state virtually all of the 'frames' that are killing us, and do so as if these frames are givens...common knowledge...
this one is so long, that it is difficult to parse for specifics...
in general, he appears to believe in, among other things, the soundness of a resource allocation system based on the ownership of property, the effectiveness of our demonstrably troubled government's representational design, and the integrity of the outcomes of our current voting system...
this already places him in grave territory, intellectually...
his unwillingness to discuss the violent class warfare or mass psycholgical conditioning that have defined our age, or the land theft and financial hobbling that have placed us squarely in the crosshairs of any willing to use violence, or legal shenanigans, to create or secure their fortunes, leave his work, along with that of so many others, quite some distance from relevance...
the individual will need to reclaim their own brain and body, and take responsibility for both...then make peace with the local lands...
the rest is mishmash...like this article...
Great speech- and we would have all been floored had Obama actually made such a speech. No-one is surprised by the same old "American is great, growth is great, we need growth, blah blah". THis message is SO outdated...my god, has no-one been listening to the science? Excuse me...the Earths very CLIMATE is changing, quickly, and has the potential with feedback loops to become uninhabitable. Growth ALWAYS means more greenhouse gas emissions- people- put two and two together!
Obama says what he says because that's what so many people want to hear. We are a nation of the clueless, truly.
Because we are too lazy to be informed, too dull to think, and are easily confused by talking heads.
For information read 'the Nation' 'Mother Jones' and watch Free Speech TV and Rachel Maddow.
I saw the State of the Union speech twice. One part that struck me was when President Obama spoke about how times have changed for American workers. Long term employment with decent pay, often no college degree required, and the hopes of saving for the house, the college education, etc. That times have certainly changed, and so many Americans are feeling the misery of them, cannot be ignored. Something has to be done for the United States to prosper in a changing world.
Alas, his proposals are nearly guaranteed to undermine those changes. How many times have we heard that Math and Science are the key to the future? For how long? Yet, for having the best universities in the world, foreigners are attending and graduating from them, earning accolades in their respective fields.
The corporate sector has created millions of jobs over the past several years. What is not mentioned is that they were not created in America.
As for becoming competitive with China, and getting back on top, the peculiar history of China has always been their conspicuous lack of interest in Empire while the rest of the world tore each other to pieces for dominance. China has ever been interested in dynasty, an empire, if you will, within its borders. China does for China, with barely a nod toward any advantage or disadvantage it may present to other nations. Our pathological fear of China's dominance simply comes down to it being a Communist country, something our nation cannot stomach falling behind or being beholden to. America needs to recognize that other political and economic systems work as well as ours do. As for the human rights violations, and lack of regulations over employment and environment, the US has nerve what with the genetically modified foods, lack of sick pay, vacation or maternity leave, national health care, and the apartheid Blacks in this country (and soon the Hispanics) live under...
David Morris hasn't written anything we here at Common Dreams haven't heard, but it cannot be said enough, lest we resign ourselves to the current conditions. The more it is repeated, let us hope the more people with listen...
Experts seem to focus on political myths and the liberal-progressive deficiency in developing one and repeating it until gets through the Republican myth machine's clatter. They give slight notice to the fact that the Republicans also have religious myths working for them, while most progressives-liberals, I would wager, are agnostic or atheistic. And we know that an atheistic person could never be elected president at this time.
In a wonderful little book, which I comment on in my sites: new-york-commoners-law.com and dons-review.com, Nicholas Wade in "The Faith Instinct: How Religion Evolved and Why It Endures" (Penguin Books, 2009), says, "however strongly religion seems to grow out of people's personal beliefs, the practice of religion is heavily social. People desire to worship together with others of the same faith. A religion belongs to a community and shapes members' social behavior, both toward one another (the in-group) and toward nonbelievers (the out-group).
“The social aspect of religion is extraordinarily significant because the RULES for behavior [my emphasis] toward others are in effect a society's morality." He continues, "People will defend their religion because it undergirds so much else of what gives life quality [a social network, help with projects or in sickness, an emotional jubilation that's hard to get while living alone]."
Here's the interesting part: "Practical morality is NOT universal. Compassion and forgiveness are the behaviors owed to one's in-group, but NOT necessarily to an out-group and certainly not to an enemy...From this, one can see how crucial religion has been over the centuries in ensuring a society's survival. It enhances the quality of society and makes it worth fighting for and it inspires people to lay down their lives in the society's defense. Groups with strong religious inclinations would have been more united and at considerable advantage over groups that were less cohesive [see the GOP versus the progressives-liberals]. People in the more successful groups would have left more surviving children and genes favoring an instinct for religious behavior would have become commoner."
"The faithful are not mistaken," says Emile Durkheim, a founder of sociology, "when they believe in a moral power to which they are subject. That power exists and it is society [and the Darwinian unstoppable urge to survive and to spread a man's seed as much as possible. Look at the Mormon church, where baby-making is deemed a man's right and women are taught to stay home and take care of the man's children. Single people or childless people are given lip-service in one of every 100 speeches by the church's authorities.].
The president insists entrepreneurship is the engine to our success. Business. Education in math and science. Competition. Money. He's wrong, of course. Am re-reading Walden. The point of that book is that we must examine our lives carefully to retain the valuable things and discard the useless. Painful hours of labor spent in a factory are not useful. Neither is slavery to the animals on the farm. Neither is pursuit of big houses, fancy horses, and other accoutrements of wealth. What is important is time, Nature, friends and family, a garden, and good work. If he were president, what a State of the Union speech Thoreau would have made! I might have listened to something like that.
Democratic Senators and Representatives have correctly ridiculed the Republican House Members for passing the repeal of the Health Care Legislation knowing full well that this repeal will not pass the Senate let alone the President's desk. Why, then, did they applaud the President when he proposed to raise the tax rate for the so-called two-percent wealthiest which will not get through the House this year nor next year? As always it is a question of whose ox gets gored.
Now is the time for all good men to stand aside and let this Fascist Police State collapse of it's own weight and hubrus.
My State of the Union, Part 1
Economics
Every couple of decades our country sends all of its money off to war. Like a wino who can’t quit, we stop our war-making against illiterate farmers in heroin-crazy countries only after we have spent every cent and when we start feeling physically sick at home.
Our large banks and insurance companies are mostly bankrupt. They are holding utterly bogus paper in terms of vast numbers of foreclosed houses valued at 2007 levels. The joke is that the world’s stockholders believe that these frauds aren’t bankrupt.
Our states and cities are going to have to cheat many, many citizens in order to stave off bankruptcy. First they’re going to have to cheat state and town employees. Many towns are going to have to run their town services with a skeleton staff. Libraries are easily cut back and out.
We are never going to repay all of our Chinese debt. Our friends and owners in China are constitutionally able to buy off our elections for the next 50 years, because the Chinese Government is legally defined as people.
Social Security
Our nation took all the Social Security money and spent it on foreign wars. Now the government is going to want to defraud people in their 50s who paid into Social Security their entire lives. By raising the official retirement age to 80, most of these people now in their 50s will die before they see a penny of what was taken from them, and the rest will average a quarter to a half of what they put in. Start way high and let the stooge seniors bargain the government down to retirement at, say, 79.
On 1/1/2011, offer the working public a little tiny giveaway swiped from the Social Security fund (who else?), and with the other hand levy a huge government payback on “borrowed” money. Everyone will receive less in their paycheck this year, but we’ll claim that we in Washington were as generous as a pig can ever be.
Health Care:
Do the same hard bargaining for Medicare. Instead of having everything be perfectly free, graft the seniors up to an 80% up-front co-pay for their Medicare and a $2500 deductible. They’ll never know the difference.
In ancient times, 1 out of 1800 people got cancer in their lifetime. For our kids the ratio will be 1 in 2. The American way of death is led by manufacturers openly selling carcinogenic products such as tobacco, pesticides, BPA in our steel food cans, a list that goes on and on forever. Almost all of our nation’s unnatural deaths - diabetes, heart disease, MS, asthma, gunshot wounds - are attributable to Washington.
Education:
Fortunately for the federal government, all educational costs are borne by the cities and states. Cut all federal educational subsidies except showy ones. Let the cities go into receivership. Then the court-appointed masters of the cities will double everyone’s property taxes, but at the federal level we will look spotless and we will wash our hands. The kids will suffer but they don’t vote and they have no voice.
"---sll unnatural deaths are attributable to Washington"? Washington had nothing to do with tobacco, pesticides, BPA in cans, nor any other corporate big business cancerous-but-high-profit product. In fact, Washington disallows the most egregiously evil products... or you can bet your bottom dollar, they'd be used!
You really don't have any other protection (such as it is) from the predatory rich and the evils of nefarious and greedy men. Who else ya gonna call, ghostbusters? And as you can plainly see by the Middle East, the rich can hire one-half of the poor to kill the other half; as a robber baron once opined (either a robber baron, or Limbaugh... oops, no difference).
Washington has done what it could to try to improve things for people - and did a lot, considering fallible human beings - from the Constitution to the Civil War to the New Deal to Civil Rights to public schools and public roads onwards - WHEN people that cared about the nation as a whole ran it, that is.
Of course, now we mainly have only totally corrupt opportunists like John Boner and the Republicans running it, due to the corroding influence of big money on any altruistic government, and the access running the government gives to looting the public treasury. Always an attraction for the dregs of grifterdom.
But remember, there was a time not so long ago that had American government reforming a nation that had 'gone rogue' and was evil (Japan) by first destroying its corporate fascism, then actually legalizing, empowering, and creating Workers' Unions, then outlawing an 'official' religion, then having it foreswear war, and then helping its people back on their feet. Sounds like they were a bunch of socialists back then, to me.
So PaulK, be careful that your anti-government screed doesn't too-well jive with those idiotic being-played pawns of the Right, the Teabaggers, who just know they want to drown government in the bathtub, "so's they don't have to pay no revenooers". And thus leave the people of this country to the tender mercies of the corpo-fascists and the Republicans, who will let people starve before they part with a dollar. Be careful, because you don't know what screwed is, until these sociopaths seize total control.
To paraphrase actually an old NRA saying, it's not the power, it's the people wielding the power, that makes for good or ill. And boy are we ill these days. Ruled by powermongers who want to push people down, not bring them up, who divide and conquer, who care only about the almighty dollar, who want to drown the poor in a bathtub... along with that pesky buttinsky government that won't even respect the right to own private property such as slaves (see Southern Republicans).
Also, Social Security is not a savings plan, it is not a mutual fund, it is SOCIALIST SECURITY, and as such can't go bankrupt any more than the Federal government can. Workers support the retirees of today (so today's retirees should stand solidly behind the workers, but instead they get their worldview these days from Fux News), and retirees tomorrow will be supported by the workers of that time. It is pure Socialism, which is why the Right is Rabid Batshit Crazy to destroy it.
(By the way, why is one accounting system good for banks and Wall Street, but not for the government? For if the US government put its book-value assets against it debits on a balance sheet, it would actually look better than any corporation in the world. Can't tell the American suckers that though, then they would turn their distracted and terroized attentions to what the hell the banksters and fraudsters are up to, still.)
Anyway, how's this for a slogan, "America Can't Afford Millionaires Any More!"
Washington didn't ban tobacco, even though 150 years ago the general population suspected that it caused lung cancer. Washington has highly limited or banned a number of other poisonous substances such as mercury and lead. The freedom to stop in at a store and innocently poison your kid is granted in America, because manufacturers want this freedom.
Just because the Teabagger message is highly controlled by rich people and the owners of that movement are a crowd of bullies doesn't mean the rank and file Teabaggers are completely out of it. The rank and file understand that they still don't have jobs, and they sometimes understand that the Republicans and Democrats are out to pay off their big campaign contributors. We benefit when we occasionally pry the rank and file loose from their leaders.
My State of the Union, Part 2
Jobs:
We didn’t give all of our jobs to China -- we gave some of them to Vietnam. Our fabulously wealthy country may have people living in tents under bridges while millions of houses sit vacant, but the homeless don’t tend to vote either. Last year everybody clamored for jobs and we gave them insurance-company run health care. This year everybody clamors for jobs and we’ll give them the repeal of health care. Oh, and it’s time to terminate all unemployment. The government’s bungling is officially your fault because you didn’t try hard enough to get a job.
Energy:
Clean energy research is the exclusive property of humongous foreign corporations and foo-foo universities. No others need apply for funds. Nuclear energy and coal are now defined as clean energy, and our government will give them all the cash they want. Coal is so clean that we advise taking baths in coal dust.
True research is alive and kicking out in America, but we in the Federal Government are doing our level best to make sure the small inventors can’t get patents, can’t afford the patent infringement lawsuits, can’t get a break on product development costs. The direct opposite of a progressive income tax is regressive hurdles imposed on garage invention.
War:
We don’t have a war. Repeat: we don’t have a war. We brought all of our soldiers home in Iraq and replaced them with vast numbers of armed private contractors. “Peace” still costs a heck of a lot. We’ll try the same thing in Afghanistan. We’ve driven many of the enemy into nuclear-tipped Pakistan, and we’ve gone into Pakistan many times with mistake-ridden drone bombings.
Heroin production in the war zone has zoomed forward. Our troops should be more careful when stepping on people’s livelihoods. We prop up a monstrously corrupt democracy that doesn’t hold real elections, just bogus ones. Our Afghan corporate allies are paying off the Taliban like crazy so that they don’t get personally attacked, and with the other hand they’re paying off the government, but at least they’re making a little profit in the end.
The only good war news to report is that we can now bounce the rubble only 7 times this year, as opposed to 11 times last year. Times are tough and we have to economize.
Obama made a politically smart speech that will appeal to independents and improve his chances for reelection. But I am not sure he has a VIABLE plan for reducing unemployment significantly.
Obama lies. Anyone at this point in time who still believes that Obama is truthful, or intends to support the interests of working people, is delusional.
Halliburton's share price rose 785% during Cheney's tenure at the White House, seemingly as their top lobbyist... That's almost 100% per year... Does anyone other than Dick Cheney and Halliburton not think that grotesque and disgraceful?
Ergo - Take away the possibility of ANY TV stations running political ads (as happens in the UK and elsewhere) and you might have a hope in Hell of restoring Democracy to the people - right now the Corporations are running the politicians and making them dance to their tunes.
Two other necessary changes the President could enact...
You also need to restore "Balance" (not the faux-news kind) to News broadcasts ... this was the case until Reagan repealed the necessary broadcasting ads. It would then mean the people have a hope in Hell of figuring out what it is that's really going on with their Country.
Last but not least - make the Judiciary independent of the politicians
That will still leave the President with the problem of ending six illegal wars and curtailing the power of the Pentagon and the Defence Departments... which incidentally is also just the corrupting power of the arms (and related industries) lobby when all is said and done. Corporations have to build a relationship with their primary buyers. Don't allow them to buy influence there. When the Iron Curtain came down it was soon appreciated that the politicians had been told the Soviet threat was 1200% bigger than it really was... why was that? Duh.
Baby steps. Obama will not solve any of this without sufficient grass roots support to do it. Coherent activism to a goal of simple minor adjustments that moves the axis of power away from the Corporate lobby's tame politicians and puts power back into the ballot box (non-electronic) would make a start.
Do you seriously think that there is any chance of this happening the way you suggest it could happen?
"Baby steps. Obama will not solve any of this without sufficient grass roots support to do it. Coherent activism to a goal of simple minor adjustments that moves the axis of power away from the Corporate lobby's tame politicians and puts power back into the ballot box (non-electronic) would make a start."
Do you think there is some amount of "grass roots support" - rallying behind the president - that would lead to any of the things you outline?
Why are we looking to Obama to do any of these things?
Just who is it that will be in a position to "not allow" corporations to do anything they want to do, and how? "Grass roots support" for the president?
Individualism is the ideology that justifies capitalism by denying our interdependence and inevitably begets bigotry of all kinds, racism, sexism, ageism, homophobia, .. .
how many times do we hear a white person claiming that "i have never benefited from slavery" or a capitalist arguing that "the lazy and stupid are trying to take what is mine"?
click the link for the Institute for Local Self-reliance at the bottom of the article, and read about amazing examples of what can be done OUTSIDE the corporate grid!
Of those voted into the House of Representatives, half are millionaires. Those in The Senate, 95 percent are millionaires.
The public voted into office the class which oppresses the middle class. So it must be OK with the oppressed class to be oppressed by the rich.
The will of the voter must be honored.
"We" are not acting against "our" self interest.
They - the few - are acting in their own self-interest at our expense.
"We" are not spending "our" money. They are taking our money and spending it on themselves.
Why do supposedly progressive people use the word "we" when referring to what the ruling class is doing? How can they seriously oppose anything the ruling class is doing when they identify with the ruling class and call them "we?"