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America Is Not Broke
Speech delivered at Wisconsin Capitol in Madison, March 5, 2011
America is not broke.
Contrary to what those in power would like you to believe so that you'll give up your pension, cut your wages, and settle for the life your great-grandparents had, America is not broke. Not by a long shot. The country is awash in wealth and cash. It's just that it's not in your hands. It has been transferred, in the greatest heist in history, from the workers and consumers to the banks and the portfolios of the uber-rich.
Today just 400 Americans have more wealth than half of all Americans combined.
Let me say that again. 400 obscenely rich people, most of whom benefited in some way from the multi-trillion dollar taxpayer "bailout" of 2008, now have more loot, stock and property than the assets of 155 million Americans combined. If you can't bring yourself to call that a financial coup d'état, then you are simply not being honest about what you know in your heart to be true.
And I can see why. For us to admit that we have let a small group of men abscond with and hoard the bulk of the wealth that runs our economy, would mean that we'd have to accept the humiliating acknowledgment that we have indeed surrendered our precious Democracy to the moneyed elite. Wall Street, the banks and the Fortune 500 now run this Republic -- and, until this past month, the rest of us have felt completely helpless, unable to find a way to do anything about it.
I have nothing more than a high school degree. But back when I was in school, every student had to take one semester of economics in order to graduate. And here's what I learned: Money doesn't grow on trees. It grows when we make things. It grows when we have good jobs with good wages that we use to buy the things we need and thus create more jobs. It grows when we provide an outstanding educational system that then grows a new generation of inventers, entrepreneurs, artists, scientists and thinkers who come up with the next great idea for the planet. And that new idea creates new jobs and that creates revenue for the state. But if those who have the most money don't pay their fair share of taxes, the state can't function. The schools can't produce the best and the brightest who will go on to create those jobs. If the wealthy get to keep most of their money, we have seen what they will do with it: recklessly gamble it on crazy Wall Street schemes and crash our economy. The crash they created cost us millions of jobs. That too caused a reduction in revenue. And the population ended up suffering because they reduced their taxes, reduced our jobs and took wealth out of the system, removing it from circulation.
The nation is not broke, my friends. Wisconsin is not broke. It's part of the Big Lie. It's one of the three biggest lies of the decade: America/Wisconsin is broke, Iraq has WMD, the Packers can't win the Super Bowl without Brett Favre.
The truth is, there's lots of money to go around. LOTS. It's just that those in charge have diverted that wealth into a deep well that sits on their well-guarded estates. They know they have committed crimes to make this happen and they know that someday you may want to see some of that money that used to be yours. So they have bought and paid for hundreds of politicians across the country to do their bidding for them. But just in case that doesn't work, they've got their gated communities, and the luxury jet is always fully fueled, the engines running, waiting for that day they hope never comes. To help prevent that day when the people demand their country back, the wealthy have done two very smart things:
1. They control the message. By owning most of the media they have expertly convinced many Americans of few means to buy their version of the American Dream and to vote for their politicians. Their version of the Dream says that you, too, might be rich some day – this is America, where anything can happen if you just apply yourself! They have conveniently provided you with believable examples to show you how a poor boy can become a rich man, how the child of a single mother in Hawaii can become president, how a guy with a high school education can become a successful filmmaker. They will play these stories for you over and over again all day long so that the last thing you will want to do is upset the apple cart -- because you -- yes, you, too! -- might be rich/president/an Oscar-winner some day! The message is clear: keep your head down, your nose to the grindstone, don't rock the boat and be sure to vote for the party that protects the rich man that you might be some day.
2. They have created a poison pill that they know you will never want to take. It is their version of mutually assured destruction. And when they threatened to release this weapon of mass economic annihilation in September of 2008, we blinked. As the economy and the stock market went into a tailspin, and the banks were caught conducting a worldwide Ponzi scheme, Wall Street issued this threat: Either hand over trillions of dollars from the American taxpayers or we will crash this economy straight into the ground. Fork it over or it's Goodbye savings accounts. Goodbye pensions. Goodbye United States Treasury. Goodbye jobs and homes and future. It was friggin' awesome and it scared the shit out of everyone. "Here! Take our money! We don't care. We'll even print more for you! Just take it! But, please, leave our lives alone, PLEASE!"
The executives in the board rooms and hedge funds could not contain their laughter, their glee, and within three months they were writing each other huge bonus checks and marveling at how perfectly they had played a nation full of suckers. Millions lost their jobs anyway, and millions lost their homes. But there was no revolt (see #1).
Until now. On Wisconsin! Never has a Michigander been more happy to share a big, great lake with you! You have aroused the sleeping giant know as the working people of the United States of America. Right now the earth is shaking and the ground is shifting under the feet of those who are in charge. Your message has inspired people in all 50 states and that message is: WE HAVE HAD IT! We reject anyone tells us America is broke and broken. It's just the opposite! We are rich with talent and ideas and hard work and, yes, love. Love and compassion toward those who have, through no fault of their own, ended up as the least among us. But they still crave what we all crave: Our country back! Our democracy back! Our good name back! The United States of America. NOT the Corporate States of America. The United States of America!
So how do we get this? Well, we do it with a little bit of Egypt here, a little bit of Madison there. And let us pause for a moment and remember that it was a poor man with a fruit stand in Tunisia who gave his life so that the world might focus its attention on how a government run by billionaires for billionaires is an affront to freedom and morality and humanity.
Thank you, Wisconsin. You have made people realize this was our last best chance to grab the final thread of what was left of who we are as Americans. For three weeks you have stood in the cold, slept on the floor, skipped out of town to Illinois -- whatever it took, you have done it, and one thing is for certain: Madison is only the beginning. The smug rich have overplayed their hand. They couldn't have just been content with the money they raided from the treasury. They couldn't be satiated by simply removing millions of jobs and shipping them overseas to exploit the poor elsewhere. No, they had to have more – something more than all the riches in the world. They had to have our soul. They had to strip us of our dignity. They had to shut us up and shut us down so that we could not even sit at a table with them and bargain about simple things like classroom size or bulletproof vests for everyone on the police force or letting a pilot just get a few extra hours sleep so he or she can do their job -- their $19,000 a year job. That's how much some rookie pilots on commuter airlines make, maybe even the rookie pilots flying people here to Madison. But he's stopped trying to get better pay. All he asks is that he doesn't have to sleep in his car between shifts at O'Hare airport. That's how despicably low we have sunk. The wealthy couldn't be content with just paying this man $19,000 a year. They wanted to take away his sleep. They wanted to demean and dehumanize him. After all, he's just another slob.
And that, my friends, is Corporate America's fatal mistake. But trying to destroy us they have given birth to a movement -- a movement that is becoming a massive, nonviolent revolt across the country. We all knew there had to be a breaking point some day, and that point is upon us. Many people in the media don't understand this. They say they were caught off guard about Egypt, never saw it coming. Now they act surprised and flummoxed about why so many hundreds of thousands have come to Madison over the last three weeks during brutal winter weather. "Why are they all standing out there in the cold? I mean there was that election in November and that was supposed to be that!
"There's something happening here, and you don't know what it is, do you...?"
America ain't broke! The only thing that's broke is the moral compass of the rulers. And we aim to fix that compass and steer the ship ourselves from now on. Never forget, as long as that Constitution of ours still stands, it's one person, one vote, and it's the thing the rich hate most about America -- because even though they seem to hold all the money and all the cards, they begrudgingly know this one unshakeable basic fact: There are more of us than there are of them!
Madison, do not retreat. We are with you. We will win together.
Comments
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160 Comments so far
Show AllAmerica is not broke.
right plenty of money, just being hoarded by the rich
I think MM has nailed it here! And very eloquently. What is needed right now is support for those on the frontlines in Madison, kind of a "support our troops" action. I do not mean anything violent here. These are non-violent troops, but they are definitely fighting a battle for all of our dignity and our financial future. What amazes me is that the corporations and the rich and their minions miss the point that if the mass of people have no purchasing power the economy will never recover.
The elite don't care if YOUR economy ever "recovers".
The elite's US economy has recovered to the point that they are within striking distance of turning the US into a source of cheap raw materials and cheap labor, functioning like the third world has for the past several centuries. When Obama told us we will double exports during the next two years he meant coal and other low value raw materials, not high value manufactured goods.
The elite figure they have enough growing markets in other parts of the world to meet their profit goals for severaal decades and they don't care if anybody in the US can afford to buy anything.
ray, you are absolutely right when you respond, "The elite don't care if YOUR economy ever 'recovers'."
The disconnect here is that while Moore, Old Blue, and millions of other good, honest, working/middle-class Americans genuinely 'feel' that the system is drastically wrong, broken, fraudulent, etc., that too few 'understand' how these crimes of Empire are being perpetrated and how totally uncaring the ruling-elite's global corporate/financial/militarist Empire is to the 'collateral damage', to the 'negative externality destruction' that they are knowingly causing to our world.
The following segment of Christopher Hedges' latest column, "This Time We’re Taking the Whole Planet With Us", gives a sense of the difference between 'feeling' the pain, and 'understanding' the existential depth and potential extinction that is being visited on our only fragile world by these sociopathic pricks of this last global Empire:
"The collapse of the global economy, which wiped out a staggering $40 trillion in wealth, was caused when our elites, after destroying our manufacturing base, sold massive quantities of fraudulent mortgage-backed securities to pension funds, small investors, banks, universities, state and foreign governments and shareholders. The elites, to cover the losses, then looted the public treasury to begin the speculation over again. They also, in the name of austerity, began dismantling basic social services, set out to break the last vestiges of unions, slashed jobs, froze wages, threw millions of people out of their homes, and stood by idly as we created a permanent underclass of unemployed and underemployed. "
We can 'feel' all the pain imaginable in this crime against humanity, but we must 'understand' and achieve solidarity against the defined deceit of EMPIRE to do anything about it.
The criminal is Empire. The cancer is Empire.
The cure of excising the cancer of Empire must involve a "Multitude" of doctors, surgeons, who can diagnose the cancer and have the combined societal skills to actually excise the tumor of Empire.
The name of the disease, 'Empire', must ring throughout the land before the operation can be successfully performed.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
"Liberty over violent empire"
Party headquarters
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
"Liberty Over Violent Empire"... by Jove, I L.O.V.E. it... bravo, Alan!
Siouxrose, you're the first one to get it. Thanks.
Best,
Alan
I rarely do "Attaboy!" "That's tellin' 'em!" "You got that right!" posts on this site, but I'd say you called it correctly with this one. The elites don't have a "misunderstandment" of what's going on. They know exactly, and they truly don't care.
Very astute Ray.
With a couple billion people in India and China they don't really need us.
And with a few trillion bucks from our treasury they really don't need our money. So I intend to not give them anymore. I will buy local and if I can find a union label on something or on the packaging I will buy that. If I can find a used car that fits my budget I will buy that. Clothes from the second hand store, and food produced locally should cut into a fatcat's profit. It's a small town I live in so walking is normal and gas doesn't cost me anything that way. I will continue to work with groups that are forming local economies as well. I will turn my back on the elites and ignore what they say. For me it's "No more Mr. Nice Guy."
I'm trying my best to do similar things RHB.
I got my money out of banks 6 years ago, sold one car, I keep the old small one running, I try not to buy "stuff", I shop at the local farmer's market, I pester my politicians (lotta good that does), donate what I can to charity, etc... it's about all a working guy with a family to support can do.
Shop mid week, buy new clothes off season, buy only special marked down or on sale. The only flesh I eat is fillet Mignon or organic chicken breast. Produce in season and on sale. Most of what I buy doesn't take coupons, but not a bad idea. Food for soups when on sale.I've been retired for 37 years.
Shop mid week, buy new clothes off season, buy only special marked down or on sale. The only flesh I eat is fillet Mignon or organic chicken breast. Produce in season and on sale. Most of what I buy doesn't take coupons, but not a bad idea. Food for soups when on sale.I've been retired for 37 years.
The 400 richest men in America, who are they see below in Forbes website. Can you tell which are the Repug? I know two may be more who benefit greatly from the Banks meltdown, especially one supported the Democrats and MoveOn.
http://www.forbes.com/wealth/forbes-400#p_2_s_arank_-1_
1 Bill Gates
2 Warren Buffett
3 Larry Ellison
4 Christy Walton
5 Charles Koch
5 David Koch
7 Jim Walton
8 Alice Walton
9 S. Robson Walton
10 Michael Bloomberg
11 Larry Page
11 Sergey Brin
13 Sheldon Adelson
14 George Soros
15 Michael Dell
16 Steve Ballmer
17 Paul Allen
18 Jeff Bezos
19 Anne Cox Chambers
20 John Paulson
MoveOn is a corrupt den of DLC frauds. They turned our (L.A.) rally, supposedly held to show support for the freedom marchers from Egypt to London to Greece to Wisconsin, into a rally for a war criminal and his party of perpetual war (Obama and the Dem's). More devious than the forces of outright repression are the "sharpies" who lead you down blind allies, dissipate your energy and hope the repeated failures will cause you to give up. DON'T FALL FOR IT!
Amen. Did you see the email they sent out today?
Two Americas
"MoveOn" I didn't say it!! It was "rudyspeaks"
All along I told you so, these carpetbaggers, whether the Democrats or Labor leaderships or whatever, it is still more or less the same.
And George Soros is No.14 in the list of America's 400 richest men. I'll repeat again, the leading backer of MoveOn.
The three founders of MoveOn are all internet millionaires having no need of Soros' money.
What are you talking about? Exactly, what do you disagree with in Moore's speech?
All comments you've posted so far on this site are incoherent ramblings. Here is my advice:
If you don't have anything clever to say, say nothing at all.
Likeitornot types must be extremely confused by people like Michael Moore. They must think it's inconceivable that there are people who are not motivated solely by self-interest. That you might be concerned about injustice and human suffering even if you are in no danger of being affected by it personally. Their egoism has been legitimized by the system, and amplified by constant reinforcement by the prevalent culture. Hopefully, there will be some reeducation camps for the likes of likeitornot soon. Let's hope it's curable.
US history has shown that most of the truly populist leaders were wealthy prior to getting into politics...the two Roosevelts, Kennedys for example.
History has also shown that faux populist leaders like the Clintons and Obama became wealthy from their political careers by selling out to the man.
Moore is wealthy enough that he doesn't need to sell out to the man like the faux populists do.
Nice distinction between populist groups. Indeed, it often takes the wealthy--or at least the highly visible--to get a movement going. Someone to get press and spread the word. Moore's certainly a perfect example of this...wish there were many more.
BEA: Thank you for that post!
When the topic is the awful scenarios playing out in Arizona, "Like it or not" can be counted on to side with the authorities. There is no "letter of the law" approach that upsets his authoritarian perspective. Too many who've been conditioned by the military never CAN regain a conscience. It would mean looking in the mirror and facing what they did in order to obtain a paycheck, or otherwise facing the degree to which they fell under thrall to the MIC and its quaint concept of patriotism.
Very good.
Clever, or even original. I type many posts then immediately wipe them out because they are hackneyed, stale, regurgitated, or just plain inane.
And what about the fact that if MM does have money he made it by conceiving and producing films that raised the awareness and conciousness of so many in the country or given courage to those that were already there. Is he perfect? Hell no, as I'm sure he'd be the first to admit. But let's all fight amongst ourselves while the ship sinks.
It's possible the commenter is just truly envious of anyone not as poor as s/he, or it is possible that s/he is an agent of doubt here on a mission.
Although Moore is not perfect, in the current political environment he is RELATIVELY perfect.
Moore's greatest shortcoming is that he doesn't have the right stage persona to win an election. In America the right stage persona is required to win elected office.
I, for one, am glad that Moore does not seek public office. Anyone heard from Al Franken lately?
You would oppose Moore if he were poor.
Moore doesn't need or ant any more money, and was never motivated by that. Even if his films had not been so successful, he would be doing and saying the same things he is now. In fact, he was before his films were successful.
I have met many celebrities. I can't think of any of them who are more accessible, less arrogant. or less changed by success than Moore.
People sure do hate hi, though. I think they hate him because he has not sold out, because he is not glamorous, but most of all because he is nit an intellectual, is blue collar, and is overweight. How dare he be successful!!
Michael Moore happens to be one of the few who have gained success who have not forgotten their roots. We who are in the working class are fortunate to have high-profile people like Michael Moore in our corner. If you don't stand behind and support the working class, like Moore does, then I'd consider you a traitor because the people are the country. Dictators and autocrats may abuse the people in some parts of the world, but here the abuse is at the hands of the superrich and the politicians they buy.
Well said. Thanks.
stop peeing in your pants, you parasite.
I don't begrudge Moore's riches. He worked for, and deserves every penny. He navigated the choppy and dangerous waters of American capitalism to acquire his wealth. Good for him and may he go on to do what he does best: tell stories and inspire –via film.
On the other hand, his continuing foray down into the clubby confines of the Democratic/Professional Left group of hacksters is an ongoing and deepening concern. He's like a younger, folksy Hightower. Nothing wrong with that mind you if you like chewing on a piece of straw while standing around, shoveling your feet back and forth in the dirt & engaging in folksy talk (and if voting settles your soul), but at the end of the day, I have to ask: "So what, Michael"?
The folks who believe in Moore (the gullible and naive - especially the young) can only expect to end up again having spent their precious resources of time, energy and money, on a dubious trip to Democraticfailureville. Just like in 2004 and 2008. And we all know where that leads: back to square one.
On day he's on one crusade, the next its something different. Hardly focused (but perhaps opportunistic?)
But meanwhile, while Moore seeks to play Robin Hood here at home on behalf of those who already have it pretty good, our killing machine keeps on killing and destroying others around the planet while spending trillions of our money to do it.
Moore is not going to redistribute the riche's wealth. He's not going to save your pieces of the pie. Our financial system is too far gone to resurrect. Besides, Moore is in bed with the ones who shipped our jobs overseas, who keep us in perpetual war, who steal our money and who have turned our once "open and free society" into police state.
I truly believe Michael Moore wants to make things better. Great. But taking so many and so much with him on his, at best naive quest, but nonetheless a dead end one, is to waste time and resources on a road already sadly traveled.
Typical logic-busting talking point: "If Michael Moore is against those who abuse their wealth, since he too is wealthy, his arguments must necessarily be false and he's a lying hypocrite."
Instead of demonizing high-profile, wealthy individuals who are speaking truth to power (add Matt Damon to that list), you could choose to admire their courage in speaking out and bringing visibility to matters not many of their brethren will dare talk about.
How can Matt Damon's criticisms be taken with any seriousness when his probably quite considerable wealth and the very fact we know him have been created by that great capitalist propaganda machine, Hollywood?
A rather incoherent critique on your part. Fractured syntax for sure!
Why do you criticize Damon when he speaks for you too? What matter that he possesses wealth when he speaks for the same ideals as do we poor folk? In fact , he risks blacklist when he speaks out ,risking far more than do you.
There seems a trend in this and other supposedly progressive forii, a penchant for tearing down any and all who dare raise their heads. Puzzling.
Good post. (Not sure why it is appearing under mine.)
Thanks but it is indented under the poster to whom it was addressed.....
You really need to learn some critical thinking skills.
Get a new act. *gong*
Nowhere in my response did I say I was in favor of a gold backed currency. As far as I care, gold is a mildly useful metal great for making rings and such, and even then I prefer silver.
Pretty muCh EVERY currency in the world is now nothing more than ones and zeros, being traded at speeds beyond human comprehension.
Time to get off the 'currency' ride, and start gardening. As one astute poster noted: "You can't eat gold."
likeitornot? I think not.
A great, old-fashioned rabble-rousing speech by Moore. If we are back in the 1800's, then let's give the rich a taste of it: no more obedience. There are country club lawns to trash, five-star restaurants that desperately need a mob, luxury cars that need a paint job, gated communities to turn into prison cells, elected hirelings that feel too comfortable after their work trashing democracy.
Who's for it?
A hood, a ball cap and a portable welder on a truck would do a good job of welding shut those gates.
Mike, as wonderful as your films are, you missed the point.
'Money', especially American money, is a fiction. 'Money' is only 'worth' something if the people and the Government BELIEVE in it.
And these days, more and more people believe that the US dollar isn't worth the paper it's printed on. The real joke is that more American 'money' these days isn't even being printed or backed by ANYTHING. The Federal Reserve just fires up it's computers and adds a bunch of zeros to the debt, creating millions more in illusory fiat currency.
Think about that.
This idea that fiat currency is the problem, or that gold currency is a solutuion, is not really true. Basically all money is based on trust that it will be honoured, and it being honoured. A gold backed currency is based on such trust, that the government will give back gold when requested. It is based on faith and trust as much as a fiat currency is. A fiat currency is backed up by the goods and services in the economy, and money supply is expanded to match growth in the economy. Monetary policy has also been used to jump start economic demand to get out of a recessio, by lowering the interest rates or printing more money, when done properly can help revitalise the economy. Gold currencies do not work that well in that other parts of the economy can grow faster than gold production itself, leading to currency shortages. Currency shortages can lead to severe economic problems. Or, the other solution, decreasing the gold-value of the currency, which would reinforce the point that it is little or no different than a fiat currency. The only way to have currency based on actual real value of the currency itself is to go back to barter. The basis of money is that there is faith the relatively worthless paper can be exchanged for something of value. It is the same for gold and fiat currencies
The gold currency rhetoric is used by Ron Paul types to distract people from our real problems, that is income inequality, hoarding of wealth by an elite few, globalisation and offshoring, and the attacks on unions leading to a declining middle class. The middle class and poor are main economic drivers, the rich have a higher savings rate and therefore much of the money tends to get locked up, while given to poor and middle class it is spent more quickly. To create jobs money needs to move and be spent. Income inequality has created highly uneven monetary flow through the economy, concentrating it into a subeconomy where it moves around between large corporations who press down wages and control prices and wages. Taxes on the wealthy, government jobs programs, and a tariff policy to stop offshoring will once again help rebuild the middle class, create jobs. Money on public investment despite conservative lies, goes right back into the economy and into middle class hands and is respent, and returns an excellent value. Government employees are not billionaires who hoard massive amounts of cash and try to starve the middle class and the public investments.
The libertarian ideology of Ron Paul types is corporate libertarianism. designed to destroy democracy and allow corporations to consolidate control of everything and act ina reckless and lawless manner, and have absolute control and power. So called libertarianism of the paul types is not liberty at all, it leads directly to our enslavement by corporations.
I agree with most of your points I do not believe monetary policy will sufficiently jump-start economic demand in this economy, either here or in the EU, where Ireland is poised to default in rebellion against IMF/World Bank/EU Central Bank imposed austerity--a move that could domino throughout much of Europe.
Fiat currency depends on public (our public and foreign publics where the U.S. dollar is traded as the key global reserve exchange currency) "full faith and credit" that the U.S. government will repay its debts on its bond issues, among other things. China already balks at us as a trustworthy debtor and, as part of the BRIC nations, is moving to replace the U.S. dollar as the key global reserve currency (by 2018) with a combination of a basket of currencies and separate, one-on-one, direct currency exchange deals with individual countries like Turkey. It has already begun those on-one-one deals, that directly trade Chinese currency for Turkish currency with no U.S. dollars in the process. If the US dollar is replaced as the global reserve currency, then our major banks will lose $Billions of dollars in annual global oil transaction commissions and go looking to make up the shortfall by pushing more draconian austerity measures wherever they can get away with it.
We already may be seeing the beginning of a State municipal bond crash predicted by some to happen by late this year. If that contagion plus other market scares (Jasmine uprisings threatening the Iraqi, Kuwaiti, Saudi or Iranian oil reserves plus looming peak oil) threatens to spread to federal bond markets, the Fed may not be able to print currency fast enough to halt it and even if it does, it could trigger ultra-inflation not seen since late Weimar Germany.
Also, you ignore that the U.S. is expected to spend $1.2 Trillion dollars on the Pentagon and related war expenditures in fiscal 2012. That's three times what we spent on the Department of Defense at the peak of the Cold War and we face far less of a military threat now than when we faced the Soviet nuclear super-power under the MAD doctrine.
The biggest threat to our overall economy now is (1) over-speculation on domestic and international asset bubbles: Food, oil, sub-prime mortgages, sub-prime auto loans, sub-prime student loans, privatized State resources (which helped fuel labor unrest in Egypt), privatized resource commons leading to civil unrest in various places around the world, etc., and (2) growth in global demand for oil simultaneous with the approach of peak oil (predicted by the Pentagon to arrive by 2015), (3) still shaky banks in the EU and U.S. holding onto unknown quantities of bad paper.
Soaring global demand for oil is due to economically and environmentally unsustainable "free trade" offshored manufacturing growth in India and China, and America's utter failure to move to a greener economy that conserves more oil by relying more on alternative sustainable energy and more energy efficient technologies. 167,000 wind turbines off the mid-Atlantic coast would provide a third of America's electricity needs alone. China is investing $100 billion dollars a year on green energy transition and the U.S. still spends a pittance by comparison. Our reliance on oil imported from increasingly unstable regions grew recklessly under Bush II until the 2008 Housing Bubble Super-Fraud kicked domestic demand in the nuts.
Pretty soon everybody's gonads are going to ache but the billionaires, unless someone breaks out the guillotines.
METAL: Although I'm not sure about the gonads part... the rest of your post speaks of my recurrent nightmare... except I also get flashes of it by daylight.
I agree with what you say. I am aware of the peak oil disaster that is approaching and indeed, that makes any prediction of economic recovery thereafter a joke. There is still a question of exactly when it will hit if it has not already. But that it will come is a certainty in the mind of anyone remotely sane, its a mathematical certainty. However the world is not filled with sane people. Peak oil since it is integrated into many things will cause recession or depression. The inability to move off oil or sanely prioritise its use through policy (this requires a ration-something the cons will never allow), actually will worsen the crisis. Peoples continued use of oil and non negiotiable oil based life system is actually breaking them, since the resource is being wasted on ineffiecies like 20 mile commutes whern people could live closer, it will drain the resource away from critical functions such as farming. So this SUV, oil guzzling lifestyel unlike the public myth of signifying wealth, is actually making us broke and poor. We cannot afford not to invest in trains and sustainable cities and pedestrian based cities. Republican ideology is once again a blatant lie, opposite from truth, they say we cant afrford train development, solar, pedestrian based designs, urban planning, when clearly, we cannot afford not to do these things.
Indeed the US is being run into the ground in wall ways by Republicans irresponsible and insane, unworkable policies.
As far as local government bond defaults. it is clear as Moore has said we at present do not have a budget and we are not broke, we have a billionaire elite that is hoarding massive wealth and that has created income inequalities and drained the tax roles, and of course, this is an evil scheme of theirs to collapse democratic institutions. The funding problems could be fixed by taxing the rich. Secondly government spending priorities must be immediately shifted to green technology to get us off oil. All road expansion projects should be cancelled and we need to go full steam into pedestrian based redesign of our cities and train based transport. This will allow more oil to go into essential rural farming use and will improve energy efficiency. Oil rations will need to be done. hey, look oil is going to begin to run out. The markets will simply assure the super rich can keep driving SUIVs while others starve. Rationing will make sure the resources are conserved and used in a way that is in thge greater common good, not in the benefit of a wealthy elite.
It is clear that taxes on the wealthy must be raised and that money used omn domestic programs. We need to cancel the wars right away, that is something we cannot afford andthe money needs to be spejnt on green retrofit and oil free redesign of society. Do i think any of this will happen? Of course not. We have an ignroant brainwashed population of Joe Six Packs that watches fox news, advocating the very policies that will lead to the Armegedon that Christians so long for, except it will be our own stupidity.
"Indeed the US is being run into the ground in wall ways by Republicans irresponsible and insane, unworkable policies."
While Republican plutocrats spend MORE on Republican politicians to push these insane policies, they heavily bribe Democratic Party politicians with campaign donations to be their subservient step'n'fetchits or, more crucially from a class and propaganda perspective, their apologists and facilitators of gradual imposition of ever more severe and extreme components of the plutocratic agenda of insane policies. The Democratic Party is the crucial KY lubricant. Republican plutocrats comprise the giant upper-class erection. Republican politicians and corporatist, militarist media provide the rhetorical frame and thrust. The nation and the planet are the rape victim, and the present unfolding nightmare is the evil progeny of all of the above.
Correct.
"To all Goldbugs: Fiat money is not the problem – the private issue of fiat money is the problem, which is like a private tax on all society."
Stephen Zarlenga, Director, The American Monetary Institute
Was it ever Feasible to Use Gold for Money?
Aside from going counter to the true nature of money as an abstract legal power, there is a very practical matter that supporters of Gold money can't address: There is never enough supply of gold sufficient for such a money system. The Gold supply has not kept pace with the growth of population and commerce. This periodically increased the real value of gold.
Money systems usually solved this problem by cheating – pretending to be operating a gold based system but really mixing private bank paper into the money supply, pretending it was convertible; leveraging the amount of gold in the system through fractional reserves of one type or another. Because this bestowed great power and unearned wealth onto bankers, there has never been a shortage of apologists for such mixed systems - we call them “economists!”
Stephen Zarlenga, Director, The American Monetary Institute
does it matter that the federal reserve paper money is created out of thin air,
when the rich has bought just about anything that is worth a spit with that paper money?
can you eat gold when you are hungry?