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Greed, Excess and America's Gaping Class Divide
Courtesy of good friend and Supreme Court of Assholedom justice David Sirota comes this revolting list of Marie Antoinettoid moments from recent years, in an article called "The New 'Let Them Eat Cake!'"
Stephen A. Schwarzman arrives for his 60th birthday party on Park Avenue, February 13, 2007 in New York City. (Arnaldo Magnani/Getty Images)
Some of the moments on the list are easily recalled – Berkshire Hathaway gazillionaire Charlie Munger's famous "suck it up and cope" quote, coming from a guy whose company was heavily invested in bailed-out banks, was an obvious inclusion – but others are quite shocking.
For instance, I was completely floored by the New York Times' pseudo-ironic take on the government's response to the financial crisis, a piece entitled "You Try to Live on $500K in This Town."
This came at a time when President Obama was considering curtailing compensation for bailed-out bankers at $500,000. The piece was sort of meant to be taken half as a joke, but it is not hard to detect an element of demented earnestness in the fashion section article, an honest argument that with mortgages and private school tuition and co-op fees and taxes, it really was very hard for a certain kind of New Yorker to get by on half a million a year.
The proposed salary cap -- remember, this cap was only going to be for banks that had fucked up badly enough to need a federal bailout -- became the cassus belli for a propaganda war launched from the general direction of Wall Street, where the notion that the government should restrict the salaries of exactly the irresponsible greedheads who caused a global financial crisis was met with blunt outrage.
Sirota's list highlights another bizarre aspect of the $500k story. During the debate over the proposed cap, one of the things we started to hear from the Antoinette class was a general sense of wonder at the notion that anyone considered them rich. It turns out that a great many of the people who make big six-figure incomes consider themselves middle class. A University of Chicago professor arguing against the repeal of the Bush tax cuts made waves by saying he was "just getting by" with his $250,000 income, while ABC's Charlie Gibson and CNN reporter Kiran Chetry in recent years suggested that $200-$250,000 is middle class (Chetry's exact quote was that "in some parts of the country," $250K "is middle class").
All of this is a testament to the amazing (and rapidly expanding) cultural divide that exists in this country, where the poor and the rich seldom cross paths at all, and the rich, in particular, simply have no concept what being broke and poor really means. It is true that if you make $300,000 in America, you won't feel like you're so very rich once you get finished paying your taxes, your mortgage, your medical bills and so on.
For this reason, a lot of people who make that kind of money believe they are the modern middle class: house in the burbs, a car, a kid in college, a trip to Europe once a year, what's the big deal? They'd be right, were it not for the relative comparison -- for the fact that out there, in that thin little ithsmus between the Upper East Side and Beverly Hills, things are so fucked that public school teachers and garbagemen making $60k with benefits are being targeted with pitchfork-bearing mobs as paragons of greed and excess. Wealth, in places outside Manhattan, southern California, northern Virginia and a few other locales, is rapidly becoming defined as belonging to anyone who has any form of job security at all. Any kind of retirement plan, or better-than-minimum health coverage, is also increasingly looked at as an upper-class affectation.
That the Tea Party and their Republican allies in congress have so successfully made government workers with their New Deal benefits out to be the kulak class of modern America says a lot about the unique brand of two-way class blindness we have in this country. It's not just that the rich don't know the poor exist, and genuinely think a half a million a year is "not a lot of money," as one "compensation consultant" told the New York Times after the crash.
It also works the other way -- the poor have no idea what real rich people are like. They apparently never see them, which is why the political champions of middle America are at this very minute campaigning in congress to extract more revenue from elderly retirees and broke-ass students while simultaneously fighting to preserve a slew of tax loopholes for the rich, including the carried-interest tax break that allows hedge fund billionaires to pay about half the tax rate of most Americans.
This is also going on because both parties are betraying the desires of the actual voters, who by and large actually do favor taxing the wealthy (they favor it intellectually anyway, when asked by pollsters). But we don't see mobs on the street demanding Stevie Cohen and John Paulson and George Soros give up their special 15 percent tax rate, because no actual people have ever seen Stevie Cohen, John Paulson or George Soros in the wild.
To most people, the undeserving rich guy is the ex-police lieutenant down the street who's been collecting a six-figure pension for years after spending two decades writing traffic tickets before retiring at 43. Seeing that guy lounging in the dugout pool you paid for with your constantly rising property taxes is enough to piss anyone off, which is why it's not hard to understand where a lot of that Tea Party anger is coming from.
But if you want to see a real asshole, you have to somehow get invited to things like the $5 million birthday party of another guy on Sirota's list, private equity creep Steven Schwarzman. After throwing his elaborate fete for himself, Schwarzman -- who is said to make $400 million a year, and made $600 million when his company went public -- compared Barack Obama to Hitler for even considering rolling back his carried-interest exemption, which, again, allows him to pay 15% taxes while some of the rest of us pay twice that or more. "It's a war," he said. "It's like when Hitler invaded Poland."
If you think your local Andy Griffith is a greedy pig because he retired in his forties and built an addition to his garage with your tax money, try hanging out with a guy who eats $400 crabs, throws himself $5 million parties where he is serenaded by Rod Stewart and Patti Labelle (who sang "Happy Birthday"), and then compares the president to Hitler when word leaks out that he might have to pay taxes at the same rate as a firefighter or a kindergarten teacher.
But America never gets to meet that guy, because all of those parties are invite-only, and the only reporters that go tend to do so with kneepads on -- like the extraordinary Andrew Ross Sorkin, who as Sirota notes, predictably wrote a slurpilicious "In Defense of Schwarzman" piece after the event (his thesis, to the extent that I could make it out, seemed to be that there are even bigger assholes than Schwarzman). As a result, the popular outrage gets steered toward state employees greedily living off their own pensions, not toward the truly deserving targets hiding in the Hamptons and Gstaad and St. Tropez.
Anyway, definitely advise checking out David's piece. You'll be grinding your teeth by the time you finish.


83 Comments so far
Show AllIf the Debt Ceiling fiasco in Washington is any indicator we as a Country have no business telling any other Country what to do or how to govern. Our so called Congress and Senate get a D- on running this Government. When a member of the Senate or Congress tells the President what to do then we are in deep trouble.
Our surplus of money in the Treasury during the Clinton Era was squandered by the GOP and now they blame the President and Democrates.
Over half the citizens are fed up with Washington and their games.
In 2012 we need to throw them all out.
""Over half the citizens are fed up with Washington and their games.""
And if the other half had half a brain they'd be fed up, too.
The ref to Marie Antoinette seems surreally apt and is a blunt reminder of how far we've really come since the times of revolutionary wars and elite ruling classes.
We need to bring back public hangings and the stockades for many of these greedy and destructive bastards.
The public hangings would be for you and me, the rich would escape in their private jets.
It will take a major disruption for people to take aim at the rich and clueless, and once it starts, the process will implode taking many of us down as well, just like any revolution.
It will have to come when Social Security is taken away, and lots of people with nothing to lose will decide to even the field.
Many of the wealthy are investing in self-sustaining islands or fortified estates. (Cheney has a fortress in Dubai; the Bush family has one down in Uruguay.) When it all hits the fan, the super-rich will be going to these retreats, leaving the mere multi-millionaires to try and weather the storm in their gated communities or sail away from trouble in their yachts. As Hunter S. Thompson once said, "Doom come soon." It's just on the horizon as the Powers-That-Be have not learned a thing from the economic crash of 2008, nor any other crash in history. As Junior Bush and many others have proved, you don't have to be smart to be rich.
Umm I thought Bush's land purchase was in Paraguay - a dictatorship - not Uruguay - a democracy. Makes no big difference but more consistent with Bush's risk of extradition to La Hague...
guillotine guillotine guillotine
Have knitting needles will travel.
"We need to bring back public hangings and the stockades for many of these greedy and destructive bastards."
--Yes, after after the revolution.
If only! Universal term limits would be a great place to start, no more than two terms for anybody. That way the lobbiests would go broke trying to bribe all the rotating officals, and could never have the famial relations that MIC, Heathcare, and Corporates enjoy in the Capitol.>^^<
Well that's all I got short of Storm the Basteele! the last 4/5 yrs have proved the inhabitants of DC no longer even pretend to care what we the great unwashed want!
But don't forget to vote. As another poster puts on here. "If voting changed anything it'd be illegal"
>^^<
swansong,
You need to be careful what you posted here, it may come back and hound you. I guess you must be a liberal! And Rahm is absolutely correct!
Did sombody forget HHS and the CIA monitor every word?? doh! >^^<
Demondade49,
"Our surplus of money in the Treasury during the Clinton Era was squandered by the GOP and now they blame the President and Democrates."
It's really amazes me to see you a liberal defending the Democrats and the President. How much have you donated to Obama reelection and how much more are you going to donate? Good Luck, see you back here whinnying and bitching for the next four years after reelection.
Really, sivasm? Are you going to defend the Republicans' sterling performance regarding the economy? Look around at the GOP-dominated states -- Florida, NJ, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin -- they are all worse off than they were before the Republican onslaught and not one new job has been created. In fact, the GOP doesn't have any plan to create new jobs beyond giving more tax cuts to their wealthy benefactors. Right, that worked so well during the Bush Regime.
RSJ,
To be absolutely clear (Obama favorites phrase). I am no Repug. I dislike them and even more than you or any Liberals here.
Yes the mess we are in are in part the eight years of Dubya regime, no doubt about it. But what happens instead of Change, Change we can believe in was nothing but shits, shit we are in by a compulsive liar.
Have you forgotten how he let the criminals walk free with only 600 million’s fine and continue foreclosure and million’s homeowners suffer? How about the Obamacare, or Social Security? Dubya failed to privatize it and your Obama, begging the Repug to take from the table.
You are just as Rahm Emanuel said: a "fucking Retard". I did not say it but Rahm Emanuel did! If you are looking for a fight, go after Obama and Rahm Emanuel, he thinks you are a retard! (I don't think you are retard ;-))
Yes, Repugs States are in bad shapes and creating no new jobs but their benefactors. The Democrats are doing the very same as the Repugs. Open your eyes, a former Comcast CEO as Obama Chief of Staff and GE's Immelt to Head Economic Advisory Panel, paying ZERO tax. You are either blind of having amnesia.
PS: Cisco announced One Of The Largest US Layoffs Of The Year in CA. I am from CA a Blue State.
If you have not figured it out yet, sivasim, there is a brigade of Dem apologist's who would have you believe Obama and the Dem party is somehow better than the other political dysfunction; when in point of fact, they both serve the same corporate interests. Now that Obama is in campaign mode, the ‘thought police’ serving the DNC has to buttress their obfuscations to defend Obama's endless war agenda, assault on the social safety net including social security and medicade/Medicare, torture via proxy states, torture of an American hero, Pvt Manning, TARP giveaway to the super elites (no CEO left behind), assault on the environment via carte blanche oil drilling on the Eastern Seaboard, allowed BP to destroy the Gulf ecosystem via dispersants which Greenpeace told us is one molecule away from anti freeze, attacked and marginalized whistleblowers in numerous fields including those who asserted the Gulf fiasco was managed improperly, extended Patriot Act, extended tax cuts to the rich while concomitantly cutting Head Start and Home Heating for the poorest of the poor; carte blanche mountain top removal permits to a fantasy called "clean coal," appointed Bush holdovers to run economic policy like Giethner and numerous others, advancing an egregious energy policy via nuclear energy which will be foot at tax payer expense but nevertheless run as a for profit enterprise by corporations, and coal the most egregious contaminant on the planet ; of course, there will be a few crumbs toward sustainable options like geo-thermal, wind, and solar maybe 2-5% of the entire energy expenditures; moreover, Obama makes a discipline of capitulating to the Tea Party nut cases on every issue of import to them, while screwing the left at every turn. Now comes the latest debate on the Debt ceiling and Obama has opened the door to downsize social security and medicade programs (originally created to establish a social safety net for the poor) now on the table to satisfy the extremists in the neo conservative movement. While on the endless war front now in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya, not to mention numerous other police actions, Obama uses unmanned drown strikes in an endless campaign which Amnesty International has claimed over 100K lives of non-combatants. Another example of the Administrations stated goals of an oxymoron which tells us we are “winning the hearts and minds of the people.” Perhaps the biggest sell out of Obama’s first two and half yea’s is the corporate For Profit health bill void of Single Payer or Public Options.
Yes, indeed, the apologists that troll this site shilling for Obama’s reelection run want you to keep your eyes on the evil Republican’s as if Obama is not one of them.
ekobe,
"If you have not figured it out yet..." Yes I have and I appreciate your two long pieces. Each day I ponder how not to be homeless in the streets of SFO. :-)
Been there Sivasm, and respect what you bring to the table on this forum. May your way be made straight...
ekobe,
I have short memory. I still can recall a few days back you mentioned it here. I can genuinely call you brother, so is brother RichardsCatz.
We struggle on. We deal with it as best as we could without help from anyone.
Thank you
@ ekobe: Your post is one long, babbling ramble, mostly wrong or distorted, and your debt-ceiling harangue is a case in point. Here's what AlterNet posted July 15, 2011 regarding Obama and the Dems playing the GOP on the debt ceiling 'crisis':
Debt Ceiling: GOP Were Set Up, Played Parts Like Unwitting Fools
AlterNet, July 15, 2011
"Back on April 13th, as Speaker Boehner was being told by the business community not to condition an extension of the debt limit on a deficit reduction package, Sen. Chuck Schumer saw an opening. As Greg Sargent speculated at the time, the Democrats might be able to exploit any such linkage to drive a massive wedge between the Big Business and Tea Party factions of the Republican Party. [...]
"The Democrats could have insisted that the debt ceiling be a clean vote with nothing attached, but they also saw the advantage to allowing the bill to be conditioned on debt reduction. It would freak out Wall Street, kill Republican fundraising, divide the party, and highlight their extremism.
"Obviously, all of those goals have come to fruition. Some Republicans are openly expressing their regret at having pursued linkage on the debt ceiling. [...]
"So, now it’s on to Plan B, which is Mitch McConnell’s pass-the-buck plan to raise the debt ceiling by voting not to do so. The president is perfectly happy to let McConnell save a little face:
"During their Wednesday meeting, Mr. Obama commended Mr. McConnell for his proposal, Democratic officials familiar with the meeting said. He also didn’t bristle at the notion of being responsible for raising the debt ceiling. “If Senator McConnell wants me to wear the jacket for that, I’m happy to wear the jacket,” Mr. Obama said, according to the Democratic officials.
"Why would he bristle? He set the GOP up, and they played their parts like unwitting fools."
-- http://www.alternet.org/newsandviews/article/634424/debt_ceiling%3A_gop_were_set_up%2C_played_parts_like_unwitting_fools
Despite all the hysteria about Obama cutting Medicare and Medicaid and increasing the age for Social Security, it turned out it was just a bargaining gambit to gull the GOP into giving him what he wanted without him giving up a thing. In fact, as it says below, Boehner had to recruit none other than Paul Ryan himself to tell the Teabaggers the facts of life:
Paul Ryan Has to Baby Tea Party Freshmen on Debt Ceiling, Forced to Use "Star Wars" Analogy to Underscore Gravity of Situation
[From the LA Times] "At a closed-door meeting Friday morning, GOP leaders turned to their most trusted budget expert, Rep. Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, to explain to rank-and-file members what many others have come to understand: A fiscal meltdown could occur if Congress fails to raise the debt ceiling.
"House Speaker John A. Boehner of Ohio underscored the point to dispel the notion that failure to allow more borrowing is an option.
"He said if we pass Aug. 2, it would be like 'Star Wars,'" said Rep. Scott DesJarlais, a freshman from Tennessee. "I don't think the people who are railing against raising the debt ceiling fully understand that."
-- http://www.alternet.org/newsandviews/article/635095/paul_ryan_has_to_baby_tea_party_freshmen_on_debt_ceiling%2C_forced_to_use_%22star_wars%22_analogy_to_underscore_gravity_of_situation
Aside from that, both parties are obviously not the same -- name the GOP counterparts to Sens. Sherrod Brown, Al Franken, Barbara Boxer, et al, or independent Bernie Sanders who caucuses with the Dems? In the House, name any Republican who comes close to Dennis Kucinich, Raul Grijalva, Jan Schakowsky, John Lewis, Keith Ellison, Louise Slaughter, Marcy Kaptur, et al. You can't because there aren't any. Both parties are demonstrably not the same.
You can post all the 'Dem apologist' nonsense you want, but it doesn't change the facts, and it's interesting you echo right-wing talking points in your attacks on Obama and the Dems. I hope you aren't a sock puppet here trying to make progressives stay home or vote for a third party next election -- the GOP knows that's the only way they can win, the same way they won in 2010, by employing Karl Rove's classic, 'divide and conquer' strategy.
Here are some additional thoughts to ponder given the 'fear brigade' is in full Obama re-election mode:
People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought, which they avoid. -Soren Kierkegaard
Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail." Ralph Waldo Emerson
"It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it." — Upton Sinclair
The best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the average voter. - W. Churchill
While Russel is talking about religion, it can nevertheless stand for partisans of the duopoly since both have this ipso facto monopoly on voting standards which they regard as "sacred":
If I were to suggest that between the Earth and Mars there is a china teapot revolving about the sun in an elliptical orbit, nobody would be able to disprove my assertion provided I were careful to add that the teapot is too small to be revealed even by our most powerful telescopes. But if I were to go on to say that, since my assertion cannot be disproved, it is an intolerable presumption on the part of human reason to doubt it, I should rightly be thought to be talking nonsense. If, however, the existence of such a teapot were affirmed in ancient books, taught as the sacred truth every Sunday, and instilled into the minds of children at school, hesitation to believe in its existence would become a mark of eccentricity and entitle the doubter to the attentions of the psychiatrist in an enlightened age or of the Inquisitor in an earlier time." - Bertrand Russell
Boy the Corporate Party really has you sheeple chasing your tails LOL! For anybody new here, There is only one party, with two faces R/D whoever you vote for the SAME FATCATS WIN! Vote 3rd party or stay home! >^^<
"Remember if voting changed anything it'd be illegal!"
Richards,
Hi Brother how is everything? I bet you getting tougher by the day. I agree with you what you say, but with slight modification. Take care. :-)
Keeping it honest, Or at least my version of honest. As HW used to say "I dislike too many reality based facts, just remember I'm the decider,," from 2004 thereabouts
lol... If I couldn't laugh I'd have cried a river by now >^^<
30
Obama does not have a plan for creating jobs either: note Riech's recent piece on CD; or for that matter, where were you when Obama signed the EXTENSION of the Bush tax cuts while downsizing Head Start and Home Heating to the poor? Still shilling for an Obama re-election run, eh...
A sad thing is that the everyday person blames anyone with a permanent job eg teacher, firefighter, council worker for having benefits the private sector stopped providing. Instead of demanding more from employers, and supporting others in unions, individualistic Mercans blame other workers, not the rich perpetrators of the present situation. Slidarity is very limited in the USA, it seems.
+1
That type of "blame it on my neighbor" attitude has driven a thick wedge between myself and a few "friends".
It is so myopic and misplaced...and often so deeply ingrained...I find I can't debate it...at least, calmly :)
I sympathize, swansong, I've tried calmly arguing with Teabaggers and Christopublicans before, but so much sheer stupidity and ignorance just drives me up a wall. Unfortunately, some of them will never change even if the roof caves in on them -- it'll still be the fault of the goddamned liberals-progressives-commies-socialists whatever the evidence to the contrary.
I think this joke sums up the current situation:
"A union worker, a Teabagger and a corporate CEO are sitting at a table. In the middle of the table there is a plate with a dozen cookies on it.
"The CEO reaches across and takes 11 cookies, looks at the Tea Partier and says: 'Look out for that union guy, he wants a piece of your cookie.' "
-- From BSmasher, by way of Bartcop.com, Feb. 26-28, 2011, Vol. 2656.
Here are a few other approriate quotes:
"Just think how stupid the average person is, and then realize that half of them are even stupider!"
-- George Carlin
“They could be made to accept the most flagrant violations of reality, because they never fully grasped the enormity of what was demanded of them, and were not sufficiently interested in public events to notice what was happening.”
-- George Orwell
"The 20th century has been characterized by three developments of great political importance: The growth of democracy, the growth of corporate power, and the growth of corporate propaganda as a means of protecting corporate power against democracy."
-- Alex Carey
"The end of democracy, and the defeat of the American Revolution will occur when government falls into the hands of the lending institutions and moneyed incorporations."
-- Thomas Jefferson
You said it, Tom.
Swan...it's classic capitalism...the richest take all the money and leave the poor squabbling over the crumbs...too preoccupied to band together and fight for their rights.
How come they Forgot Senators, and Congresscritters??? They have Permanent JOBBS??? >^^<
Richards,
They all have Defence mechanism amnesia. That's right amnesia!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defense_mechanisms
Sounds good to me!! I could save the co-pays on the antidepressents it takes to read a paper or watch the news >^^<
Amen: "In 2012, we need to throw them all out." !!! - with the exception of Bernie Sanders whose lone voice barely rises above the maelstrom of idiocy that characterizes our Congress. Furthermore, Newt Gingrich (bless his blackguard soul) ranted yesterday (or the day before) about how the Congress has nay-say over the Supreme Court. In other words, they could have intervened in the Supreme Court decision to stop GWB from stealing the Presidency (and had that happened it's guaranteed we would be in far better economic shape today than we are -- THE DEBT CEILING WAS RAISED SEVEN TIMES UNDER THIS CRIMINAL). Congress could have intervened to reverse the Citizens United decision. They apparently know so little about their job, and are so busy taking money from all the lobbies and living the good life -- Paul Ryan in a local restaurant consuming with well-heeled friends $700 worth of wine in one meal -- that they don't have time and are not really interested -- as long as their tab is paid -- in what it takes to run this country. BUT the only culprits to blame for this SAD! state of affairs is us. If we don't track and follow each and every one of them, remember the names of all the Judases that haunt the halls of Congress and send them home (once and for all, and for good), the even SADDER Truth is that we deserve these SOBs.
I have nothing to do with the plutocrats running this country and refuse to accept the blame that you are assigning to me.
90% of Americans were against the banker bail-out, but Congress passed it anyway.
Most Americans were against attacking Iraq and Libya, but the attacks went on anyway.
Americans voted for Obama because they wanted peace and justice. It's not our fault that we didn't get either.
We are being screwed, and it's not in anyway consensual. Anyone who parrots the line that we deserve what we get has blinders on. Especially at this late date in the decline of the former USA.
While I agree it's nearly impossible to see through the wash of corporate-state propaganda, it's the failure of the left (not the establishment Dems, mind you) to organize these people. As a whole the left is a fractured mess and needs to get its shit together.
Actually, Americans were in favor of going into Iraq (the Gulf War as well) and Afghanistan, and only a small majority were against our involvement in Libya.
American's voted for Obama because they accept the failed notion of choosing the "lesser of evils". That, and the fact that they don't make the effort to properly investigate a candidate's record before they vote.
The idea that the ordinary citizen is somehow completely absolved from responsibility for his/her predicament is not only incorrect, but is a self-defeating mindset.
That said, I understand your anger and frustration. It is true that elite forces have the cards stacked against us.
In order to effectively countervail such elite forces, a significant number of us must begin to step up to the plate and take action. We "ordinary citizens" need to become much more confident and serious about the true potential of "people power". This requires organizing in solidarity with others in our communities (also networking with other communities), as well as developing the discipline necessary to sustain a long-term commitment to direct action campaigns in unprecedented numbers (but merely 3-4% of the population could make a very big impact). It's our only chance to come out of this burgeoning maelstrom intact.
Nice post. The only problem is how do we get to solidarity when so many want to disagree on fundamentals? It not only requires organizing, but it will require rigorous thought and agreement on the priorities for launching "people power". At the end of the day, the world has to spin and be produced, it does not do it on its own. Behind the people is the working s/he, and this includes all forms that labor takes under fully developed capitalism.
That's how I knew Obummer was lying about being an "community orginizer" he didn't have enough grey hair. or bloodshot eyes from 100s of hours hearding cats that are americans to get them to so much as face in one direction! The only professional trait I saw was the chain smoking (common to Chicago backroom politics) otherwise no dice. He has no street cred! >^^<
P.S. he's got grey hair now! lol he's aging faster that Carter lol!
Yes, seasurface, good point. In my view, under a "business as usual", status quo scenario, there are 8 issues that are most fundamental to confront quickly and aggressively to mitigate against long-term national and global tragedy of unprecedented proportions:
1) We must force change in the weakest underpinnings of our political system, which is ostensibly a bare-bones "democracy" (e.g., require complete public funding of elections, dismantle corporate personhood, etc.).
2) We must fundamentally restructure the "corporate media" system. The "airways" are supposed to be public, and so the control and funding of them must also be public, and/or non-commercial. As citizens in a democracy we need accurate information to function properly, not propaganda that helps elites maintain control over the political and economic systems.
3) We must work seriously to reconfigure our economic system, "capitalism", for two main reasons: it is fundamentally "unjust"; and it is fundamentally "unsustainable". The great gap between the wealthy and the poor is a utter unstable proposition that simply cannot be maintained without tremendous societal turmoil and brutality. The concept of unending "material growth" must be replaced. Industrialization and incessant consumption is killing the planet, and eventually, all or much of humanity.
4) The power behind the throne of capitalism is the "monetary system", run by an elite cabal of bankers. At the heart of the problem is the "creation of money" as debt, in which the bankers collect a ton of interest by in effect robbing the American taxpayer. The creation of money needs to be put into the hands of the American people, as the Constitution so stipulates.
5) The "military industrial and security complex" must be reigned in and progressively dismantled. It is a moral outrage to spend so much money to kill so much of innocent life. "Overkill" is an understatement when describing the power of our military. We could spend MUCH less and still protect our people and homeland from any major external threat.
6) We must seriously transform our energy infrastructure, in particular as a response to the inevitable depletion of "fossil fuel" energy. This means immediate and heavy investment in "renewable energies", reforming our agricultural system, redesigning our transportation infrastructure, and modifying our city environments to accommodate more self-sufficient localized economies, which includes being less car-dependent.
7) We must take much more serious action to mitigate against the burgeoning catastrophe brought on by "global warming". This is the insidious and deleterious environmental outgrowth -- the other side of the coin, if you will -- to the "fossil fuel" problem.
8) Finally, at the heart of our problems looking forward is an over-consumption of finite resources, and the resultant poisoning of the planet. These are human-made problems. You can't blame it on the elephant, the whale, or the condor. Thus, we must get a firm grip on human population. We are currently in "population overshoot", and it must stop, SOON.
It would certainly be difficult to get solidarity from elites on these principles, but isn't it possible to get true commitment and solidarity from 3% of the U.S. population? (all you would probably need to make a big impact). Granted, it would not be easy, and would require at least a significant upgrade in a base level of knowledge through mass education campaigns, and an extra dose of courage and empathy for others, including for those innocents in other countries, but I don't find the principles enumerated above so outlandish. Clearly one does not have to passionately agree with all of the above to still believe in the overall goal (not defined right here), which with time will benefit all, including our children and grandchildren.
We need to be thinking "collectively", not "individually". It's our only hope of salvation and dignity as a global society.
"We could spend MUCH less and still protect our people and homeland from any major external threat."
YES Indeed cdresearch, a recent opinion is that a ONE TRILLION cut in the pentagon yearly budget would NOT hurt our military capacity.
here is the quote and the source:
"U.S. military spending now exceeds the spending of all other countries combined. Knowledge military experts argue that we can cut at least $1 trillion from the Pentagon budget without changing its currently expressed mission. e
From: http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/07/12
The article mentions 58% of discretionary spending not 50% as does Dennis!
Yes, that's a nice article. Unfortunately they don't specify over how many years the trillion dollar cut is for. I'm left to assume it's over ten years, which though better then what we've ever seen, still results in spending WAY more then we reasonably need. For example, that level of spending cuts would barely touch our tentacle of bases spread around the world (around a 1,000, give or take a couple hundred). We need to draw down the massive imperial project of policing the world, and invading other countries to boost the profits of elites. It is fundamentally immoral, and fiscally irresponsible.
We wouldn't have ant external threats! if we kept out of everybodys business!
As it is 1/2 the world wants us dead, The other half wouldn't shed a tear on hearing that the empire was dead. Sad we could have done so much better, working with people as opposed to bombing and shooting them.
Look at Canada, and Mexico How many enemies do they have?? >^^<
I agree with much of what you write, cdresearch. and I think you've hit the crux of effective political organizing with the idea of a "signigicant upgrade in a base level of knowledge through mass education campaigns," but these things, in the current system, do require funding to be able to pull off something as large as what is required to get your 3%. The current, perhaps the use of technologies could aid in the distribution of the necessary materials, but I am a bit apprehensive on joining the technologies, i.e. twitter and facebook, are great "camp."
I am curious as to the 3% figure. What is your reasoning or thinking on its significance?
seasurface:
Funding is of course always an issue for social movements, especially if the heart of such a movement is broad-based anti-establishment, which in my view is the only way to go at this point. Indeed, our backs are literally against the wall, even if most people are still unable to see it in such stark terms. Ostensibly such a movement would be going to battle against dysfunctional and unsustainable institutions that are run by wealthy elites, since these are the systems of the status quo that are killing the planet -- killing first the least powerful, the non-human life on earth, along with its poorest human inhabitants.
As a result, it will not be easy to help fund the movement by attracting "heavy-hitter" donors that are benefiting handsomely from the very system the movement intends to substantially dislocate, dismantle, and significantly restructure. Nevertheless, "heavy-hitters" should be continuously sought out anyway, though never counted on to fund the basic daily affairs of the movement. In short, the fundraising plan should be carried out with the assumption that no big donor will be found. Instead, the funding of such a movement should be based on a growing number of committed members that typically donate within a range of small contributions (e.g., mainly between $1 to $20 per month). The key is gaining long-term, steady "commitments" from a growing number of adherents. Ideally, what one wants from members of such a movement is a commitment of time and money, regardless of how small the time & money commitment is. For some, that might mean just 1-2 hours per week, and one dollar per month, and that is just fine, as long as they're making a "good faith commitment", which would preferably be for at least one year, and then hopefully willing to recommit annually thereafter for the LONG-TERM. Such a movement would clearly need to be a LONG-TERM affair. Most people can afford $1 per month, and 1 hour per week of their time. It's a matter of priorities, and also whether a recruit can say yes with conviction to the following two questions: Does the movement stand for principles and objectives that are important to me, to my family, to my fellow human beings, to other life on the planet, to posterity, and, is getting started on its objectives urgent in order to have a chance at mitigating potential human and ecological catastrophe? Am I willing to make some level of sacrifice, with courage and resolve, in solidarity with others, and hold firm to the belief that the movement can one day succeed in its mission?
Organizing, mainly the old-fashioned way is the key. That is, meeting in our communities, face to face, in person (by congressional district (CD) makes sense). Forming personal connections is what attracts members to a movement, and represents the glue that has the chance of keeping people together over the long haul. It is what allows true "solidarity" to be created. I'm not an expert on "social media", but it currently does not represent in any way a truly radical political movement. Far from it, in fact. This does not mean that such a movement would not use technology to advance its cause. Certainly video conferencing would be necessary as the movement grows in size and geography. Even social media platforms could be used at some point if used differently than how they're typically used today, but even so, it is unlikely that this tool would be effective in "movement building", particularly during the early stages. It has not proven to be an effective way of building "real" and "sustainable" connections among people concerning serious issues.
The 3% movement population figure is really just an educated guess at what it might take in numbers to effectively disrupt the daily functioning of the major problematic institutions maintained by wealthy and powerful political and economic elites. Three percent is roughly 10,000,000 American citizens, and if a great majority of them were quite committed, and could be trained to act with discipline and in solidarity, and if they used solid strategy and tactics, they could conceivably get quite a bit of attention in response to the execution of powerful direct action campaigns. Conceivably at some point a tipping point would occur whereby an additional portion of the population becomes more sympathetic to the movement's cause, even if they are not directly active. This would put even more pressure on elite powers to concede ground. But that's actually when the hard work begins, and the movement must persevere, and be unwavering in its demands. The movement should never negotiate in a position of weakness. It must firmly establish the upper hand by holding firmly to the demands the movement has deemed necessary to sufficiently transform the identified problematic institutions. Remember, this is a LONG-TERM proposition. As you can see, any mass movement with any hope of even moderate success against the dire set of predicaments at our doorstep, and the entrenched countervailing powers, will require significant courage and resolve from a very large number of ordinary people that make up the movement. "Individually" it can be ordinary; "collectively" it must be extraordinary to succeed. Indeed, many leaders and many more followers will be necessary, because waiting for a few special and/or charismatic leaders to depend on will not suffice. It is too easy for the power elites to foil such a movement by cutting off its (leader's) head.
The only good plutocrat is a dead plutocrat.
What Brian said.
While Attorney General Andrew Cuomo was going hat-in-hand for campaign money from Wall Street banksters while their looting was emptying out New York State's pension funds of millions, if not billions, of dollars which were under the Attorney General's legal purview, Cuomo and his friends sponsored a dog and pony show to help the public to understand that the drain on New York's pension funds was actually due, not to Wall Street criminal behavior, but to a handful of Long Island school district lawyers who did tricky things to become eligible for state pensions. Newsday assigned its reporters to follow Cuomo's dog and pony show which kept readers' eyes off Wall Streeters' looting while Cuomo watched and did nothing, even as Newsday's relentless reporting highlighted Cuomo's courage for going after the half dozen Long Island lawyers who had become state pensioners. After the election, Newsday ran an editorial supporting, now Governor, Cuomo's effort to end the "millionaires' tax" which can only benefit Cuomo's bankster moneymen as well as Newsday's owners. Such is the "reporting" that we have come to expect of our media.
Class warfare and job envy is a mark of cannabalism of society. The rich are predators on the poor. The poor and jobless are considered to be parasites on society. The people with jobs that still keep the nation ticking along, although at declining pace, are being squeezed from both sides. Work hours are increasing. Income and benefits are not rising. Some benefits, like adequate health insurance, are unaffordable. Its a matter of time until the wages and conditions of all jobs, exempting the rentier class, fall to the exonarable pressure of having a large pool of unemployed, and competition for a job becomes a life and death issue, requiring physical violence.
If thats what it takes to wake people up to the facts ... is total sadness.
"All of this is a testament to the amazing (and rapidly expanding) cultural divide that exists in this country, where the poor and the rich seldom cross paths at all, and the rich, in particular, simply have no concept what being broke and poor really means."
In an essay coming from Rolling Stone--purveyors of ideological containment for Capital's interests--it's not hard to sniff out the unsaid of their use of "class" as a "cultural divide that exists in this country." Yes, Class does exists, but it certainly is not cultural. Income is not an index to Class. It's an effect of class (see Class in Culture from Teresa L. Ebert and Mas'ud Zavarzadeh). Moreover, income can only point to one's position within the ever widening division of labor as Capital expands beyond its State borders into the mid East.
Articles like this fuel the fire and provide more confusion than clearly articulating the property relationships that constitute class. Class marks the property relation of owning labor; thus, if you sell your time and are unable to procure the necessary instruments for your reproduction of your labor, and the things that one needs to survive, you are a worker. You can argue as much as you like about owning cars, x-boxes, vacation packages--yes, argue as much as you want...They make you an owner of THINGS.
Of course Taibbi has learned well from his cultural educators on how to make class "safe" for american standards, thus making his article promote the idea that an equitable distribution of taxation will clear the way, but leaves the contradiction between labor and capital untouched: "If you think your local Andy Griffith is a greedy pig because he retired in his forties and built an addition to his garage with your tax money, try hanging out with a guy who eats $400 crabs, throws himself $5 million parties where he is serenaded by Rod Stewart and Patti Labelle (who sang "Happy Birthday"), and then compares the president to Hitler when word leaks out that he might have to pay taxes at the same rate as a firefighter or a kindergarten teacher."
I won't comment on Ms. Labelle's serenade. But I will say that the way in which this article represents Class warfare as cultural (rich vs. poor) contains the seeds for a new "Hitler" and neo-fascistic adherents to strike while the "cultural" war wages.
This article: http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/07/11-3
points to the growing real class divide between production (labor) and capital, though it looses me in some sections. It is definitely worth the read in lieu of Taibbi's cultural criticism.