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Billionaire Media Moguls vs. Occupy Wall Street
Hundreds of police officers, many wearing riot helmets, marched into lower Manhattan’s Zuccotti Park early Tuesday morning to clear out the Occupy Wall Street protesters. The operation required boroughwide task forces and “scores of mobile officers who are usually used to flood high-crime neighborhoods.” According to the police, 142 people were arrested, largely for “disorderly conduct and resisting arrest,” though it turned out that according to a judge’s ruling, the police did not have the right to clear the park at all, but merely to dispose of its tents and sleeping bags.
The first thing the police did was clear out the journalists so that they could not see what was going on—just as they routinely do in totalitarian nations. At least 10 reporters were arrested. Ironically, the owners of at least three New York newspapers could not have been happier. Of course, all three are not merely members of “the one percent” but the 1 percent of the 1 percent.
Billionaire NYC Mayor Bloomberg and billionaire pals, Rupert Murdoch and Mort ZuckermanThe Daily News, owned by billionaire real estate mogul Mort Zuckerman, cheered “Bravo to Bloomberg’s Occupy Wall Street eviction from Zuccotti Park, [for] finally reclaiming public space from unsanitary shantytown.” He added: “What they [the protesters] need to overcome is a sense that they occupy a higher moral ground than everyone else and are entitled to the privilege of behaving obnoxiously.”
Rupert Murdoch’s New York Post claimed: “Lunatics had taken over the asylum, as if the right to use a park as a public outhouse was in the Constitution,” and called the Occupiers “silver-spoon sickos.” The editorial page credited the crowd at Zucotti Park with being made up of “criminals, vagrants and other loons.”
Another New York newspaper, this one owned by Jared Kushner, the socialite son of another real estate scion (who is currently in prison), also embraced the “law and order” arguments of the mayor. His New York Observer worried, without evidence of problems, that the protests could hypothetically “lead to public health issues, especially with winter approaching.”
Lost among this tone of self-congratulation by the millionaires and billionaires who are lucky enough to buy their ink by the barrel are not only their alleged commitment to the protection of the first amendment but the facts themselves that inspired the protests.
So let’s recall just a few of them. For instance
- In 1974 the top 0.1 percent of American families earned 2.7 percent of all income in the country. By 2007 this same tiny slice of the population had increased its holdings to fully 12.3 percent, roughly five times as great a piece of the pie as it had enjoyed just three decades earlier. (see here and here)
- Half the U.S. population now owns barely 2 percent of the country’s wealth, putting the United States near Rwanda and Uganda and below such nations as pre-Arab spring Tunisia and Egypt when measured by degrees of income inequality.
- By the end of 2010, as corporate profits rose to 15 percent of national income—their biggest share of the economy since such statistics became available nearly 70 years earlier—the share going to workers’ wages fell to its lowest level in the same period.
These numbers have consequences. Wednesday morning’s New York Times publicized the release of a new report documenting the slow-motion destruction of the American middle class “as rising income inequality left a growing share of families in neighborhoods that are mostly low-income or mostly affluent.”
The study, conducted by Stanford University and released Wednesday morning by the Russell Sage Foundation and Brown University, employs census data to illuminate what has happened to family income in the country’s 117 most populous metropolitan areas.
According to the data, “In 2007, the last year captured by the data, 44 percent of families lived in neighborhoods the study defined as middle-income, down from 65 percent of families in 1970. At the same time, a third of American families lived in areas of either affluence or poverty, up from just 15 percent of families in 1970.”
The report also demonstrates a pattern of escape, or at least attempted escape, by the well-to-do of the neighborhood, a consequences of this epidemic of increased inequality with “the rich flocking together in new exurbs and gentrifying pockets where lower- and middle-income families cannot afford to live.”
As a result, according to the study’s authors, “Children in mostly poor neighborhoods tend to have less access to high-quality schools, child care and preschool, as well as to support networks or educated and economically stable neighbors who might serve as role models.”
The results may be evident in any number of outcomes, such as “the growing gap in standardized test scores between rich and poor children, now 40 percent bigger than it was in 1970. That is double the testing gap between black and white children.”
What’s more, the gap between the rich and poor in college completion—one of the single most important predictors of economic success—has grown by more than 50 percent since the 1990s. Today, over half of children from high-income families finish college while less than 10 percent of low-income children do.
As the noted sociologist William Julius Wilson told The Times, the study offers further evidence that “rising inequality is beginning to produce a two-tiered society in America in which the more affluent citizens live fundamentally different from the middle- and lower-income groups. This divide decreases a sense of community.”
This study confirms much of the data discussed in a recent Time magazine cover story, described in this post, entitled “Why the U.S. is No Longer the Land of Opportunity.”
The Time story discussed a recent study from the Pew Charitable Trust finding that “Americans born in a family that was one of the bottom fifth in terms of wealth, only had a 17% chance of making into the top two-fifths as an adult.” It turns out that for all of Europe’s problems, “it is now easier to move up the income ladder in Europe than it is in America.”
Time attributes the causes of inequality to “two mega trends that have been reshaping the global economy since the 1970s: the effects of technology and the rise of the emerging markets.”
And these are indeed important. But during one week in the autumn of 2010, the U.S. Census Bureau reported that the number of Americans living in poverty had reached its highest level in 15 years. (For a single adult in 2009, the poverty line was $10,830 in pretax cash income. For a family of four, it was $22,050.)
Economic inequality was also soaring. A few days after the census report, Forbes magazine released its annual list of the 400 richest Americans and their combined net worth, which had climbed 8 percent to $1.37 trillion.
That’s not the whole story, however. Another report, this one from the Corporation for Enterprise Development and the Annie E. Casey Foundation, found that the U.S. government had spent nearly $400 billion during fiscal year 2009 to fund tax breaks and programs aimed at helping Americans build wealth. More than half the benefits in question went to the wealthiest 5 percent of taxpayers, individuals, and households making more than $167,000. The top 1 percent of taxpayers—those making more than $1 million—received an average of $95,000 in assistance. Meanwhile, families making $50,000 received less than $500 in benefits.
Time’s cover story also notes that European nations with higher levels of mobility also provide much stronger safety nets for the lower classes “such as universal healthcare.” They also “have fewer corporate loopholes, longer tax codes and generally higher rates, and at least on an equality and mobility standpoint their nations' economies seem to be performing better.” Moreover, in these countries, “Unions get seats on corporate boards in order to help balance out worker pay and CEO pay.”
Some conservatives simply reject the idea that the government should do anything about inequality. Matthew Continetti, writing in the November 14 Weekly Standard, advises his fellow right-wingers, "The way out is to reject the assumption that government’s purpose is to redress inequalities of income. Inequalities of condition are a fact of life.”
This of course ignores the fact that, unlike pretty much every other liberal democracy in the world, government policy in the United States has been designed by conservatives to promote inequality and ensure that billionaire hedge fund managers are taxed at a far less confiscatory rate than their secretaries or even their janitors.
It also ignores the deleterious effects that inequality has on democracy—the Koch brothers can buy a great deal more from Congress and state legislators than the rest of us—and America’s historic formula for economic success.
As former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich puts it, “Pump-priming works only when a well contains enough water.”
He explains:
During periods when the very rich took home a much smaller proportion of total income—as in the Great Prosperity between 1947 and 1977—the nation as a whole grew faster and median wages surged. We created a virtuous cycle in which an ever growing middle class had the ability to consume more goods and services, which created more and better jobs, thereby stoking demand. The rising tide did in fact lift all boats.
During periods when the very rich took home a larger proportion—as between 1918 and 1933, and in the Great Regression from 1981 to the present day—growth slowed, median wages stagnated and we suffered giant downturns. It’s no mere coincidence that over the last century the top earners’ share of the nation’s total income peaked in 1928 and 2007—the two years just preceding the biggest downturns.
In that respect, as well as many others, the Occupy Wall Street folks are demonstrating not only for democracy but for the very economy they are accused by the local billionaire newspaper owners of undermining.
- Posted in


48 Comments so far
Show AllThe American Empire is following the same course as the Roman Empire, decline and all.
All empires eventually crumble. But this one is the most dangerous in the history of mankind. I fear it will not simply fade away without taking everything and everyone with it.
Thomas Gilbert-
...and when it does, the MIC will scatter like roaches across the planet and roam at-large.
And THAT my friend is a scary prospect.
All citizens of the world must be ready for that war. We will win.
Well said - Bodryn. As with the Twin Towers, it is falling down into its own footprint. Ironic, huh? Karmic -- very karmic.
The Empire will implode from its own bloated megacolon.
Or disappear into its own vacuum, like that creature in "Yellow Submarine"
Peaceably assembling is a first amendment remedy, to get rid of corruption.
Super committee my ass, these ass holes are totally ignoring 99 percent of the American people. Cuts for any program for the poor and working class, to cover the expense of the bush tax cuts, sign your Grover Norquist pledge you ass hole do nothing republican bastards. Watch your lies on faux news, kiss the Koch brothers ass, your day is getting near. The cops will get tired of busting heads, then what will you bastards do. And don't give me that democrats are the problem too bullshit, they are fighting to keep entitlements.
"And don't give me that democrats are the problem too bullshit, they are fighting to keep entitlements."
Oh, how nice. Such darlings.
'And don't give me that democrats are the problem too bullshit, they are fighting to keep entitlements.'
Yes, why don't we keep voting for them and see what happens....oh, wait...
Actually it was Oblahblah (the head democrat) who put social security and medicare on the table during the debt "crisis" that he helped to manufacture.
.
And Super Senator John Kerry (a leading democrat) has said social security and medicare are causing the "crisis" and that "entitlements must be addressed" ... meaning that he believes they should be cut.
.
So yeah, democrats = part of the problem.
The 1% is in bed with the republicans and democrats. Whichever one wins, they win. There has to be a new system that separates big businss from our elected oficials.
It's very frustrating to know that America's financial problems could be quite easily fixed. If we would give peace a chance... if we would allow the Bush tax cuts to expire... if we would continue to get our health care system attuned to the best cost effective outcomes... Actually the last 2 items are the most important as long as the war mongers remain nearly sane.
I don't know, I think ending the wars would be a great help-- morally, psychically, and financially.
The rest of your post makes points I am in thorough agreement with. But it won't happen, because the people driving the bus are the die-hard laissez-faire extremists.
Once you become aware of the fact that virtually every dime collected by the US income tax goes to the military/homeland security/intelligence gathering/industrial complex, you realize that just repealing the Bush tax cuts will not be enough. Spending on "private" spy agencies alone will approach one trillion dollars over the next decade, while spending on medicare, social security and other programs is being cut. The effective tax rate on the rich should be set back to the pre-Raygun figure of 40%, from the current effective rate of 23%, and the cap on SS tax should be removed. At the same time the effective tax rate for the rich has been nearly cut in half their yearly earnings have increased by four times over what they were thirty years ago, while the income of working families has fallen by 10% since 2007.
These well-to-do types might want to brush up on late 18th century French history.
Ya!
Ya!
constitutional, you remind me of my Norwegian grandfather. He would often say, "Ya, ya."
Constitutional:
You actually suggest that politicians with D's after their names might not
be quite as bad as those with R's after their names? You are ignoring
"de rigueur" of equality of badness of D's and R's. We'll both be slapped
with allegations of ignorance of what is acceptable, despite such obvious
facts as who signed Grover Norquist's pledges. Wait for the arbiters of
opinionatedness to take notice of our posts. One wonders. One must
wonder.
I did nothing of the kind, I am just saying that the people with D behind their name are not backing Norquist, they haven't fought Social Security for sixty years, they haven't fought Medicare for forty years saying both would bankrupt America. OWS should not be about cops, or republicans, it should be about peoples rights and how the one percent is robbing us.
It seems to me their opposite goals for Social Security is a real-world difference too important to ignore. The bankers are clearly headquartered in their lockstep Republican party. And they revel in every mole they get into a "Democratic" spot, like Ben Nelson. True, the bankers have now achieved substantial financial influence in the Democratic party as well. Will this trend continue, or can it be reversed and democracy rescued? Will other business sectors, such as the intellectual property sector, put up money to help defeat the bankers control? Because what sensible business would want a predatory banking sector gobbling up the asset landscape? I hope this Great Recession will make clear the dangers of privatizing the central bank.
Although I stopped reading Alterman years ago because of his edenizing of NYC, this is a good informative piece.
This is an unsustainable country. The rich may think that they will always be safe and sound, but their exodus to the ex-ex-exurbs will simply leave them far from the nexus of everything they know when oil prices inevitably rise and the cities collapse - which is inevitable as oil becomes scarcer, prices sky-rocket, infastructure and public services collapse, and the vast tens of millions that comprise the vast majority of the landscape in Amereicha around them becomes more desperate and angry. Their little gated communities will become islands in the storm. Eventually, even the "well-off' - $100K-$500K/year - will find themselves utterly fucked and abandoned when the only hope of escape from their dwindling fortresses is the kind of liquid wealth that supports private planes to jet off to private islands away from the collapse of Amereicha. The end-result, unfortunately for them, will be a protracted siege as they bunker down and the desperate hordes converge upon them. When resources become scarce to the point where people degenerate to desperation to survive - which is inevitable in this ridiculously unsustainable model that is Amereicha today - people devolve to the lowest common denominator. It is inevitable. The number of poor dying will be attrocious - but I expect the rich will find their numbers dwindling as assaults against them and their little conclaves escalate as the desperate masses seek out the source of their suffering, and the resources horded there.
Darkness lies ahead. It is inevitable.
Demonstorm, The Road ahead will be full of darkness except when it's full of greyness. Or not. Perhaps finely appointed super trains from the "exurbs" to the other important places. Especially fine "cattle guards" on the LOCOmotive to ward off the chattel. Technophobes can always be bought. Most of us like to work and build. A moderate denominator is most likely. While Collapse will occur, resilience is in our DNA.
"So what to do? Within limits, one should try to allay unnecessary social dissonance. If you’re going to have a demonstration on behalf of working Americans, can the drumming circles. The class warriors on the right want to convince people it’s really a culture war, and you don’t want to make their job easier."
---Paul Krugman, NY Times
Krugman was talking about how the right wing press is trying to portray OWS in terms of a culture war -- because they think they can win that battle -- and what OWS might consider as a defense ...
Krugman may be "talking about (only) the right wing press trying to portray OWS in terms of a culture war", but the reality is that the entire bipartisan corporate/financial/militarist Empire and its media/propagandist arm is trying to portray OWS as an anti-government war.
To defeat this counter-revolutionary and reactionary strategy, Occupy has to use judo and turn the weight of the Empire on itself by making the Occupy movement an anti-Empire revolution against only the illegitimate and non-democratic government that the EMPIRE has captured and controls.
We are not dealing with, we are not trying to expose, we are not confronting, we are not intent on excising any "government" of the people, since that is already fully captured, perverted, and controlled by a deceitful ruling Empire.
We need to focus on "Occupying Empire", "Exposing Empire", "Confronting Empire", and finally "Excising Empire".
It may only be by accurately and clearly articulating that this movement, this revolt, this revolution is "Against Empire", and not against any form of legitimate or representative 'government' of the people, that the vast majority of Americans will actively join the 99% that Occupy is appealing to.
As long as the Occupy movement can be distorted by the Empire's corporatist media weapons like TV as being in any way an anti-government movement, the vast majority of the movement's potential recruits, to fill-out the full 99%, may be falsely dissuaded from becoming as fully active as Occupy needs them to become.
What real percentage of Americans will join something that they understand to be a Second American Revolution "Against Empire", compared the percentage that will join a movement that they are being propagandized into thinking might be meely an anti-government movement?
Best luck and love to Occupy.
Liberty, democracy, justice, and equality
over
violent/Vichy
empire,
Alan MacDonald Sanford, Maine
Boycott Christmas shopping this year, except for kids, and watch these New York Newspapers try to exist on financial fumes. If we cannot stop consuming we are not serious about change.
______________________________
“You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.”
Richard Buckminster Fuller
Screw the rug-rats. What better time to give the little ankle-biters a lesson in economic & political anarchy than now? What they DON'T need is more useless, plastic, material shit.
Otherwise, you're right on.
They are children moonpie. Treat them with love. Each family knows the proper way to gift and needs no coaching. If parents are smart enough to boycott the commercial side of Christmas for themselves, they know the level of gifting that is appropriate for their kids. The subject is adults forgoing consumption for
Christmas. If we can't do that why waste our time in the streets.
Beware of Altermans bearing gifts.
This article includes both facts and fictions.
The criticism is largely aimed at extremely rich owners of newspapers, "conservatives", and the Koch brothers. While these criticisms are appropriate, they are also not even half of the story.
Then there is this clever misrepresentation,
"...the top earners share of the nation's total income peaked in 1928 and 2007."
This is a deliberate misrepresentation which, I strongly suspect, was employed to make people believe that the top earners have made less money since the election of Obama in 2008.
If anything, since Mr. Alterman's wetdream candidate (the unconstitutionally corrupt Obama) was elected, the obscene income growth for the richest and the disparity between them and the rest of us has become even greater.
Alterman is very smart and un-trustworthy.
"The first thing the police did was clear out the journalists so that they could not see what was going on—just as they routinely do in totalitarian nations."
When you say the word "totalitarian", i first think of the USA's attitude toward economic systems and class privilege. I think of the USA as more totalitarian than any other place. But the rampant pretense of tolerance and diversity in the USA, while it effectively rams kapitalism down our throats, really makes me want to fight it, until it lays in pieces before me. It's totalitarian, and wicked.
____________________________________
Funny song. If you haven't heard it yet, link provided below. It's called "Save the Rich":
____________________________________
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_M8fOwHnwg0&feature=player_embedded
LOL cd. What a hoot! Thanks for sharing.
I was in Grant Park on the Wednesday of the week of the Democratic Convention in Chicago in 1968. Mayor Daley, whose son was chosen by Obama to be his Chief of Staff this year, ordered his police to attack and beat the peaceful protestors in the park because we planned to express our 1st Amendment rights to free speech and assembly despite not having a permit required by a city ordinance.
When the 12,000 cops attacked the 3,000 demonstrators I happened to be in the dense crowd on Congress Avenue, right near Michigan Avenue. TV cameras in those days were about the size of a Volkswagen, and there were only three in place to cover the demonstrations. They were on a platform which was built over the sidewalk there near the Hilton Hotel, where demonstrators had been forced by raging police right through the huge plate glass windows which comprised the facade of the hotel the day before.
My friend and I were in the crush just beneath the TV networks camera platform. We were caught between the mass of demonstrators in the park and the throng of riot gear clad police filling all the streets to the west. A signal was given and a contingent of the riot police stormed the TV platform and wrecked the cameras and beat everyone to a pulp they could get their hands on. Then another signal was given and a group of a hundred or so more police waded into the crowd and grabbed and beat to a pulp anyone who had a camera or a notebook.
That went on for just a few minutes, then a police whistle was heard and loud, grunting commands were shouted and the entire mob of adrenaline charged cops rushed the demonstrators in our thousands and, outnumbering the demonstrators, who were committed to non-violence, four to one, began to beat everyone they could get their hands on while tear gas (an understatement if there ever was one) canisters rained down all around. My buddy was 16 and I was 17. I have always believed that our relative youth saved us. The "pigs" were grabbing people all around us and swarming them with several of the big cops pinning even young women to the ground while two or more of their colleagues beat them insanely with three foot truncheons. It was terrifying! I can, in my mind, still hear the screams and the sickening crunching sound of the truncheons impacting the skull of an unfortunate young woman who seconds before had been standing next to me in the crowd. The pigs were not trying to arrest anyone or enforce the law. They were out to teach people a lesson - do not challenge the state - if you do we will kill you. That was the message they were sending with violence just short of mowing the crowd down with machine guns. And they were prepared to do that too had someone given the order. Thirty or so blocks away, in Jackson Park, in the midst of the black community, 27,000 fully armed regular Army troops were camped at the ready.
To this day, unless you were there, no one really knows the extent of the brutality which occurred in Grant Park that afternoon because the Chicago Police, under the direction of Richard Daley, blinded and silenced the media in a consorted and deliberate fashion as effectively as in any totalitarian state immediately before proceeding to beat defenseless, peaceful protesters exercising our constitutional rights to expression and free assembly.
Attacking the press is nothing new. What is new is that instead of video cameras the size of Volkswagens, they now are smaller than a pea and nearly weightless and almost everyone has one in their pocket and try as they might the images of the brutality cannot be repressed.
"Heavyrunner"
The Daley's have long been strong believers in corporate domination. Richard J. Daley was notorious for his "machine" of control. I think his sons took their father's devotion to that corporate control and refined(?) it so that they could appear less oppressive than their father, but still promote the same power control.
William Daley, as you pointed out, became a white house chief of staff, through the work he did to give the banks more control.
Richard M. Daley, another long-time mayor, had a much greater ability (and corporate support) to get people to believe that corporate "benefactors" were vital and needed special concessions.
When Obama was becoming involved with Illinois politics, the majority of his supporters were distrustful of the new "improved" Daley machine. As soon as Obama achieved a foothold in Illinois politics, he turned his back on the largely poor majority of his electorate and turned to the Daleys and their allies on North Michigan Avenue and in "the Loop."
Those poor people on the South-side would never get him to where he believed he belonged.
I won't go into the corrupt ascendancy of Rahm Emanuel.
Murdoch's fascist newspaper' declaration that "the lunatics have taken over the asylum" is correct. The lunatic fringe of the greedy-rich have stolen the Amerikan government and occupied it since that idiot Reagan declared it was "(mourning) in Amerka."
These members of the tiny plutocracy, who can spend billions on printing their lies have outlived there usefulness to society. Workers must take back the government and send these criminal traitors to prison. While the greedy-rich's shills in the corporate media insist that the Occupy movement has no message and will fail, they are scared shitless because, the ruling elite has in fact received the movement's message loud and clear. The plutocracy's days are numbered.
"“What they [the protesters] need to overcome is a sense that they occupy a higher moral ground than everyone else and are entitled to the privilege of behaving obnoxiously.”
This is such an ironic statement for Zuckerman the war-monger to make, considering he is one of the most obnoxious, arrogant, dishonest activist billionaires in the country. He was a big supporter of the Iraq war and would love for the U.S to go to war with Iran due to the fact that he's a right-wing Zionist. He is a close personal friend of fellow ***hole billionaire mayor(illegal 3rd term) Bloomberg. The list goes on and on but he's hardly any different from Rupert Murdoch, except maybe not as influential. Oh yeah and he was a big advocate for and beneficiary of the bailouts.
This bloodthirsty snake has absolutely no credibility when it comes to anything. Boycott the Daily News.
It's not just the Usual Media Suspects.
The formerly left-leaning Huffington Post, on orders by either AOL or the DNC or both, has been minimizing OWS coverage for weeks now.
Today, for example, OWS is midway down their main page, while an Incredibly Important story on Jupiter's moon (I am not making this up) is number one.
And most of the posts on the OWS story are boilerplate right-wing. All ad hominem attacks against OWS itself and its supporters on HuffPo.
Very, very telling.
OWS is having a real impact now - keep it up.
The bastards are afraid.
Alterman rehashes a long list of statistical evidence to show how the rich are getting richer at everyone else's expense, but we've all read this before a few thousand times. This data has been around for decades, even as the gap continues to widen. But ultimately, Alterman is just another liberal Democrat, having just written a book absolving Obama of all blame for his serial betrayals of progressive demands and expectations after he slithered into office on a string of lies, and serial capitulations to the right. None of it is Obama's fault. He's really a magnificent progressive who has been stifled by the far right, despite his valiant efforts to turn the country around. There are few apologists for the spineless Democrats more prominent and dogged than Alterman, unless it's Ed Schultz.
Eric Alterman's a big fan of democracy ... but only if people vote for the blue team. If OWS doesn't isn't co-opted by the democravens or if they refuse to back Oblahblah in 2012 .... you can bet that Eric Alterman will forget about the billionaire funders of both political parties and focus his animosity towards OWS.
THE GRINCHES OF WALL STREET
‘Twas the night before Christmas
And through the Senate and House
The money was flowing
To each Wall Street louse
The hedge fund managers and CEOs
Had told their tales of financial woes
Their stories were naughty – not very nice
They told of private jets and gluttonous vice
Meanwhile on Main Street the people were sad
No one could explain why things had gotten so bad
Some said the cause was market speculation
Others said Capitalism was the right explanation
Santa’s elves should create a People’s State
End all war, poverty, and hate
A Single Payer System would keep us healthy
Enough food for all – no need to be wealthy
At the shelter, the children were snuggled in their beds
As nightmares of foreclosure danced through their heads
A holiday miracle is what we need -
On second thought – we just might have to secede
An Alternative to Capitalism (if the people knew about it, they would demand it)
Several decades ago, Margaret Thatcher claimed: "There is no alternative". She was referring to capitalism. Today, this negative attitude still persists.
I would like to offer an alternative to capitalism for the American people to consider. Please click on the following link. It will take you to an essay titled: "Home of the Brave?" which was published by the Athenaeum Library of Philosophy:
http://evans-experientialism.freewebspace.com/steinsvold.htm
John Steinsvold
“Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result”
~ Albert Einstein
Frederic Bartholdi turns in his grave for designing and installing the Roman goddess, icon of freedom in the US
An Alternative to Capitalism (if the people knew about it, they would demand it)
Several decades ago, Margaret Thatcher claimed: "There is no alternative". She was referring to capitalism. Today, this negative attitude still persists.
I would like to offer an alternative to capitalism for the American people to consider. Please click on the following link. It will take you to an essay titled: "Home of the Brave?" which was published by the Athenaeum Library of Philosophy:
http://evans-experientialism.freewebspace.com/steinsvold.htm
John Steinsvold
“Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result”
~ Albert Einstein