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G8, These Are Our Demands
It's fitting that the G8 is meeting in my beloved but beleaguered hometown of Chicago this May. In a city with the highest sales tax in the country, where the state tax rate was recently increased by 66% and property taxes went up $300 per homeowner, and where 2012 state education spending was cut by a greater percentage than in any other state, a tax break of $85 million per year was given to the largest and most diverse financial exchange in the world.
The CME Group, made up of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Chicago Board of Trade, had a profit margin higher than any of the top 100 companies in the nation over the past three years.
That leads us to another astonishing fact: an American mother pays nearly a 10% sales tax on shoes for her kids, while millionaire investors pay .002 percent (2-thousandths of a percent) for a financial instrument.
So our first demand is..
{First a disclosure. In keeping with the OWS Statement of Autonomy (Speak WITH us, not FOR us), the 'our' in "our demands" represents this writer's sense of the overriding needs of the 99%.}
So our first demand is for a financial transaction tax (FTT).
The FTT is sensible, equitable, and long overdue. And familiar to some of your more farsighted G8 members. The United Kingdom has had a tax on stock trades for decades. French President Nicholas Sarkozy insisted that his country, despite opposition from the European Union, would institute an FTT. Germany favors a tax, as reportedly do Brazil, Argentina, and South Africa. Belgian finance minister Didier Reynders observed, "All goods and services are regularly subject to tax, so I don't see why financial transactions would have exceptional protection."
Let's review the advantages and disadvantages of an FTT. First of all, it has extraordinary revenue-generating potential, on a global scale. The Bank for International Settlements reported in 2008 that annual trading in derivatives had surpassed $1.14 quadrillion (a thousand trillion dollars!).
For the U.S. alone, revenue estimates by the Center for Economic and Policy Research and the Chicago Political Economy Group approach a half-trillion dollars annually. My hometown's CME Group handles about 3 billion annual contracts worth well over 1 quadrillion dollars. One-thousandth of 1 percent of that (about a dollar for every $100,000) would pay off the total budget deficit of Illinois.
The FTT would also limit the speculative trading that contributed to the financial meltdown in 2008, and which continues to devastate Greece and other financially troubled countries.
What are the disadvantages? Bankers, trade associations, and conservative research groups have concocted a variety of arguments against the FTT, including its effect on ordinary investors, the practicality of collecting the tax, and the risk of exchanges bolting to other countries. But ordinary investors and retirement funds can be exempted from the tiny amount they might be taxed; the modern electronic trading system can easily incorporate a new fee; and a global tax would leave nowhere for tax avoiders to hide.
The Wall Street Journal calls the FTT a "sin tax" which would punish Main Street. It seems, rather, that Main Street has been punished by the absence of an FTT. Considerable support for the tax exists outside of the financial industry. Bill Gates, George Soros, prominent economists, Catholic development groups, National Nurses United, the Pope. In 1989 Lawrence Summers recommended a securities transaction tax. Even Fortune admits, "There is growing consensus from diverse corners of society for some sort of financial transaction tax."
So, G8, that brings us to our second demand: a trillion dollars of annual FTT revenue committed to a global cooperative of alternative energy research and development. It's a win-win-win-win. (1) Labor-intensive jobs in wind turbine and solar panel and electric grid construction; (2) Environmental gains; (3) Less dependency on foreign oil; and (4) A common goal for the countries of the world.
Studies by independent laboratories and research institutes confirm that the alternative energy industry has more job-creating potential than the fossil fuel industry. Growth in wind and solar is unlimited, whereas oil and gas and coal are inefficient and increasingly difficult to obtain.
Wind power alone could solve most of our energy problems, if we just show the farsightedness and political will. The Earth Policy Institute estimates that the installation of 2 million 2-megawatt wind turbines could provide half the world's energy needs (4,000 gigawatts) within ten years, at a cost of $600 billion per year. If the construction of two million wind turbines sounds daunting, consider that the world currently manufactures 50 million automobiles per year. And technology is adaptable. During World War 2, automobile factories were retooled to produce almost a million aircraft.
Much of the world is already powered to a significant degree by wind. The U.S., China, and Germany combine for 100 gigawatts. Denmark is close behind. In Spain, where Cervantes' Don Quixote once tilted at windmills, over half the country's energy needs have been met during periods of strong winds. According to the Earth Policy Institute, an acre of land in Iowa is 300 times more efficient as a producer of wind power than of ethanol.
Some analysts feel that solar energy will be the dominant source of electrical power in the future. The American Solar Energy Society estimates that solar resources in the U.S. Southwest can supply over four times the current U.S. electricity needs.
There are problems, of course, most notably the challenge of transmitting wind- or solar-generated electric power over long distances. A 2009 report from the Pew Center on Global Climate Change lists the principal barriers as cost, means of transmission, and the integration of diverse power sources.
But China and Germany are making rapid progress with super-grids that can transmit power across continents. Energy storage will be provided by batteries and fuel cells. The technology is in place, waiting for expansion.
So, G8 members, these are our demands: a Financial Transaction Tax and a commitment to Alternative Energy. They complement each other. A particularly eloquent argument for the matching pair is made by CIDSE (International Cooperation for Development and Solidarity).
We borrow the earth from our children. We want them to look back with the sincerest appreciation for what we have done for them.
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12 Comments so far
Show Allin re: chicago - let's not forget the greatest gift of all the ghost obummer - the man with no past
let's not forget the university there that taught us how to offshore jobs - "its a good thing really" - and how to create derivatives - "its a good thing really"
let's not forget the most corrupt political machine since tamanany hall
"Yet Blagojevich got just that, an unusually harsh punishment intended to send a signal to the state of Illinois, which has been racked by corrupt politicians for decades.
So corrupt, in fact, that in the past four decades, four Illinois governors have gone to prison. That’s four out of the past nine governors in office. Two more governors who were charged with crimes were later acquitted
An old joke goes that former president John F. Kennedy, former president Lyndon Johnson, and former Chicago mayor Richard J. Daley are stuck on a one-person life raft that is sinking, and they have a secret ballot to decide who should stay. When the ballot box is opened, there’s one vote for Kennedy, one vote for Johnson, and 5,475 for Daley."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/blogpost/post/rod-blagojevich-4th-illinois-governor-jailed-in-four-decades/2011/12/08/gIQAFzvVfO_blog.html
" Between 1995 and 2004, 469 politicians from the federal district of Northern Illinois were found guilty of corruption"
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/recycled/2008/12/why_is_chicago_so_corrupt.html
the writer mentions the cme - the mercantile exchange who were asleep at the switch while former jersey governor corzine stole 1.6 billion dollars out of his customers segregated accounts
while driving his 40 billion dollar investment fund into total bankruptcy
do you mean that cme...
in chicago where the black folk - like the poor whites in the south - voted once again against their own best interests
" Rahm Emanuel was able to to win every African-American ward comfortably and that would suggest that Black voters did not buy the arguments Carole Moseley-Braun brought to the table"
http://www.chicagonow.com/chicago-political-commentary/2011/02/chicago-mayor-elect-rahm-emanuel-sweeps-on-low-turnout/
brother cornel west treid to tell them
""I believe a Rahm Emanuel victory would be a slap in the face," West said. "I'm here to support poor and working people - specifically black Chicago."
West said Chicago can do better - in the spirit of Harold Washington, the city's first black mayor. He called Emanuel an outsider and intimated that he's tethered to the corporate elite and big business."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/14/carol-moseley-braun-wins-_n_822881.html
here is his site
http://www.cornelwest.com/
as for the g8 - they aint listening to anyone but their controllers in the banking system
another way of understanding the g8 is this - the white guys against the world, especially arabs and blacks in africa
keep em down and steal their stufff
france - broke, war monger, destroyer of libya
germany - broke war monger destroyer pf europe (3 times 1914, 1939 and ongoing)
italy - broke war monger destroyer of libya
japan - broke, irradiated and royally screwed
united kingdom - broke (even they admit it) war monger destroyer of libya, home to the lizard queen, rothschilds and talk about corruption the city of london
the united states - war monger broke destroyer of worlds
canada - who gives a shit about that place
russia - hey i thought we were in a war against those guys
wow - the g8
do they represent hope or change - i keep forgetting...
"medmedude"
Having spent a good deal of my life in Illinois, there is an aspect to the corrupt politics which is remarkably consistent.
The Illinois governors who are sent to prison are usually the ones who have done things which are beneficial to the majority of people.
The most ardently corporate governors don't get charged with criminal acts in Illinois.
If they are shark-like or indifferent bureaucrats as governor and do not exhibit any frailties (such as caring about death-row prisoners or poor children's health) , they are safe from charges of corruption in Illinois. I suspect it is because it proves that they are truly devoted worshippers of the state/national religion of so-called Free Market Capitalism.
The current democrat governor, Quinn, seems to know this. He came into office as the 'SERIOUS' democrat and he and the rest of the democrats who control the statehouse have used that image to implement the same agenda as Walker blatantly has tried to do in Wisconsin. Only, in Illinois, deception is the preferred style.
So, by tearing away at the social fabric, politicians of the corporate state keep themselves out of prison in Illinois.
Obama quickly learned this and has worked hard to be their high priest.
i guess rahm is looking forward to a long and bright future then
thanks for the insights
Nice demands.
Any ideas about how we might enforce them?
I demand batteries and fuel cells?
over and above air, water and food that isn't toxic, if not radioactive??
or are you one of the deluded that sees no connection between things like batteries and fuel cells and imminent planetary death, if not horrific oppression?
do you not understand every 'thing' is made from the living world?
not just the battery, but the car, or cell phone, or tv, or hair dryer, or drone...
making, and using, these, and the like, is what is killing our planet...
where do you plan to live after you've killed everything making batteries and fuel cells and all the crap you desire to run on them?
demand is such a lame, deceptive word...
it makes you sound as if you have power, which you don't...
just like you try to pretend you don't need the natural world, which you do...
the word 'beg' would help much with perspective...can you say 'pepper spray'?
Yeah there is that. But still, nice succinct list of extremely useful demands.
A waste of breath. The G8 powers know our demands entirely well, and they absolutely do not care.
Anyone tired of begging hopelessly from rulers yet?
"The Wall Street Journal calls the FTT a "sin tax" which would punish Main Street."
Standard propaganda ploy. Last night Nightly Business Report on PBS likewise editorialized that a higher tax on dividends would penalize all retiring baby boomers for owning dividend paying stocks. What they neglected to mention is that almost all those baby boomers would be in a far lower tax bracket than the richest ones, and thus escape the "higher tax". In other words, it doesn't really have to penalize most of the baby boomers, which collapses their argument ...
Just about everyone posting thus far has sought to slay the visionary and undo his very wise counsel. Although the Chicago machine has served as engine to fuel Disaster Capitalism doesn't mean it will always be thus and so. To the degree you besmirch and denigrate the voices that speak up for alternatives is the degree to which you marry yourselves to the old system, even if you go down kicking and screaming.
Keep shooting (at) the messengers of Another Way. That'll REALLY take care of all the problems!
"To the degree you... ...kicking and screaming"
???
Reminds me of looking at a knot I couldn't untangle once.
"The CME Group, made up of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Chicago Board of Trade, had a profit margin higher than any of the top 100 companies in the nation over the past three years."
The CME Group is a for-profit entity that is the elite exchange floor for for-profit entities. It is the free-wheeling Casino Royale itself, for the more tangible items. While the casino for fake commodities, like financial derivatives and stock in das korporations, lives on Wall Struck, the casino for plundered earthly treasures, most of which should stay IN THE EARTH, exists in Chicago, near its incubator, the Chicago School of Ekonomics, which continues to rely on dead defunct Milton Friedman for its stature among the gangster class.
The CME group has a lot more rackets going on than is widely known. Besides spearheading the monstrous commodity spekulation frenzy of the past decade, in cahoots with the office of former V-P Darth Viper, the CME group has for decades conspired with congrussian evil and das kapitalevil to operate a food kommodities empire that effectively enslaves Merkan farmers to an extremely narrow production paradigm that facilitates kremlin-style central planning out of Chicago, maximizes energy and material inputs (to help maximize overall "GDP"), maximizes concentrated "intellectual property" ownership of the means (entrusted to key partners Monosonto, et al), and maximizes influence/control from Chicago of the food choices of not only Merkans but of the whole planet, in due time (manufactured demand).
And as a result, Merkans had an EXTREMELY BAD selection of food options over the past four decades. And we've only had better options more lately because Chicago was forced out of its long-range planning by the proliferation of public awareness through the internet. And public awareness campaign phase two is in the works. Meanwhile, extremely poor ideas, and plain evil agendas, continue to drive Merkan-style "supply-side" kapitalism, still featured on the banners of Chicago School of Ekonomics, in the terminal phase of its death spiral.
Everybody knows that the people have found a better way.