Jul 18, 2016
Their unspoken goal is a two-class nation, with a heavily armed security force to quell resistance from the more outspoken members of the lower class. It may be somewhat of an unwitting goal, since narcissistic wealth-takers, as they build their fortunes, tend to lose their ability to empathize with others.
Barack Obama said, "We are not as divided as we seem." But those are just feel-good words. A middle class still exists, but in weakened form, as many families from the once-dominant mainstream of society continue to move up or down, mostly down. The conspirators in the breakdown of the middle class have complementary roles that allow them to divide the country as they perpetuate the myth of prosperity for all.
Congress: The Kingpins
Gun control is the most flagrant example of Congressional disdain for the middle class. Over 90% of Americans want background checks, but Congress has failed to act. The House of Representatives even rejected an amendment that would have allowed research into causes of gun violence.
Over 90% favor laws on clean air and water, but Congress has proposed to weaken them. Almost 80% want to increase Social Security benefits. 83% want Medicare to negotiate drug prices. Nearly 90% support mandatory labeling of genetically modified foods. About two-thirds of polled Americans believe corporations pay too little in taxes. 90% support the protection of public lands.
Based on a study of 1,779 policy issues, Princeton researchers Martin Gilens and Benjamin I. Page concluded that "the preferences of the average American appear to have only a minuscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy."
Military: The Enforcers
Barack Obama said, "They are not very good at feeding their people, but they invest a huge amount in their weapons systems." He was talking about North Korea. In the U.S., where half the discretionary budget is spent on the military, one of five children live in food insecure households.
As we pour trillions into war, cutbacks decimate programs vital to the middle class--vital to the one out of five Americans who have mental health problems; to the dependent children who lost funding for the first time in nearly 20 years; to the neglected public schools; to injured workers; to food pantries.
The conspirators also feel the need to protect themselves within our own borders, and they do this with an increasingly militarized system of local law enforcement. In recent years the Pentagon has armed local police forces with assault rifles, land-mine detectors, grenade launchers, and half-million-dollar mine-resistant ambush-protected vehicles (MRAPs).
Research by Samuel Bowles and Arjun Jayadev indicates that greater inequality is correlated with a greater demand for security services, which apparently stems from the need to stifle lower-class opposition, and which is manifested in violence between police and minorities.
Lobbyists: The Con Men
The top lobbyists? The US Chamber of Commerce, a consortium of business interests supporting job outsourcing and climate denial; followed by the National Association of Realtors, which seeks Congressional favors even as three-quarters of renters with incomes below the $30,000 median are "cost burdened," paying more than 30 percent of their incomes for rent.
Next come the American Medical Association, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Pharmaceutical Research, and the American Hospital Association, with Pfizer close behind. According to the Milliman Medical Index, the cost of healthcare in 2015 for a typical American family of four covered by a PPO was $24,671--nearly half the median household income. Pharmaceutical companies have successfully lobbied Congress to keep Medicare from bargaining for lower drug prices, and they pay off generic drug manufacturers to delay entry of their products into the market, thereby forcing consumers to pay the highest prices for medicine. For every $1 they spend on basic research, they invest $19 in promotion and marketing. Meanwhile, the industry has cut nearly 150,000 jobs since 2008.
Also in the top 20 are Northrop Grumman, Boeing, and Lockheed Martin, all complicit with Big Business in keeping the nation safe for profit-making. Lockheed Martin's revenues increased 15.7% after President Obama announced the addition of 250 troops in Syria.
The conspiratorial revolving door is spinning fast: Of the 352 people who left Congress alive since 2008, almost half have joined the lobbyist and related industries.
Media: The Illusionists
The popular business-oriented media insults the middle class with inane headlines and quotes that betray their ignorance about issues that matter to most of us:
- Income inequality is simply not a significant problem. (Benjamin Domenech, The Wall Street Journal)
- I define peace as the ability to defend yourself and blow your enemies into smithereens. (Sean Hannity, FOX News)
- The global atmosphere hasn't been warming lately. (Mark Phillips, CBS News)
- Global warming shouldn't even be in the top five on the list of problems our president should be worrying about. (Ed Rogers, Washington Post)
The mainstream media is complicit, of course, with its corporate bosses. As Bernie Sanders explained, "The corporate media does everything they can to keep us entertained without addressing the real issues...[Young people] don't even know that we are the only major country without healthcare for all. They don't know that in Germany or in Scandinavia college is free...Media is not telling them that...If you talk about the real issues and people get educated on the real issues, you know what happens next? They actually may want to bring about change."
Instead, the media keeps scaring us into dependency on the military/police state, with panicky reports from sources like FOX, which skipped past wars and lynchings and called ISIS "the single biggest threat in [America's] 200-year history."
Finance: The Hitmen
As our nation bemoans the violence in lower- and middle-class communities, the financial industry keeps to itself, perfecting the role of Economic Hitman that John Perkins defined on a global scale. Despite generating about 25% of all corporate profits, finance creates only about 4% of all jobs, and it has decimated middle-class homeowners and students through unpayable debt. In a direct hit to lower-class workers, the industry pays itself enough in bonuses to boost all 2.6 million U.S. fast-food workers to a $15 minimum wage.
Nothing would help the middle class more than a financial transaction tax. In Chicago, sales of $1 quadrillion (a thousand trillion dollars, 4 times more than all the money in the world), generated ZERO SALES TAX. Instead the Chicago Mercantile Exchange complained that its own taxes were too high, and they demanded and received a tax break.
In a recent letter to his Berkshire Hathaway stockholders, Warren Buffett, the beloved old man of finance, whose company has been avoiding its taxes for years, blathered: The babies being born in America today are the luckiest crop in history... America's economic magic remains alive and well.
That "economic magic" is making the American middle class disappear.
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Paul Buchheit
Paul Buchheit is an advocate for social and economic justice, and the author of numerous papers on economic inequality and cognitive science. He was recently named one of 300 Living Peace and Justice Leaders and Models. He is the author of "American Wars: Illusions and Realities" (2008) and "Disposable Americans: Extreme Capitalism and the Case for a Guaranteed Income" (2017). Contact email: paul (at) youdeservefacts.org.
Their unspoken goal is a two-class nation, with a heavily armed security force to quell resistance from the more outspoken members of the lower class. It may be somewhat of an unwitting goal, since narcissistic wealth-takers, as they build their fortunes, tend to lose their ability to empathize with others.
Barack Obama said, "We are not as divided as we seem." But those are just feel-good words. A middle class still exists, but in weakened form, as many families from the once-dominant mainstream of society continue to move up or down, mostly down. The conspirators in the breakdown of the middle class have complementary roles that allow them to divide the country as they perpetuate the myth of prosperity for all.
Congress: The Kingpins
Gun control is the most flagrant example of Congressional disdain for the middle class. Over 90% of Americans want background checks, but Congress has failed to act. The House of Representatives even rejected an amendment that would have allowed research into causes of gun violence.
Over 90% favor laws on clean air and water, but Congress has proposed to weaken them. Almost 80% want to increase Social Security benefits. 83% want Medicare to negotiate drug prices. Nearly 90% support mandatory labeling of genetically modified foods. About two-thirds of polled Americans believe corporations pay too little in taxes. 90% support the protection of public lands.
Based on a study of 1,779 policy issues, Princeton researchers Martin Gilens and Benjamin I. Page concluded that "the preferences of the average American appear to have only a minuscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy."
Military: The Enforcers
Barack Obama said, "They are not very good at feeding their people, but they invest a huge amount in their weapons systems." He was talking about North Korea. In the U.S., where half the discretionary budget is spent on the military, one of five children live in food insecure households.
As we pour trillions into war, cutbacks decimate programs vital to the middle class--vital to the one out of five Americans who have mental health problems; to the dependent children who lost funding for the first time in nearly 20 years; to the neglected public schools; to injured workers; to food pantries.
The conspirators also feel the need to protect themselves within our own borders, and they do this with an increasingly militarized system of local law enforcement. In recent years the Pentagon has armed local police forces with assault rifles, land-mine detectors, grenade launchers, and half-million-dollar mine-resistant ambush-protected vehicles (MRAPs).
Research by Samuel Bowles and Arjun Jayadev indicates that greater inequality is correlated with a greater demand for security services, which apparently stems from the need to stifle lower-class opposition, and which is manifested in violence between police and minorities.
Lobbyists: The Con Men
The top lobbyists? The US Chamber of Commerce, a consortium of business interests supporting job outsourcing and climate denial; followed by the National Association of Realtors, which seeks Congressional favors even as three-quarters of renters with incomes below the $30,000 median are "cost burdened," paying more than 30 percent of their incomes for rent.
Next come the American Medical Association, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Pharmaceutical Research, and the American Hospital Association, with Pfizer close behind. According to the Milliman Medical Index, the cost of healthcare in 2015 for a typical American family of four covered by a PPO was $24,671--nearly half the median household income. Pharmaceutical companies have successfully lobbied Congress to keep Medicare from bargaining for lower drug prices, and they pay off generic drug manufacturers to delay entry of their products into the market, thereby forcing consumers to pay the highest prices for medicine. For every $1 they spend on basic research, they invest $19 in promotion and marketing. Meanwhile, the industry has cut nearly 150,000 jobs since 2008.
Also in the top 20 are Northrop Grumman, Boeing, and Lockheed Martin, all complicit with Big Business in keeping the nation safe for profit-making. Lockheed Martin's revenues increased 15.7% after President Obama announced the addition of 250 troops in Syria.
The conspiratorial revolving door is spinning fast: Of the 352 people who left Congress alive since 2008, almost half have joined the lobbyist and related industries.
Media: The Illusionists
The popular business-oriented media insults the middle class with inane headlines and quotes that betray their ignorance about issues that matter to most of us:
- Income inequality is simply not a significant problem. (Benjamin Domenech, The Wall Street Journal)
- I define peace as the ability to defend yourself and blow your enemies into smithereens. (Sean Hannity, FOX News)
- The global atmosphere hasn't been warming lately. (Mark Phillips, CBS News)
- Global warming shouldn't even be in the top five on the list of problems our president should be worrying about. (Ed Rogers, Washington Post)
The mainstream media is complicit, of course, with its corporate bosses. As Bernie Sanders explained, "The corporate media does everything they can to keep us entertained without addressing the real issues...[Young people] don't even know that we are the only major country without healthcare for all. They don't know that in Germany or in Scandinavia college is free...Media is not telling them that...If you talk about the real issues and people get educated on the real issues, you know what happens next? They actually may want to bring about change."
Instead, the media keeps scaring us into dependency on the military/police state, with panicky reports from sources like FOX, which skipped past wars and lynchings and called ISIS "the single biggest threat in [America's] 200-year history."
Finance: The Hitmen
As our nation bemoans the violence in lower- and middle-class communities, the financial industry keeps to itself, perfecting the role of Economic Hitman that John Perkins defined on a global scale. Despite generating about 25% of all corporate profits, finance creates only about 4% of all jobs, and it has decimated middle-class homeowners and students through unpayable debt. In a direct hit to lower-class workers, the industry pays itself enough in bonuses to boost all 2.6 million U.S. fast-food workers to a $15 minimum wage.
Nothing would help the middle class more than a financial transaction tax. In Chicago, sales of $1 quadrillion (a thousand trillion dollars, 4 times more than all the money in the world), generated ZERO SALES TAX. Instead the Chicago Mercantile Exchange complained that its own taxes were too high, and they demanded and received a tax break.
In a recent letter to his Berkshire Hathaway stockholders, Warren Buffett, the beloved old man of finance, whose company has been avoiding its taxes for years, blathered: The babies being born in America today are the luckiest crop in history... America's economic magic remains alive and well.
That "economic magic" is making the American middle class disappear.
Paul Buchheit
Paul Buchheit is an advocate for social and economic justice, and the author of numerous papers on economic inequality and cognitive science. He was recently named one of 300 Living Peace and Justice Leaders and Models. He is the author of "American Wars: Illusions and Realities" (2008) and "Disposable Americans: Extreme Capitalism and the Case for a Guaranteed Income" (2017). Contact email: paul (at) youdeservefacts.org.
Their unspoken goal is a two-class nation, with a heavily armed security force to quell resistance from the more outspoken members of the lower class. It may be somewhat of an unwitting goal, since narcissistic wealth-takers, as they build their fortunes, tend to lose their ability to empathize with others.
Barack Obama said, "We are not as divided as we seem." But those are just feel-good words. A middle class still exists, but in weakened form, as many families from the once-dominant mainstream of society continue to move up or down, mostly down. The conspirators in the breakdown of the middle class have complementary roles that allow them to divide the country as they perpetuate the myth of prosperity for all.
Congress: The Kingpins
Gun control is the most flagrant example of Congressional disdain for the middle class. Over 90% of Americans want background checks, but Congress has failed to act. The House of Representatives even rejected an amendment that would have allowed research into causes of gun violence.
Over 90% favor laws on clean air and water, but Congress has proposed to weaken them. Almost 80% want to increase Social Security benefits. 83% want Medicare to negotiate drug prices. Nearly 90% support mandatory labeling of genetically modified foods. About two-thirds of polled Americans believe corporations pay too little in taxes. 90% support the protection of public lands.
Based on a study of 1,779 policy issues, Princeton researchers Martin Gilens and Benjamin I. Page concluded that "the preferences of the average American appear to have only a minuscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy."
Military: The Enforcers
Barack Obama said, "They are not very good at feeding their people, but they invest a huge amount in their weapons systems." He was talking about North Korea. In the U.S., where half the discretionary budget is spent on the military, one of five children live in food insecure households.
As we pour trillions into war, cutbacks decimate programs vital to the middle class--vital to the one out of five Americans who have mental health problems; to the dependent children who lost funding for the first time in nearly 20 years; to the neglected public schools; to injured workers; to food pantries.
The conspirators also feel the need to protect themselves within our own borders, and they do this with an increasingly militarized system of local law enforcement. In recent years the Pentagon has armed local police forces with assault rifles, land-mine detectors, grenade launchers, and half-million-dollar mine-resistant ambush-protected vehicles (MRAPs).
Research by Samuel Bowles and Arjun Jayadev indicates that greater inequality is correlated with a greater demand for security services, which apparently stems from the need to stifle lower-class opposition, and which is manifested in violence between police and minorities.
Lobbyists: The Con Men
The top lobbyists? The US Chamber of Commerce, a consortium of business interests supporting job outsourcing and climate denial; followed by the National Association of Realtors, which seeks Congressional favors even as three-quarters of renters with incomes below the $30,000 median are "cost burdened," paying more than 30 percent of their incomes for rent.
Next come the American Medical Association, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Pharmaceutical Research, and the American Hospital Association, with Pfizer close behind. According to the Milliman Medical Index, the cost of healthcare in 2015 for a typical American family of four covered by a PPO was $24,671--nearly half the median household income. Pharmaceutical companies have successfully lobbied Congress to keep Medicare from bargaining for lower drug prices, and they pay off generic drug manufacturers to delay entry of their products into the market, thereby forcing consumers to pay the highest prices for medicine. For every $1 they spend on basic research, they invest $19 in promotion and marketing. Meanwhile, the industry has cut nearly 150,000 jobs since 2008.
Also in the top 20 are Northrop Grumman, Boeing, and Lockheed Martin, all complicit with Big Business in keeping the nation safe for profit-making. Lockheed Martin's revenues increased 15.7% after President Obama announced the addition of 250 troops in Syria.
The conspiratorial revolving door is spinning fast: Of the 352 people who left Congress alive since 2008, almost half have joined the lobbyist and related industries.
Media: The Illusionists
The popular business-oriented media insults the middle class with inane headlines and quotes that betray their ignorance about issues that matter to most of us:
- Income inequality is simply not a significant problem. (Benjamin Domenech, The Wall Street Journal)
- I define peace as the ability to defend yourself and blow your enemies into smithereens. (Sean Hannity, FOX News)
- The global atmosphere hasn't been warming lately. (Mark Phillips, CBS News)
- Global warming shouldn't even be in the top five on the list of problems our president should be worrying about. (Ed Rogers, Washington Post)
The mainstream media is complicit, of course, with its corporate bosses. As Bernie Sanders explained, "The corporate media does everything they can to keep us entertained without addressing the real issues...[Young people] don't even know that we are the only major country without healthcare for all. They don't know that in Germany or in Scandinavia college is free...Media is not telling them that...If you talk about the real issues and people get educated on the real issues, you know what happens next? They actually may want to bring about change."
Instead, the media keeps scaring us into dependency on the military/police state, with panicky reports from sources like FOX, which skipped past wars and lynchings and called ISIS "the single biggest threat in [America's] 200-year history."
Finance: The Hitmen
As our nation bemoans the violence in lower- and middle-class communities, the financial industry keeps to itself, perfecting the role of Economic Hitman that John Perkins defined on a global scale. Despite generating about 25% of all corporate profits, finance creates only about 4% of all jobs, and it has decimated middle-class homeowners and students through unpayable debt. In a direct hit to lower-class workers, the industry pays itself enough in bonuses to boost all 2.6 million U.S. fast-food workers to a $15 minimum wage.
Nothing would help the middle class more than a financial transaction tax. In Chicago, sales of $1 quadrillion (a thousand trillion dollars, 4 times more than all the money in the world), generated ZERO SALES TAX. Instead the Chicago Mercantile Exchange complained that its own taxes were too high, and they demanded and received a tax break.
In a recent letter to his Berkshire Hathaway stockholders, Warren Buffett, the beloved old man of finance, whose company has been avoiding its taxes for years, blathered: The babies being born in America today are the luckiest crop in history... America's economic magic remains alive and well.
That "economic magic" is making the American middle class disappear.
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