Mar 112013
 

An excellent video about income inequality went viral last week.  It is worth a watch and a re-watch.  

 

The animated graph in the second half is fantastic and could be an amazing tool for helping people see and understand how outrageous the wealth gap has become in America.   When you do watch, share, and discuss this video and the issue, do not fall into the trap of using the term “inequality.”  Here’s why.

I know it is easier and quicker just to say “inequality.”  But in this case brevity is doing a disservice to your argument.  It leaves you open to the charge that since you are against inequality, therefore you want equality.  This flawed rebuttal is quite catchy and is used by the right to easily tie any critique of inequality to Communism, Socialism, Nazism, and general puppy-kickingism.  It could go something like this.

Plutocrat Toady:  I keep hearing people complaining about “inequality.” I don’t like the sound of that.  It’s like they want us all to be equal, to have the same amount of money.  I do OK, but I don’t want the government to force me to give some of my money so they can redistribute it to some lazy poor people. Do you?

Innocent, yet simple working class person:  Not really.

Plutocrat Toady:  It sounds like socialism to me, and do you know who used to call themselves “socialist”?

Innocent, yet simple working class person:  Who?

Plutocrat Toady:  The USSR communist Russians and Hitler’s Nazis.  I don’t want America to be taken over by those guys.  Do you?

Innocent, yet simple working class person:  No way, man!

Plutocrat Toady:  Next, they’ll force your daughter to go out with one of those poor people that took your money.  What do you think about that redistribution?

Innocent, yet simple working class person:  Starting to really piss me off.

Plutocrat Toady:  And since we’re all equal together now, they are going to make us all start speaking Spanish, right?

Innocent, yet simple working class person:  Ay Dios Mio!  … uh, I mean, screw those guys.  I’ll keep my inequality thank you very much.  Keep your government hands off my Medicare!

 

“You want to force everybody to be equal.”  The claim is absurd, but it plays on someone’s fear of government tyranny and fear of people that are different.  Anything that taps into those fears is a great tool to divide the majority (i.e. everyone who is not Crazy Rich) and generate support for the status quo.  

If you want to save capitalism from itself, one should pre-emptively rebut this argument by choosing to add one extra word in front of every reference to inequality.  You could use “extreme,” or “massive,” or “ridiculous,” or even “ungodly.”  Those that are appalled by the implication of forcing everyone to be equal may agree that it is possible for inequality to go too far.  Many can understand that sometimes freedom needs limits.  They won’t say that the Second Amendment give individuals the right to own nuclear weapons.

 The trap has been set that if you complain about “inequality,” the reactionaries on the right (yet not everybody on the right) will regurgitate an oversimplified and intentionally misleading spin that at “you are trying to force us all to be equal.  You are a communist/socialist.  You want the government to redistribute wealth.  You want the government to take money from people and give it to poorer people.”  They want to scare you into thinking all efforts to remedy this extreme inequality — a form of rabid capitalism not healthy rational capitalism — involves taking money from everyday “working class” Americans and giving it to the poor.  They want to recast it as a black-and-white issue, that the choice is equality or inequality.

Letting those at the top grab as much of the pie as they want and can is killing the American dream.  It’s already reached the point where you are much more likely to achieve the American dream outside of America.

 

The American Dream has Left the Country: Extreme Inequality Kills Social Mobility

 

Social mobility is the core of the American Dream. Note that having high mobility does not require perfect equality. That would actually be silly. In fact, social mobility requires inequality and it goes beyond just the idea of keeping up with the Joneses. I hope to be unequal with myself, doing better in the future than I am today. People want to be able to improve their status over time.

For today, know this. I don’t care about inequality; I’m outraged at extreme inequality. Simplify this debate and we all lose.

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Dec 052012
 

One of the things holding up negotiations on the so-called fiscal cliff is a certain party’s insistance that the Bush tax cuts be extended for the top 2%. They want to prevent the rate from increasing from 35 percent to 39.6 percent.

This is for the top marginal tax rate. You are an idiot or a liar if you think that this small increase will be at all burdensome on the lives of the very rich. They want to fool you into thinking that a tax increase affects everyone the same, so that you might have some sympathy for those at the very top. The truth is different levels of income lead to different levels of lifestyle stability.

Lifestyle Stability Curve: Why it is Moral for the Very Wealthy to Pay Higher Taxes

Past a certain level, your everyday life is not really affected by changes in income. On the other end of the spectrum, the same change in income/wealth creates more dramatic differences in one’s life. On the chart, if a new tax burden moves you from Point A to Point B, your lifestyle does not change. If you move from C to D, you will feel the sacrifice.  A move from E to F has a more catastrophic effect. That’s why we’ve set up tax brackets in the first place.

I agree that there is a problem with that top bracket. The people at the $250,000 line would be impacted by our need to increase taxes on multimillionaires. The solution is add a new bracket. This is not unprecedented; we used to have dozens of them. I’ll present my idea for a new bracket in another post.

Today, know that a major part of the holdup on a fiscal cliff deal is one side’s demanding a tax break for people who don’t need the help. If they budge on the issue, they are demanding on so-called “entitlement” cuts — from the people who can’t afford to give up those very services.  If such a deal goes through, everyone will sacrifice something, but think about how their day-to-day lives will be affected.  The top 1% won’t notice a thing, while the cost of the “entitlement” service cuts will have to be paid out of the pockets of the people further down the income scale.

I’m so sick of hearing the “Crazy Rich,” their paid mouthpieces, and delusional wannabes complain about paying 39.6% Look at what they used to pay:

 

Historical Tax Rates

from visualeconsite

 

There was plenty of investment going on and paying the top marginal tax rate never sent anyone to the poorhouse. Do the math. Almost all millionaires who pay their taxes are still going to be millionaires. So quit your damn crying.

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Jun 012012
 

A month out I’m willing to declare, even discounting the mainstream media’s severe undercoverage, Occupy Wall Street’s May 1st general strike and rallies did not live up to expectations.  The Occupy movement, while still actively organizing and taking action, has begun to fade into the background.  I’ll grant you that the demotion is not entirely the movement’s fault.  The corporate media elites are more than happy to let (or push) OWS slide into the background. 
 
Having failed to reignite with the return of warmer springtime weather, perhaps Occupy has truly peaked.  However, I wouldn’t advise the “1%” (I still reject that term as too broad) to celebrate victory yet.  As Occupy “fades,” we should take some time to consider some lessons learned from the recent movements striking at unjustified concentrated power wielded to the detriment of average citizens.
 
Yes, Occupy Wall Street and the Tea Party share a common undercurrent of populist discontent (including a lot of fear and/or anger).  I would also include the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear as another expression of this populism.  Friends on the left will express shock that I’m even entertaining the idea that there is anything to admire or learn from the Tea Party.  Before you guys pass out, just think of the Tea Party as Darth Vader:  Young Skywalker knew there was some good in him even though Vader was co-opted and used as a powerful tool of the Empire.  
 
Occupy and the Tea Party’s common populist undercurrent is that some form of elite has usurped our political system (our American form of democracy) and it no longer responds to “We the People.”  I like to think of the movements’ actions as modern populists “testing the fence,” like the raptors did in Jurassic Park.  Occupy and the Tea Party’s experiences have uncovered strengths and weaknesses of the barriers and movements themselves.  These lessons should be learned to craft the next populist movement.
 
We learned from the both that co-option is a danger, to be wary of divisive so-called opinion leaders trying to jump to the front of your parade (Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin).  If an organization is giving you a bus they are going to want to steer it.  Co-option by established “allies” undermines the perceived legitimacy of the movement; true grassroots can be smothered beneath a layer of cynically applied astroturf.
 
We learned from Occupy that masses without message doesn’t translate into success. 
 
We learned from both that big crowds at rallies are still shiny objects that can get media attention.  People in attendance are making a statement with their physical presence, voting with their bodies.  The picture says, “Look at all of these people who came out to support this message (whatever it happens to be).”
 
Both evoked an activist awakening, getting new people and new generations to get up off their butts and show up at an event.
 
We learned from both about the limits of leaderlessness, that too much decentralization leads to abdication of control over the message to the movements’ more fringy participants.  You can have quality, legitimate leadership without being co-opted; it requires finding new, unaffiliated leaders from within the movement.
 
Perhaps most importantly, the Tea Party showed how it is possible to take over an establishment party from the bottom up.  Over-gerrymandered safe districts are actually fertile ground for populist candidate takeovers.  We learned from the Tea Party that if you are going to run candidates in elections, you need to vet them better.  The Tea Party sometimes had multiple favored candidates running against the establishment GOPer resulting in a split vote.  How about trying some sort of pre-primary or Tea Party caucus/convention sending your best candidate to the GOP primary?
 
We learned from both that there needs to be some control over the image of the movement.  If you don’t define your image, someone else will.

We learned from Occupy that choosing tactics that the general public find annoying can be counterproductive to growing the movement.  One writer disagrees: “Occupy’s saving grace and only power is that it is not permitted, and it is not ‘legal’”  This accomplished what exactly?  I guess it sent the message that a movement is not afraid to break a law, perhaps leading your enemies to wonder what sort of other laws can be broken in the future if the vague demands are not met.
 
Hopefully, the next movement spawned from popular disgust can learn from the lessons of the Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street.  Perhaps they will not repeat the same mistakes and find greater success.

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Feb 152012
 

Rule #5:  Defend the Moral High Ground with Nonviolence.  This one’s obvious, but not always easy.  To be successful, your class war should be as violent as the Cola Wars.
 
We have a political system that prides itself on its democratic values. Perhaps the most recognizable is majority rule. If an overwhelming majority is amassed behind an idea, our system must respond or its legitimacy will be questioned (to put it mildly). However, a movement cannot grow and deploy such a majority using or condoning violence. If you are going to have some kind of class war you must use only nonviolent means to awaken and activate the majority and then give the system its chance to respond.
 
Beyond violence, a peaceful and productive class war should reject forms of destructive and/or disrespectful behavior that do more harm than good (although they may feel good) to the movement. Some recent examples are posters of Obama as Hitler, defecating on police cars, flag burning, and glitter bombs. These are behaviors that deter others from wanting to work with you. I know, I know … those are almost always the acts of isolated idiots or even agents provocateurs, but some form of leadership should denounce and discourage it ahead of time.
 
For those who think the “Crazy Rich” would only respond to violence, here’s some consolation. The “Crazy Rich” seeing the mobilization with their own eyes, will likely perceive it as a mob that is one spark away from storming their castles, attacking their families, and eating their pets. A nonviolent crowd is intimidating to those few who oppose it. Look at what happened last year at UC Davis.
 
After a news conference concerning the infamous pepper spraying incident, university chancellor Linda Katehi left the building and walked three blocks to her car while being flanked by hundreds of silent protesters. Here’s the video:
 

 
That’s pretty tense. She looks like she’s walking The Green Mile. Others have pointed out how much it reminded them of the last scene of Hitchcock’s The Birds. Ominous.
 
I anticipate seeing some very interesting methods of protest and resistance. Currently, the promise of the American Dream is being broken for the most educated generation in our history. That is a lot of overeducated, underemployed minds that will be quite motivated and creative. Keep in mind, the law is always slow to respond to societal and technological change. You can find and exploit these loopholes. (Much like how the financial industry has done by creating make-believe products that turned our economy into a casino — all legal).
 
So Rule #5 is Defend the Moral High Ground with Nonviolence. Be creative and get your popcorn ready, America!

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Feb 062012
 

 
If you are going to have a productive and peaceful class war, you should put the other “wars” on hiatus.
 
Wedge issues are one of the biggest barriers preventing patriotic Americans from uniting to restore American capitalism and recapture America’s greatness. The Crazy Rich and their allies have used these wedge issues to divide us for decades. These are the issues they use to trick you into turning against your own best interests and those of your country. Here’s a partial list: abortion, gun control, gay rights, flag burning, immigration, Israel, racism, climate change, religion, and terrorism.
 
Yes, some of those are serious and need resolution, but 1) they are minor in comparison to the rising threat to the integrity of our political process (how power is acquired and its limits), and 2) the pursuit of wedge issues themselves is pointless because they will remain stalemates until our representative democracy can be made properly responsive and functional again.
 
How can you trust the system to fairly or effectively resolve any of these issues when the process can so easily be co-opted by just a few people? Even if you were to persuade a sizable majority to take your side on your pet issue, your efforts are in vain without a process that responds to that majority instead of the whims a very powerful few.
 
The defenders of the status quo want us to scuffle over trifles and not notice that they are looting the country’s wealth causing its greatness to crumble.
 
How do you show that you’ve adopted the wedge issue truce? When someone raises a wedge issue to divide us (or make good TV) call them on it. If they try to insert it into a debate, use the term “wedge issue” like some have used “class warfare.” Tell them, “You are trying to use wedge issues to distract and divide us from what is really important.”
 
So Class War Rule #4 is: Accept the Wedge Issue Truce. Put all of those on the back burner. Just let it go … for now. Once we “get our country back” and on the right track again, only then can it possibly be worth our time and energy to take up wedge issue debates.
 
With the wedge issues on the shelf, the working classes (composed of many different people with many different and conflicting beliefs) will find it much easier to come together to work toward greater goals.

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Jan 272012
 

Who can really claim to love the country more: the Crazy Rich, the multinational corporation, or the rest of us?
 
The Crazy Rich just want more for themselves; more money for the sake of money, more power to impose their will on the majority. If they had to choose between making the country better and making themselves even slightly richer, they will choose the latter.
 
Multinational corporations, by design, do not give a damn about this country. They may appear to do so only to the extent that it promotes their prime directive: profit. Of course a multinational corporation would favor road maintenance, because it uses those roads to move their goods. It doesn’t care about maintaining the nation’s infrastructure in order to make the country better.
 
The rest of us have a duty to tap into our patriotism. Patriotism is OK. If we love our country it follows that we want to make it the best it can be. The rest of us care more about the condition of the country because, well, we have to live here. We can’t hide in gated communities or move our operations overseas. Continue reading »

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