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The Millions Left Out by Bob Herbert |
SearchAbout John StoltenbergAbout Me Hi Darlene; I am the third generation of a German-American family. Both of my grandfathers were socialists. My father was a member of the Socialist Labor Party (SLP) in the 1930s and 1940s. I am not a socialist, but I am well acquainted with the SLP's platform. I consider the SLP to be the only socialist party that is advocating true socialism and not capitalism with some reforms tacked on. From my perspective we are on a long slow evolutionary path that involves the capitalist economic system eventually evolving into some other economic system. Also, it involves the culture that presently supports capitalism, and makes it possible, evolving into another culture that will be able to support the new economic system. "The best solution would be to replace the American capitalist economic system with an economic system that would not exploit people, destroy cultures, corrupt governments, plunder resources, etc. Of course, this is not going to happen in our lifetimes and, perhaps, for many lifetimes." |
Hi;
Below is the article titled "The Millions Left Out" by Bob Herbert that appeared in the Saturday, May 12, 2007 issue of The New York Times.
Articles such as this appeared in newspapers in capitalist America in my grandfather's day, in capitalist America in my father's day, in capitalist America in my day, now in capitalist America in my children's day and I expect that they will be appearing in newspapers in capitalist America in my grandchildren's day. If capitalism survives its current gross mismanagement, I fully expect that articles such as this will be appearing in newspapers in my great grandchildren's day and beyond.
Concurrently, the Republicans come-up with economic fiascos such as Reagonomics, the Democrats have an endless list of worthless reforms, and nothing ever changes.
That is the unsolved economic and social problems that are directly attributable to our very mature capitalist economic system go on from generation to generation. They just keep piling-up.
To make matters worse, American capitalism is patently failing in addressing very serious external problems such as Global Climate Change and Peak Oil.
Small wonder, that the American capitalist class and Corporate America are creating a fascist state for the sole purpose of securing their economic and political power. They don't have the foggiest idea how to solve the inherent problems of our very mature capitalist economic system, or the new problems confronting capitalism.
It is abundantly apparent that the sole function of the new American fascist state will be to preserve the economic power of the capitalist class and Corporate America in the face of their total failure at solving the aforementioned problems.
My positions are as follows:
(1) Whether we love it, or hate it, we are stuck with capitalism for a long, long time. This is because there aren't any viable alternative economic systems to replace capitalism and our present American culture can only support capitalism.
(2) The management of capitalism is far too important to be left to the greedy, ignorant and shortsighted capitalist class and Corporate America.
(3) In practical terms, for my particular situation, (2) comes down to this. My fat-cat Republican capitalist representative in Congress, Representative Thomas Petri has to go. Also, my fat-cat Democrat capitalist senator in Congress, Senator Herbert Kohl has to go. Both are not just absolutely worthless, they are worse than worthless. This because, whether they realize it or not, they really truly are fascists and responsible for the creation of the new American fascist state.
(4) We need new people in those positions in Congress that actually have solutions, or are willing to experiment to arrive at solutions.
(5) We need new people in those positions that will undo the fascist state that has been created to date. That is restore our democratic political process, our civil rights, the rule of law, and the separation of church and state.
(6) I don't care if these people are members of the Libertarian Party, Constitution Party, Green Party, or even Republicans or Democrats. What they have to be is real true populists, not worthless fat-cat capitalists that can get elected because they can finance their own elections. They have to aggressively restore our constitutional democracy, solve the problems inherent to our mature capitalist economic system and solve the external problems confronting our mature capitalist economic system.
(7) We are running out of time. Fascism truly is capitalism self-destructing and America has gone a long way down the road of fascism.
John P. Stoltenberg, P.E.
N8362 State Highway 67
P.O. Box 596
Elkhart Lake, WI
53020-0596
920-876-2184
jpstolten@verizon.net
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The Millions Left Out
By Bob Herbert
The New York Times
Saturday 12 May 2007
The United States may be the richest country in the world, but there are many millions - tens of millions - who are not sharing in that prosperity.
According to the most recent government figures, 37 million Americans are living below the official poverty threshold, which is $19,971 a year for a family of four. That's one out of every eight Americans, and many of them are children.
More than 90 million Americans, close to a third of the entire population, are struggling to make ends meet on incomes that are less than twice the official poverty line. In my book, they're poor.
We don't see poor people on television or in the advertising that surrounds us like a second atmosphere. We don't pay much attention to the millions of men and women who are changing bedpans, or flipping burgers for the minimum wage, or vacuuming the halls of office buildings at all hours of the night. But they're there, working hard and getting very little in return.
The number of poor people in America has increased by five million over the past six years, and the gap between rich and poor has grown to historic proportions. The richest one percent of Americans got nearly 20 percent of the nation's income in 2005, while the poorest 20 percent could collectively garner only a measly 3.4 percent.
A new report from a highly respected task force on poverty put together by the Center for American Progress tells us, "It does not have to be this way." The task force has made several policy recommendations, and said that if all were adopted poverty in the U.S. could be cut in half over the next decade.
The tremendous number of people in poverty is an enormous drag on the U.S. economy. And one of the biggest problems is the simple fact that so many jobs pay so little that even fulltime, year-round employment is not enough to raise a family out of poverty. One-fifth of the working men in America and 29 percent of working women are in such jobs.
Peter Edelman, a Georgetown law professor who was a co-chairman of the task force, said, "An astonishing number of people are working as hard as they possibly can but are still in poverty or have incomes that are not much above the poverty line."
So the starting point for lifting people out of poverty should be to see that men and women who are working are adequately compensated for their labor. The task force recommended that the federal minimum wage, now $5.15 an hour, be raised to half the average hourly wage in the U.S., which would bring it to $8.40.
The earned-income tax credit, which has proved very successful in supplementing the earnings of low-wage working families, should be expanded to cover more workers, the task force said. It also recommended expanded coverage of the federal child care tax credit, which is currently $1,000 per child for up to three children.
A crucial component to raising workers out of poverty would be an all-out effort to ensure that workers are allowed to form unions and bargain collectively. As the task force noted, "Among workers in similar jobs, unionized workers have higher pay, higher rates of health coverage, and better benefits than do nonunionized workers."
In a recent interview about poverty, former Senator John Edwards told me: "Organizing is so important. We have 50 million service economy jobs and we'll probably have 10 or 15 million more over the next decade. If those jobs are union jobs, they'll be middle-class families. If not, they're more likely to live in poverty. It's that strong."
The task force made several other recommendations, including proposals to ease access to higher education for poor youngsters, to help former prisoners find employment, to develop a more equitable unemployment compensation system, and to establish housing policies that would make it easier for poor people to move from neighborhoods of concentrated poverty to areas with better employment opportunities and higher-quality public services.
Mr. Edelman, an adviser on social policy in the Clinton administration, stressed that there is no one answer to the problem of poverty, and that in addition to public policy initiatives, it's important to address the "things people have to do within their own communities to take responsibility for themselves and for each other."
But he added, "It is unacceptable for this country, which is so wealthy, to have this many people who are left out."
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