LOTS OF TRUTH: FERGUSON’S TEARS AND OURS

Boils down to money in politics I fear. Greed too. And look at what the message is from Ferguson, MO as of last night–from the bottom end of the 90% economically and those who feel disenfranchised or ignored or persecuted because of their color/race. The amount of evident hate is scary and discouraging, especially so when the governing class will “little note nor long remember…” after the glass is swept up and the tear gas smoke clears. Nothing to celebrate in Ferguson this Thanksgiving.

Truthdig

The Real Reason Behind the Democrats’ Big Midterm Losses

http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_real_reason_behind_the_democrats_big_midterm_losses_20141111/

Posted on Nov 11, 2014

By Robert Reich


This post originally ran on Robert Reich’s Web page.
The President blames himself for the Democrat’s big losses Election Day.
“We have not been successful in going out there and letting people know what it is that we’re trying to do and why this is the right direction,” he said Sunday.
In other words, he didn’t sufficiently tout the Administration’s accomplishments.
I respectfully disagree.
If you want a single reason for why Democrats lost big on Election Day 2014 it’s this: Median household income continues to drop.
This is the first “recovery” in memory when this has happened.
Jobs are coming back but wages aren’t.
Every month the job numbers grow but the wage numbers go nowhere.
Most new jobs are in part-time or low-paying positions. They pay less than the jobs lost in the Great Recession.
This wageless recovery has been made all the worse because pay is less predictable than ever.
Most Americans don’t know what they’ll be earning next year or even next month. Two-thirdsare now living paycheck to paycheck.
So why is this called a “recovery” at all? Because, technically, the economy is growing.
But almost all the gains from that growth are going to a small minority at the top.
In fact, 100 percentof the gains have gone to the best-off 10 percent. Ninety-five percent have gone to the top 1 percent.
The stock market has boomed. Corporate profits are through the roof. CEO pay, in the stratosphere.
Yet most Americans feel like they’re still in a recession.
And they’re convinced the game is rigged against them.
Fifty years ago, just 29 percent of voters believed government is “run by a few big interests looking out for themselves.”
Now, 79 percentthink so.
According to Pew, the percentage of Americans who believe most people who want to get ahead can do so through hard work has plummeted 14 pointssince 2000.
What the President and other Democrats failed to communicate wasn’t their accomplishments.
It was their understanding that the economy is failing most Americans and big money is overrunning our democracy.
And they failed to convey their commitment to an economy and a democracy that serve the vast majority rather than a minority at the top.
Some Democrats even ran on not being Barack Obama.
That’s no way to win. Americans want someone fighting for them, not running away from the President.
The midterm elections should have been about jobs and wages, and how to reform a system where nearly all the gains go to the top.
It was an opportunity for Democrats to shine. Instead, they hid.
Consider that in four “red” states — South Dakota, Arkansas, Alaska, and Nebraska — the same voters who sent Republicans to the Senate voted by wide margins to raisetheir state’s minimum wage.
Democratic candidates in these states barely mentioned the minimum wage.
So what now?
Republicans, soon to be in charge of Congress, will push their same old supply-side, trickle-down, austerity economics.
They’ll want policies that further enrich those who are already rich.
That lower taxes on big corporations and deliver trade agreements written in secret by big corporations.
That further water down Wall Street regulations so the big banks can become even bigger – too big to fail, or jail, or curtail.
They’ll exploit the public’s prevailing cynicism by delivering just what the cynics expect.
And the Democrats? They have a choice.
They can refill their campaign coffers for 2016 by trying to raise even more money from big corporations, Wall Street, and wealthy individuals.
And hold their tongues about the economic slide of the majority, and the drowning of our democracy.
Or they can come out swinging. Not just for a higher minimum wage but also for better schools, paid family and medical leave, and child care for working families.
For resurrecting the Glass-Steagall Act and limiting the size of Wall Street banks.
For saving Social Security by lifting the cap on income subject to payroll taxes.
For rebuilding the nation’s roads, bridges, and ports.
For increasing taxes on corporations with high ratios of CEO pay to the pay of average workers.
And for getting big money out of politics, and thereby saving our democracy.
It’s the choice of the century.
Democrats have less than two years to make it.


A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion   Publisher, Zuade Kaufman   Editor, Robert Scheer
© 2014 Truthdig, LLC. All rights reserved.

HOLIDAY READING SUGGESTIONS

Here are some books I’m reading currently that you might enjoy.  Lots of different styles and choices, but they all kept me entertained and traveling mentally in another world. Have fun and Happy Thanksgiving.

Edward O. Wilson, The Meaning of Human Existence (from the point of view of a scientist–edifying)

Wallace Stegner, The Big Rock Candy Mountain and Angle of Repose (novels, brilliantly crafted)

Robert Fisk, The Great War For Civilization  (Conquest of the middle east–last century and a half)

Daniel Yergin, The Prize  (quest for oil, power, money)

Stephen Ambrose, Undaunted Courage  (Lewis and Clark)

Karen Armstrong, Fields of Blood  (religion and the history of violence)

Richard Flanagan, The Narrow Road to the Deep North   (WW II fiction, prize-winning)

Proust, Swann’s Way (persistence and nature of memory–slow going , thick, detailed, try little doses)

Karl Ove Knausgaard, My Struggle (autobiographical, rich detail,7 volumes, riveting, easy to identify with his life)

Mark Helprin, In Sunlight and In ShadowRefiner’s Fire, and A Soldier of the Great War (well-executed novels, like eating dessert)

Daniel James Brown, The Boys in the Boat (narrative non-fiction about the quest for olympic gold in rowing 1936)

Mark Strand, Blizzard of One (poetryPulitzer Prize)

John Irving, The Water-Method Man (novel)

Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat, Spiritual Literacy: Reading the Sacred in Everyday Life  (selections, meditational, confessional)

Bart Ehrman, How Jesus Became God  (scholarly explanation how the church reframed the nature of Jesus)

Barbara Ehrenreich, Living With a Wild God (autobiographical, for the seeker)




WHERE AM I? LOST EXCEPT TO ME.

I find this more than a little disquieting–I mean, after all, I am really important to me, at least, because I am all I really have and know. Ponder this today, fellow humans.

  1. You are a tiny speck of nothingness

    This is perhaps the most surprising map of all. Think about yourself for a moment. You’re a pretty big deal, right? The things that happen to you feel very consequential, don’t they? And for you, and your family, and your friends, they are. But this is a map of our corner of the universe. It’s called Laniakea and it’s got more than 100,000 galaxies and stretches more than 500 million light years across. You can’t even see earth in it, much less your city, much less your house. “It’s hard to wrap one’s head around how enormous this is,” writes Brad Plumer. “Each of those points of light is an individual galaxy. Each galaxy contains millions, billlions, or even trillions of stars. Oh, and this all is just our little local corner of an even broader universe. There are many other galaxy superclusters out there.” You can see more in this videofrom Nature. It kind of puts things in perspective, doesn’t it?

GETTING AHEAD IN AMERICA? NOT ME!

Today I saw this chart in THE WEEK on the internet. Many economic forecasters have been describing and alerting us to this phenomenon for years, but to see it displayed graphically makes me heartsick–not only for me, but for the remainder of the 90% represented by the blue bars below. Of that 90%, I am pretty comfortable comparatively–I have a roof over my head, regular meals, can get medical attention when I need it, and can afford basic cable. There are many many Americans who are not so fortunate and can’t afford the basics of food and housing.
My own situation, however, is not entirely stable–as the stock market grows and corporate profits hit record levels, the tide is actually going out rather than raising all ships in the harbor. My economic stasis or decline is exacerbated by my inability as a 78 year old retiree (on a basically fixed income) to increase my income or asset base in any meaningful or legal way. My dentist doesn’t understand or care about this (fees go up markedly each visit), neither does my land lord (rent for the next 12 months will rise 10%), nor my super market, nor Walgreens (purveyor of prescription drugs), nor Humana (prescription insurance), nor the folks at Exxon Mobil. My cost of living just continues to go up faster than my income–with no change in my lifestyle, material possessions, security, or peace of mind.
Unequal distribution of income in America, with a minority accruing spendable income of unspeakable amounts and at outrageous rates, is rapidly creating a situation (or already has)where the only recourse will be for the 90% to take to the streets and forcibly redistribute the wealth. There may be no alternative because history tells us that we cannot count on our wealthy brethren  to self- police or self-regulate. Big money right now virtually controls the electoral process, so the democratic option of changing the system by voting is rapidly fading from sight.  Greed and “living fat” are simply too much fun and too easy to justify in a country where everything is for sale and material values, for most folks,  have long ago replaced anything remotely resembling ethical considerations with a spiritual or altruistic/idealistic foundation and focus. When you’re really enjoying yourself, it’s very hard to see, really see, the suffering around you.
I don’t think that the Founders had this sort of outcome in mind when they established our Nation. 
The question that remains is: what shape or form will the “correction” will eventually take, and how long will  it be before people decide that the system is so badly broken that they have no choice but to act to fix it on their own?
  •  
How the rich devoured the American economy, in one chart
In America, a rising economic tide lifts all boats, right? Not anymore. Pavlina Tcherneva, an economist at Bard College, plotted the distribution of income growth between the bottom 90 percent and the top 10 percent during economic expansions in the United States. The red bars are the richest 10 percent of people, the blue bars are everyone else:
Now, this is only economic expansions, which explains the wonky interval choices at the bottom — 1974 is missing, for example, because that whole year was taken up by recession. Those recessions would also probably claw back some of the rich’s income gains, since they get a lot of income from financial assets which crash in price during recessions (see p. 8 here).
But the trend here is undeniable. Economic expansions are supposed to be when the American economy distributes the fruits of growth to everyone. And that used to be true! But slowly and steadily the rich have gained on everyone else. They advance almost regardless of which party is in control of government — Reagan speeds it up, while Clinton slows it down, but not by very much.
Most staggering of all, during our current economic expansion, the bottom 90 percent is suffering declining incomes. Not only is the rising tide not lifting everyone equally, it’s actually submerging nine out of ten people.

 –  Ryan Cooper

MAKE A DIFFERENCE, ONE SOCCER BALL AT A TIME

Just signed up to donate a new design of soccer ball for kids to use anywhere.  What a great invention and idea.  Worth supporting. Make a real difference in the lives of kids with no access to regulation soccer balls or playing fields. It occurs to me that diverting the testosterone-fuelled energies of young men around the world into competitive sports is not a bad strategy for peacemakers.

http://www.oneworldfutbol.com/shop/one-world-futbol-give-one/

MOYERS ON LAWRENCE OF ARABIA: YESTERDAY’S MESS REVISITED TODAY

The problems in the Middle East are not new.  The causes continue to be rooted in outside influences and interventions that have as their primary goal self-aggrantizement. Maybe the peoples of the area will now do violently for themselves what Lawrence tried to do peacefully almost 100 years ago.

This link leads to a < 5 minute explanation–with implications for all of us today.

http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/24652-bill-moyers-essay-what-we-can-learn-from-lawrence-of-arabia

ABOUT TIME: A WORTHY INVENTION

I’m glad to see that some brainpower is being devoted to something other than video games and manufacturing artisanal booze.  Here’s something that can really make a difference. Wonderful”feel good”presentation.

http://news.yahoo.com/katie-couric-one-world-futbol-223434918.html