Wednesday, August 28, 2013

America At The Economic Crossroads: The Second Gilded Age Must End

By Manifesto Joe

In 2013, America stands at the economic crossroads more starkly than perhaps ever before. The federal budget deficit, though reduced, remains staggeringly high. Two-thirds of U.S. corporations pay no federal income tax, and they employ armies of lawyers and CPAs, plus own scores of lawmakers through campaign contributions, to make sure things stay that way. Their well-paid mouthpieces tell us things can't really be any other way, that we can't be competitive by going back to an arrangement in which corporations paid 39% of the IRS take (Barlett and Steele, citing IRS figures for 1959).

There is some truth in this, and we have seen enough outsourcing and offshoring to know it. Big corporations are now armed with technology and tactics that they didn't have in 1959, and no socialist alternatives to the capitalist system are regarded as viable. Karl Marx predicted that there would be attempts to "reform" capitalism, to ameliorate its more brutal side, but that those efforts would all fail as capitalism stubbornly returns to its more primitive form. A few countries like Sweden and Norway seem to have found a comfortable coexistence of capitalism and socialism, with the mix much more weighted toward the latter than we've generally seen elsewhere in the West. But, as the social safety net is whittled down not only here but in many other countries such as Spain and Greece, the chances of other places in the West reaching a Swedenlike arrangement any time soon are quite remote.

But I don't believe that, in the long run, our corporate masters are going to get their way. The genie is out of the bottle, so to speak. Ordinary people know, from New Deal-era programs such as Social Security and institutions such as labor unions, that there actually is another path.

The Gilded Age, Part Two has been pursued mostly unabated in the U.S. for about 35 years now, and the results should be shocking. In 1982, CEO pay was 42 times that of an average worker. By 2012, pay for the former had swelled to 354 times that of the average U.S. worker. There seems to be no end to the number of apologists for this sort of obscenity, and many people have been cowed into silence as their faces are ground more savagely by the priesthood of "free markets."

Here's a link from the AFL-CIO with more details about this very organized thievery.

But there's nothing like discomfort to wake up the millions. That was what did it in the 1930s, after the first Gilded Age was at long last over. When you got nothin', you got nothin' to lose. It took a painfully long time back then, but it finally happened. And it will happen again. It's been said that history doesn't really repeat itself, but it certainly rhymes. Our corporate masters won't be able to hustle working people with "free" verse for very much longer.

At this point, people aren't uncomfortable enough. We will see that, though, and it won't be that much longer. Real disaster was averted during the meltdown that accompanied The Great Recession, and the means for the bailouts is less likely to be there next time. And there will be a next time, because clearly the high-class hustlers have learned absolutely nothing from the past five years, except perhaps that they very often end up back on top.

People in this country, and in others, saw collectively for decades that things can be different. And I don't think this is at all optimism, because what I see ahead is a lifetime of horror and struggle. Our corporate masters are discovering that they can perform many functions without employing flesh-and-blood humans to do them. But flesh and blood has to eat, has to have potable water, and will demand medical care when sick. During much of the 20th century, people in relatively affluent societies got used to taking such things almost for granted. They can't anymore -- the "social safety net" has too many gaps, and more are being torn on purpose.

We're headed for a time in which Social Security, Medicare and labor unions will be nostalgic folklore. There will be decades of illegal campfires, fights in which the faceless masses suffer horrendous losses, and coastal cities going underwater.

I'd like to see what comes out of all this in, perhaps, a century. But I'm glad that I'm 57 and that my wife and I stayed intentionally childless. I wouldn't want to see what the next two or three generations of Americans will go through. I wouldn't want to be 27 now, and certainly not 17.

Manifesto Joe Is An Underground Writer Living In Texas.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

re:
>>But, as the social safety net is
>>whittled down not only here but in
>>many other countries such as Spain
>>and Greece

One thing I'd like to point out that I don't think the U.S. media does a good job of reporting. The social safety net in Greece is indeed modest compared to most of Europe. But by U.S. standards, it is in fact still very generous.
What's interesting is that, for all their noisy demonstrations against the EU, polls show a solid majority of Greeks still want to keep the euro.
Americans like to think that we "lead" the world. But in my extensive travels in Europe, I've found that very, very few people there want a U.S.-style economic system. That's simply not ever going to happen in Europe, (despite the wishful thinking of the U.S. corporate media).
I believe that, in the end, the EU will get its act together. Generous social programs will continue to exist in Europe. The average quality of life there will continue to be relatively good. I mean, hell, for all its supposed terrible woes, Europe still to this day has better social mobility than the U.S. does.

Anonymous said...

I will live to see the horrors of which you speak. Even though I have a union job, a large portion of my income goes into gas and auto maintenance just to keep going there. I'm often so anxious when I get home from work, that I have trouble sleeping. I'm in my 30's, I've never finished college, so I know I have no future or advancement left. I feel like a conglomeration of statistics instead of a human being.

-WageslaveZ-

WeThePeople said...

Impeach Obama before it is too late. Sign the petition:
https://www.facebook.com/ImpeachPresidentObama

ARTICLES OF IMPEACHMENT OF PRESIDENT BARACK HUSSEIN OBAMA

RESOLVED, That Barack Hussein Obama, President of the United States, is impeached for high crimes and misdemeanors, and that the following article of impeachment to be exhibited to the Senate:

ARTICLE OF IMPEACHMENT EXHIBITED BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA IN THE NAME OF ITSELF AND OF ALL OF THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, AGAINST BARACK HUSSEIN OBAMA, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, IN MAINTENANCE AND SUPPORT OF ITS IMPEACHMENT AGAINST HIM FOR HIGH CRIMES AND MISDEMEANORS IN USURPING THE EXCLUSIVE PREROGATIVE OF CONGRESS TO COMENCE WAR UNDER ARTICLE 1, SECTION 8, CLAUSE 11 OF THE CONSTITUTION.

ARTICLE I

In his conduct of the office of President of the United States, Barack Hussein Obama, in violation of his constitutional oath faithfully to execute the office of President of the United States and, to the best of his ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States, and in violation of his constitutional duty to take care that the laws be faithfully executed, has usurped the exclusive power of Congress to initiate war under Article I, section 8, clause 11 of the United States Constitution.
More here:
https://www.facebook.com/ImpeachPresidentObama

Manifesto Joe said...

I think we've just seen one of the biggest reasons why the immediate future is going to be so horrible.

Old Scout said...

A learned responce to "wee the people"
You are NOT the voice of the people.
You are NOT rational.
You are NOT even accurate with your counter-factuals and factoids.
Take your tripe over to the reactionary and hatred oriented sites where you'll be praised for being so blantantly stew-peed.

Yes wee ... my great-grandmothers' term for urinating.