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Category Archives: Business/Jobs

Most consumers around the globe pay little attention to what allows them to buy many goods at extraordinarily low costs.  Yet if they considered that they were contributing to conditions that amounted to slave labor or indirectly contributed to tragedies like the recent garment factory fire in Bangladesh, would it really alter their buying habits?

 

Sorry to put a damper on your holiday buying spirit but here’s something all of us should consider when we use this time of year to spend in excess on stuff more than any other time to satisfy our consuming predispositions.  A fire in a Bangladesh garment factory killed 112 human beings this last weekend who just happened to be employed there.  Some unsettling facts have evolved regarding the deaths and though they may be shocking, they are nothing new to how such sweatshops operate.

  • Exit doors were locked from outside

  • Fire extinguishers didn’t work

  • Managers told workers to remain at their stations after the fire alarm rang.

Not exactly anyone’s ideal employer.  But then again it’s not that these 112 people and the hundreds of others that escaped with their lives had their choice of where they wanted to work and develop a career.   They were dirt poor people and were lucky to be part of a revenue source so they could feed and house their family.  I say lucky in the sense that though they had the misfortune to be born in squalor conditions, unlike some of their neighbors they weren’t begging on the streets or living off of the charity from friends and relatives to survive.

Yet it is these very conditions that allow such sweatshops to flourish and serve as a magnet for big foreign retail giants like, Wal-Mart, Sears and Target to outsource work to make clothing articles and other goods for sale back in the U.S. and European markets, always at astounding marked up prices that create great profits for such retailers & wholesalers.

Products from Wal-mart, along with Sears, Disney Pixar and Sean Combs ENYCE label were found charred in the Tazreen Fashions Ltd. factory.  Wal-Mart was quick to put out a bulletin that claims they quit doing business with Tarzeen last year when such deficiencies were discovered.

Wal-Mart said the Tazreen Fashions Ltd. factory was no longer authorized to produce merchandise for Wal-Mart but that a supplier subcontracted work to it “in direct violation of our policies.”

“Today, we have terminated the relationship with that supplier,” America’s biggest retailer said in a statement Monday. “The fact that this occurred is extremely troubling to us, and we will continue to work across the apparel industry to improve fire safety education and training in Bangladesh.”  SOURCE

Perhaps this let’s them off of the hook for the time being along with Disney who also released a similar statement late Wednesday.  Sears and the other Western brands however that were doing business with this factory have yet to distance themselves so they clearly need to be held accountable for their association with someone who was in clear violation of safety standards.

I suspect that we will get the usual gratuitous apologies from these large corporations and who will swear that any future contracts with foreign manufacturers will enforce the safety standards that are supposed to be a part of the foreign trade agreements like NAFTA or The South Asian Free Trade Area (SAFTA), which Bangladesh is a partner to.  The record shows however that enforcement of such standards is weak and often overlooked by businesses on both sides of the agreements.

Anything that impacts profits will always run up against barriers, even if it means human degradation and loss of life.  We often put on a compassionate face here away from the dank, dark working conditions that pays on average a dollar a day for 8, 10 & 12 hour shifts in foreign sweatshops.

The burned out remains of the garment factory where 112 people were killed from fire.

But does all the blame lie with businesses who work with such people, deliberately or otherwise?   Yes, these things are horrible and someone should do something about it.  However, a day or two after such tragedies occur the force that keeps these facilities operating is right back it, with the memory of such horrible scenes completely erased.  That force is people like you and I who flock to the malls to buy the latest fashions made by other humans under conditions that would be considered nothing less than slave labor by most Westerners.

I don’t fault the principle many companies have used to justify moving their business to the cheaper foreign labor markets.  I don’t like it but businesses are after all here to make a profit in any way they can.  They don’t have a heart and soul, contrary to what some Supreme Court justices here might think.  It is this sole factor that distinguishes humans from entities formed to generate revenue and yet the view by many free-marketers that dispassionate corporations are people ignores what makes us truly human – and THAT only resides within people made of flesh and blood.  Not stone, metal and glass.

Any consideration of the human toll by “corporate people” is often weighed in terms of how it will affect profits and the publicity that can be garnered by appearing to put people above profits.   But there will always be those enterprises that work in the shadows of such noble-appearing ideals who undermine the health and safety of those who are there only to maximize margins that create golden parachutes for Executives and large dividends for investors and stock holders.

This tragedy, like others similar to it, will be marked with platitudes and affirmations, declaring that things need to and will improve.  Scorn will be cast by public officials toward those who have no consideration for their fellow man and harsh sentences may be meted out to a few lower echelon managers.  This will all occur however with a wink and a nod amongst those who profit from such low-cost conditions.  Then in another year or two, if not sooner, a similar tragedy will occur and once again the consuming public will display outward emotions of shock and outrage.

However, as long as this occurs on foreign soil where the people are viewed inferior by Westerners, real concern will never materialize.  Not the type anyway that will force needed changes or alter the buying habits of a people who just can’t seem to get enough of cheaply made goods to fulfill some inane urge to possess that which clutters their homes, only to be tossed out with little sign of wear and tear for the next latest fad or gadget.

Even though I have learned to live with less and hang on to it until it can’t be repaired any further as I have gotten older, I wish I could exclude myself totally from the practice of buying cheap goods from foreign sources.  Sources that could well resemble the conditions that that garment factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh existed under.  Maybe by publishing this to my blog I can help myself realize that caving to the consuming urges created by marketers who exploit the poor indigent populations in third world nations could conceivably contribute to the loss of life there.   I can try to change my consumption impulses.  I can – and should – at least try.

Not to belittle the serious nature of my topic with this humorous skit by George Carlin, but it perhaps provides the best insight on what seems to be our pathological compulsion to own “stuff”.


Clearly, the technological wonders of our capitalist system have not released human beings from the burden of work. They have brought us more work. They have not brought most of us more freedom, but less. – Lynn Parramore

Reprinted from  the Naked Capitalism Blog

Fifty Shades of Capitalism: Pain and Bondage in the American Workplace

By Lynn Parramore, a contributing editor at Alternet. Cross posted from Alternet

If the ghost of Ayn Rand were to suddenly manifest in your local bookstore, the Dominatrix of Capitalism would certainly get a thrill thumbing through the pages of E.L. James’ blockbuster Fifty Shades of Grey.

Rand, whose own novels bristle with sadomasochist sexy-time and praise for the male hero’s pursuit of domination, would instantly approve of Christian Grey, the handsome young billionaire CEO who bends the universe to his will.

Ingénue Anastasia Steele stumbles into his world — literally — when she trips into his sleek Seattle office for an interview for the college paper. When she calls him a “control freak,” the god-like tycoon purrs as if he has received a compliment.

“’Oh, I exercise control in all things, Miss Steele,’ he says without a trace of humor in his smile. ‘I employ over forty thousand people…That gives me a certain responsibility – power, if you will.’”

She will. Quivering with trepidation, Anastasia signs a contract to become Christian’s submissive sex partner. Reeled in by his fantastic wealth, panty-sopping charm, and less-than-convincing promise that the exchange will be to her ultimate benefit, she surrenders herself to his arbitrary rules on what to eat, what to wear, and above all, how to please him sexually. Which frequently involves getting handcuffed and spanked. “Discipline,” as Christian likes to say.

Quoting industrial tycoon Andrew Carnegie, Christian justifies his proclivities like an acolyte of Randian Superman ideology: “A man who acquires the ability to take possession of his own mind may take possession of anything else to which he is justly entitled.” (Rand’s worship of the Superman obliged to nothing but his intellect is well-known and imbued with dark passions; she once expressed her admiration for a child murderer’s credo, “What is good for me is right,” as “the best and strongest expression of a real man’s psychology I have heard” in a 1928 diary.)

Christian Grey, our kinky CEO, started his literary life as a vampire when Erika Leonard, the woman behind the pseudonym “E.L. James,” published the first version of her novel episodically on a Twilight fan site, basing the story on the relationship between Stephenie Meyers’ love couple Edward Cullen and Bella Swan. It was later reworked and released in its current form. Gone was Edward the vampire, replaced by Christian the corporate slave-master.

Drunk on the intoxicants of wealth and power, Fifty Shades of Grey hints at a sinister cultural shift that is unfolding in its pages before our eyes. The innocent Anastasias will no longer merely have their lifeblood slowly drained by capitalist predators. They’re going to be whipped, humiliated and forced to wear a butt-plug. The vampire in the night has given way to the dominating overlord of a hierarchical, sadomasochistic world in which everybody without money is a helpless submissive.

Welcome to late-stage capitalism.

 

Invisible Handcuffs

 

This has been coming for some time. Ever since the Reagan era, from the factory to the office tower, the American workplace has been morphing for many into a tightly-managed torture chamber of exploitation and domination. Bosses strut about making stupid commands. Employees trapped by ridiculous bureaucratic procedures censor themselves for fear of getting a pink slip. Inefficiencies are everywhere. Bad management and draconian policies prop up the system of command and control where the boss is God and the workers are so many expendable units in the great capitalist machine. The iron handmaidens of high unemployment and economic inequality keep the show going.

How did this happen? Economists known as “free-market fundamentalists” who claim Adam Smith as their forefather like to paint a picture of the economy as a voluntary system magically guided by an “invisible hand” toward outcomes that are good for most people. They tell us that our economy is a system of equal exchanges between workers and employers in which everybody who does her part is respected and comes out ahead.

Something has obviously gone horribly wrong with the contract. Thieving CEOs get mega-yachts while hard-working Americans get stagnant wages, crappy healthcare, climate change, and unrelenting insecurity. Human potential is wasted, initiative punished and creativity starved.

 

Much of the evil stems from the fact that free-market economists who still dominate the Ivy League and the policy circles have focused on markets at the expense of those inconvenient encumbrances known as “people.” Their fancy mathematical models make calculations about buying and selling, but they tend to leave out one important thing: production. In other words, they don’t give a hoot about the labor of those who sustain the economy. Their perverted religion may have something to say about unemployment or wages – keeping the former high and the latter low — but the conditions workers face receive nary a footnote.

Michael Perelman, one of a small group of heretical economists who question this anti-human regime, draws attention to the neglect, abuse and domination of workers in his aptly named book,The Invisible Handcuffs: How Market Tyranny Stifles the Economy by Stunting Workers. He reveals that instead of a system of fair exchanges, we have “one in which the interests of employees and employers are sharply at odds.” This creates conditions of festering conflict and employers who have to take ever-stronger measures to exert control. Hostility among workers thrives, which results in more punishment. Respect, the free flow of information, inclusive decision-making – all the things that would make for a productive work environment — fly out the window. The word of the manager is the law, and endless time and energy is expended rationalizing its essential goodness.

Americans are supposed to be people who love freedom above everything else. But where is the citizen less free than in the typical workplace? Workers are denied bathroom breaks. They cannot leave to care for a sick child. Downtime and vacations are a joke. Some – just ask who picked your tomatoes – have been reduced to slave-like conditions. In the current climate of more than three years of unemployment over 8 percent, the longest stretch since the Great Depression, the worker has little choice but to submit. And pretend to like it.

 

A medieval peasant had plenty of things to worry about, but the year-round control of daily life was not one of them.  Perelman points out that in pre-capitalist societies, people toiled relatively few hours over the course of a year compared to what Americans work now. They labored like dogs during the harvest, but there was ample free time during the off-seasons. Holidays were abundant – as many as 200 per year. It was Karl Marx, in his Theory of Alienation, who saw that modern industrial production under capitalist conditions would rob workers of control of their lives as they lost control of their work. Unlike the blacksmith or the shoemaker who owned his shop, decided on his own working conditions, shaped his product, and had a say in how his goods were bartered or sold, the modern worker would have little autonomy. His relationships with the people at work would become impersonal and hollow.

Clearly, the technological wonders of our capitalist system have not released human beings from the burden of work. They have brought us more work. They have not brought most of us more freedom, but less.

Naked domination was not always the law of the land. In the early 1960s, when unions were stronger and the New Deal’s commitment to full employment still meant something, a worker subjected to abuse could bargain with his employer or simply walk. Not so today. The high unemployment sustained by the Federal Reserve’s corporate-focused obsession with “fighting inflation” (code for “keeping down wages”) works out well for the sado-capitalist. The unrelenting attack on government blocks large-scale public works programs that might rebalance the scale by putting people back on the job. The assault on collective bargaining robs the worker of any recourse to unfair conditions. Meanwhile, the tsunami of money in politics drowns the democratic system of rule by the people. And the redistribution of wealth toward the top ensures that most of us are scrapping too hard for our daily bread to fight for anything better. The corporate media cheer.

 

Turning the Tables

In the early ’70s, the S&M counterculture scene followed the rise of anti-authoritarian punk rock, providing a form of transgressive release for people enduring too much control in their daily lives. Bondage-influenced images hit the mainstream in 1980 — the year the union-busting Ronald Reagan was elected president — in the form of a workplace comedy, 9 to 5, which became one of the highest grossing comedies of all time. 9 to 5 struck a chord with millions of Americans toiling in dead-end jobs ruled by authoritarian bosses. Audiences howled with joy to see three working women act out their fantasies of revenge on a workplace tyrant by suspending him in chains and shutting his mouth with a ball-gag.

More recently, the 2011 film Horrible Bosses follows the plot of three friends who decide to murder their respective domineering, abusive bosses. The film exceeded financial expectations, raking in over $28 million in the first three days. It went on to become the highest grossing black comedy film of all time.

The fantasy of turning the tables on the boss speaks to the deep-seated outrage that trickle-down policies and the war on workers has wrought. People naturally want to work in a rational, healthy system that offers them dignity and a chance to increase their standard of living and develop their potential. When this doesn’t happen, the social and economic losses are profound. Today’s workers are caught in Perelman’s “invisible handcuffs” – both trapped and blinded by the extent to which capitalism restricts their lives.

 

The market has become a monster, demanding that we fit its constraints. As long as we ignore this, the strength of the U.S. economy will continue to erode. Freedom and equality, those cornerstones of democracy, will diminish. For now, many working people have unconsciously accepted the conditions that exist as somehow natural, unaware of how the machine is constructed and manipulated to favor elites. Fear and frustration can even make us crave authority. We collaborate in our own oppression.

Just ask Anastasia Steele, whose slave contract spells out her duties with business-like efficiency:

Does the submissive consent to:

-Bondage with rope
-Bondage with leather cuffs
-Bondage with handcuffs/shackles/manacles
-Bondage with tape
-Bondage with other

Yes! She consents. The hypnotic consumption Christian offers in a world replete with fancy dinners and helicopter rides – goodies that will be revoked if she fails to obey — overturns her natural desire for free will. Once Anastasia has signed on the dotted line, her master rewards her with a telling gift that is often the first “present” an office employee receives: “I need to be able to contact you at all times…I figured you needed a BlackBerry.”

Her first note to him on her new gadget asks a question: “Why do you do this?”

“I do this,” Christian answers, “because I can.”

Until we can link ourselves together to change this oppressive system, the Christian Greys will remain fully in control.


On it’s way back down, the jobless rate hit a number last week that it hasn’t seen since Obama took office in January 2009.  This is a further indication that  the economic recovery, albeit slow, is gaining momentum.  So naturally the GOP is finding every cause it can to downplay something that has celebratory significance.


I received my routine e-mail from my Congressman the other day, Republican Michael Burgess of the Texas 26th district.  It came on the heals of great economic news about the better-than-expected job growth in January.  But you got the clear impression that Mr. Burgess wasn’t hopeful about this and in fact started blaming Obama for failing to revive the economy at a much faster pace.  This of course is understandable in light of the fact that the Republican/TeaParty has worked so hard to portray all of Obama’s efforts as a failure.  For the reality to expose their misrepresentation of the current administration’s economic policies, it makes it difficult for them to speak at all with feet placed firmly in their mouths.

Why is congressman Burgess dejected over the lowered jobless rate?

The inference here by Congressman Burgess, and by default the GOP, is that there is a magic bullet “out there” that only they possess which can restore our economy to an earlier time before it started plummeting in late 2007.  By his count there has been some 20 bills passed by the GOP-controlled House to effect this silver bullet solution but oddly this magically powerful projectile has been unable to penetrate the Democrat-controlled Senate.  Not so oddly however if you scratch the surface of these Orwellian named pieces of legislation where you’ll find that the ammo that Burgess and his Party are shooting rounds with are the same old blanks of trickle down economics, eliminating critical government oversight and tax cuts for the wealthy 1%.

Why these people insist that what didn’t work previously will somehow miraculously work now is Einstein’s definition of insanity that assert’s “doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.”  To suggest also that it is easy to reverse the mess that got us where we are today after decades of mismanagement is both naive and disingenuous of Burgess and his crony capitalist partners.

It’s true that we have not recovered at a faster pace than we could have but this as much a factor of an obstructionist Party who is more focused on “making Obama a one-term president” than finding real, proven solutions to our unemployment issues.  Continuing to vote for legislation that sends jobs overseas and subsidizes highly profitable agriculture and fossil fuel businesses while balking on those that help start-up 21st century green technology is not conducive to rapid economic growth.  It doesn’t help either to kill millions of public sector jobs and negatively impact spending by opposing an increase for the minimum wage, unemployment benefits and objecting to a continuance of the payroll tax cut.

Likewise, the continued fantasy that pure capitalism is the holy grail and capable of lifting all boats on a rising tide has seen evidence that only the wealthy truly benefit from a system that is supported more and more by a government that carries water for corporate America.  The income disparity in this country has accelerated over the last 30 years since the Reagan administration began stripping every federal safeguard to prevent abuses by the private sector.

With unfettered ability, so-called “free-markets” have manipulated the resources of working class people around the world where the wealthiest income earners gained almost exponentially over other income groups.

[T]he Congressional Budget Office found that, from 1979 to 2007, the average real after-tax household income for the 1 percent of the population with the highest incomes rose 275 percent. For the rest of the top 20 percent of earners, it rose 65 percent. But it rose just 18 percent for the bottom 20 percent.  SOURCE 

Financiers who run those institutions that are “too big to fail”, which conservatives helped create with lax regulations and exploiting policies that were aimed at making homeownership a reality for more people, have shown us what really matters to them.  As they loaded the housing market with predatory loans and credit default swaps sold to unsuspecting investors using the pension funds set aside by retiring working class people, the markets crashed under the limited regulation policies supported by all Republicans today.  Millions of American wage earners joined the ranks of the unemployed not seen since Reagan was President while millions more were left underwater on their home loans.

Speaking of the patron saint of many contemporary Republicans, their no-compromise, tax-cuts-for-the-rich stances are not only counter productive but not reflective of a Reagan presidency that had to raise taxes four times and who once chastised members of his own Party who thought “Compromise’ was a dirty word”.  He became impatient with congressional Republicans who “couldn’t face the fact that they couldn’t get [everything they] wanted … all at once.”

It’s both predictable and lamentable that the messages from our Congressional representatives in the GOP offer nothing new while spending far too much time berating the efforts of the opposition Party who are taking action not favored by the status quo in an attempt to get this economy up and running again.  What we get instead from   people like Michael Burgess are discouraging and ineffectual cultural war messages that seethe against gays, abortion, prayer in school and so-called traditional marriage.

Both Parties employ their own negative issues about each other to jockey for control but come on Congressman Burgess – give us break.  243,000 new jobs last month is something to be upbeat about.  Forget about Party politics, in this case at least.  If you can’t hold your criticism until you see this trend not holding then at least how about an “atta boy” for this bit of good news right now that says Good for you America!


 

I’ve been working part-time at a delightful catering service called “Extreme Cuisine”.  It’s been the perfect outlet for me after being laid off from my 18-year career with a home builder back in October, 2009.  Unable to find full-time work with equal or near-equal compensation I decided to go in that direction I was being reluctantly pulled towards – early retirement.

I was fortunate enough to have built up a savings in my 401k over nearly two decades and with my wife still working full-time as a school nurse, I had the resources to clear all my debt, including our mortgage, pay myself a small stipend each month and access health care coverage through my wife’s employer.  I really wasn’t ready to retire in the fashion I wanted but it seems fate intervened and forced a lesser form of that lifestyle on me, ready or not.  I count myself fortunate compared to the millions still out there looking for full-time work.

Working is for me, as for many people, about more than just bringing home a paycheck.  It’s a source of social connection and allowing your creative side to manifest itself, even if at a level that doesn’t completely fulfill you.  I tried to fill this void at first by volunteering.  I worked with elementary school kids a couple of semesters helping them with their reading and writing skills but surprisingly lost interest after that.  I guess I’ve lost that inner child one needs to connect with young kids today.

I also worked for a hospice service briefly too.  Most of that time was spent with an aging WWII vet who was mostly confined to bed and was quickly losing his ability to think clearly.  I would encourage him to talk about his life, especially his military service and his job experience as a tool man for oil rigs in foreign ports.  His wife had died about a year earlier and nearly all of his five children lived far enough away to prevent any daily or even weekly visits.  He eventually lapsed into a semi-comatose state and because he had a DNR (do not resuscitate) order, was kept on pain-killing medications before expiring from an inoperable stomach tumor.

Doing this kind of work requires lots and lots of heart.  I lean more towards the cognitive aspects of human interaction than I do the emotional.  Thank God for those people who are cut out of for this kind of humanitarian service.

I began to think I might never really find that kind of “work” experience that appealed to my need for social interaction and contributing meaningfully to some effort.  After being unemployed for nearly a year I also realized that age had began to creep in on me and my ability to work a full 8, 9 or 10 hours day was becoming something of the past.  A mid-afternoon nap has not only now become something to look forward to each day but gives me a boost of energy to allow me more creative time for writing.  I have no shame in admitting that getting 40-50 winks each day is part of my daily regimen.

Then the perfect opportunity availed itself to me.  My wife informed me that a fellow nurse friend of hers had a sister, Kathleen, who owned a small catering service and was looking for some part-time help.  I’ve never had any “kitchen” experience other than what little I do at home and on my grill during summer months but this type of work was non-threatening and actually piqued my interests.  I called Kathleen the next day and she invited me to come out and interview with her business partner, Matt.  I went to work that next day.

The whole environment at “Extreme Cuisine”, is pretty much a family affair.  Kathleen’s two adult children, Renee and Ryan, work there routinely along with other family members when the need arises, like a large festive event.  EC prepares the food, delivers and serves it up too.  Everyone else who works there are young also, some who attend college full time and even a few high schoolers.  This mixture of people, oddly enough, seems to have provided the perfect blend for me to work with.

Renee has a beautiful voice and often breaks out singing in a fashion that has you wondering why she doesn’t go pro.  She’s been married a couple of years but you would think they were married last week the way she speaks often and admirably about her husband, Michael.  I hope she retains that feeling.  The cynic in me says time will diminish that some but not her devotion to her marriage.

Ryan, a couple of years younger than Renee, has recently earned his wings as a Sous chef.   He completed his training at the Culinary School of Ft. Worth and has plans to work for his Mom’s company at least until other opportunities open up to him.  Ryan is also about to join the ranks of newly weds.  He and his fiance, Hannah, have made plans to tie the knot this June.

Recent Culinary graduate and sous chef Ryan with proud mom, Chef Kathleen

Both of these young people have adopted me as their “grandpa” figure; a position I rather enjoy.  Somehow the gray hair of mine gives off that air of being a kindly elder gentleman; at least that’s the perspective I allow myself. Two of the college students who work there are Mark and Ariel and as is the case at many job sites, these two have found one another and are now more than work mates.  I think they’ve been dating for about a year now.

Along with these young adults there are also Kathleen’s nieces, Elizabeth and Rebecca, both in college and who fill in when needed and as classes allow.  Daniel and Austin are the high school co-workers, and Jake and Brandon, former classmates of Ryan’s, pretty much make up the “regulars” at EC.

The catering business is one of those that is pretty much boom or bust.  The holidays are the busiest naturally but during this down economy even these periods are not as fulfilling as they have been in times past.  There will be some weeks where I may work only a day or two.

But their product is what keeps bringing people back.  I have tasted some of the richest desserts and most savory meats ever while working there.  A sample of their taste delights can be found at their website here.   Click on the Gallery link at the top of the page to view what is in store for those who order from Extreme Cuisine Catering.

For me personally however, it’s the camaraderie I share with everyone there, including  Chefs Kathleen and Matt.  They have all enriched my life on a daily basis and have gone above and beyond on certain occasions.  This last Veteran’s Day they honored my time in the military.  I was presented a delicious white frosting cake and a handsome and sturdy rocking chair with the Marine Corps logo emblazoned on the top rail of the back support.   That’s me setting in it pictured below at the kitchen with the EC gang.  Because we know each other’s birthday dates from our Facebook pages, no one escapes a rendition of the birthday song on their special day, often led by Arial.

From left to right: Jake, Daniel, Chef Ryan, me, Austin, Renee, Mark, Arial and Brandon


I have been fortunate to find a place like this that I can still stay active in.  I work mornings and am able to leave after lunch, giving me time to do what I like most these days – nap and write on my blog.

 

I am not enticed to stay there because I rely on this job for employee benefits I was requiring and accustomed to with my previous full-time job.  This small business operation like many others struggles to make payroll each week.   But it is such operations as this that, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration:

•    Represent 99.7 percent of all employer firms.
•    Employ half of all private sector employees.
•    Pay 44 percent of total U.S. private payroll, and
•    Generated 65 percent of net new jobs over the past 17 years.

What can’t be reflected in such statistics though is the relationships that form between a small group of people.  I feel certain that the success of Extreme Cuisine Catering is more than just their fine food.  It is the workmanship of people who feel comfortable with each other.  Somewhere I’m sure there are other statistics that tell us what common sense does – the less stress we experience in our lives, the more productive we are.

I have gained more than learning how best to prepare tasty salad dressings and skin a cantaloupe with little to no waste at EC.  I have gained new friendships that fill that void we all need to be productive members of the communities we live in.

 


“I argue that the right has quite deliberately structured markets in a way that have the effect of redistributing income upward. The upward redistribution of the last three decades did not just happen, it was engineered.”  - Dean Baker, co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research

Though many on the right , especially within corporate-friendly GOP ranks,  are accusing the OccupyWallStreet (OWS) movement of inciting “class warfare”, it was Warren Buffet who affirmed back in 2005 that class warfare did indeed exist, but it was his side that was winning.  In a CNN interview with Lou Dobbs Buffett suggested that we should raise taxes on the wealthy to fix the projected shortfalls in Social Security that were sure to occur as the aging baby boomers retired.  Dobbs called this a “progressive idea” and made sure that what Buffet was saying was that he (Buffett) supported rich people paying more.

BUFFETT: Yeah. The rich people are doing so well in this country.  I mean, we never had it so good.

DOBBS: What a radical idea

BUFFETT: It’s class warfare, my class is winning, but they shouldn’t

The reality though is that class warfare started long before Buffett’s comments 6 years ago and the evidence heavily favors the position that the wealthy interests in this country formally initiated it.

If we work from the premise that grievances toward the excessively wealthy result from a failure of many to benefit from the resources that they helped produce or are willing to produce and that tax rates for lower income groups are higher than many in the top 1%, a case can be made to uphold who is in fact really guilty of generating class warfare between the haves and have-nots.  It is deprivation and hoarding that leads to class warfare.  Most in the 99% are deprived of things like quality health care and education while those in the 1% hoard much of the wealth that was generated by the labor and energy of many in the 99%.

A Paradigm Shift From Meeting Sustainable Actions to Greed

The capitalist concept that what my labor produces belongs to me and me alone is justifiable, primarily when what your labor produces sustains you and your family.  Any excess you gain beyond this to a point is also justifiable so you can put some aside for future needs to stave off conditions that negatively impact your productive capabilities, such as illnesses, physical deterioration, “acts of God” and social conflicts such as wars.

Beyond these fundamental needs we reach a point where wanting more for the sake of having more is an unnatural behavior, a sickness of sorts, that has manifested itself in our contemporary way life.   It is not only detrimental to those who hoard great amounts (wasting resources and time to protect their gains) but its accumulation reduces the available resources for others to meet sustainable levels.  When this imbalance occurs the natural animal instinct is to fight and take what is needed to survive.  In the corporate world this often meant that you had to suppress competitors from all directions, be it a fellow entrepreneur or the government representing the general welfare of its citizens.

This turn for grabbing more of what was out there seems to have escalated as the country expanded Westward and the technology from industrial revolution made heretofore men of modest means very wealthy.  The fact that there were vast resources in this country to be exploited and that men who had dreams of capitalizing from it were encouraged by our new government and a new spirit of the people who sought to free themselves from a system where only a few were in control.  Americans benefitted from improved forms of transportation like the railroads and mass production of goods that impacted economic growth.

Ultimately though resources started to diminish and as is usually the case, control of what there was became concentrated in the hands of a few, leaving the rest of us dependent on them.  With less competition the captains of industry strengthened their positions through monopolies and other non-competitive forms of behavior, which included payola to elected officials to enact and support policies that enhanced corporate wealth.

There evolved a capitalist view of Herbert Spencer’s theory of evolution where only the fastest, strongest and smartest succeeded in working their way to the top. which like most superficial statements first appear to be common sense.  But this “survival of the fittest” concept that Spencer coined seven years before Darwin’s theory of evolution was published, tended to skip over the ruthless nature of free-marketers in their haste to get to the top.

Herbert Spencer based his concept of social evolution, popularly known as “Social Darwinism,” on individual competition. Spencer believed that competition was “the law of life” and resulted in the “survival of the fittest.”

“Society advances,” Spencer wrote, “where its fittest members are allowed to assert their fitness with the least hindrance.” He went on to argue that the unfit should “not be prevented from dying out.“  SOURCE

In real Darwinian evolution though those species that succeed do so on conditions that tend to favor them not of their own creation.  One bird species may succeed where others fail because the color of their plumage does a better job of camouflaging them from predators.  Corporate Barons that evolved in the late 19th century manufactured their own camouflage by manipulating our legal system to enhance their opportunities, which in many cases granted them predatory powers in the business world.  The legal system, where there was supposed to be justice for all, began to favor those who had the greatest wealth that would influence the self-interest of legislators rather than promoting a level playing field for everyone.

Missing also from the corporate view of “survival of the fittest” was the human compassion that had become a learned trait as man evolved but which has been forced into the background, and even demonized by some free marketers like Ayn Rand, who placed competition above everything else and all that that can entail.

He Who Controls The Money Supply of the Nation …

In words that could well fit into today’s narrative with those active in the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement, Mary Elizabeth Lease, an American lecturer, writer, and political activist stated back in 1890 that “Wall Street owns the country…. Money rules…. Our laws are the output of a system which clothes rascals in robes and honesty in rags. The [political] parties lie to us and the political speakers mislead us.”

Lease’s words reflected the mood of the American public during the period we call the Gilded Age, where Robber Barons dominated all facets of life.  This was the era where sweat shop labor worked for pennies a day making it nearly impossible to afford available health care or support a family to provide basic nutrition, clothing and housing needs.  Too often this required using the children to work in the unsafe conditions to supplement the family income instead of allowing them to get a basic education.  The dream of moving West and finding land to make a life for yourself was slowly disappearing.

Many of the social and economic reforms won by the efforts of people like Mary Lease elevated many people out of utter poverty but little reform had been done to control the captains of the financial industry and their connections with those in Congress.  Without reasonable regulations to rein in the excessive greed on Wall Street, the stock market crashed in 1927, allowing the Great Depression to sweep away the financial gains that had been made only a few short years earlier, leaving one-fourth of all wage earners unemployed.

Once again, reform was necessary to correct the abuses foisted on the nation from a self-serving corporate mindset.

In the 1930s, Franklin Delano Roosevelt saved American capitalism from its own self-inflicted wounds by erecting a new financial infrastructure—often over the vociferous opposition of the bankers and investors whose poor judgment had helped precipitate the Great Depression. During the New Deal, the government reacted to a disastrous systemic failure by creating the sort of backstops, insurance, and risk-spreading mechanisms the market had failed to develop on its own, such as deposit insurance, federal securities registration, and federally sponsored entities that would insure mortgages.  SOURCE

…Controls the Nation”

Today, history is repeating itself and the class warfare initiated by those who fought these earlier reforms are back in force and have assimilated themselves in our culture in ways that many do not even recognize.  The ramifications have been disastrous for most of the working population.

In 1970, CEOs made $25 for every $1 the average worker made. Due to technological advancements, production and profit levels exploded from 1970 – 2000. With the lion’s share of increased profits going to the CEO’s, this pay ratio dramatically rose to $90 for CEOs to $1 for the average worker.

As ridiculous as that seems, an in-depth study in 2004 on the explosion of CEO pay revealed that, including stock options and other benefits, CEO pay is more accurately $500 to $1.

If our income had kept pace with compensation distribution rates established in the early 1970s, we would all be making at least three times as much as we are currently making. How different would your life be if you were making $120,000 a year, instead of $40,000?  SOURCE

In an excellent essay by Bill Moyers we learn that two men were responsible for inspiring class warfare as a reaction to government efforts intended to protect the health and safety of millions of Americans.

The first of these was Lewis Powell, a board member of the death-dealing tobacco giant Philip Morris and a future justice of the Supreme Court.  It was the new decade of the 1970’s.

Big business was being forced to clean up its act. Even Republicans had signed on. In 1970 President Nixon put his signature on the National Environmental Policy Act and named a White House Council to promote environmental quality. A few months later millions of Americans turned out for Earth Day. Nixon then agreed to create the Environmental Protection Agency. Congress acted swiftly to pass tough amendments to the Clean Air Act, and the EPA announced the first air pollution standards. There were new regulations directed at lead paint and pesticides. Corporations were no longer getting away with murder.

To conservatives like Powell, these actions were viewed as an “attack on the American free enterprise system.”  Lewis Powell didn’t see the environmental threat that commercial industries, their wealthy executives and investors were creating for everyone as they sought to increase profits and dividends.  Powell saw the actions of people demanding that their government promote environmental quality posing a threat to the profit margins and investment income of those at the top of the income pyramid.

Using the services of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Powell spurred his fellow corporatists on in a memo dated August 23rd,1971, urging them to fight back hard.

Build a movement. Set speakers loose across the country. Take on prominent institutions of public opinion—especially the universities, the media and the courts. Keep television programs “monitored the same way textbooks should be kept under constant surveillance.” And above all, recognize that political power must be “assiduously [sic] cultivated; and that when necessary, it must be used aggressively and with determination” and “without embarrassment.”

Powell imagined the Chamber of Commerce as a council of war. Since business executives had “little stomach for hard-nosed contest with their critics” and “little skill in effective intellectual and philosophical debate,” they should create think tanks, legal foundations and front groups of every stripe. These groups could, he said, be aligned into a united front through “careful long-range planning and implementation…consistency of action over an indefinite period of years, in the scale of financing available only through joint effort, and in the political power available only through united action and united organizations.”

In his essay, Moyers informs us – through the writings of historian Kim Phillips-Fein – that, “many who read [Powell’s] memo cited it afterward as inspiration for their political choices.”  Corporate lobbyists went from a small coterie of 175 registered firms in 1971 to today’s 11,195, spending $2.95 billion dollars in 2009 alone.  According to Texas populist Jim Hightower, that’s more than six times greater than the total spent by all consumer,environmental, worker, and other non-corporate groups combined.”  SOURCE

Building a Class-Warfare Infrastructure


Moyers tells us that the next principal who elevated the class warfare was Nixon’s Treasury Secretary, William Simon.  His book, A Time for Truth “argued that ‘funds generated by business’ must ‘rush by multimillions’ into conservative causes to uproot the institutions and the ‘heretical strategy’ of the New Deal.”  Remember, the “New Deal” was the efforts of the Roosevelt administration to not only bring the nation out of the Great Depression through job creation but to create barriers that prevent the excesses of Wall Street to occur again while they helped construct a level playing field for what would later become the greatest middle-class culture the world had ever seen.

It was clearly Simon’s intention to escalate the hysteria generated by Lewis and incite wealthy business owners to engage in a type of warfare with those who were being exploited and deprived of the means to sustain themselves.  In 1971 the Nixon administration imposed wage and price controls in an attempt to curb inflation.  It was only supposed to last 90 days but wound up lasting nearly 3 years.  After it’s failure was ended in 1974, wages dropped and stagnated for nearly two decades and by 1997 they were still lower than the average wage of 1967.

It was felt that the government role in wage setting during the years of controls had no lasting effect on labor wages but Economist Eric Nilsson with California State University’s Department of Economics disputes this notion.  Nilsson found that it’s most likely that “the government-imposed wage-and-price-setting institutions in place from August 1971 to April 1974 shifted the balance of power between capital and labor. When these formal institutions were eliminated in April 1974, the government-caused shift in the balance of power between capital and labor was not reversed. Rather, this shift in the balance of power was maintained through informal institutions, and these informal institutions set in motion the decline in real wages that started after 1973.   SOURCE

Were the heightened senses of corporate America initiated by the efforts of Lewis and Simon in play here in the form of “informal institutions”, such as The American Enterprise Institute, The Heritage Foundation and The CATO Institute, creations of the super rich Koch Brothers and Richard Mellon Scaife?  In these early efforts were such people taking advantage of government imposed wage controls to offset those costs by environmental regulations that Lewis saw as an “attack on the American free enterprise system”?  Were workers being penalized to compensate for cuts in profit margins from such regulations and were these efforts expanded to eventually eliminate organized labor altogether to keep wages low?

As a means of controlling the wealth in this country, keeping wages suppressed is useful in other, more political ways.  Less money can go to causes that support grass roots movements and candidates who fight corporate abuses.  Holding their paycheck and ultimately their jobs over their heads keeps potential whistle blowers in check.

Without a strong, well-funded middle class, the wealthy 1% can pretty much run rough shod over representative government as they buy candidates and their votes with larger campaign contributions than those grass roots organizations.  Their ability to do this was enhanced with the pro-corporate Roberts Supreme Court decision that defined money as speech in the 2008 case of Citizens United vs The FEC.  What then occurs is that the “survival of the fittest” changes to “might makes right” and as James Garfield pointed out during the heyday of the Gilded Age, He who controls the money supply of a nation controls the nation.”

The actions of Lewis Powell and William Simon have come to fruition.  All that they hoped to achieve in their class-warfare efforts have been put in place and are set to reverse the gains of the middle-class and likely replace any real democracy this country ever had with a plutocracy.  As Bill Moyer notes:

[T]hey bought off the gatekeeper, got inside and gamed the system. As the rich and powerful got richer and more powerful, they owned and operated the government, “saddling Americans with greater debt, tearing new holes in the safety net, and imposing broad financial risks on Americans as workers, investors, and taxpayers.” Now, write Hacker and Pierson, the United States is looking more and more like “the capitalist oligarchies, like Brazil, Mexico, and Russia,” where most of the wealth is concentrated at the top while the bottom grows larger and larger with everyone in between just barely getting by.


The herd mentality of those who took Lewis’ and Simon’s exhortations to heart have twisted the simple concept I mentioned above about what your labor produces to sustain you into one that defends excessive hoarding.  The healthy attitude of sharing the natural resources that all life is a part of, for the benefit of all, is now a diseased mentality that justifies the suffering and death of many so that a minority can fulfill that imperial fantasy that fanatics over the centuries have been infected by during the successive ages of Alexander the Great, Attila the Hun, Genghis Kahn, Napoleon, and Hitler.  Today it is Corporate America and its global mentality that sweeps across the earth, consuming what they want and need, leaving tidbits and morsels for the rest of us to fight over and expecting us to be grateful for that.

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The Richest 1% Have Captured America’s Wealth — What’s It Going to Take to Get It Back? 


What are these 1%ers smiling about?

Sharon Bialek, a former employee of the National Restaurant Association’s educational foundation, accused [presidential candidate Herman] Cain of making an inappropriate advance toward her in 1997, when she visited Cain in Washington, D.C. in 1997 to seek his assistance in finding a new job.

Bialek accused Cain of touching her in an inappropriate manner during her visit to D.C., where Cain was still serving as president of the restaurant association. When she rebuffed him, Cain said, “You want a job, right?” per Bialek’s retelling.  SOURCE

As part of the 1% in this country, I’m sure Mr. Cain is getting accustomed to using this tactic to get what he wants from people who are in the lower 99%.

Dangling their jobs before them as they ship many positions overseas or reduce their wages and benefits for those that remain, anyone who complains will likely hear this  from the 1% -  “You want a job, right?”

Those within the 1% club work tirelessly to have taxes reduced that fund jobs for school teachers, fire fighters and police officers by contributing to and helping get elected those politicians who are on board with them.  If your not on board you’re likely to hear from people like the Koch brothers, “You want a job, right?”

If whistle blowers threaten to reveal toxic waste being dumped in local water supplies by chemical and petro companies, they are often stopped short with the threat of, “You want a job, right?”

If local citizens protest that the nearby coal-fire powered plant is contributing to lung diseases with their waste emissions, the owners threaten to close it it down instead of making necessary changes to reduce such emissions.  Workers there are told to take this message back to their community if they persist in attempting to regulate their dirty discharges into the air: “You want jobs, right?”

It’s time to turn the tables on these people and let their puppets in Congress know that if they don’t start representing all interests equally and making serious efforts to create jobs besides promoting trickle down economics, they may hear this from us next November – “You want a job, right?”

We need to back the grass roots movements across this country that have challenged the status quo as they occupy Wall Street, City Hall, and the other fraternal members of the 1% and make it clear that not only do we want a job, but we want them to have decent health care benefits and a livable wage.  We want our income to grow proportionally to that of a CEOs, many who bankrupt their companies but still walk away with a retirement package greater than what most in the 99% will see in their lifetimes.

 

 

 


Paul Krugman makes a striking observation that has sat beneath my radar about the U.S. Defense department’s budget all this time.  I used to scream and holler about the bloated defense spending in this country (still do in fact) on destructive forces along with many items that served no real need for our modern military.

An example of the latter is Lockheed Martin/Boeing’s F-22 Raptor jet that no one in the Pentagon really wants, but many in Congress do to appease Lockheed Martin/Boeing, or in mixed company with his or her voting constituency an elected official would refer to it as “important job creation “.  With the full support of the GOP back in 2009 the Democratic-led House Armed Services Committee stripped $369 million for environmental cleanup – a job creator – to find enough money in the fiscal 2010 budget to fund an additional 12 F-22s.

But these are tough economic times and as Krugman matter-of-factly notes:

Military spending does create jobs when the economy is depressed. Indeed, much of the evidence that Keynesian economics works comes from tracking the effects of past military buildups. Some liberals dislike this conclusion, but economics isn’t a morality play: spending on things you don’t like is still spending, and more spending would create more jobs. SOURCE 

With all the hollering and hammering by TeaParty-GOPers about how government can’t create jobs along with the equally baseless claim that tax cuts for millionaires is a job creator, we discover that they are really just hypocrites when it applies to defense spending.

The super-committee that was formed by Congress shortly after the fiasco about raising the debt ceiling was resolved this last summer (albeit temporarily) but now has to come up with some other, more permanent cuts next month that the full committee agrees on or there will be automatic cuts across the board.  Not just in the areas that many conservatives and Libertarians are salivating over like Social Security and Medicare, but also in areas that they do not want to see, specifically cuts in the DoD’s budget.

Many of them  are unabashedly opposed to cuts in Defense because they say it will kill jobs.  Think about that for a minute.  The anti-government crowd is affirming that the federal contracts with many private businesses, which are paid with tax payers dollars, not only established new jobs at one time, they sustain them as long as the Defense budget is kept pumped with public funds.  Those in Congress who support such federal spending are pretty much the same ones opposed to Obama’s Job plan that seeks to stimulate job growth through infra-structure repairs and on energy efficient projects like high-speed rail, wind and solar innovation and retro-fitting government buildings and fleets to run off of renewable, cheaper energy sources.

We need jobs bad and we need them now but conservatives in Congress can’t own up to the reality that, as Krugman puts it, “spending on things you don’t like is still spending.”   The business acumen that affirms “you have to spend money to make money” seems totally lost on those who want to eliminate spending on needed programs simply because they’re not ideologically sound in the Tea Party-Libertarian view of things.  Infrastructure spending is spread out and not necessarily dominated by a national or even international corporate interests; that power element within the top 1% that tends to pull the strings of many in Congress and even dictate how to write legislation benefitting these wealthy interests.

Spending on infrastructure repairs has a multiplier affect too, creating jobs that benefit more businesses.  Repairing bridges and roads better enables those vehicles who transport the parts for the unwanted F-22 Raptor jets while it also generates jobs that feed the truckers and repairs their vehicles.  As these businesses expand there is a greater need for other retail services that accompany the influx of new workers.

The same occurs when you replace older manufacturing jobs with newer ones in the fields of renewable energy.  Developing countries like China and India are beginning to dominate this 21st century opportunity, leaving the U.S. to catch up.  We need to make stronger advances to make sure that the U.S. is competitive in this new growth field.

 

The finite sources of fossil fuels is not lost on these two expanding economies and they are fully aware that to sustain their growth they are going to need vast quantities of easily attainable and cheaper sources of energy along with the huge amounts of coal and oil they are already drawing from the global supply of limited resources.

Social welfare spending on things like Medicare/Medicaid, Unemployment benefits and Food Stamps are not entities that can stuff campaign coffers with big bucks but they do have a healthy impact on the economy, despite the reservations of anti-government types.  Sustaining such programs does have negative consequences for the deficit when unemployment rates climb and tax revenue is removed but the money spent on such programs goes directly back into the economy and keeps some businesses from going under in tough recession conditions like those we are currently experiencing.  In a healthy economy where there are high rates of employment and a livable wage, the need and thus the burden for such programs diminishes.  Our current deficit issue is more a factor of the Bush tax cuts and two foreign wars.

There was a time when traditional political conservatives felt the need to keep Defense spending at a reasonable level.  Eisenhower’s warning about the threat from the military-industrial complex pretty much fell on deaf ears but back in 1989 then Defense Secretary Dick Cheney sought to cut $10 billion from the Pentagon’s budget

Cheney termed the proposed cuts “very, very painful” but said that there is no way to balance the budget “without offending somebody, without breaking some china, without stepping on some toes.”

Cheney’s budget–$305 billion for the 1990 fiscal year, which begins Oct. 1–contains a 1% reduction after inflation from the current year’s spending plan. It marks the fifth consecutive year of real declines in defense spending, which has fallen 12% short of keeping pace with inflation since 1985.

But the $10 billion in reductions for 1990 represents only a down payment on a total of $64 billion that Cheney must pare from Reagan’s military spending goals over the next five years to meet the Bush Administration’s deficit-reduction targets.   SOURCE

The issue of job creation by defense spending is apparent even today as one can attest to with the projected military spending for this month alone.   I cringe at the thought of this reality but under such dire economic circumstances I am willing to forego my ideological bent to see Americans back on the job and off of the welfare rolls.   TeaPublicans need to do the same and reciprocate by allowing the needed spending requested in Obama’s Job’s Plan.

The deficit matters but not half as much as job creation does right now and those on the Right need to swallow this tough pill and do what’s needed for ALL Americans.  That means we need to raise taxes on the wealthiest 1% to spend on these essential job-creating programs and as the job market grows include the remaining 99% in fair proportion to their income.

To seek spending cuts in areas that hurts most Americans while ignoring them in others as efforts are also made to further reduce needed revenue through tax cuts is a short-sighted and callous approach to job creation – not to mention the hypocrisy of those who refuse to see how spending by the government is in fact a job creator

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G.E.s $3 billion Pentagon Boondoggle 


I’ve been recently introduced to the naked capitalism website by fellow blogger Ronni Bennett over at Time Goes By and it has been rewarding beyond my expectations.  It’s a website that, as its name implies, lays an intelligent, critical eye on capitalism as it strips the emperor bare.  Its reports question and often embarrass billionaire Investors, CEOs and their corporate tentacles, giving us a more realistic picture of “corporate personhood”.   There’s also a fascinating animal picture added with each daily submission of their selected links to review, such as this one

The story that caught my eye yesterday may seem small in comparison to bigger events around the world but it serves as a perfect example of why people are out in force at OWS protests across the country and how serious some amongst the top 1% in this country are at crushing every facet of this grass roots movement.

We discover that when Goldman-Sachs chose to become more than an financial investment firm and turned its sights to banking it was subject to the rules and regulations of the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) whereas all banks are encouraged to “help meet the needs of borrowers in all segments of their communities, including low- and moderate-income neighborhoods.”  Once they sign on to this agreement the appropriate federal financial supervisory agency will “examine banking institutions for CRA compliance, and take this information into consideration when approving applications for new bank branches or for mergers or acquisitions”.

Goldman did this with a small bank in their New York neighborhood, People’s Bank, where over 80% of its member-owners have low incomes and at least 65% are Latino.  Since Goldman was itching to get its greedy hands even deeper into the accounts of everyday people, People’s was a great choice and Goldman was even willing to donate $5000 to help the bank celebrate 25 years at its location.

But herein lies the rub.  Goldman-Sachs’ name was on a donation list with a special honoree – Occupy Wall Street.  This grass roots movement  has labeled one-percenters like Goldman as those who engage in questionable practices that not only widens the income disparity between people like themselves and those  member-owners of People’s Bank, but had a direct hand in the economic collapse of 2008 with their bundled credit default swaps that were intentionally sold to unsuspecting investors, knowing full well that the mortgages they insured were destined to default.

When Goldman discovered this affront to them they insisted that People’s return the $5000 donation and threatened litigation and action that could limit the small bank’s ability to receive funds from other wealthier banks to serve their mission.  Read the full account about this bowel movement by G-S here.

This incident raised the analogous one for me about the self-centered rich kid who takes his ball (the one his dad paid for) and goes home with it when not allowed to dominate the game.  He may discover that some of those playing in the scrimmage are what he views as “undesirables” from another neighborhood.  He refuses to play if they are part of it.    Everybody else doesn’t necessarily go along with this view but they want to play football, not having one of their own.  Besides, the arrogant owner of the ball is a popular jock at school and they want to remain on his good side.

The prevailing tension between these two groups is perpetuated as a result.  That’s been the tradition between them for years and the opportunity to smooth ruffled feathers and perhaps foster a more symbiotic relationship is killed because of the prevailing attitude of an elite group.

Yves Smith, who appears to write most of the material for nc feels, and I agree, that Goldman’s reaction to this was vane and just simply mean-spirited.

“This low grade thuggish behavior over a mere $5,000 illustrates how deeply narcissistic Wall Street has become. Anything that threatens their image, no matter how small, must be beaten back.  Goldman could have been punitive (by threatening never to do anything for the bank ever again) without going to the ridiculous step of threatening litigation over a charitable contribution. How charitable is it, exactly, when you try to attach retroactive conditions?”

Goldman’s “Nelson” character revealed intimidating People’s Bank “Milhouse”

They probably spend $5000 on business lunches routinely.  Their self-serving egos however has only brought home what is fundamentally flawed with the socio-economic structure in this country today.

Goldman-Sachs could have come across as someone willing to close the partisan divide between the haves and have-nots by acknowledging their loan as a move in this direction.  They could have taken the high road and ignored that a perceived enemy shared the limelight with them.  It would’ve been seen by many as a goodwill gesture and disarmed some of their critics who attack them for such arrogance.  Surely FOX and many right-wing bloggers and pundits would have elevated this to a sainthood state.

Corporations have worked feverishly to be seen by the courts as a “person”.  This incident shows that perhaps being an adult person is asking too much of them.  They own the football.  Play by their rules and meet their demands or they will make the game all about them and take their ball home.

Is this the message that hangs over most Wall Street office doors?

“It is really not so repulsive to see the poor asking for money as to see the rich asking for more money.”  – G.K. Chesterson


I think many of us have learned by now that when politicians and corporate CEOs speak against what they refer to as “federal over reach” and how that will “increase consumer prices” and “cost jobs”, that this is often code for profits taking a hit in a given business.  The concern then is more about how such action will affect their shareholders and executive bonuses rather than working families and their budgets.

Conservative politicians, especially those being re-born as Tea Partiers, interject this code-messaging at every opportunity.  The conservatives we deal with today, more so than ever, are not true politicians as much as they are mouth pieces for corporate policy.  There’s even an organization in place called the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) that helps put together legislation disguised as a “job creators”.  The Center for Media and Democracy says “these so-called ‘model bills’ reach into almost every area of American life and often directly benefit huge corporations.”

Much of what they defend is often dressed up to appeal to an individual’s sense of  patriotism, religious values, and the spirit of individualism; characteristics that most any of us can attach ourselves to.  The harm lies in that there is little virtue in policies that threaten our safety and health, reduce our health care benefits and keep most of us working for wages that are shrinking more and more while many corporate and financial entities see greater and greater profits.

From Governor Rick Perry’s Flickr page

An example of this approach is being persistently used by the man Tea Party favorites  want to run for President – Texas Governor Rick Perry.  Perry is playing the David vs. Goliath card as he continues to resist efforts by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to reduce toxic emissions from coal-fired power plants.  There are more coal-fired power plants (19) in Texas than any other state and there are more coming on-line for the near future.  Though Perry has called for a day of prayer to deal with issues he and the Texas legislature feel reluctant to, not all of our problems are “beyond our power to resolve”, as Perry has declared.

The research is clear on at least one of the toxic agents, nitrogen oxides, that come from these plants and the damage they do to human respiratory systems.  They are the largest contributors to green house gases that gather in the atmosphere, thus contributing to the man-made global warming that appears to be linked to the increased rate of flooding, droughts, hurricanes and other natural disasters.  The Clean Air Task Force released a report less than a decade ago that “found that tens of thousands of people die prematurely every year and hundreds of thousands more suffer asthma attacks as a result of power plant pollution alone.”

 

People like Perry cannot fight the physical data that brings this fact home so he and others of his ilk create diversions and misinformation to prevent the very public he’s been elected to protect and watch over from getting the bigger picture here.  They appear more intent on protecting special corporate interests and their profits while disguising it as concern for the “job losses” and “increased energy prices” that all Texans will have to endure.

In a recent editorial in the Houston Chronicle it was noted that Perry, fellow Texas politicians Bryan Shaw, chairman of the  Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) and Senator John Cornyn referred to the EPA ruling to monitor coal plant emissions as “… another example of heavy-handed and misguided action from Washington, D.C., that threatens Texas jobs and families”,  one that will “increase Texas energy costs,” and declared “outrageous” by Senator Cornyn.

But the EPA’s projections are far from outrageous: They estimate that a typical family’s electricity bill will increase by less than $1 per month, and by 2014 the rule will prevent up to 34,000 premature deaths, 400,000 cases of aggravated asthma and 1.8 million sick days a year, saving up to $280 billion annually in health costs. Those savings will far outweigh the projected $800 million in annual costs to implement the new rule and the estimated $1.6 billion annually to comply with a previous rule. And, according to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, the rule will also prevent from 670 to 1,700 premature deaths per year in Texas alone.   SOURCE

Many are too willing to see government as Perry and others portray it without realizing that unfettered corporate interests can be equally egregious, if not more so.  Without some federal and state oversight many businesses, some with headquarters outside the legal purview of this country, can cut corners and engage in activities that hurt millions of people, especially those that work for them.  One only need to consider the tragic accidents that took the lives of coal miners in West Virginia last year along with the BP oil disaster in the Gulf.

When governments intervene on behalf of the general welfare of the public because a business’s product or production process poses a health and safety risk, not only for those who purchase it but for their neighbors and future generations, a business should make changes that reduces that threat.  Likewise, the consumer needs to realize that there will be some cost increases to make this necessary changes.

If governments honestly represents their constituents based on established research and science, the business community should not circle the wagons and try to demonize that institution that has served them well through previous legislation and government subsidies.  No man is island and when one person’s actions represent a danger to another then established law and ethics dictates that corrective measures be imposed.

EPA Director Lisa Jackson with President Obama

For businesses like Big Oil and Coal to cry foul when government seeks to impose standards and limits on their production processes that hurt us physically and take away from our earned wages in the form of higher health costs, it is cowardly and self-serving to invoke the coded message of “job losses” and “price increases” to fend off such actions.

Large corporations can usually absorb most of these costs with a combination of modest price increases and smaller profits and in so doing would demonstrate their willingness to meet their responsibilities as the corporate citizen they have fought so hard to have the courts declare them as.

Rather than shrieking about “heavy-handed and misguided action from Washington” as Gov. Perry of Texas has done, he and other government officials should work with the agency and the industry to see that mischief is avoided so that all lives may be better served, not just those who seek to guard their profits.

Jobs and low consumer prices are too often a trade-off for poor health and increased health care costs.  In some cases they are the lesser value of the two where long-term health care is involved or loss of life occurs.  Demonizing government that attempts to serve the public, not a chosen few, is a common practice by businesses and stoking the fears about “job losses” and “price increases” is merely one more tool in an arsenal to defend special corporate interests.


Last month I wrote on what the GOP promised Americans on job creation if they won back the House and Senate.  They did win the House but failed to gain enough seats for a Senate majority.  So what have they actually produced since their four-item promise last November?

If you haven’t seen the Republican plan for creating jobs in this country since the new Congress convened in January, don’t feel alone.  Even those who have read their proposals laid out in The House Republicans Plan For America’s Job Creator’s are still unsure of how exactly it will stimulate job growth in the private sector.

The House offering was put out last month after feeling the pressure from constituents back home to address more than just a budget deficit that congressional Republicans helped create over the years.  What they gave voters was an over simplistic outline that is both vague and shallow in its concept.  It a full 10 pages long but has information on only about 50% of those pages.

Two pages are filled with illustrations and only three pages have written material from top to bottom.  The remaining five pages have illustrations and very large, bold heading type that covers about half the pages.  Now, we all know how the GOP likes to lambast bills that are thousands of pages long and written in legalese that most of us fall asleep trying to decipher.  But just a little detail would go along way on such important issues as job creation, health care costs and the environment.  You’re not going to find that in this GOP plan and what you do get will generate a “WTF!?” response.

Be prepared for the GOP to accept zero accountability for the economic hard times many of us are facing today as witnessed by their opening statement.

“Free markets, free enterprise, innovation and entrepreneurship are the foundation for economic growth and job creation in America. For the past four years, Democrats in Washington have enacted policies that undermine these basic concepts which have historically placed America at the forefront of the global marketplace. As a result, most Americans know someone who has recently lost a job, and small businesses and entrepreneurs lack the confidence needed to invest in our economy. Not since the Great Depression has our nation’s unemployment rate been this high this long.”

Though the ire and anger of many people towards our economic plight became more visible shortly before and immediately after George Bush left office and the GOP still controlled the Senate, the conditions that led up to a financial collapse by greedy, unregulated banking and investment capitalists were well entrenched years before.  To many, the housing bubble that had been fostered by the creation of toxic mortgages from predatory lending practices of these financial institutions were red-flagged by observant market watchers.

When Bush assumed the presidency in 2001, many hoped that he would govern competently from the center. More pessimistic critics consoled themselves by questioning how much harm a president can do in a few years. We now know the answer: a great deal.

At the root of America’s economic problems are measures adopted early in Bush’s first term. In particular, the administration pushed through a tax cut that largely failed to stimulate the economy, because it was designed to benefit mainly the wealthiest taxpayers. The burden of stimulation was placed on the Fed, which lowered interest rates to unprecedented levels. While cheap money had little impact on business investment, it fueled a real estate bubble, which is now bursting, jeopardizing households that borrowed against rising home values to sustain consumption.  … [H]igher interest rates and falling house prices do not bode well for the American economy. Indeed, according to some estimates, roughly 80% of the increase in employment and almost two-thirds of the increase in GDP in recent years stemmed directly or indirectly from real estate.  – SOURCE 

The GOP plan engages in hyperbole when it exclaims that “More taxation, regulation, and litigation will not create more jobs. Government takeovers of the economy have failed while the size and the scope of the federal government has exploded.”   I can only guess that they are hoping that their constituents are watching and listening to misinformation programs such as Glenn Beck, FOX broadcasting network and red-state websites rather than objective criteria available to them.

To anyone who has paid close attention to the political reality you might find the claim of being Taxed Enough Already by Tea Party zealots as ludicrous.  In an earlier report I have pointed out that tax rates today are lower than they’ve been in 50 years.  Regulations have been more lax than even under Ronald Reagan and because there were efforts to restrict attempts to regulate derivatives, those financial products that led to our economic woes, it is hard to create a carte blanche view that regulations are evil in of themselves.

As for government takeovers, the only one anyone can point to was the auto industry bailout of General Motors and Chrysler.   Though most of us can agree that the free market principles would have allowed their demise, it wasn’t clear to us then that such a loss in jobs would have made recovery of any kind tougher and harder to recoup.  The decision made by both George Bush and Barack Obama to save these two auto giants not only proved to be a wise decision since they have essentially pulled themselves out of bankruptcy, but kept the American auto industry competitive in the global market.

As one peruses the comments in the GOP “Job Creation” plan two things are obvious.  Those items listed as PROBLEMS are not the result of actions taken since Obama and the Democrats took control of the White House and the Congress.  Many of them were in place in several administrations and congresses before now.  For some of the problems to continue to exist even now is indicative of an ineffective GOP-controlled Congress and White House for nearly eight years under George Bush.  Secondly, some of their solutions are extremely vague and where there ARE details they run parallel to what the Obama administration is already attempting with it’s policies laid out in the American Recovery Act passed in 2009.

This is apparent in the GOP’s plan under section entitled “Increase Competitiveness for American Manufacturers”.  Here they concede that even Obama is in agreement with the idea to create more exports through more trade agreements with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea.  “The independent International Trade Commission has estimated that implementation of the three pending free trade agreements would increase U.S. exports by more than $10 billion — an increase that according to the Obama Administration, would create over 250,000 jobs. 

We should all have a problem with their view that America’s global competitiveness is hampered by the world’s largest business tax rate of 35%.  In reporting on low tax rates as mentioned above, it is clear that not only do businesses not pay anything near this rate, with the aid of congressional legislation and tax loopholes, many businesses not only pay NO taxes, but get refunds worth millions of dollars.  Their cure to reduce the business tax rate to 25% would have some credibility if they would have but mentioned that they would also eliminate the subsidies and loop holes that are currently in place for most profitable businesses.  That thought is expressed nowhere in this plan.

But as you read this plan and match it with current actions, you get the idea that the GOP is really not all that serious about fulfilling their plan to create jobs.  One of the more sillier “job creation” items on their plan is to modernize and improve the patent system to discourage frivolous lawsuits, expedite reviews, and provide better protection for job creating entrepreneurs. Streamlining the system will make it easier for existing businesses to grow and allow more start-up companies to flourish.”    Nobody has offered an estimate on how many new jobs this will create.

The “America Invents Act” (HR 1249) to address patent issues and thus “create jobs” was passed in the House last week but according to some in business “it is business as usual in Congress” according to Steven F. Borsand, Executive Vice President Intellectual Property for Trading Technologies International, Inc. (TT).   HR 1249 “will not improve our patent system; rather, … it favors … big banks and other special interests. Contrary to claims of supporters, this bill will stifle innovation, kill jobs, and further backlog the patent office”, says Mr. Borsand.

The bill passed in the House by a considerable majority with 117 voting against it.   Fifty two Democrats, mostly members of the Progressive Caucus voted no on this bill with sixty-five Republicans, mostly those who affiliate themselves with the Tea Party, like Ron Paul and Michelle Bachman.  According to information from Congress.org’s mega-vote e-mail alert, “The Senate passed its version of the bill in March 2011. Negotiators will likely meet this summer to work out a compromise bill. The administration has expressed support for the House bill.”

 

Of all the things that will generate real job growth the only act that Republicans can pass with above average bipartisan support is something that no one can approximate job growth numbers for and is suspected of favoring some of those financial institutions who may have benefitted from taxpayer bailouts back in late 2008 and early 2009.

Should I be prepared to buffer myself against the outrage we heard back in 2009 when many accused the Obama administration and Democratic majorities of becoming disconnected with the American public?  We will see come November, 2012.



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