Editor's Note:
This is an edited transcript of Bill Moyer's speech, delivered June 3 at
the
Take Back America conference in Washington, DC. The transcript of the
speech as delivered can be found at
ourfuture.org.
Go
to Original
The Mugging of
the American Dream
By Bill Moyers
AlterNet.org
Monday 06 June
2005
Washington is a
divided city - not between north and south as in Lincoln's time, but
between those who can buy all the government they want and those who can't
even afford a seat in the bleachers.
It's good to be
with you again. Your passion for democracy is inspiring and your enthusiasm
contagious. I can't imagine a more exuberant gathering today except possibly
at the K Street branch of the Masters of the Universe where they are
celebrating their coup at the Securities and Exchange Commission
I wish that I
could have attended all your sessions, listened to all the speakers, and
heard all the points of view that have been raised here. But thanks to
C-Span I was able to catch enough of your proceedings to realize you covered
so many subjects and touched on so many ideas that you've left me little to
say. That's okay, because as Bob Borosage reminded us back in January, what
matters most isn't what is said in Washington but what you do on the ground
across the country to build an independent infrastructure, generate ideas,
drive local campaigns, persuade the skeptic, organize your neighbors, and
carry on the movement at the grassroots for social and economic justice.
Before you go
home, however, Bob has asked me to talk about what's at stake in what you
are doing. Given all that has already been said, I will take my cue from the
late humorist Robert Benchley who arrived for his final exam in
international law at Harvard to find that the test consisted of this one
instruction: "Discuss the arbitration of the international fisheries problem
in respect to hatcheries protocol and dragnet and procedure as it affects
(a) the point of view of the United States and (b) the point of view of
Great Britain." Benchley was desperate but he was also honest, and he wrote:
"I know nothing about the point of view of Great Britain in the arbitration
of the international fisheries problem, and nothing about the point of view
of the United States. I shall therefore discuss the question from the point
of view of the fish."
That's what I have
done in much of my work in journalism. Thirty-five years ago almost to the
day I set out on a three-month trip of over l0, 000 miles to write a book
called "Listening to America." I completed the book but I've never finished
the trip; never was able to come off the road; never could stop listening.
My worldview has been a work in progress, molded largely by the stories I've
heard from the people I've met. I want to tell you this morning about some
of those people. They tell us what's at stake.
I begin with two
families in Milwaukee. The breadwinners in both households lost their jobs
in that great wave of downsizing in 1991 as corporations began moving jobs
out of the city and out of the country. In a series of documentaries over
the next decade my colleagues and I chronicled their efforts to cope with
the wrenching changes in their lives and find a place for themselves in the
new global economy. I grew up with people like them. They're the kind my
mother called "the salt of the earth" (takes one to know one!) They love
their children, care about their neighborhoods, go to church every Sunday,
and work hard all week. But like millions of Americans, these two families
in Milwaukee were playing by the rules and still losing. By the end of the
decade they were running harder but slipping behind, and the gap between
them and prosperous America had reached Grand Canyon proportions.
I want to show you
a very brief excerpt from that first documentary. It aired on PBS in January
1992 with the title "Minimum Wages: The New Economy." You'll see the father
of one family as he looks for work after losing his machinist's job at the
big manufacturer, Briggs and Stratton. You'll meet his wife in their kitchen
as they make a desperate call to the bank that is threatening to foreclose
on their home after failing to meet their mortgage payments. During our
filming the fathers in both families became seriously ill. One was
hospitalized for two months, leaving the family $30,000 in debt. You'll hear
the second family talk about what it's like when both parents lose their
jobs, depriving them of health insurance and putting their children's
education up for grabs. Take a look.
[Video Segment]
Seeing those
people again I thought of the interviews that the Campaign for America's
Future conducted around the country on the eve of your conference. A woman
in Columbus, Ohio, told one interviewer something that I've heard in
different ways in my own reporting over the past few years. She said:
"Everyday life pulls families apart." It takes a moment for the implications
of that to hit home. Think about it: Our country, the richest and most
powerful nation in the history of the race - a place where "everyday life
pulls families apart."
What turns these
personal traumas into a political travesty is that the people we're talking
about are deeply patriotic. They love America. But they no longer believe
they matter to the people who run the country. When our film opens, they are
watching the inauguration of Bill Clinton on television in 1992. By the end
of the decade, when our final film in the series aired, they were paying
little attention to politics; they simply didn't think their concerns would
ever be addressed by our governing elites. They are not cynical - their
religious faith leaves them little capacity for cynicism - but they know the
system is rigged against them. As it is.
You know the
story: For years now a relatively small fraction of American households have
been garnering an extreme concentration of wealth and income as large
economic and financial institutions obtained unprecedented levels of power
over daily life. In 1960 the gap in terms of wealth between the top 20% and
the bottom 20% was 30-fold. Four decades later it is more than 75 fold. (See
Joshua Holland, AlterNet, posted 4/25/05.)
Such
concentrations of wealth would be far less of an issue if everyone were
benefiting proportionally. But that's not the case. Statistics tell the
story. Yes, I know - statistics can cause the eyes to glaze over, but as one
of my mentors once reminded me, "It is the mark of a truly educated man [or
woman] to be deeply moved by statistics."
Let's see if these
statistics move you.
While we've
witnessed several periods of immense growth in recent decades, the average
real income of the bottom 90 percent of American taxpayers - that's a heap
of people - fell by 7 percent between l973 and 2000.
During 2004 and
the first couple of months this year, wages failed to keep pace with
inflation for the first time since the l990 recession. They were up somewhat
in April, but it still means that "working Americans effectively took an
across-the-board pay cut at a time when the economy grew by a healthy four
percent and corporate profits hit record highs as companies got more
productivity out of workers while keeping pay raises down."
Believe it or not,
the United States now ranks the highest among the highly developed countries
in each of the seven measures of inequality tracked by the index. While we
enjoy the second highest GDP in the world (excluding tiny Luxembourg), we
rank dead last among the 20 most developed countries in fighting poverty and
we're off the chart in terms of the number of Americans living on half the
median income or less.
And the outlook is
for more of the same. On the eve of George W. Bush's second inauguration The
Economist - not exactly a Marxist rag - produced a sobering analysis of what
is happening to the old notion that any American can get to the top. With
income inequality not seen since the first Gilded Age (and this is The
Economist editors speaking, not me) - with "an education system increasingly
stratified with fewer resources than those of their richer contemporaries"
and great universities "increasingly reinforcing rather than reducing these
educational inequalities" - with corporate employees finding it "harder...to
start at the bottom and rise up the company hierarchy by dint of hard work
and self-improvement" - "with the yawning gap between incomes at the top and
bottom" - the editors of The Economist - all friends of business and
advocates of capitalism and free markets - concluded that "The United States
risks calcifying into a European-style class-based society."
Let me run that by
you again: "The United States risks calcifying into a European-style
class-based society."
Or worse. The Wall
Street Journal is no Marxist sheet, either, although its editorial page can
be just as rigid and dogmatic as old Stalinists. The Journal's reporters,
however, are among the best in the country. They're devoted to getting as
close as possible to the verifiable truth and describing what they find with
the varnish off. Two weeks ago a front-page leader in the Journal concluded
that "As the gap between rich and poor has widened since 1970, the odds that
a child born in poverty will climb to wealth - or that a rich child will
fall into middle class - remain stuck....Despite the widespread belief that
the U.S. remains a more mobile society than Europe, economists and
sociologists say that in recent decades the typical child starting out in
poverty in continental Europe (or in Canada) has had a better chance at
prosperity." (Wall Street Journal, page one, May 13, 2005.)
That knocks the
American Dream flat on its back. But it should put fire in our bellies.
Because what's at stake is what it means to be an American.
A few weeks ago my
colleague Charlie Rose put a question to the new president of CNN, Jonathan
Klein. He asked: Could there ever be a successful progressive version of Fox
News Channel? Klein didn't think so. He said Fox appeals to "mostly angry
white men" while liberals - "you know, they don't get too worked up about
anything."
Well, here's
something to get worked up about:
Under a headline
stretching six columns across the page, the New York Times reported last
year that tuition in the city's elite private schools, kindergarten as well
as high school, would hit $26,000 for the coming school year. On the same
page, under a two-column headline, the Times reported on a school in nearby
Mount Vernon, just across the city line, with a student body that is 97%
black. It is the poorest school in the town: Nine out of ten children
qualify for free lunches; one out of ten lives in a homeless shelter. During
black history month this past February a sixth-grader who wanted to write a
report on the poet Langston Hughes could not find a single book about Hughes
in the library - not one. There is only one book in the library on Frederick
Douglass. None on Rosa Parks, Josephine Baker, Leontyne Price, or other path
breakers like them in the modern era. Except for a couple of Newbery Award
books bought by the librarian with her own money, the books are largely from
the l950s and l960s, when all the students were white. A child's primer on
work begins with a youngster learning how to be a telegraph delivery boy.
There's a l967 book about telephones with the instruction: "When you phone
you usually dial the number. But on some new phones you can push buttons."
The newest encyclopedia dates from l99l, with two volumes missing. And there
is no card catalogue in this library. Something worth getting mad about.
How about this:
Caroline Payne's
face and gums are distorted because her Medicaid-financed dentures don't
fit. Her appearance has caused her to be continuously turned down for jobs.
Caroline Payne is one of the people in David Shipler's recent book, The
Working Poor: Invisible in America. . She was born poor; although she once
owned her own home and earned a two-year college degree, Caroline Payne has
bounced from one poverty-wage job to another all her life, equipped with the
will to move up, but lacking the resources to deal with such unexpected and
overlapping problems as a mentally handicapped daughter, a broken marriage,
and a sudden layoff that forced her to sell her few assets, pull up roots,
and move on. "In the house of the poor..." Shipler writes, "the walls are
thin and fragile, and troubles seep into one another." If you believe the
Declaration of Independence means what it says - that all of us are endowed
by the Creator with a love of life, a longing for liberty, and a passion for
happiness - and everyone includes Caroline Payne - this is something to get
worked up about.
Or this - courtesy
of the columnist, Mark Shields. It seems workers in the American territory
of the Northern Mariana Islands were being forced to labor under sweatshop
conditions producing garments for Tommy Hilfiger, Calvin Klein, Gap and Liz
Claiborne. The garments were then shipped tariff-free and quota-free to the
American market where they were entitled to display the coveted "Made in the
USA" label. When Republican Senator Frank Murkowski of Alaska heard that
these people were being paid barely half the U.S. minimum hourly wage and
were forced to live behind barbed wire in squalid shacks without plumbing
while working l2 hours a day, often seven days a week, with none of the
legal protections U.S. workers are guaranteed, he became enraged. He got the
Senate to pass a bill - unanimously - that would extend the protection of
our laws to the U.S. territory of the Northern Marianas. But then the
notorious lobbyist Jack Abramoff moved into action with an SOS to his good
friend, Tom DeLay. The records show they met at least two dozen times. DeLay
traveled to the Marianas with his family and staff - on a "scholarship"
provided by Abramoff's clients - where they played golf and went snorkeling
not far the sweatshops (some scholarship!) Was Tom DeLay offended by what he
saw? To the contrary. He told the Washington Post that the sweatshops were
"a perfect petri dish of capitalism. ABC-TV News recorded him praising
Abramoff's clients by saying: "You are a shining light for what is happening
to the Republican Party, and you represent everything that is good about
what we are trying to do in America and leading the world in the free-market
system." And Tom Delay - the rightwing radicals' revisionist incarnation of
Saint Francis of Assisi - killed the Senate bill. (Mark Shields, CNN.com.
5/28/05.)
If that doesn't
get your dander up, maybe this will: The minimum wage hasn't been raised
since l997. After the Republicans recently defeated an effort to increase
it, Rick Wilson wrote for CommonDreams.org about a single mother of two
children working somewhere in his home state of West Virginia at $5.l5 an
hour, 40 hours a week, or $5,378 below the federal poverty level of $l6,090
for a family that size. Put another way, "her earnings only reach two-thirds
of the poverty level." Meanwhile, the base salary of the Members of Congress
who voted down the wage increase is $l62, l00. That single mom would have to
work about 3l, 476 hours to earn what those members of Congress get in a
year. And remember - the minimum wage she earns is actually worth less than
it was 40 years ago (Rick Wilson, CommonDreams.org. 5/25/05.)
It wasn't supposed
to be this way. America was not meant to be a country where the winner takes
all. Through a system of checks and balances we were going to maintain a
decent equilibrium in how democracy works so that it didn't just work for
the powerful and privileged (If you don't believe me, I'll send you my copy
of The Federalist Papers). The economist Jeffrey Madrick put it well:
Because equitable access to public resources is the lifeblood of any
democracy, Americans made primary schooling free to all. Because everyone
deserves a second chance, debtors - especially the relative poor - were
protected by state laws against their rich creditors. Charters to establish
corporations were open to most if not all (white) comers, rather than held
for elites. Government encouraged Americans to own their own piece of land
and even supported squatters' rights. The old hope for equal access to
opportunity became a reality for millions. Including yours truly.
Ruby and Henry
Moyers were knocked down and almost out when the system imploded into the
Great Depression. They worked hard all their lives but never had much money
- my father's last paycheck before he retired was $96 and change, after
taxes. We couldn't afford books at home but the public library gave me a
card when I was eight years old. I went to good public schools. My brother
made it to college on the GI bill. And in my freshman year I hitchhiked to
college on public highways stopping to rest in public parks. Like millions
of us, I was an heir to what used to be called the commonwealth - the notion
of America as a shared project. It's part of our DNA, remember: "We, the
People...in order to create a more perfect union"
You're never more
mindful of this than at the Lincoln Memorial. Like you, I've been there many
times over the years. Back in l954, when I was a summer employee in the
Senate, I took the same hike every Sunday. Starting at the Capitol I headed
for the Washington Monument, briskly climbed its 898 steps, came down almost
as briskly (I was only 20, remember), veered over to the Jefferson Memorial
and then doubled back to the mall and down past the reflecting pool to where
Lincoln gazes perpetually over this city - a city that because of him is the
capital of the United States of America and not just the Northern States of
America.
Standing there
last night, I sensed that temple of democracy where Lincoln broods to be as
deeply steeped in melancholy as it was during the McCarthy reign of terror,
the grief of Vietnam, or the crimes of Watergate. You stand there silently
contemplating the words that gave voice to Lincoln's fierce determination to
save the Union - his resolve that "government of, by, and for the people
shall not perish from the earth" - and then you turn and look out, as he
does, on a city where those words are daily mocked. This is no longer
Lincoln's city. And those people from all walks of life making their way up
the steps to pay their respects to this martyr for the Union - it's not
their city, either. This is an occupied city, a company town, a wholly owned
subsidiary of the powerful and privileged whose have hired an influence
racket to run it. The records are so poorly kept it's impossible to know how
many lobbyists there really are in this town, but the Center for Public
Integrity found that their ranks include 240 former members of Congress and
heads of federal agencies and over 2000 senior officials who passed through
the revolving door of government at warp speed. Lobbyists now spend $3
billion a year buying influence and access for their clients and, according
to the New York Times, over the last six years spent more than twice the
amount spent by candidates for federal office. Once again this is a divided
city. Not between North and South as in Lincoln's time, but between those
who pay to play - those who can buy the government they want - and those who
can't even afford even a seat in the bleachers.
So it is that huge
financial institutions like MBNA - the credit card giant that is the biggest
contributor to the President's two campaigns for the White House - prevail
in getting Congress and George W. Bush to curtail personal bankruptcies,
making it harder for those families in Milwaukee to get a fresh start and a
second chance.
So it is that
Wal-Mart, with the third largest corporate political action committee in the
country, and pharmaceutical giants with more lobbyists in town than there
are Members of Congress, join with gun manufacturers and asbestos makers and
the White House to restrict the right of aggrieved citizens to take
corporations to court for malfeasance.
So it is that as
Exxon Mobil accumulates more than $l billion a month from escalating oil
prices - more than $l billion a month even after allocating for dividends,
share repurchases, and capital spending - the oil and gas industry wrings
huge tax breaks from a public already squeezed hard by high prices at the
gas pumps.
And so it is that
on the Sunday before President Bush's second inaugural, Nick Confessore,
writing in the New York Times Magazine, , describes how the president's
first round of tax cuts has brought the United States tax code closer to a
system under which income from savings and investments would not be taxed at
all and revenues for public services would be raised exclusively from taxes
on working men and women. One of the most fervent right-wing class warriors
in Washington is quoted as predicting: "No capital gains tax, no dividends
tax. No estate tax, no tax on interest." It will be one of President Bush's
enduring legacies to have replaced estate taxes on the wealthy with a sweat
tax on their grave diggers.
Let me read you
something:
When political
interests shower Washington with millions in campaign contributions, they
often get what they want. But it's ordinary citizens and firms that pay
the price and most of them never see it coming. This is what happens if
you don't contribute to their campaigns or spend generously on lobbying.
You pick up a disproportionate share of America's tax bill. You pay higher
prices for a broad range of products from peanuts to prescriptions. You
pay taxes that others in a similar situation have been excused from
paying. You're compelled to abide by laws while others are granted
immunity from them. You must pay debts that you incur while others do not.
You're barred from writing off your tax returns some of the money spent on
necessities while others deduct the cost of their entertainment. You must
run your business by one set of rules, while the government creates
another set for your competitors. In contrast the fortunate few who
contribute to the right politicians and hire the right lobbyists enjoy all
the benefits of their special status. Make a bad business deal; the
government bails them out. If they want to hire workers at below market
wages, the government provides the means to do so. If they want more time
to pay their debts, the government gives them an extension. If they want
immunity from certain laws, the government gives it. If they want to
ignore rules their competition must comply with, the government gives its
approval. If they want to kill legislation that is intended for the
public, it gets killed.
Once again I'm not
quoting Marx or Lenin or even The Nation, the American Prospect, the
Washington Monthly, In These Times, The Progressive, or Mother Jones.
I'm quoting
from.....Time. From the heart of the Time-Warner empire comes the judgment
that America now has "government for the few at the expense of the many."
You read this, and
then you read the report by the American Political Science Association which
finds that "increasing inequalities threaten the American ideal of equal
citizenship and that progress toward real democracy may have stalled in this
country and even reversed." You also read - in that same report - that a
quarter of all whites in this country have no financial assets. Then you
read on and learn that the median white household has 62% more income and
twelve times as much wealth as the median black household and that 6l% of
African-Americans in this country and half of all Latinos have no financial
assets at all.
Then you open
Jared Diamond's new book, Collapse: How Societies Choose to Succeed or Fail
to find the Pulitzer Prize-winning scholar's description of an America where
rich elites cocoon themselves "in gated communities, guarded by private
security guards, and filled with people who drink bottled water, depend on
private pensions, and send their children to private schools." Gradually,
they lose the motivation "to support the police force, the municipal water
supply, Social Security, and public schools." Any society where the elite
insulate themselves from the consequences of their action, Diamond warns,
contains a built-in blueprint for failure.
You read all this
and realize you have been seeing it with your own eyes as a reporter in the
field. You're seeing the mugging of the American Dream right before your
eyes.
Go with me for a
moment to a small town in Pennsylvania. Two years ago, for my weekly PBS
series Now with Bill Moyers, one of our teams spent time there listening to
regular people talk about what's happening in their lives. I want to share
with you an excerpt so that you can eavesdrop on the hidden conversation of
America that the ruling powers in Washington wants to stay hidden, as I'll
explain in a moment. First look at this:
[Video Segment]
Let me tell you
something about these people ("the point of view of the fish," remember?)
They don't ask to
get rich.
They want a job
that pays a living wage.
They want social
security to be there in their old age, for their own sake and so their kids
won't be burdened with their care.
They want a
simple, comprehensive health care system.
They want their
livelihoods and the fate of their communities to be taken into account as
the elites in government and corporations measure profits, economic growth
and the GDP.
And they would
like to see the political system cleaned up, so the playing field is more
level and their voices not wholly drowned out by the deep-pocket predators
from the Business Roundtable.
These are not
radical views. These are not even "liberal" views. They are just plain
American values. Any reporter who spends any time in the field can see that.
You just have to get out of the Washington and New York studios, throw away
the talking points sent you by the Republican National Committee, stop
yakking and start listening, leave the winners to their champagne and buy
the losers a beer, and you'll discover that the actual experience of regular
people is the missing link in a nation wired for everything but the truth.
And let me tell
you: These plain American values - the truth from an America that is barely
holding on - scare the hell out of the powers that be.
Case in point:
When that broadcast aired in November of '03, Kenneth Tomlinson was
watching. As most of you know by now, Mr. Tomlinson is chairman of the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting, an ally of Karl Rove, and the rightwing
monopoly's point man to keep tabs on public broadcasting. You've heard no
doubt that he and I have been, shall we say, somewhat at odds of late. I
didn't know exactly what started the trouble until just a few days ago, when
the Washington Post carried a story reporting that when Mr. Tomlinson
watched that documentary from Tamaqua, Pennsylvania, it was too much for
him. Reaching into the well-worn book of mindless rightwing clichés, he
called it "liberal advocacy journalism" and decided right then and there "to
bring some 'balance' to the public TV and radio airwaves."
So what did he do?
Well, apparently the saintly Tom DeLay was too busy snorkeling with
lobbyists to take on his own show informing the folks in Tamaqua,
Pennsylvania, that they are the "Petri dish of capitalism." But Mr.
Tomlinson found kindred spirits at the rightwing editorial board of the Wall
Street Journal where the "animal spirits of business" are routinely
celebrated with nary a negative note about the casualties of their voracious
appetites. Now you can get on public television every week, in The Wall
Street Editorial Report, an alternative view of reality to life as it is
lived in Tamaqua, Pennsylvania and communities like it all across this
country.
Here's the point:
The last thing ideologues want is reporting about the facts on the ground.
Facts on the ground subvert the party line. That's why if you live where
rightwing talk radio and media monopolies dominate the public discourse, you
are told a hundred different ways every day why unregulated markets work
better than democracy. It's a lie, but it works, because you are never told
the other side of the story. But here, on PBS one Friday evening, was the
other side of the story. Here were ordinary people who are in pain for
reasons not of their own making. And it was more than a rightwing
apparatchik could take. Because too much of the truth might set those people
free. Might take them to the voting booths - or even to the streets - to
declare: We're mad as hell and we're not going to take it anymore!"
This is a good
place to pause and call on that old journalistic warhorse, Hal Crowther, who
was at Time and Newsweek and the Buffalo News before going his own way with
an independent column. Just this week he writes that "The first thing every
reporter was taught, back when reporters were taught things, is that the
best way to find the truth is to follow the money....If the media still
hunted with live ammunition, Enron, Halliburton and the energy industry's
pornographic profits since 9/11 would be enough to force this oil-soaked,
sheik-beholden government to resign. In disgrace - remember disgrace?" And
he goes on: "Worse still than handouts to the wealthy is the reprehensible
new legislation that blocks working Americans from climbing the hill where
the money flows - laws like boulders rolled downhill to crush the scrambling
underclass, the millions of Americans unable to pay their bills. Think about
what it means to limit personal bankruptcies, inhibit class action suits
against toxic employers, protect chemical polluters (usually oil companies)
from liability lawsuits and cap settlements in personal injury cases. It
means trying to eliminate what little protection ordinary citizens retain
against corporate leviathans that cheat, exploit, injure and poison them,
trap them in hopeless jobs, renege on their healthcare and default on their
pensions. It means striping leverage from the people who have no leverage to
spare."
Hal Crowther is
one of those journalists who goes hunting with live ammunition. But if
Kenneth Tomlinson and Karl Rove have their way, public broadcasting
journalists will be firing blanks.
What's important
in this story is not only that journalism still matters - that reporting
from the ground up can strike a nerve in the heart of the imperium. What's
important is that you see what as citizens you are up against. These guys
play for keep. They mean to control the story. And if they can they will
silence or discredit anyone who dissents from the official view of reality.
A profound
transformation is occurring in America and those responsible for it don't
want you to connect the dots. We are experiencing what has been described as
a "fanatical drive to dismantle the political institutions, the legal and
statutory canons, and the intellectual and cultural frameworks that have
shaped public responsibility for social harms arising from the excesses of
private power." From public land to water and other natural resources, from
media with their broadcast and digital spectrums to scientific discoveries
and medical breakthroughs, a broad range of America's public resources is
being shifted to the control of elites and the benefit of the privileged. It
all seems so clear now that we wonder how we could have ignored the warning
signs at the time. Back in the early l970s President Nixon's Attorney
General, John Mitchell, predicted that "this country is going to go so far
to the right that you won't recognize it." A wealthy right-winger of the
time, William Simon, President Nixon's Secretary of the Treasury, wrote a
polemic declaring that "funds generated by business...must rush by the
multimillions" to conservative causes. Said Business Week, bluntly: "Some
people will obviously have to do with less...It will be a bitter pill for
many Americans to swallow the idea of doing with less so that big business
can have more."
We've seen the
strategy play out for years now: to cut workforces and wages, scour the
globe in search of cheap labor, trash the social contract and the safety net
meant to protect people from hardships beyond their control, make it hard
for ordinary citizens to gain redress for the malfeasance and malpractice of
corporations, and diminish the ability of government to check and balance
"the animal spirits" of economic warfare where the winner takes all. Streams
of money flowed into think tanks to shape the agenda, media to promote it,
and a political machine to achieve it. What has happened to working
Americans is not the result of Adam Smith's benign and invisible hand but
the direct consequence of corporate money, ideological propaganda, a
partisan political religion, and a string of political decisions favoring
the interests of wealthy elites who bought the political system right out
from under us.
It's an old story
in America. We shouldn't be surprised by it any more. Hold up a mirror to
this moment and you will see reflected back to you the first Gilded Age in
the last part of the l9th century. Then, as now, the great captains of
industry and finance could say, with Frederick Townsend Martin, "We are
rich. We own America. We got it, God knows how, but we intend to keep it."
They were deadly
serious. Go for the evidence to such magisterial studies of American history
as Growth of the American Republic ( Morison, Commager, and Leuchtenberg),
and you'll read how they did it: They gained control of newspapers and
magazines. They subsidized candidates. They bought legislation and even
judicial decisions. To justify their greed and power they drew on history,
law, economics, and religion to concoct a philosophy that would come to be
known as Social Darwinism - "backed up by the quasi religious principle that
the acquisition of wealth was a mark of divine favor." One of their favorite
apologists, Professor William Graham Sumner of Yale, said: "If we do not
like the survival of the fittest, we have only one possible alternative, and
that is the survival of the unfittest. The former is the law of
civilization; the latter is the law of anti-civilization.
I'm not making
this up. It's right there in the record. The historians tell us that a
boundless continent lay open and ready for their exploitation and "all the
bounties of nature were allowed to fall into the hands of strong men and
powerful corporations." Clever lawyers came up with new devices for the
legal aggrandizement of private fortunes (shades of today's Federalist
Society!) No labor laws or workingmen's compensation nets interfered with
their profits (shades of DeLay's "Petri dish of capitalism! ") No public
opinion penetrated the walls of their conceit (shades of "The Great
Republican Noise Machine.")
They're back, my
friends. They're back in full force and their goal is to take America back -
to their private Garden of Eden in that first Gilded Age when "the strong
take what they wanted and the weak suffer what they must." Look no further
than today's news: William Donaldson, who made a decent stab at enforcing
post-Enron reform on Wall Street, is out as Chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Commission; according to USA Today, the President's big donors -
the captains of finance - cashed in their IOUs and came away from the White
House with his head on a platter. In his place: A rightwing congressman who
takes a dim view of shareholder suits and favors eliminating the estate tax,
the dividend tax, the - well, there's no tax on wealth he doesn't want to
eliminate. Once again the chicken coop is sold to the fox.
Back in the first
Gilded Age it was the progressives who took them on, throwing themselves at
the juggernaut to try and keep it from rolling over the last vestiges of
democracy. They lost the first rounds and only because they kept fighting
for many long years did in time America begin to balance the power of
concentrated wealth with the claims and needs of ordinary people. Nowadays
it's you who stand between that regenerated juggernaut and those families in
Milwaukee, those folks in Tamaqua, and the millions like them around the
country. You must be like the Irishman coming upon a street brawl who yells
in a loud voice: "Is this a private fight, or can anyone get in it?" Not
waiting, he wades in.
Wade in! Go home
and tell the truth to your neighbors and fight the corruption of the system.
But it's not enough just to say how bad the others are. You owe your
opponents the compliment of a good argument. Come up with fresh ideas to
make capitalism work for all. Ask entrepreneurs to join you - they know how
to make things happen. Show us a new vision of globalization with a
conscience. Stand up for working people and people in the middle and people
who can't stand on their own. Be not cowed, intimidated, or frightened - you
may be on the losing side of the moment, as the early progressives were, but
you're on the winning side of history. And have some fun when you fight -
Americans are more likely to join the party that enjoys a party . Come to
think of it, go out and argue that working people should have more time off
from the endless hours of tedious work that devours the soul and the long
commutes that devastate families and communities.
Above all, know
what you belief and why. So I have some homework for you. Here's your summer
reading: Thomas Paine and the Promise of America, by Harvey Kaye, soon at
your bookstores (along, I might add, with a revised and updated paperback
version of Moyers on America.) Thomas Paine was the foremost journalist of
the American Revolution who called forth the better angels of our nature,
imbued us with our democratic impulse, and articulated our American Identity
with its exceptional purpose and promise. It was Paine who argued that
America would afford "an asylum for mankind," provide a model to the world,
and support the global advance of republican democracy. In these pages is
tonic for flagging spirits facing great odds - because it was Thomas Paine
who insisted that "it is too soon to write the history of the Revolution."
And writing the history of the Revolution is now up to you. That's what
truly is at stake.
Good luck!
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