We
Are the 99%: The Focus of Our Rage (part one)
by
Rev. Paul J. Bern
On
this third anniversary of the Occupy and 99% Movements, I have given
a lot of thought and engaged in plenty of research regarding the
plight of middle America, and what should and should not be done to
bring the top 1% in line with the rest of us. Having
written two books about this topic,
I will now attempt to spell out the basics of what we want, and why
working Americans of all kinds have continued the “Occupy”
protests that are springing up all over the world (such as in
Ferguson Mo. recently). We all want basically the same things. We
want all the legalized bribery out of politics. This can be
accomplished by strict regulation of the lobbyist profession at the
very least, but most likely we should consider outlawing the lobbyist
profession as it currently operates. If Washington won't do it then
“we the people” will have to do it for them. We can accomplish
this by, among other things, “occupying” K Street in downtown
Washington where most of the lobbyist's offices are located, or by
laying siege to their offices through human barricades (nobody comes
and nobody goes), or other forms of nonviolent protest. Either take
the rampant corruption out of our nation's politics and fully
prosecute those responsible for the 2008 financial meltdown on Wall
Street and for creating the housing bubble just before they
intentionally popped it, or else we may well be destroyed by Wall
Street and their armies of lobbyists, shady co-conspirators and other
henchmen, starting with the Federal Reserve on down.
From
my vantage point, and based on my own experiences, the least common
denominator to everything that we are protesting, marching and
occupying for can be boiled down to 2 things: the rights of workers
and the right to economic equality, including the peaceful
restoration of the American middle class to its former economic and
social position in American society. Allow me to use the next few
pages to explain exactly how we can go about accomplishing these
goals in a manner that is legal, peaceful and orderly so we can set a
good example for our nation's kids and grand-kids. For example, one
very good way that we could go about accomplishing this is to emulate
the peaceful and nonviolent tactics of Rev. Dr. King, Jr. that were
utilized during the civil rights marches and protests of the 1950's
and 1960's. In so doing, history will be on our side and victory
against the top 1% will ultimately be ours.
Let
me add one more thing before I get into this. You will notice as you
read the rest of this essay/op-ed that there are a lot of ideas in
here about how to restore America and its middle class, and how to
re-balance the distribution of wealth in a peaceful and orderly
manner for the mutual betterment of everyone. These ideas I am about
to share are simple and practical solutions to some huge problems
that America faces. You will also notice that these ideas can be
easily implemented using our existing governmental framework and
technology. It won't be necessary to reinvent the wheel in order for
America's people to accomplish their goals for the perfection of our
society, starting with a rescue of the poor and middle class.
The
first and foremost issue of what we the people want should be the
rights of all workers and independent contractors. We want a $15.00
per hour minimum wage combined with the abolition of the federal
income tax and an end to the withholding of US income tax from our
paychecks. This would give everyone who makes less than $108.000.00
per year a pay raise amounting to an average of 20% immediately,
pumping billions of fresh dollars into the US economy that generates
many millions in new tax revenue without raising any existing taxes.
Full employment should become the new standard of the world, and that
standard should be set by the USA.
The
second issue I wish to mention is the right to higher education
and/or vocational retraining at will and at nominal cost. This is
what we should do for all the long-term unemployed, all the homeless
who are healthy enough to work, all unemployed veterans, and for all
newly released prisoners who are re-entering society. This is how we
can end homelessness for good and cut back on crime; simply give
these people a trade. It is an established fact that the root cause
of the majority of crime is economic desperation (excluding crimes of
passion). Every human being on the face of the earth has the
unconditional right to a livelihood and to a living wage. Those
unable to find work, and those needing to learn new job skills in
order to be self-sufficient have the basic human right to
professional retraining without cost. Let the private colleges and
universities remain as they are, but let our public institutions of
higher education become nonprofits so that higher education is
unconditionally accessible to everyone. The days of exclusively
for-profit educational institutions must come to an end, because I am
convinced that it is immoral and mean-spirited to prevent another
human being from being able to sustain themselves because some CEO or
policy wonk somewhere thinks that retraining America's workers would
be “too expensive”, as if they are not worth the trouble. The
best part about this as far as I am concerned is that America can
easily afford this, and I will use the 2 wars in Iraq and the
occupation of Afghanistan as an illustration.
If
the US government took all the money spent in one single day on the
illegal occupation of Afghanistan or Iraq and put it into an
interest-bearing account, there would be enough money to put every
school kid in America through 4 years of college fully paid for,
including tuition, books, dorms, food, transportation and Internet
access, plus a new desktop or laptop computer. Let me give you
another example. If the US government took all the money spent in one
single day on the war in Afghanistan and put it into an
interest-bearing account, there would be enough money to put every
homeless person or family in America – all 2.2 million of them as
of 2013 – into a new 3,000 square foot home fully paid for, fully
furnished, with the utilities turned on including Internet access
(which the UN declared to be a basic human right as of 2011), and
stocked with a years worth of groceries. This is what converting to a
peacetime economy can do for America. And all on one day's military
expenditures. Then, send them all back to school to teach them new
trades so they can keep those houses and leave them to their children
upon their departure from this earth.
There
is one more important thing that I have yet to mention. The world is
changing and developing so rapidly as scientific and technological
advances are made that the job market has become very dynamic. As you
know, the pace of this advancement is accelerating, resulting in
different types of jobs coming and going rapidly in order to meet an
ever-changing demand. Higher education, the US public school system
and for-profit vocational schools will most definitely have to adjust
their curriculum accordingly. You have probably noticed that some
very traditional jobs are disappearing. Just ask anybody who used to
be in the travel industry, or direct sales, or a factory worker, or a
former computer and network technician like I was for 22 years. When
I went back and tried to get retraining I was told that my credit
rating was not good enough to qualify for a student loan. Many of the
courses taught in various vocational schools cost tens of thousands
of dollars, and I was broke at the time (come to think about it, I
still am, but I digress). So, I found myself shut out from any chance
at changing careers. As I began to research this I found that this is
actually quite commonplace in today's dreary job market. Instead of
going back to work like I wanted, I was forced into early retirement,
and forced to depend on a federal government that I despise for my
monthly sustenance. I would much rather be self-sufficient, but never
mind that. My government has already decided to throw me away because
I'm allegedly too old (I'm in my 50's as I write this), and therefore
too expensive to keep around. Therefore I insist that this practice
must come to an end, that higher education should be free for
everybody, and that higher education is a basic human right. The days
of a college education or vocational retraining being only for those
who can afford the tuition (or who “qualify” for predatory and
highly unethical student loans) must come to an end. Do you want to
have a better educated country? Fine, so do I! Let everybody who
wants to get educated – or reeducated – go back to school, and
let the government, the Wall St mega-rich and corporate America foot
the bill. The funds are definitely available, as I wrote above.
Of
course, I can hear my critics laughing already. Where, they will say,
do we get the money to fund re-educating the whole country? We're
running a $16 trillion deficit as it is! You know what? You're
absolutely right, we do have a seemingly insurmountable federal
deficit. How do we tackle both problems together? By creating new
taxpayers who have found new careers and gotten their incomes
restarted thanks to low cost retraining, and there is ample precedent
for this very thing. At the end of World War 2, there were about
600,000 former GI's who had just returned from the European and
Pacific theaters in the wars against Germany and Japan. Many of them
didn't have any marketable job skills, so Congress passed the GI Bill
and put all those soldiers through 4 years of college. It paid off
handsomely, paving the way for the record economic expansion of the
1950's and 1960's. Well, if they could do that in the 1940's, why
can't they do it in 2014? The answer is that the system most
certainly can, and we of the Occupy and 99% Movements must count
reeducation as one of the things that we occupy and protest for.
Either employ us or retrain us, and we're not leaving until we get
what we want.
One
final thing about the basic right to higher education. According to
data I obtained from the US Department of Labor, and some additional
information I obtained from CareerBuilder.com, the average student
graduate from college today will have to change careers from 5 to 8
times during the course of their lifetime of employment. So, by
today's standards, and assuming career changes involve getting 2-year
degrees, somebody going back to school a total of 8 times multiplied
by the average cost of obtaining each of those degrees – roughly
$30,000.00 times as much as eight – could be as much as a quarter
of a million dollars, plus interest. Do our colleges and universities
seriously believe that people will be willing to go into that much
debt from student loans in their lifetimes, just so they can remain
employable? How ridiculous! The cost of tuition for higher education
in the early 21st
century has reached a level that is so unreasonable that getting a
degree has become financially out of reach for all but the top few
percent. Excluding the overwhelming majority of all others for purely
financial reasons is a social injustice and a human rights violation
if there ever was one. We must start demanding our right to free or
low-cost higher education as part of our goals. And so we will
continue to “occupy” and protest peacefully until we get what we
want. We are the 99%!
The
third fundamental human right that I want to write about is to be
free from poverty and hunger, with an equal chance at prosperity, in
a clean and peaceful environment. How do we do all that? We clean up
the environment that we already have, and for that we will need lots
of people. That brings me to the topic of a huge public works program
that this country urgently needs, and this is part of the solution
that I see. Therefore, this is indeed another basic human right. This
is something that should already have been done at the Presidential
level, but unfortunately it has not since president Franklin
Roosevelt's New Deal of the 1930's. We need massive protests and
demonstrations, and a major effort through the social media to get
this passed into law. My proposed solution is that all the long-term
unemployed people plus all the others I mentioned above be put to
work in this new series of public works projects. Some will be doing
environmental cleanup, others will assist with bridge and highway
repairs, and still others will be repairing sewers and sidewalks. The
homeless will be put to work revitalizing abandoned homes left over
from the “great foreclosure robbery” (as I called it in my
first book).
When they are finished with the first home, they can go live in it as
they begin repairs on others. We do have the capacity to have full
employment at a living wage, and to end homelessness while ending the
foreclosure crisis. This is one way to accomplish just that. I
encourage anyone having additional ideas to publish them as I have,
and the more input the better. And what about all the households
where both parents work, or single-parent households? Who is going to
watch all those kids? I think we should have on-site daycare
available for everybody free of charge. It would be yet another way
to create jobs with a starting wage of $15.00 an hour.
The
fourth fundamental human right, and another way to articulate what we
want, is to address the problem of health insurance and its
ridiculous cost, pricing 54 million Americans out of the health
insurance market and forcing many of us to rely on the local
emergency room for medical treatment. It is an indisputable fact that
every developed country in the world has national health insurance
for its citizens except for the United States. From Europe to Canada
to Japan, getting sick is never a problem unless the illness is
terminal. Not so in the USA, where health care is on a for-profit
basis, and we are the only country in the developed world where this
is so. We have the highest cost for health care and the most
expensive prescription drugs of any country in the world by far. In
other words, good health care in this country is only for those who
can afford it. The rest of us are left stranded on the side of the
road to health and wellness and without remedy, eventually to die,
and well before our time. Speaking as an Internet
pastor,
I find the idea of denying health care to nearly a fourth of the US
population (about half of whom are children) just because they can't
pay for it to be immoral, unjustifiable, and utterly barbaric.
So
what is the solution to this pressing problem? One thing is for sure,
every human being on the face of the earth has the unconditional
right to good health care. It's as basic as access to clean water
(another area where mankind has some work to do). I strongly maintain
that it should be a crime for any patient to die because they lacked
access to treatment due to having no money or health insurance. There
is simply no excuse for that to be happening in the richest country
in the world, and I for one am ashamed that it is occurring, and I
doubt that I am the only one who has this opinion. Also, people with
preexisting conditions or who are beset with a catastrophic illness
should always have unconditional access to health care. One possible
way to do this would be to change the health care industry in the US
from for-profit entities to nonprofits. Anyone seeking treatment for
substance abuse or mental illness, or who are in need of any organ
transplants, or kidney dialysis, cancer treatment, or any other
serious illness requiring constant monitoring or ongoing therapy,
must be able to get treatment without financial qualification. This
is not a privilege of the well off, it is a basic human right. For
example, it is pointless and prohibitively expensive to prosecute and
incarcerate nonviolent drug users. They don't need jail, they need
treatment.
See
you next week for part two! Until then, shalom.
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