We
Are the 99%: The Focus of Our Rage
(part two)
by
Rev. Paul J. Bern
At
the conclusion of the first half of this essay last week, the topic
was free health care. Not that I wish to demand a handout from anyone
or anything, it's just that good health through preventative medicine
is a basic human right for everyone, not just for those who can
afford the insurance premiums and the medical debt that is sure to
come after one's wellness is restored. The question remains then: How
does the US catch up with the rest of the developed world when it
comes to universal health care? Every developed country in the world
has free health care for its citizens – the US is the only
exception. Also, how do we do this within the framework of the
existing US health care system(s) in order to conserve on start-up
costs and minimize overhead? The plan I proposed back in 2012, in
a book I self-published (“The Middle and Working Class Manifesto”),
is simple: Take all currently available medical care in all its forms
and put it under one umbrella, so to speak. Merge Medicare, Medicaid,
government health insurance for civilian employees at the state and
federal levels, the military and Congress' (including the
President's) health care plans, plus the entire Veterans
Administration hospital system into an enhanced Medicare program
(private insurance excepted) so that no one is left out. Next,
streamline the new Medicare health care system by eliminating any and
all duplicate departments, and make it an on-line, Internet-based and
paperless system utilizing leading edge information technology in
order to lower operating costs and cut way down on paperwork. And
third, once this new on-line system gets rolled out and becomes
available to everyone, we'll simply eliminate Medicaid so that all
persons will have unconditional access to the same level of care,
from the President down to the dishwasher at your favorite
restaurant. And now, before I move on, let me point out another
equally big advantage to having a universal health care system such
as this.
Having
the government take over the administration of health care for the
entire country is a solution that is long overdue. Don't worry about
what might happen to the existing insurance industry, it isn't going
anywhere and I will explain why in the next paragraph. Allowing a
proposed universal health care system to work in this manner (and
so-called 'Obamacare' comes up way short of what's needed) would take
the burden of providing health insurance for its employees off the
backs of businesses, substantially enhancing the profit margins of
all US companies both great and small. This will give the American
economy – together with US businesses – a far greater financial
shot in the arm than any government tax cut could ever hope to. In
the process, making US medical care into a series of nonprofit
entities will bring American health and wellness up to 21st
century speed with comparatively nominal operating costs.
So
what happens to the existing insurance industry? These very companies
will be the ones who will administer this new digitized health care
system. They will do so by way of a competitive bidding process to
ensure that costs are kept under control, effectively farming out the
day-to-day operations of the health care program. The companies with
the lowest bids will get the contracts, which will be brought up for
renewal periodically – say, every 3 years. Running the new
universal health care system this way will ensure that only the best
insurance companies will be administering the program, and that the
remaining marginal or substandard insurance companies be ultimately
either forced to improve or go out of business.
The
fourth and final main thing I want to write a couple of paragraphs
about is that of economic inequality, or what I called in my
first book
“enforced inequality”. Class warfare has been declared by the top
1% against the rest of us, meaning the 99% who are losing our jobs,
our homes, our cars, our savings and eventually our health as the
enforced liquidation of the US middle and working classes continues.
What is needed is a peaceful and orderly redistribution of wealth
that is done in a non-violent manner. So how do we accomplish this
without starting a brawl? I have a couple of ideas, but the first
step for America would be to enact an all-new tax system, abolishing
the federal income tax and replacing it with a national sales tax.
This proposed new tax system will be a 2-tiered system, with the
national sales tax – or consumption tax – set at 9% (excluding
groceries, fuel, utilities, wholesale goods, raw materials, and all
government entities). Why 9%, you ask? Well, according to some data
that I obtained from the IRS, as well as from the alternative news
media, the average personal income tax rate in 2013 was roughly 18%,
so I am proposing cutting that rate in half.
The
second part of this proposed new tax system will be what I call an
“excess wealth tax” for the mega-rich on Wall St. and elsewhere,
and for any financial transactions that are over a certain limit. For
individuals, there would be no income tax on their first $1 million
in earnings, but anything above that gets taxed at a rate of 50%. So,
a wealthy household or individual who made $25 million last year
would pay no tax on the first $1 million, but they would pay $12
million on the remaining $24 million. For businesses, the proposed
consumption tax rate is even more generous, with the first $700
million in earnings tax free, and a tax rate of one-third on anything
over and above that. So, a company that made $1 billion dollars in
profits the previous tax year would pay no tax on the first $700
million, but they would pay $100 million on the remaining $300
million, and so on. On the other hand, a multinational corporation
that had $300 billion in gross proceeds in a given year would also
pay a rate of one third, so their tax rate would be $100 billion. As
a result, all itemized deductions would come to an end, greatly
simplifying the process. Ditto for the estate tax and capital gains
tax, both of which would be replaced by this proposed Excess Wealth
tax. The alternative minimum tax and self-employment tax would also
be eliminated, replaced by the national sales tax. And the motivation
under the current unfair system to stash trillions in profits in
overseas bank accounts would become a moot point, generating still
more revenue while cutting the tax rate as it stands today. (update:
there is a bill circulating in Congress as I write this that would
make such shady financial shenanigans illegal – outcome TBD.)
Under
this plan, there is ample incentive for the rich and big business to
get enthused about these ideas. First, the necessity of providing
group health care would go away for US businesses (due to my proposed
Medicare-for-all system), followed by the repeal of the federal
income tax. All the money being spent on income taxes and group
insurance could be put back into these businesses, making them more
competitive and better funded than ever before. In fact, I would
estimate that such a move by the federal government would go a long
way toward making America very competitive in the global economy
because the costs associated with operating a business will drop so
drastically due to the elimination of these two primary expenses. And
second, the “excess wealth tax” that I just proposed would still
provide sufficient funding for costly government institutions like
the military and the space program, not to mention the cost of public
reeducation and the public works projects I mentioned previously.
Finally, this proposed excess wealth tax would go a long way toward
making room for a higher minimum wage a reality as a legal and
orderly means of wealth redistribution in the US. Even if raising the
minimum wage to $15.00 per hour (not $10.10 an hour, Mr. President,
that is woefully inadequate) does not get passed into law (at least
for now), the repeal of the income tax will still give every American
worker an average 18% pay raise immediately (not counting the
benefits of repealing corporate income taxes). Now that's what I call
genuine economic stimulus!!
Another
way to peacefully redistribute wealth is by converting unwanted or
surplus housing and commercial or office structures into residences,
live-work-play developments, green or urban garden space, or new
worker-owned businesses such as cooperatives. One of the things that
can and should be done with my proposed national public works program
is to get rid of all the empty, boarded-up houses that have been
abandoned to foreclosure and neglect. Put all the homeless and
jobless to work remodeling this otherwise worthless real estate.
There are millions of unemployed construction workers who would love
to get a chance to do something like this, so why not let them
(especially if they have families)? And when they are finished
rebuilding them, let them live in them and so revitalize America.
Reward them by turning them into homeowners. This is how we can end
unemployment and homelessness while turning around the US foreclosure
crisis. We can do the same with health care and with higher
education. Make them both available to everyone unconditionally as a
way to enforce economic equality and social parity. This is how we
can redistribute American wealth in a peaceful and nonviolent manner,
and in so doing set a good example for our kids and grand-kids. The
days of making good health care and higher education available for
only those who can afford it must come to an end. That is unfair,
discriminatory, it is a social injustice and therefore a civil rights
violation of the worst magnitude. To tell anyone that they are
ineligible to receive either good health care or quality education
because they can't pay the tab should be a crime.
In
closing, everybody deserves to have an income and a livelihood. It is
cruel and mean-spirited to tell anyone that they are no longer needed
nor wanted, or that they are overqualified, or that they can't be
hired because there is allegedly no money to pay them while corporate
America sits on trillions of dollars in excess cash, much of it
overseas. If unemployment is brought to an end using the methods and
ideas that I have written about, poverty, hunger and crime will be
very nearly brought to an end as well – not in a matter of decades,
but rather just a few short years, or the time that it takes them to
finish their (free) education. We already have the means to do this,
so it would be irresponsible and immoral for us not to act. However,
some will say, “I've been looking for a job for years and I haven't
found anything.” I have found this to be particularly true among
older workers, minorities and people of color. Having experienced
this myself in the recent past as a worker in his late 50's, I know
exactly what these people are going through. To call these situations
stressful would be a gross understatement.
Brothers
and sisters, friends and followers, if you are experiencing this now,
this is not your fault.
Your government, together with some of this country's most well-known
institutions such as the US public school system, the 1%-'ers and the
Wall Street multinational corporations and their bankers, have let
you down. All the jobs that could be outsourced overseas have already
been sent away, never to return. The ones that couldn't be outsourced
were mostly downsized out of existence, ending millions of careers
prematurely. It is for these reasons that we are now protesting in
the streets and occupying
America
in New York, Boston, Washington, DC and Atlanta, and Ferguson, Mo.,
among others. Because the truth of the matter is that since these
jobs aren't coming back, we as a country should be making new ones,
and this should have started decades ago. America has a lot of
catching up to do in the area of job creation. The good news is that
there are new industries currently being born that can replace all
those lost jobs that I wrote about with room to spare. Green
industries like solar power, windmill power generators, the
construction of a low-voltage national electrical grid and of fusion
reactors, not to mention biotechnology, stem cell research,
nanotechnology, robotics, seashore desalination plants for an endless
supply of clean water, and a greatly expanded and revitalized space
industry, all are the new growth industries of the 21st
century.
Seriously,
people! We first landed on the moon in 1969, took our last trip there
in 1972, after which our country's “leadership” mysteriously gave
up and quit. This was alleged at the time to be due to insufficient
funding, but if the US hadn't been involved with the war in Vietnam,
America could easily have afforded to continue NASA's Apollo program.
The immoral and strategically questionable occupations or wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan today are preventing our country from returning
to space in much the same way as Vietnam did. It's all a matter of
the proper allocation of resources. So when do we start a grassroots
campaign to stop the wars overseas so we can fund our needs at home?
How much longer are we going to delay? How about starting today?
Once
that serious matter is taken care of, the next step will be for us to
decide how to allocate all the money the country will save by ending
the wars overseas and bringing our troops home. All right, check this
out. We are supposed to be in the space business already! Hello!
Instead, we debate among ourselves whether or not women should have
abortions, or whether gay marriage is acceptable or not. Speaking as
an independent Internet
preacher
of the more radical kind, if we are serious about wanting to lead
good lives and to be productive contributors towards the common good,
then we need to be creating jobs and helping to rebuild people's
lives. We need to be helping people regain their sustenance and
self-sufficiency. I also am appalled that the mainstream church is so
against abortion while being in favor of the death penalty and of
waging war, a contradiction if ever there was one. I am equally
appalled at the mainstream denominations for their condemnation of
gay marriage while the divorce rates for evangelicals are about the
same as for the secular world. Again, these are glaring
contradictions to their faith, to say the least.
OK,
so let's do something constructive in Jesus' name. Here's one way we
can fix our public schools and accelerate the start-up of all these
new 21st
century businesses, all at the same time. First, government and
business should get together and find a way to give large grants to
these fledgling companies that are already started up in one form or
another. They need start-up capital, and they're not going to find it
at the bank branch down the street. Government can and must step in.
Our only alternative is to become a second-rate country, a has-been
of military and economic power. The other thing that needs to be done
is to start training future astronauts now. Update public school
curriculum, and put it on-line. Turn the public schools into an
Internet-based system that is paperless and that doesn't need to buy
expensive textbooks every year (save the trees!). Then, start
teaching the kids skills that they will need for a technology-based
world and a digital workplace, with an emphasis on science and math.
Start teaching them to be astronauts when they're 12 years old,
because by the time they graduate from college there will be
thousands of astronauts needed, not just a select lucky few like
today. Allow me to tell you why in just one paragraph.
At
the peak of the US space shuttle program, NASA was launching about
three missions per year. Having witnessed – over the last couple of
years – the ongoing privatization of space by unmanned cargo
shipments to the International Space Station, I can tell you that by
the end of this decade there will be about three launches per week
instead of per year. Ten years after that in 2030 there could easily
be more than 3 launches per day, and so on. The time to begin getting
ready for our space-faring future is now. Train our children by
making the space sciences a part of their curriculum, and then do the
same with the adults. Retrain everybody who can't find work, or who
needs a career change, and pick up the tab just like the GI Bill that
was passed by Congress after the end of World War 2. Performing this
service for America's workforce will literally lift them all up to
the next level and make it much more competitive. I have heard people
complain over and over again that “we can't compete” with some
dude in China who does the same job we do for $2.00 a day. What
America needs is new careers to replace those that have been
eliminated. We not only have the capacity to do this already, we are
way behind and America has a lot of catching up to do. But we are
Americans. Our skills and work habits are second to none, and the
same goes for US institutions of higher learning. We can and will
succeed if only we will unite together in this effort. Let's all get
started today!
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