America's
Tax and Monetary Systems Are Broken
by Rev.
Paul J. Bern
Wall Street
has gotten completely out of control when it comes to the salaries,
and especially the outrageous bonuses, being paid to top management,
sales and other executives. This problem has been ongoing for a long
time, and it continues to get worse. The scenario usually works out
something like this: A global financial catastrophe occurs a
la 2008. An outraged public shakes pitchforks
at the corporate culprits. Lawmakers respond by proposing some new BS
laws that appear to require corporations to more fully disclose what
they’re doing. Corporate America, sensing encroachment on their
hunting territory, goes ballistic. Sound familiar? We’ve seen this
story play out before. In fact, we’ve seen this story play out
after almost every grand corporate catastrophe over the last 80
years.
For
example, back in 1933, with the nation still reeling from the 1929
stock market crash, newly-elected President Franklin Roosevelt pushed
for legislation that required firms to register securities trades and
provide basic financial information. That act eventually passed
despite fanatical Wall Street opposition. A more modern example? In
1984, a Union Carbide chemical leak killed thousands in Bhopal,
India. U.S. lawmakers had to battle relentless industry opposition
before they could pass a right-to-know law on toxic emissions.
Runaway
executive pay played a key driving role in the run-up to the Great
Recession. Executive pay excesses, as President Obama once put it,
“have contributed to a reckless culture.” By attempting to avoid
the issue, it seems clear that corporations simply want to avoid
embarrassment and public outrage, not to mention the attention of
investigators outside the scope of Wall St. such as the Office of
Management and Budget and the US Attorney General's office, among
others. If we are going to be successful in reversing this trend for
the purpose of redirecting America's cash flow from the top 1% back
in favor of the rest of us, the remaining 99% of Americans – that's
us – will have to forcibly take back what has been shamelessly
stolen from us. Political and economic power is never surrendered
voluntarily, so forcibly retaking it is the 99%'s only option as of
now. Is this too much to ask of ourselves? I think not! In fact, I
made up my mind a long time ago that this would be a cause that I
would always believe in, the cause of social and economic justice for
all.
Outrageous
pay packages, research indicates, encourage outrageous executive
behaviors that range from high-risk investing gambles to outsourcing
jobs while firing long-time workers without cause, to cooking the
corporate books for the aggrandizement of upper management. The wider
the pay gap between the guy in the top floor corner suite and
everybody else, the lower the workforce morale and the higher the
employee turnover. In other words, the more cash we let corporations
stuff in executive pockets at their employee's expense, the less
competitive our corporations become. Is this any way to run the
richest country in the world? Whose lame-brain idea was this to begin
with?
Is it any
wonder that the US economy has been run into the ground when we find
such egregious examples of inexcusable mismanagement, criminal
malfeasance and offensive buffoonery? It is abundantly clear to me
that the system has been abused so badly that it is no longer
functional. Allow me to present a couple of examples taken straight
from the Web on what happens when abusive people who also happen to
be exceptionally greedy take control of our country's entire
governmental system. Vast sums of money are being quietly diverted
from the wallets, pensions, banking and investment accounts of the
American public just by changing the tax laws to favor the
ultra-rich.
In
my example #1, tax cuts for the wealthiest
five percent of Americans cost the U.S. Treasury $11.6 million every
hour, according to the National Priorities Project. America’s top
earners got an average tax cut of $66,384 in 2011, while the bottom
20 percent will get an average cut of $107. These enormous tax cuts
are weighing on the national debt. The non-partisan Center for Budget
and Priorities found that the Bush tax cuts costs about the same as
the shortfall from Social Security in the ten years after they were
signed into law. If the U.S. reverted to Clinton-era marginal tax
rates, the U.S. Treasury would net an additional $72 billion
annually, according to Citizens for Tax Justice. In addition,
increasing taxes on the wealthy could also help to narrow the
widening wealth gap. In 2012 when this book was first written, the
net worth of the bottom 60 percent of U.S. Households – about 100
million households – was lower than that of Forbes 400 richest
Americans. Tax cuts for the wealthy provided Americans making more
than $1 million with a $128,832 benefit, while Americans earning from
$40,000 to $50,000 got an $860 benefit on average. This disparity has
since gotten still worse. As of this summer 2014 update, the entire
Walton family of Bentonville, Arkansas, the six sons and daughters of
Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton, now have roughly the same wealth as
America's “bottom” 100 million people, as if one's net worth
correlated somehow with the measure of a man, or of a woman. This is
how twisted and distorted capitalism has become, and economic
inequality doesn't happen by accident.
Besides the
broken tax system, as if this set of problems were not enough, I
offer our broken monetary system as my second example. The US Federal
Reserve was created on December 21st,
1913 and given a 99 year lease to print America's money. This lease
was given to an organized group of nameless, faceless investors who
formed a private holding company that is the de
facto sole proprietorship of the Federal
Reserve. (The Federal Reserve Bank is not a public entity, and never
was). That 99-year lease expired on December 21st,
2012, but the Fed is still there occupying that real estate and those
reserve banks. Legally, that makes the Federal Reserve and all its
employees nothing more than mere squatters on US Government property,
and I think they should be treated as such.
What many
people don't realize is that the US Constitution gives the right to
mint money to the Department of the Treasury, which makes the Federal
Reserve Bank in its current form completely unconstitutional, as it
has been right from the start. To make matters worse, in all the time
the Federal Reserve has been in existence it has never – ever –
been audited until fairly recently. Nobody in Washington, not even
the president, knows the exact true state of the Federal Reserve as I
write this, although I have no doubt that many in DC will claim they
do and a few will even believe it. For that reason senator Bernie
Sanders, an independent US senator from Vermont with (thankfully) no
party affiliation, sponsored a bill calling for an audit of the
Federal Reserve system that was made public in the summer of 2011. He
published a blog post regarding this first-ever Fed audit that was
widely cross-posted on the Web, and I offer a short excerpt of what
the senator wrote.
“The
first top-to-bottom audit of the Federal Reserve uncovered
eye-popping new details about how the U.S. provided a whopping $16
trillion in secret loans to bail out American and foreign banks and
businesses during the worst economic crisis since the Great
Depression. 'As a result of this audit, we now know that the Federal
Reserve provided more than $16 trillion in total financial assistance
to some of the largest financial institutions and corporations in the
United States and throughout the world,' said Sanders. 'This is a
clear case of socialism for the rich and rugged, you're-on-your-own
individualism for everyone else. Among the investigation's key
findings is that the Fed unilaterally provided trillions of dollars
in financial assistance to foreign banks and corporations from South
Korea to Scotland, according to the GAO report. No agency of the
United States government should be allowed to bailout a foreign bank
or corporation without the direct approval of Congress and the
President. One thing already is abundantly clear. The Federal Reserve
must be reformed to serve the needs of working families, not just
C.E.O.'s on Wall Street'...”
The
so-called “national debt” is nothing more than the indebtedness
of the US Government to the Federal Reserve for the money it prints
for our government. For example, when former Federal Reserve chairman
Ben Bernanke initiated what he called “QE3” (for quantitative
easing), what actually occurred was the need for Washington to borrow
more money. This necessity was met by having the Fed print what we
now know was $16 trillion dollars in order to flood American markets
with liquidity. Unfortunately for the American people, there was a
price tag to be paid in the form of interest on the money that the
Fed printed. And so it turns out that the United States has to borrow
to print its own money, an arrangement whose legality is highly
questionable and whose very existence is contrary to the best
interests of the United States.
I'm not a
politician and have no plans to become one, but if I were President I
could solve America's national debt problem in one afternoon. On my
first day in office, I would send certain platoons of US Army
soldiers to seize control of the Federal Reserve Banks in Washington
DC and all other locations throughout the country, along with federal
agents and local SWAT teams, to arrest all the directors and
managers along with anyone else who opposes us. They will all be
charged with treason for ruining the financial health and general
welfare of the US, or with being accessories to the same, and they
will be prosecuted. The Federal Reserve will be immediately
nationalized, with the authority to manage and oversee returned to
the Department of the Treasury where it belongs, pursuant to Article
1, section 8 of the US Constitution, which says this: “Congress
shall have the power... to coin money, regulate the value thereof,
and of foreign coin, and to fix the standards of weights and
measures”.... One thing would happen for
sure: it would be 'bye bye national debt'! In fact, maybe the Federal
Reserve banks across the US should be “occupied” until they are
returned to the rightful owners, the American people. Now THAT would
be something to see! Who is with me today?
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