WALL STREET PROTESTS (Part II): The Free Market vs. the Pain & Suffering of Citizens October 2
“There is a Chinese curse which says ‘May he live in interesting times.’ Like it or not we live in interesting times. They are times of danger and uncertainty; but they are also more open to the creative energy of men than any other time in history.” –Robert F. Kennedy
The Occupy Wall Street Movement along with the other planned and spontaneous uprisings across America presents our leaders with new challenges. America seems poised to engage in a vigorous debate about what is right, moral and just in our society in terms of its economic policy and the existing system by which we capitalize society.
One might wish to consider that those who demonstrate are not all anarchists seeking to bring down this country. Likewise, it is also critical to remember that not every individual working in the financial sector is a mini-Madoff like Ken Starr or white collar criminal in a suit who deserves to have his or her life work and credibility or success challenged or stained in this process for playing the game by the rules established for the game. And this is true even if a casino mentality was fostered on Wall Street due to a lax regulatory environment. This is so even if the rules of the Wall Street Casino might need to be tweaked or rewritten. There are legitimate and honorable people working in the financial community who work to build the wealth of a nation and its investors.
In the words of Nicholas Kristof:
I don’t share the antimarket sentiments of many of the protesters. Banks are invaluable institutions that, when functioning properly, move capital to its best use and raise living standards. But it’s also true that soaring leverage not only nurtured soaring bank profits in good years, but also soaring risks for the public in bad years.
In effect, the banks socialized risk and privatized profits. Securitizing mortgages, for example, made many bankers wealthy while ultimately leaving governments indebted and citizens homeless.
There is, however, something terribly awry when things are so bad that it necessitates the pitchfork wielding crowd of college educated citizens protesting in the streets in Lower Manhattan. How many more of us or them (depending on your perception) are but a paycheck or two away from having nothing to lose and taking it to the street? Do you take that gamble and double down against the current protesters? I hope not for pete sakes. Do you know how many others are out there now prepared to follow suit?
Do you know how many are angry that members of the Madoff Crime Family like Andrew Madoff and Shana Madoff are still at large, securely ensconced in relative luxury on the Upper East Side, Tribeca and in Palm Beach? What kind of message are we sending to our citizens when members of a criminal syndicate that destroyed the lives of thousands roam free? Poor Ruthie left with a couple million bucks. Oy vey! And how many more are angry that they see our leaders more consumed with protecting the uber elite at the expense of average citizen?
There is a very real danger that this will spread when inequality grows, the elite seem oblivious at best and selfish at worst and a “let them eat cake” mentality is pervasive in our policy. Nobel Prize winning economist Paul Krugman dissected the false narrative being fostered by forces on the right. They postulate falsely that the reason for our stagnant economy is that business are suffering under a burden of taxes and regulations and President Obama’s socialist policies which are stifling economic growth. He goes on to point out the rather curious fact that businesses are making large profits and sitting on a lot of cash but aren’t spending that cash to expand capacity and employment. But why?
As stated by Paul Krugman on The Phony Fear Factor:
…..but what stands out now is a surge in the number of businesses citing poor sales — which strongly suggests that lack of demand, not fear of government, is holding business back.
So Republican assertions about what ails the economy are pure fantasy, at odds with all the evidence. Should we be surprised? At one level, of course not. Politicians who always cater to wealthy business interests say that economic recovery requires catering to wealthy business interests. Who could have imagined it?
And it also, of course, reflects the political need of the right to make everything bad in America President Obama’s fault. Never mind the fact that the housing bubble, the debt explosion and the financial crisis took place on the watch of a conservative, free-market-praising president; it’s that Democrat in the White House now who gets the blame.
But good politics can be very bad policy. The truth is that we’re in this mess because we had too little regulation, not too much. And now one of our two major parties is determined to double down on the mistakes that caused the disaster.
Partly, no doubt, this reflects the party’s broader slide into its own insular intellectual universe. Large segments of the G.O.P. reject climate science and even the theory of evolution, so why expect evidence to matter for the party’s economic views?
The Choice: A Real Revolution or Rebuild the American Dream
“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable. “
–President John F. Kennedy.
NYC Mayor Mike Bloomberg is quite right when he warns that the jobs crisis could spark riots here. According to NPR in June 2011 over 25 million Americans were unemployed while famed economist Nouriel Roubini suggests that the real number is as high as 16% unemployment. The system is broken. We must get our nation’s house in order. And frankly if we do not get our house in order and the prostitutes (err politico’s) posing as our leaders in Washington, DC don’t begin to recognize that they represent the citizens of this entire country and not exclusively those who have lined their pockets, they will surely bring about ‘the end of America’. They must recognize that a nation starving, with a rapidly eroding middle class will turn on and ultimately consume itself along with them. What are peaceful demonstrations now could morph into something else entirely. The choice is a real revolution or to rebuild the American Dream by making a deep commitment to rebuild, in earnest, the nation’s infrastructure and manufacturing base. Many economists think that may be the best alternative.
HELPFUL LINKS
Occupy Wall Street
-Occupy Wall Street
-Occupy Together
-Occupy Youtoube: Anonymous documents what the media blacks out.
-Anonymous Occupy Youtoube blog
-WaVe Movement (Facebook Page)
-Naomi Klein: ”This is not the time to be looking for ways to dismiss a nascent movement against the power of capital, but to do the opposite: find ways to embrace it, support it and help it grow into its enormous potential. With so much at stake, cynicism is a luxury we simply cannot afford.” read more about what the author of “The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism” had to say at Moveon.org, Rachel Maddow Show and on Huffington Post
-‘A New Shift in Power’: Documentary entitled “Nobody Can Predict the Moment of Revolution”Offers an Intimate Look at Occupy Wall Street
-Elizabeth Warren: “The People on Wall Street Broke this Country”: Elizabeth Warren is a Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. She served as Assistant to the President and Special Advisor to the Secretary of the Treasury for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. She is running for the U.S. Senate against Scott Brown. See also the Brad Blog for Elizabeth Warren’s commentary on ‘Debt Crisis’ & ‘Class Warfare’
Rebuild America
-Building America’s Future
-Our Future
-Rebuild the American Dream
-RAI
-Fareed’s Take: Obama should declare a jobs emergency
-Van Jones on Rebuilding the American Dream (see also: Van Jones)
Inequality in America
-Inequality.org: The Program on Inequality and the Common Good focuses on the dangers that growing inequality pose for U.S. democracy, economic health and civic life. It is a project of theInstitute for Policy Studies and based in Boston, MA
-The United States of Inequality
-Who Rules America?
-Vanity Fair by Joseph E. Stiglitz: Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1%
-The Economist: The rich, the poor and the growing gap between them
-PBS, In Perspective: Tricia Rose on America’s growing inequality
-Robert Reich: Growing Inequality Is The Central Problem Of Our Age
-The Nation magazine: Inequality in America
-The Nation Magazine by Robert Reich: Unjust Spoils
-Mother Jones: It’s the Inequality, Stupid
The American System
-Nouriel Roubini: Marx was right about self-destruction of capitalism
-Vice Chairman of China’s CIC Says It’s Become Harder to Defend the U.S. Model
The Danger
-The End of America: Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot (book) by Naomi Wolf
-The End of America (Trailer)
-“The End of America” Full Length HQ Film
-Bloomberg: Jobs crisis could spark riots here
-Kent State Massacre (Video): Could this happen in NYC? Will history repeat itself?
The Uprising
-Occupy Wall Street
-Zuccotti Park in Lower Manhattan: must-see site of the demonstrations
-Chris Hedges: [The Criminal Class that has seized power is scared but the] Occupy Wall Street is ‘where the hope of America lies’
-My Great Depression (video)
-Nader, Ron Paul, Kucinich Speak to Occupy Wall Street
-The Huffington Post – Occupy Wall Street: NYPD Arrests 700 Protesters On Brooklyn Bridge
-The Guardian: Occupy Wall Street rediscovers the radical imagination: The young people protesting in Wall Street and beyond reject this vain economic order. They have come to reclaim the future
-Truthout: Wall Street Occupation Live Stream
-Occupy Wall St, SlutWalk, Hot Chicks, Van Jones by Zennie Abraham
-RT: Open-ended Wall Street occupation
-NPR by Joel Rose: Wall Street Protests Stretch On, Reasons Vary
-Gothamist: Anonymous’s Occupation Of Wall Street
-UPI: Wall Street protesters morale ‘high’
-Michael Moore: The media ignores Wall Street occupation
-The Guardian, Occupy Wall Street: inquiries launched as new pepper-spray video emerges: NYPD officer Anthony Bologna faces two investigations as video emerges of a second pepper-spray incident
-NY Daily News: Pepper-spray videos spark furor as NYPD launches probe of Wall Street protest incidents
-Salon: Jon Stewart on the Wall Street pepper-spray attack
-Occupy Wall Street: ‘Pepper-spray’ officer named in Bush protest claim
-The Huffington Post: Anthony Bologna, NYPD Officer Who Pepper-Sprayed Protester, Had Role In 2004 Incidents
-JP Morgan gave NYPD $4.6 million to strengthen security
-Truthout: Got Class Warfare? Occupy Wall Street Now!
-Greg Palast | Uber-Vultures: The Billionaires Who Would Pick Our President
-Trumka: AFL-CIO Will Support Occupy Wall St. Protest ‘In Every Way’ It Can