Thursday, October 27, 2011

 

Political Mayhem Thursday: More on OWS



Last week, I wrote about the Occupy Wall Street movement, expressing some confusion about what they are after (much as I didn't understand the Tea Party movement back when they actually did some things in public). I got many interesting responses via email, and the best of the lot was this fascinating and informative essay by UST student Phil Steger:

The obvious thing that everyone should be clear that the protesters are upset about is economic inequality in this country. This is plain from the "99% vs. 1%" message that people can spend a lot of time picking apart but miss the main point of. The fact is that over the last 30-40 years, the United States - and the world at large - has experienced an alarmingly unequal distribution of wealth. While the annual incomes and total wealth of the richest 1% and 1/10 of 1% have increased sharply and keep increasing, the annual wages of the bottom 99% have remained stagnant, barely keeping up with and in many cases falling behind inflation. Quibble over where the lines should be drawn - at 1/10 of 1%, 1% or 10% - as you may, the overwhelming fact for the overwhelming majority is that their wages are not keeping up with expenses - healthcare, food, education, housing - and the loans they've taken out for school and homes and consumer products (which the best and brightest and the richest relentlessly pressured them to take out by appeals both to personal self-interest and the interests of national economic growth) means they are always trying to build wealth out of holes. Part of what galls many of us is the fact that the Wall Streeters (meant inclusively to refer to actual Wall St investment bankers, but also lobbyists and congressmembers, big bankers and others who've been aggressively pushing neoliberalism) who pushed and pressured us to borrow in the 90s and 00s, and who paid huge sums to lobby the mostly wealthy congressmembers to bring down the barriers between conventional and investment banks and to remove debt-to-asset rations, and who made 100s of millions of dollars from leveraging our debt and even from betting against it, now have the chutzpah to wag their fingers at our irresponsible borrowing and bad gambles on buying homes and getting the wrong college degrees.

So, there's huge economic inequality. And only the very naive would believe that economic equality doesn't translate into political inequality as the very wealthy consider political contributions and lobbying expenses to be rational investments in creating more favorable business environments for their various interests. This would be true under any system. Under a political system with enormously expensive elections, this is even more so.

So now, we not only see an economy producing enormously rich "winners" (and not all "winners" are equal...few OWSers begrudge Steve Jobs his wealth and fortune because we can see how genius and drive and hard work and interest in people led him to create products many of us love and feel make our lives better...but please explain how hedge fund managers contribute in the same way to our lives) while piling up more and more "losers" of which we see not only ourselves, but our parents, siblings, cousins, neighbors, classmates, and friends. We also see those economic winners cozying up with the policymakers to create rules that tip the balance of factors in favor of the winners, again and again. And this. Drives. Us. Crazy.

This is not just an issue for liberals who tend to value equality over pure liberty, at least in economic matters. It ought to be an issue of extreme concern to conservatives, who, at least until the Republican and Reagan radicalism of the last 30 years, placed stability, security and the preservation of hard-won civil and communal traditions and institutions somewhat ahead of both equality and liberty. Want the division of child against parent? Make the parent rich and the child poor. Make the price for the parent's comfort in old age be the child's opportunity to find a job and raise a family. Want to erode trust in a society's hard-won institutions and rule of law? Make it clear to young people that their votes don't count; only money counts. Deride them as hippies and lazy people, even better, as idiots who were too stupid to see that the world was much more ruthless than their parents taught them it was and that they were morons for not seeing, when they were adolescents, how their future was being mortgaged to pay for babyboomer excesses.

Think of what we're seeing in OWS as a reaction to the radical rewriting of the social contract that's taken place in just one generation. For our grandparents, the social contract was this: everybody pays in, everyone takes out. The better-off and more successful pay in more and take out less in direct services, but nevertheless are in a position to benefit the most from the overall health, strength, growth and stability of the political economy. The harder-luck pay in less and take out more in direct services but are less well-positioned to take advantage of the larger goods. Fair deal. The whole country prospers and we become the most powerful, secure, wealthy nation in the world. Our parents' generation's social contract was this. Why pay in more when you're rich? That's robbery. The rich should pay in less, the poor should take out less. The next generation should learn the value of hard work by being on their own from the get-go. Meanwhile, the rich and middle-age can suck up the benefits of the last generation's investments, earnings and savings with the next generation having no store to draw from. And our country stagnates, falls from its supreme intern national standing to one where, in measures like infant and child mortality, child and adult imprisonment, poverty and disease, it resembles Third World dictatorships.

So, this generation wonders, out loud, in public, in a variety of colorful and off-color ways: WTF?! I know one of your readers was scandalized that one person in the protest saw OWS as an amazing opportunity for random, anonymous sex. Surprise, surprise. Want to erode the value of stable, monogamous relationship and sexual discipline? Create a lot, I mean, a lot, of unemployed young people in the middle of a consumer culture that uses sex to sell everything. Give them nothing productive to do and little future to aspire toward and then hiss "shame, shame" when they decide immediate gratification is the way to go.

Everyone who's been paying attention by now should understand that although the official unemployment rate is a high 9%, that's not the real unemployment rate, in that it doesn't include people who've given up on finding a job, stopped looking, are unemployable. We should also know that the highest unemployment is suffered by the young, the ones to whom the most promises have been made. Some figures place this rate as high as 20%. Moreover, anyone paying attention should realize that we not only have a youth bubble, we have a youth bubble that is MUCH more diverse than our adult bubble. The very people that conservatives have been vilifying and blaming and using to divide the country for the last thirty years - gay people, African-Americans, Latinos - are now larger and larger percentages of the population. In Minnesota alone, 1 in 22 people over 65 is a person of color, but among children under 18, 1 in 3 are of color. Today's youth not only reject the scapegoating of minority populations, they are members of or best friends with those populations. And for members of these populations, the unemployment rates are again much higher, not just for the youth, but for their parents, too.

Want to know why young people are complaining about student loans? Back to social contract. A generation ago, a college degree was a distinct advantage in an economy that had a lot of great, blue collar jobs. It was a way out of hard, physical work, but was by no means the only route by which to attain the middle class. Then, globalization started up. There was a chance for the richest to make more money by sending manufacturing overseas where the labor was a fraction of the price. We were told, alternatively, that globalization was a) a force of human nature that could not be stopped and b) a good thing that would make us all richer. We were offered this promise: Let us create free trade zones all over the world, letting manufacturing jobs drain away to other shores, and we'll educate and train you to be at the top of the globalized economic food chain. Either way, we were told that the key thing for us was to get a college education. In the knowledge economy, thinkers would be rewarded. Meanwhile, globalization made competition for top teaching and research talent more expensive, so tuition had to go up. Moreover, the well-funded republican movement succeeded in selling the mantra of "no new taxes" and "cuts, cuts, cuts" using deficit scares and bullying to accomplish both cuts in financial aid and halts in the growth of education spending and, at the same time, tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans, many of whom had already taken full advantage of globalization to offshore their wealth and avoid paying taxes on their income and wealth. So the deal was: get your education and prosper in the globalized economy; globalization is good, for everyone. But it's not. It might be inevitable (a moot point now, since we've thrown everything open and there's no unthrowing it), but it is plainly, manifestly, painfully not good for everyone. It is very, very, very, very good for a very few. Good for a few more. And very, very, very disruptive, unsettling and disadvantaging to the very many. Want to erode loyalty to the nation and a sense of patriotism? Have an economy where the best off view the nation as a resource pool to draw from and haul away to fantastically rich tax havens, far away from national law and national responsibility.

If globalization is inevitable, as it probably now is, then it is manageable as a country, SO LONG AS we feel we're all in it together. But we don't. The plainest message of all over the last 20 years is that we are not all in it together. You're on your own. If you're not successful, it's your own fault. Don't bother me. Rot there. By yourself.

You want a country that's going to make it through the next decade as a national union, a unity, a whole? You don't want a permanent underclass of disaffected youth preventing you from seeing plays on Broadway or visiting Times Square or whatever? You don't want America to fall further into class division and resentment, too poor, undereducated, unprepared for the demands of global competition? Then you better be about the business of genuinely understanding what young people are feeling and figuring out what to do about it. Hold your nose if you don't like the smell of hippies.

Comments:
Thank you Phil and thank you Mark for sharing this essay with us. And a special thanks to Sanford I Weill whose desire to be KING of the financial world (prior to his retirement) for helping start this giant snowball of a problem.
 
If you’re interested to see a fast-forward of what economic inequality looks like (the US still has some good momentum before getting there) check out some of the former Eastern European countries. Exploiting corruption, confusion, misplaced frustrations and political wasteland a handful of people got insanely rich purely via illicit ways, while the majority watched them do so in the very celebrated free press. Given the egalitarian fumes had not cleared the brains of the populace, the lesson learned was that something for nothing is the way to go.
Side note, political correctness was invented by the Bolsheviks as a social weapon (mediocrity was a beast that had to be constantly groomed )...so the much celebrated (BS in my humble opinion, just as any other PC censorship) slogan “if they can do it so can I” translated to a culture of taking without giving anything back, a culture of rights and no responsibilities whatsoever. It is always, ALWAYS someone else’s fault for just about anything ever happening or not happening. The infrastructure is falling apart, the rich live in “gated communities” the Ferraris had been taken to their villas in Monaco and the SUVs kept for driving on roads that nobody wants to contribute having fixed.
 
What we need to do is cut taxes, re-criminalize homosexuality and forbid the construction of mosques. Only then will the wealthy people that make up 100% of entrepreneurs, business owners and employers be placated enough to start hiring people again. And if that doesn't work, then we will put social services on the altar as a burnt offering.

Eventually the wealthy will realize our worship and bless us again, just like Jesus said.
 
2 things I learned from this post:
1. "Offshore" is apparently now a verb.
2. There is to be no "unthrowing" globalization.
 
Anon 11:38, careful, all those straw-men are a fire hazard!
 
Maybe I need a lesson here, as I often feel a little bit of an outsider...my understanding was that the majority of entrepreneurs are upper middle class, but middle class nonetheless. A small percentage of entrepreneurs make the super rich, but the rich class is mostly the kind of people that give themselves millions of dollars in bonuses, even after they put their companies into the ground. They seem to be also the super smart and have the super suckers think that cutting their taxes and trickle down economics is the bone to throw.
 
Marta - you are on the right track.

Aside from sending many jobs off-shore our traditional blue collar, assembly/production line jobs have benefited from imporvements in technology. A car that use to take 250+ people to guide it along the assembly line now requries only 50 to 100 people. So our push for technological innovations has also played a part inthe demise of the traditional middle class.
 
I've been studying the OWS demonstrations since shortly after they kicked off, and I participated in #OccupyMN for a week before fall break. From my perspective, this essay really represents the core feeling of the #OccupyWallStreet movement. It's list of grievances is a thousand miles long, and its imagination is largely confined to the political left. (I don't mean to deride the author here; this is really a very well considered and lucid piece).

It is not simply students and unemployed young people protesting--although that segment may be overrepresented. Instead, the crowd began as an extremely diverse group of people who were angry about the very obvious ills in our society: police violence, endless war, cascading financial crises, and the inexplicable yet unrelenting decay of Americans' living standards. This is the same as the Tea Party, which organized for largely the same reasons and began by booing both democrat and republican politicians who tried to curry its favor.

Slowly, as the protests lose their spontenaity (and how could you not after more than a month of sleeping on the streets?), the crowds are thinning to union supporters and representatives, women and minority interests (such as La Raza), and hard left socialists and anarcho-syndicalists (mostly ideological college students and recent grads). This is also like the Tea Party, which gradually distilled itself from a populist into a purely right-wing movement.

The cause, however, is much different. Whereas the Tea Party was taken over by rightist personalities such as Glenn Beck and Michelle Bachmann, OWS has been taken over by a stifling consensus-based political system. This infatuation with daily General Assemblies, spirit fingers, ineffectual committees, chanting, and groupthink comes (bizarrely) from an anarcho-syndicalist "occupation" movement in Madrid calling itself "Los Indignados."

If you want more information on this movement, its origins, and the people who are scurrying to take advantage of it, look into the investigations done by Webster Griffin Tarpley, who has the most comprehensive take on the whole movement I have come across yet. Another good resource for Spanish speakers is the web log "No Morir Idiota" covering the Indignados movement in Spain.
 
I don't get this whole Occupy Wall Street thing. So if there are all these protesters occupying this really busy street in New York, aren't they all getting hit by cars and dying?
 
dirty lazy crybaby echoboomer hippies.

The 1 % :)
 
Phil, what a blessing to read this powerful piece. Insightful, articulate, and worthy of careful attention.
 
Thank you, Phil.

I find it interesting that, among other things, the blame for education costs is to be laid at the feet of "globalization". The cost of professors and other teaching staff has indeed risen, but the reason that college tuition/costs have risen far faster than inflation is the availability of cheap funding, i.e., student loans. This is the problem with the "Occupy" movement. They have a legitimate grievance, in my opinion, in the sense that now some 20 years worth of college students and their parents have bought into the notion that borrowing money to pay the exorbitant fees was a good, that a college degree was the only way to get a decent job. That may have been true, but sometime in the last decade the lines crossed: people were paying more in higher ed costs (including opportunity costs), and getting a much poorer product, than their peers who took a less conventional route (got a job out of high school.) Unfortunately, jobs for HS grads have also deteriorated, but the cost of a college degree has sunk young adults and their parents under a mountain of debt, and predictably, the quality of said education has deteriorated as a matter of self-preservation: if the students themselves don't have the critical thinking skills to identify the problem, the scam will last that much longer. And this interesting and provocative (and not completely off the mark) essay is exhibit A.

Of all the demands of OWSers, the petulant gimme for student loans has the most resonance, because it is the "gateway" entitlement. Barack Obama spent an inordinate amount of verbiage in his nomination speech (the one with the fake Greek columns: ooooh, the irony) on "helping" everyone get access to student loans so that *everyone* could afford a college education. Then, the government took over the student loan program. But before that, there was the "public service" option: go to work for the Government for ten years and all your loans will be forgiven. That was a George W. Bush innovation.

Does anyone see a pattern here? Nation of Slaves, anyone?
 
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