World in Revolt: The Global Backlash Against Budget Cuts
Sunday 26 September 2010
by: Anthony DiMaggio, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Firemen on strike in Nice, France, on September 7, 2010. (Photo: Bex.Walton)
Americans should take a page from activists throughout the rest of the world if they're seriously interested in resisting the massive budget cuts afflicting this country. Effective social change only comes about through mass action - a lesson that has emerged after years of grassroots uprisings in the U.S. and throughout the world. Consider some of the evidence from various cases below.
The French: Don't Call Them Cheese-Eating Surrender Monkeys
Over a million French workers turned out in the streets this month to protest proposed government budget cutbacks by President Nicolas Sarkozy. The rallies were part of a 24-hour strike that shut down flights and railway services, in addition to closing schools throughout the country. Government plans to raise the retirement age from 60 to 62 motivated these protests, even though France already has one of the lower retirement rates throughout Europe. The opposition is also driven by resistance to plans to fire 7,000 teachers, the proposed lengthening of pay periods for public employees, and plans to cut pension benefits.
The mass turnout of a million people in France is the functional equivalent (after controlling for population differences) of seeing more than 4.5 million organize throughout the United States to protest state budget cuts and mass layoffs. Such a movement has not been seen among public sector workers, despite the fact that this segment of the economy traditionally benefits from the strongest worker organization through its continued reliance on mass unionization.
This is not the first protest in France either in recent years. Last June, nearly 1 million turned out nationwide to protest proposed budget cuts - a sign of a sustained national activist campaign that will not relent until the government backs down on its austerity measures. The case of France demonstrates that necessity doesn't have to be the mother of invention. Well-off people can organize to protect hard fought wage gains and other benefits, and we don't need to wait until we're on the verge of destitution (as Americans are doing) to be engaged in activism and protest. Of course, France's strong history of labor unionism has helped spur sustained rounds of resistance to budget cuts, whereas the American public has become increasingly divorced from working class unionism in recent decades (unions represent less than 15 percent of all American workers today).
Sweatshops are NOT Inevitable: The Case of Bangladesh
The people of Bangladesh most strikingly put to shame the elitist apathy that is sapping the collective will of the American people. With radically less, the poor people of Bangladesh have achieved so much more than Americans (at least in the last two years) in the areas of popular activism and protesting economic injustice. The Bangladesh Nationalist Party is leading a mass movement to protest the terrible working conditions and pay levels in sweatshops throughout the country. Demonstrations that took place this summer just outside of the country's capital of Dhaka protested the refusal of the national government to improve power and gas supplies, and the unwillingness to ease the suffering of those who are enduring increased food prices. 50,000 garment workers came together to demand the equivalent of $70 per month, a major increase from the estimated $14-23 per month they were receiving. The lower rates of pay they receive are below the national poverty line, and contribute to great unrest and instability among Bangladesh's workers.
The demand for increased pay represents a major challenge to the unimpeded profits of American companies (operating in country) such as Wal-Mart, Levi Strauss, and H&M, which have been happy to subjugate an entire nation to wage slavery. The protests were highly effective in drawing national and international attention to the plight of Bangladesh's working poor. At least 76 factories were forcibly shut down, in retaliation against the government's reneging on a promise to increase wages for the country's 2.5 million garment workers. The case of Bangladesh should be inspiring for all those throughout the world dealing with austerity measures, as it shows that even in the direst of circumstances, there is no such thing as "inevitability" of low pay. All workers retain the right to a living wage, and many are willing to fight for it. Of course, it also helps to have a political party (as those in Bangladesh do) which will fight for popular change.
Protests on the Forgotten Continent: Increasing Desperation in Mozambique and South Africa
Many Americans would be hard pressed to demonstrate any sort of knowledge of African politics. The continent is traditionally seen as outside of citizens' interests, as attention to global politics is a low priority for the American public (outside of following events in countries the U.S. is bombing). Still, increasing desperation throughout Africa has been accompanied by serious action on the part of the disadvantaged and desperate. Violent protests and riots in Mozambique this month were the result of increasing global food prices. Food costs increased dramatically in light of deteriorating global environmental conditions - most specifically the severe droughts in Russia, Eastern Europe, and Northern and Western Africa, which have exacted a terrible toll on global crop yields.
Prices for bread, electricity, and water have gone up by nearly a third in Mozambique, and were accompanied by looting throughout the nation's capital of Maputo. Public anger was further stoked by the government's refusal to intervene to help the poor deal with major increases in food and energy costs.
Strikes in South Africa are driven by public sector workers, who are demanding better benefits from the government. Strikes throughout the country this summer went on for weeks, and were accompanied by the forced closing of schools and the short-staffing of hospitals, as more than a million public servants refused to return to work until their demands for a 8.6 percent pay raise were met. Union activism succeeded in forcing the South African government to the negotiation table, in an effort to end the nation-paralyzing strikes.
Europe in Decline: Protesting the Decline of Living Standards in the U.K., Spain, and Greece
While Americans are overwhelmingly sitting back and accepting the "necessity" of massive budget cuts and mass layoffs that will inevitably make the economic crisis worse, union activists in Europe are taking the initiative in rejecting comparable efforts in their countries. This June saw the emergence of a national rebellion in Spain, where a day-long strike protested a 5 percent pay cut across the board directed against public sector teachers, firefighters, hospital workers, and other local government positions. The cuts were undertaken in the name of balancing budgets and protecting the prosperity of future children, ironically while assaulting the living standards of the parents and children of today. The rebellion in Spain was truly massive, with an estimated 75 to 80 percent of public workers - or more than 2.5 million people - taking part.
The Spanish government wants further cuts, with salaries frozen in 2011 and future pension funding that will not be adjusted for inflation. Spain's workers are sending the message that they won't go down without a fight. At a time when national unemployment is over 20 percent (with total unemployment at 4 million and underemployment reaching 40 percent of the population), Spain's workers are standing up and saying "no more!"
Summer protests in Greece were designed to draw attention to increasing national desperation. One in five now live below the poverty line, and the situation is certain to get worse as proposed austerity measures - including tax hikes, pay cuts, and pension freezes - are undertaken. By July 2010, Greece's public service workers had engaged in a half dozen strikes, forcing a shutdown of public transportation and closing down schools, courts, hospitals, and newspapers. The protests galvanized tens of thousands to turn out in cities across the country, prompting chants of "hands off our pensions" in opposition to draconian cuts directed against the country's working class.
In the United Kingdom, students, staff, and faculty across 100 universities came together to organize on-campus protests in June to resist planned government layoffs, salary cuts, and reductions in courses. The public was not fooled over the incremental nature of the cuts, which will be implemented over a number of years, but will affect three-quarters of the country's schools. The cuts are quite significant in scale - approximately 200 million pounds (or $300 million in U.S. dollars) across the country.
Protests in the U.S.: What are We Waiting For?
The United States is suffering under its own economic calamity over the last few years, too. Unemployment is consistently increasing, while massive state budget cuts are succeeding in throwing out countless public servants across the states in recent years. Underemployment is currently at over 20 percent, while unemployment benefits were barely extended in a bitter national debate between both parties this summer. To make matters worse, the economy is limping along, showing little sign of a real recovery, while the specter of future bank and financial failures loom in the background.
Many will wonder, why is there so much activism throughout the rest of the world, but comparatively much less in the United States in resisting neoliberalism and austerity-based budget cuts? Part of the explanation in the cases of resistance in Greece, Spain, Mozambique, South Africa, and Bangladesh is the fact that workers in those countries are comparatively much worse off than Americans when it comes to deteriorating pay, benefits, and other worker protections. Unemployment levels are often much higher than in the U.S., while pay levels have long been comparative lower. This explanation, however, is partial at best. The U.K. is characterized in many ways by a relatively stronger social welfare state (especially in relation to health care) than that seen in the U.S., and less extreme conditions for workers, with 7.8 percent unemployment compared to the United States' 9.6 percent official unemployment. Yet, British public sector workers are far more organized and intolerant of the gutting of public education. France has a similar level of unemployment to the U.S. at 10 percent and a far more advanced social welfare state, yet its workers have responded with a coordinated national campaign to protest budget cuts. In contrast, American protests against far larger austerity measures (in the form of mass layoffs and talk of serious pension cuts) are being met by scattered local protests at best. No salient national campaign is emerging across localities in this country, nor does it appear that one is on the horizon in the near future.
The relatively stronger position of labor unions throughout Western Europe also doesn't fully explain the weak level of protests in the U.S. Most of the strikes and protests discussed above were led by public sector workers, an area of the U.S. economy that has traditionally been characterized by strong unionization and organization. While only 7.2 percent of U.S. private sector workers are part of a union, the figure is at nearly 40 percent of public workers, and that figure actually grew from 2008 to 2009.
A major cause of U.S. apathy is likely the depoliticization of the American electorate and the lack of a collective working class consciousness. A majority of Americans distrust their political officials, while a growing number feel that they cannot rely upon the national government to improve their living standards. This latter trend should be particularly disturbing for those on the left who see the national government as the primary medium for promoting the improvement of living standards for the masses and for establishing and promoting collective goods. Establishing universal health care and universal funding for higher education, in addition to the strengthening of food stamps, head start, job training, Social Security, and a slew of other welfare programs will only be accomplished by increasing our support for, and reliance on the national government. These progressive victories will not emerge by "getting government out of our lives," or by turning our back on national politics.
Americans are incessantly bombarded by conservative propaganda stressing the theme that government is the problem, rather than part of the solution in terms of promoting American prosperity. Diversionary mass media direct public attention toward fashionable consumption and meaningless celebrity news, rather than toward important political and economic issues, such as whether Americans will have a job tomorrow as a result of massive budget cuts and a weakening economy. American educational institutions do a pitiful job in informing the young about the importance of social movements in bringing about positive social change. Finally, structural changes in the economy force Americans to work longer hours for less pay, leaving less time for political education and activism.
All of these forces come together to wreak havoc on the prospects for renewed progressive activism among the American public. Progressive change is further hindered by the emergence of faux "social movements" like the Tea Party, supplemented by "grassroots uprisings" in the form of birtherism and anti-Muslim racism. These "movements" are largely media-induced, fueled by right-wing Republican and punditry-based hatred, which seeks to take advantage of the very real economic grievances of Middle America. There is more than a bit of Nazi-esque race-baiting and scapegoating involved in this process, especially when looking at the equation of Muslims with Nazism (seen among many protesting the Manhattan Muslim Community Center).
Until we begin to address the structural problems that plague American society, we will see little progress in organizing the masses to oppose the reactionary assault on the populace. Without action, there will be little support for a progressive agenda for real change. Americans must realize that the only way forward is through a direct confrontation with political and economic elites. Positive progressive change is never willingly given up by elites - it must be forcibly taken from below. This is the most important lesson to take from the global backlash against neoliberalism.

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Comments
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Why did the left-wing
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 11:52 — Anonymous (not verified)Why did the left-wing movement of the late Sixties in the U.S. allow itself to be so utterly dismantled? It relied almost exclusively on direct action under the aegis of more-or-less temporary coordinating committees.
Direct action in America lives in the media; it places every actor at the center of a uniquely personal spectacle guaranteed by the presence of cameras. It can mobilize masses at moments of crisis, but it can't sustain a movement.
Above all, it subsumes, but does not challenge, the radical individualism that has the same place in the American mind that Islam has in the minds of Afghanistan's illiterate peasants.
Americans may slide and backslide in and out of Old Time Christianity, but they never cease worshiping at the altar of Personal Superiority or abandon the belief that each and every human being is the Star of his and/or her Unique Show. In this country, direct action begins and ends with this underlying fundamentalist belief system.
Find a way to challenge that, or your direct action will have no lasting effect, supposing you can even get it started.
I am of the belief that we,
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 12:36 — Frodo (not verified)I am of the belief that we, as a nation, suffer from mass depression of the emotional type. We care too much. Watching this cookie crumble while still on the plate has us immobilized. Great nations rise and fall, we just happen to be caught on the down hill run. Brazil is growing at 7%, or so I understand. Maybe it's another countries turn?
It's not the left. Clear
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 12:59 — Garrett Connelly (not verified)It's not the left. Clear thinkers fed up with obvious corruption and stupidity mingle freely with less engaged yet sympathetic minds. The people have given up on restricted partial democracy and are busy evolving a new way. Sure, if a good candidate appears on the ballot, support them with a good old-fashioned vote. Otherwise, it looks to me like the people of the cosmos are as affected by natural law as water running downhill. Dams, after all is said and done, don't last all that long in the grand picture. Consciousness is part of the big bang, it can be killed but it cannot be stopped from expanding with the cosmos as per natural laws of physics.
American understanding of
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 14:11 — Sir Teach a lot (not verified)American understanding of the forces at play in our world is growing at a -5% rate.
The negative growth rate has been manipulated by the wealthy powerful elites who see public awareness of crucial issues to be a threat to their positions of power.
Exposure of some fundamental truths to the average American is a must.....How can we do that?
The only way I see that happening is if we suffer a collapse of epic proportions where the blame can not be spun away from wealth and power
Metternich once said, 'when
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 14:14 — Anonymous (not verified)Metternich once said, 'when France sneezes, Europe catches cold.' We can only hope he is still right. The French serve as role models for the rest of us. The Greeks too have taken to the streets once again keeping the barbarians at the gate only this time it is the western neoliberals. Thank you France. Thank you Greece.
If we all went to the
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 14:18 — Barry Oaks (not verified)If we all went to the streets we would be labeled economic terrorist and they would drone us to save the country.
Good overall points but you
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 14:43 — robert matthews (not verified)Good overall points but you neglected to mention that this Wednesday, September 29, Spanish workers will go out on a general strike for the first time in over two decades. The mood is till very angry here over austerity programs imposed by the socialist government of President José L Rodriguez Zapatero
Sorry, lelfties, but the
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 14:44 — Anonymous (not verified)Sorry, lelfties, but the French have given awayh so much to the workers that now they are up shit's creek, and so the workers protest ...don't take away all the goodies I have and who cares about ourt economy and the mess we have. Just keep giving me more and more.
There is a glut of junk
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 14:46 — Anonymous (not verified)There is a glut of junk food induced thoughts, in many americans,its like junk food inertia that goes with thought inertia.
People are gullible. Put the
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 14:50 — Erich Von Freemason (not verified)People are gullible. Put the word, "stimulus" in a spending bill and people believe that it will improve the economy. People think that there is a free lunch and will vote for anybody who promises them one. And, when it doesn't work (like the promise made 15 years ago that even poor people with bad credit should be able to get home mortgages), just blame the rich. Well, we're living in the mess that is the inevitable result of nearsighted vote-buying schemes.
I hope that the French get what they want. Tons of government spending while their economy goes in the tank. Prop up their standard of living while their economic output continues to decline. More government debt that the taxpayers will never be able to repay. More Enron accounting tricks to make them think that the plan is working.
Please improve the budget
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 14:51 — Charlie Peters (not verified)Please improve the budget with a trailer item:
CAPP believes an in-field vehicle repair audit program could create maximum vehicle owner satisfaction. And provide a mechanism for continuous improvements in how vehicles are repaired so that customers will be better satisfied with repairs made under the Smog Check program.
Our proposal:
“44036 (b) To achieve the goal of consumer protection and quality assurance, the department is directed to adopt in-field audits using known vehicle defects. The in-field audits will be used to determine if a technician does actually detect, diagnose and repair the designated audit vehicle defect.
(c) As there are no clear standards to see that emissions defects are being corrected, these audits are to be conducted without notification being provided to ensure accurate assessment. The improved methods generated by the audits will provide continuous improvements in the quality of vehicle repairs actually occurring.
CAPP contact: Charlie Peters (510) 537-1796 cappcharlie@earthlink.net
(I just read over this
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 15:05 — Jan Boudart (not verified)(I just read over this comment and I am afraid to send it. I hope someone has my back.)
Did anyone hear what Barry Oaks said? We are bombarded every day with the great new weapons systems being developed by the best scientists in the country. We all know that the potential to bomb us is there. Yesterday the FBI raided the homes of protesters who are against the war. Secret rendition has eliminated some people who had most to complain about (and most to fear).
Recently "non-lethal" weapons are being considered against prisoners who get out of line. So, who's next. UNOWHO -- any of the rest of us who get out of line.
Sedition laws are not in play anymore (Ha!). Only the PATRIOT ACT and anyone else the FBI feels like going after.
The American public is scared. In spite of our lack of knowledge of Labor History, we know what is going on today in American streets -- how we were criminalized after Katrina -- how law enforcement can criminalize and imprison anyone it wants (see www.4efren.com).
Add lost trillions to
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 15:07 — JadeQueen (not verified)Add lost trillions to unfunded mandates of harm. The equation yields bi-partisan debacles that encourage eye-rolling. Properties held by far-away agencies languish as local people couch-surf, glean, trade, camp, and brainstorm. Officials become D.C. locals, leaving homes unrepresented. The French don't camp to get away from it all--different culture. Our government is famous for breaking heads, arson, shooting, horrific imprisonment, iatrogenic adverse events, and capital punishment. Change happens when we ignore government, a while after it notices. We need,ways of change that are safer for the bottoms in this environment, so our butts can live on to fight again.
Barry, it's Chicken Little
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 15:37 — Kevin Schmidt (not verified)Barry, it's Chicken Little Balls idiotic statements like yours that only adds to the problem. We should not fear our government, they should fear us! They are not the boss of us, we are the boss of them!
What we should do is take to the streets and have a massive sit-in. We should refuse to leave until our representatives in our government meet our demands to stop spending our money on war mongering and start spending it here at home where it is needed the most.
Rally,DC, Capitol Mall,
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 16:32 — Anonymous (not verified)Rally,DC, Capitol Mall, October 2.
What a load of rubbish! We
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 17:51 — Sargam (not verified)What a load of rubbish! We have too much debt and not enough taxes to service it with. Have to cut budgets, duh. Author is a spoiled little brat.
No new ideas here. No ideas
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 17:52 — Doug Wilson (not verified)No new ideas here. No ideas for anything different. The idea of letting anyone else take what you make; goods, labor, money, anything - and spend it - is nutty. Besides, the government isn't even redistributing wealth through taxation like socialism suggests it should. All taxes do directly and solely to pay off the national debt owed to international bankers (Fed). Anything "spent" by the government must be borrowed. As long as people keep thinking things that aren't even possible and trying to get a government to do them - what could be a possible outcome? The only possible outcome is more debt, more suffering, more of the same. It can be no other way. Think on this for as long as it takes. I'm all for something different. We can't get anything different doing the same make believe stuff...
22:52 What you are saying is
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 18:56 — drosera (not verified)22:52
What you are saying is that collective action of any sort has no value. You will learn that those countries that take collective action to solve problems will have a much richer environment in which to bring up their kids. You (if you can keep your hoard) will be spending lots and lots of money for your personal security. Public health problems--epidemics--will run rampant. Though your private schools may do well by your kids, unsupported public schools will continue to pour out uneducated citizens. You will get to keep yours, but your life will be infinitely worse than if you consented to pay a lousy thirty-six percent of your income to pay for civil society.
To Anon 19:44: As long as
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 18:59 — goobagooba (not verified)To Anon 19:44: As long as we're generalizing about who gets the goodies and complains, let's focus a bit on the wonderful folk at GM and Chrysler and what they've become 'entitled' to as corporations subsidized by you as well as me.
I don't excuse over-reaching by unions either. The difference is that membership has some say in what unions do, where manufacturing entities have little or no respect for the product they sell or the investors who keep them afloat.
I'm hoping you are individually wealthy enough to afford your apparent disdain. The system we live under is all about keeping the most money away from the most people. Voting for the winning ticket is like rooting for the winning team; they win the pot, and all we get is the t-shirt.
Although I celebrate any
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 19:10 — Matt Sloan (not verified)Although I celebrate any action by people who have the nuts to use their god-given rights, I completely agree with Doug Wilson. Budgets have to come out in the green, or they don't work. Many countries are so deep in the red right now, that they are indebted to international bankers for decades. It has to stop at some point, and if somebody has their retirement benefits slashed or their unnecessary government job eliminated...that sucks for them but what we have now is UNSUSTAINABLE.
The problem with Americans
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 19:32 — aimlowjoe (not verified)The problem with Americans is that they have been taught to be powerless for so long that they don't realize that they have any power.
That and the food made us too fat to fight.
Aimlow Joe was here.
www aimlow com
Corporations have taken over
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 19:42 — Anonymous (not verified)Corporations have taken over everything including the media. We no longer have a free press willing to cover half the issues in this article and commentary.
There are only so many
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 20:21 — K (not verified)There are only so many dollars to go around......and always plenty of folks with their hands out.....
What we need is to stop spending money we don't have....even the French government has figured it out (even if the people are a bit slow catching on....)
I'm all for street protest,
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 20:21 — Anonymous (not verified)I'm all for street protest, but this piece doesn't back up the contention that street protest produces change. You show clearly all the mobilizations going on around the world, but not whether they are having the intended effect. That makes the article more rhetorical than constructive. The mobilizations against elite trade agreements, structural adjustment and military bases have had some success in defeating elite projects, but not - typically - in bringing our own agenda to fruition. Social movements in Latin America have had more success, eventually electing responsive governments, although even these have significant democracy deficits.
U.S. workers are too
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 20:56 — Rick Levy (not verified)U.S. workers are too brainwashed by religion and patriotism such that demonstrations and mass strikes are considered un-American and "socialist". After all Americans are special in the eyes of the Christian God who will make tomorrow a better day for them.
Americans haven't had enough
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 21:48 — Anonymous (not verified)Americans haven't had enough lead in their britches for 'mass action' since the Boston Tea Party!!
When a government
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 22:37 — mysterioso (not verified)When a government continually under educates its citizens and then holds their eyelids open to watch a constant barrage of NASCAR, football and "reality" shows, what you wind up with is the population of the United States. In all its "we're number one" ignorance. Actually, in education at any level, health, and general political knowledge, the US is near the bottom of the heap. The only thing the US leads the world in anymore is arrogance and meanness.
Americans can no longer tell
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 23:00 — Maggie (not verified)Americans can no longer tell the difference between fantasy and reality and as such have lost their power to act upon the real world.
I hope I'm wrong, but I fear I'm right...
The other force at play here
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 23:08 — Anonymous (not verified)The other force at play here is that we "industrious" Americans are at once so all-consumed with trying to pay the bills, and again accustomed to NOT rock the boat that we will literally watch everything go, be left bereft (and possibly WORSE!) and THEN STILL think it was our fault even as millions of others in the same circumstance surround us. We can not see systemic faults. What a job the propagandists have done on us!
Americans are not human
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 23:20 — Anonymous (not verified)Americans are not human anymore...we are zombies living in a state of collective trauma - and this goes for our elites as well, who are being robbed of their mothers at birth and raised by hired labor.
Franklin Roosevelt said: Mr.
Sun, 09/26/2010 - 23:36 — dryfly (not verified)Franklin Roosevelt said: Mr. Hoover does not understand laid off government workers are added to the unemployment lines. FDR's solution:
1. progressive income tax, 2. cash-and-carry government. The New Deal was not financed with debt. At the 1936 tax rates inflation adjusted, the top four U.S. taxpayers would be paying enough to cover the whole bill for the Middle East.
Americans are cowardly cows.
Mon, 09/27/2010 - 00:06 — Chip (not verified)Americans are cowardly cows.
Bravo! Bravo! Why won't
Mon, 09/27/2010 - 01:11 — Al M (not verified)Bravo!
Bravo!
Why won't Americans wake up?
They will when the glass house they live in breaks!
Re: Jan Doudart-- You are
Mon, 09/27/2010 - 08:00 — morgan 1 (not verified)Re: Jan Doudart-- You are correct an d that is all the more reason to take to the streets and risk it all to take our country back. Many workers died to create better work conditions, better wages, labor unions and that in turn built this country and broke the backs of the wealthy who got rich off our backs. Now they have gotten even. They have broken all the unions. They have waged a War of Fear and Retaliation against the middle-class (As well as the management classes). During the Great Depression, Wall St. was destroyed as well as the entire banking system, but jobs were created for the masses and the country was stronger--And survived. Both those industries got even by gutting the country once more but were "saved" while we were destroyed. They are still playing their financial games, living well, not committing suicide while we are losing our jobs, homes, health and way of life. There is no one now to protect us as they have all sold out to greed and political careers. It is better to stand up and die the quick death for what you believe in than die the slow death by starvation, apathy and cowardice.
The glass houses they live
Mon, 09/27/2010 - 08:50 — Anonymous (not verified)The glass houses they live in have been repossed by Banks as they hoard land, capital and political power. Goons are kicking in doors and Obama wants state secret priveledge to summarily execute anyone anywhere. Step out of line and they will f#$k with you!
It's all so easy to point
Mon, 09/27/2010 - 12:27 — Droslovinia (not verified)It's all so easy to point fingers at Americans and call them "gutless," as if they were congressional Democrat or something. And maybe we are but...
If you go out to protest in France because you lost your job, and the police crack your skull, you go to the hospital. If it happens to you in America you lie there, because you have no health insurance. As long as we are denied the basic human right of healthcare, we're not likely to demand that we get the other ones. There's just too much at stake.
Voters are very confused
Mon, 09/27/2010 - 23:20 — Anonymous (not verified)Voters are very confused right now.
Government, as Homer Simpson says of beer, "is the cause of and solution to all of life's problems."
An American. government owned and operated by global corporate interests is a big problem.
But less government is not the solution. That will only make the corporate interests even happier.
The anecdote is quality government that protects the interests of Main Street America and its middle class.
Currently, our government is "making markets" via policy and direct investment that rewards the wealthy elites.
We're in the third decade of a class war that's been waged against the American middle class. The wealthy elites are clearly winning and the middle class is disappearing.
In the end, the answer to all debate is:
FOLLOW THE MONEY!
Follow the money, and the questions answer themselves.
sure lets support chaos, why
Tue, 09/28/2010 - 02:53 — Bearzerker (not verified)sure lets support chaos, why not if the rest of the world can why cant we huh?
of all the countries in the world can riot in the streets for right we used to have why shouldn't we riot to get em back?
COINTELPRO - Look it up.
Tue, 09/28/2010 - 08:18 — Anonymous (not verified)COINTELPRO - Look it up. Thats the name of JUST ONE of the black ops targeting the left. That has been going on since the intel orgs were founded.
The left was being destroyed by the US intelligence organizations. The personification of evil in the world.
We can see the same thing going on today with the storm troopers in the FBI and their harassment of anti-war organizations.
It's not much better
Tue, 09/28/2010 - 18:05 — Anonymous (not verified)It's not much better elsewhere, believe me. The UK populace is in some ways even more programmed into deficit hawkery, and antipathy to action.
Here in NZ and Australia people have been mostly supportive of attacks on workers conditions.
"There is no more money" they cry. It's unfathomable.
Anonymous on 9/26 at 16:52,
Mon, 10/04/2010 - 13:26 — Frances in California (not verified)Anonymous on 9/26 at 16:52, you must be too young to remember the '70s, Ronald Reagan, and all the the other Oligarchic tendencies that dismantled the "60s Leftist Movement". We were divided and conquered by all the dispassionate forces that - same as today - have all the money and all the thugs. Go back twenty m0re years - read C. Wright Mills's "Power Elite". Eerily apropos. Many posters here are correct: if We the People hit the streets, We the People will be set upon by the thugs; and all the thugs will have badges, some velcro'd on over their Xe patches.
Mon, 09/27/2010 - 04:36 —
Wed, 10/06/2010 - 10:30 — Erich von Freemason (not verified)Mon, 09/27/2010 - 04:36 — dryfly (not verified)
"The New Deal was not financed with debt."
Of course it was. The US federal debt for FY 1930 (ending 06/30/1930) was just over $16 billion. For FY 1940 (ending 06/29/1940) it had climbed to just under $43 billion.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_U.S._public_debt