Let's Build the New Economy

by: Joe Brewer, Cognitive Policy Works | Report

We need to build a new economy, one that promotes widespread prosperity while protecting us against ecological disaster. The problem is that the current economy has been structured explicitly to extract wealth from the global commons and accumulate it in the coffers of an extremely powerful elite. And it is standing in our way.

I say let the U.S. economy collapse. It’s not serving us anyway. Now before you go off and think I’m just a heretic who hates this country, please hear me out.

The current economy is designed to:

Encourage widespread home ownership, which straps people to a lifetime of mortgage debt;

Mandate that health care only be provided through employers, which enslaves people to meaningless jobs they don’t like;

Grow perpetually, which means that natural resources must be depleted to keep the gears turning;

Accumulate wealth in the hands of those who control capital, which drives a wedge between the haves and the have-nots;

Drive the creation of sweat shops all over the world that enslave billions in a cycle of perpetual poverty;

Allow corporations to co-opt our democracy, by granting them the rights of legal personhood and defining money as speech;

Ultimately destroy the foundations of human well-being, thus spiraling deregulated markets out of control.

As a result, we are seeing massive growth of public debt while a small portion of the population becomes more wealthy than the monarchs of past ages. These billionaires then build incredibly sophisticated propaganda machines to convince everyday citizens to support their exploitative system.

I would be perfectly happy to let this economy collapse if a better one were to replace it. Luckily, the collapse is about to be accelerated. We’re about to see the federal political system become even more dysfunctional. And the life supports for our economy — the vital infrastructure funded by public dollars — is about to be cut even further to extract wealth for the super rich. Tea Party supporters have ensured that the next few years will further corrode the existing economy through the attack of a thousand cuts.

We can take comfort in the knowledge that the global economy of the late 20th Century is in the process of collapsing. It wasn’t serving us anyway.

Now is the time for social entrepreneurs to mobilize and begin the creative process of building the foundational institutions of the 21st Century economy. Look around and you will see that this effort is already underway. Micro-credit lending institutions are revolutionizing the world of finance (see Kiva and Grameen Bank). Social media platforms are replacing the elite communication systems set up to broadcast information from a central source to the masses. Legal hackers are creating benefit corporations that merge the social missions of non-profits with the economic power of publicly traded corporations. And urban designers are creating cityscapes that mimic natural ecosystems.

So let’s begin the work of building 21st Century political and economic systems. The need is clear and the time is right. Many bottlenecks to progress are about to be removed de facto as state governments grapple with bankruptcy and corporations expand their stranglehold on our judicial and legislative systems. The weakening of our economic foundations will bring with it a loosening of control that these powerhouses have on economic development.

Rough times lie ahead, no doubt about it. But we can take heart in the entrepreneurial spirit of the American people and the considerable economic power of our major cities. A truism that we must all take to heart is that, while the 20th Century was dominated by nations, the 21st Century will be shaped primarily by cities. If you don’t believe me, look at the rapid urbanization of China and India and ask yourself how many of the remaining resources will be sucked up by the unprecedented growth of buildings, regional transit systems, and commerce in the developing world.

Many Americans are going to be caught off guard when the carpet is pulled out from under their feet. Others will be relieved that we can finally begin to catch up with the rest of the world, presuming of course that our own cities aren’t entirely decimated by the hoarding of wealth by short-sighted elites. We currently house most of the world’s best research labs and continue to attract global intellectual talent to our shores. (Of course, this may change if the xenophobic tenor of our immigration debate doesn’t catch up with the times.) And we have several awe-inspiring regional economies like the San Francisco Bay Area, Puget Sound in the Pacific Northwest, and a number of hubs in New England.

So all you social innovators out there, now is the time to heed the call. Focus your efforts on the new business models, disruptive technologies, collaborative finance systems, and politic organizing platforms. We’re going to need you.

The time to build the new economy is upon us.
 

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The best way to increase

The best way to increase on'e life is to get a job. Quit smoking rope and eating mushrooms, Education will not correct split personalties and paranoid thinking that Uncle Sam will put a chicken in every pot and pint of wine on your table on labor day. The free ride is just about over with in America.



I have been the CEO of a

I have been the CEO of a financially banrupted nonprofit for the past three years. I have a great business model if anyone is interested. I was able to transform this organization into a profitable going concern after being $340k in debt using the new model. Contact me anytime I will share the concept model anytime.

David C Skul
Www.relativitycorp.com



Every journey's started with

Every journey's started with one foot step... Onward!

Another group has a similar vision:
http://www.waterparty.info/pages/1-about-us



I'm reminded by me

I'm reminded by me 21-year-old son that the way to increase one's life is to have a reason to be earning the money.

Travel. Learn about the world on the outer edges of the US, places where our xenpohobic silliness is seen for the autistism it fosters.

If smoking rope and eating mushrooms (edible mushrooms, incidentally, are but one of many ways to combat cancers) leads the way, so be it. If reading the Bible or the Koran or the Torah, or doing yoga, or playing sports, or having a job that enables you to find what you want to do with your life, it matters little.
As long as you do no harm. Service is another good way to find out more about what matters.

There never was a free ride, and anybody who ever thought so was deluded from the get-go.



When I'm paying 50% marginal

When I'm paying 50% marginal tax rates at a lower-middle-class job in my 30s, you can tell me all about "well, the rich stole all the wealth."

It's the middle class. Do you have *any* idea the subsidies we send out to middle-class taxpayers? The "tax cuts for the middle class" are 2.3 trillion dollars over ten years, over twice as much as the "rich" tax cuts of 800 billion! And their cutting the Earned Income Tax Credit to pay for it, too!

The poor suck wealth. The middle class suck wealth. The rich suck wealth. Who pays for this?

The working class, whose jobs migrate overseas so foreign nations can fund our deficits. After all, foreigners must first *get* dollars before they can *lend* them.



And finally, I'm sick of all

And finally, I'm sick of all this "it's only the rich's fault". Frankly, it's a generational fault. We had insane growth from a population bump, and *nearly every single person squandered it*, whether it was the poor, middle-class or the rich.

Only the working class faced any significant challenges, but of course sacrificing the manufacturing base is a small price to pay for an overvalued, "strong" dollar (decompetitizing American products) and funding the entitled poor, the entitled middle-class and the entitled rich.

It's not corporations. It's everyone. And my generation will pay for it. Thank you idiot liberals, idiot conservatives, idiot Progressives, and thank God for the moderates and deficit hawks in both parties. We seriously need a centrist third party.



Private interests have

Private interests have siphoned off our public wealth for the past 30 years - as another writer so aptly mentioned.
You think the austerity measures are going to cut Corporate Marxists off from the Government's tit? Obama was recently traveling around the world marketing their products. Who works for whom? That's correct, Obama works for Lockheed, et al.



Wag wrote: "When I'm paying

Wag wrote:

"When I'm paying 50% marginal tax rates at a lower-middle-class job in my 30s, you can tell me all about "well, the rich stole all the wealth.""

Yes that's right. What exactly is confusing you?



While it could be more

While it could be more cogently expressed, especially at somewhat greater length, this is essentially what is occurring now, and will be the only way FORWARD in the near future.

(There are many other ways, but let's not think about them unless we are forced to.)

Hogorina: The writer is pointing out that jobs no longer exist for most seekers, and are not likely to any time soon. We must create out own livelihoods as an aspect of creating our lives.

Joe et al: You are entitled to be angry, but you are not really entitled to be ignorant and blame it on everyone but yourselves. Turn off your TV, read Truthout and myriad other alternative media, and begin your REAL education.

For starters, the "middle class" IS the working class. The classical meaning of "middle class," the merchant and professional class that arose during the renaissance between the feudal landed aristocracy and the landless peasants, has been obsolete for a century.

Yours is not the first generation to inhabit this place, although what you were taught in school and on TV about those who preceded you is mostly baloney.



Value exists on Main Street,

Value exists on Main Street, it just can't be accurately measured by a screwed-up national currency. We have precedents for going around screwed-up currency. Many localities did it in the Great Depression, and some countries have businesses that function cooperatively and well, out of debt traps. One of my favorites is SEMCO in Brazil, but there are others around the world. Some may exist in the U.S., but it is hard to hear about unless you hang out with wise renegades. Brazil kicked the IMF and World Bank out, right? It's possible to tell the elites off, though it is a risk to one's ability to stay out of the private prisons owned by you-know-whom. Too-big-to-fail is likely to fail, eventually.



Oh, Anonymous, but it IS the

Oh, Anonymous, but it IS the fault of the rich. They are the Criminal Oligarchy; they have all the money and all the thugs; they do not create jobs - they only institute layoffs which spike their stock value; they do not heal anything, considering healthcare a COMMODITY; they do not repair anything, nor do they build anything. They are out only for themselves and disregard all other human beings and citizens of the nation they have definitely disparaged and degraded. Yes, they have a lot to answer for but they will never be held accountable.