7
Deadly Sins America's Leadership
Commits
Against Their Own People
The
following list is a stomach-turning smorgasbord of every
gut-wrenching, visceral injustice currently being committed by the
very people that have been entrusted with the responsible and prudent
leadership of what used to be the greatest country in the world, the
USA. It has been my observation for some time now that the underpaid
US workers that do have jobs, combined with the unemployed and
sometimes even homeless American population, none of whom are able to
find any work at all, are a ticking time bomb hidden in plain sight
across America. The following is a listing of the abuses being heaped
upon us, when in fact we deserve no such thing! The list doesn't
include our most grievous offenses, those of military and economic
warfare against the rest of the world. Sinful enough is our own
behavior at home.
1.
Sins against children
Perhaps
"sanctity of life" ends at birth. According to Census
Bureau figures, one out of every five American children lives in
poverty. For blacks and Hispanics, it's one out of every three.
UNICEF has reported that the U.S. has a higher child poverty rate
than every industrialized country except Romania. We are near the
bottom in all measures of inequality that affect our children,
including material well-being, health, and education. One more fact
before I move on: 1 out of every 4 American school children will rely
on food stamps at some point for their sustenance and nutrition. In
communities of color, this figure jumps to a truly shocking – and
outrageous – 1 out of 2.
2.
Sins against the poor
The
U.S. poverty rate grew from 11.3% to 15.0%, a 33% jump, in just the
last 11 years. The impact was felt primarily by minorities and women.
The median wealth for single black and Hispanic women is shockingly
low, at just over $100 (compared to $41,500 for single white women).
Even more shocking – For every dollar of non-home wealth owned by
white families, people of color have only one cent. Despite the
continued economic assault on already-poor Americans, the number of
TANF (Temporary Assistance for Needy Families) cases has dropped by
60 percent over the last 16 years.
3.
Sins against students
Students
at all levels have been losing their nation's support. States reduced
their education budgets by $12.7 billion in 2012, and in 2013 the
majority of states will be spending even less. At higher educational
levels, Americans are paying much more than students in other
countries. Only 38% of college expenses come from public funding,
compared to 70% in other wealthier “first world” countries. While
other nations continue to offer free tuition, with the recognition
that education leads to long-term prosperity, the U.S. system has
become more corporatized, to the point that expensive programs like
nursing, engineering, and computer science have been eliminated to
cut costs. The profit motive has blocked the path to academic
excellence. But the worst part of America's treatment of its
students has been the greed-driven debacle of over $1 trillion in
predatory student loan debts, much of which can never be repaid. The
same graduates who are obligated to repay those debts are the ones
who can't find jobs, or who wind up working at jobs for which they
are grossly overqualified. When you enrage a nation's youth, the
seeds of insurrection have already been sown. All it will take is one
good storm to make those seeds sprout, and the 2nd
American Revolution will be underway.
4.
Sins against the middle class
The
middle class, to say the least, is shrinking. In fact, America's
middle class is slowly being liquidated. In 2011, according to a Pew
Research analysis, 51% of the nation's households earned from
two-thirds to double the national median income. In the 1970s it was
61%. One-quarter of America's workers are now making less than
$22,000 a year, the poverty line for a family of four as of 2012.
Thirty million Americans are making between $7.25 (minimum wage) and
$10.00 per hour. With the transition of middle-class workers to
low-income status, entrepreneurship is disappearing. Innovation
doesn't come from the upper class. A recent study found that less
than 1 percent of all entrepreneurs came from very rich or very poor
backgrounds. Small business creators come from the hard-working,
risk-taking, nothing-to-lose middle of America, but their
entrepreneurial numbers are down -- over 50% since 1977.
5.
Sins against the common good
A
recent Tax Justice Network report placed total hidden offshore assets
at somewhere between $21 trillion and $32 trillion. With about 40% of
the world's most mega-rich individuals in the U.S., up to $12.8
trillion of untaxed revenue sits overseas. Based on a historical 6%
rate of return, this is a tax loss of up to $300 billion per year,
money that should be paying for the public needs of education and
infrastructure. Tax avoidance is so appealing that 1,700 Americans
renounced their citizenship last year. The American Thinker blog
argued that "the U.S. tax code is so oppressive that smart and
successful people are compelled to renounce their citizenship in
order to keep more of their own hard-earned wages." Hard-earned,
in truth, by the thousands of contributors to their financial
success.
6.
Sins against nature
A
number of studies show that investment in renewable energy will
create many more jobs than the fossil fuel industry. And the
investment will likely pay off. A National Renewable Energy
Laboratory analysis determined that "renewable electricity
generation from technologies that are commercially available today...
are more than adequate to supply 80% of total U.S. electricity
generation in 2050." But now the prospect of cheap natural gas
is leading us back to a dirty form of energy independence, with a
continuing reliance on fossil fuels, and on the fracking technology
that despoils our land and pollutes our water. The national
commitment and political will needed for the long-term health of our
nation is more elusive than ever.
7.
Sins against common sense
The
deception began, at least in the modern age, with Milton Friedman,
who said "The free market system distributes the fruits of
economic progress among all people... He moves fastest who moves
alone." This unflagging adherence to free-enterprise
individualism is consistent with Social Darwinism, the belief that
survival of the fittest (richest) will somehow benefit society, and
that the millions of people suffering from financial malfeasance are
simply lacking the motivation to help themselves. Social Darwinism is
a feel-good delusion for those at the top. Or, as described by John
Kenneth Galbraith, a continuing "search for a superior moral
justification for selfishness." A tenet of progressivism is that
a strong society will create opportunities for a greater number of
people, thereby leading to more instances of individual success. This
is the common sense attitude suppressed by conservatives for over 30
years.
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