While
some still believe the United States is the greatest democracy on
Earth, the US is actually a plutocracy, a government ruled by the
wealthiest. The recent Supreme Court decision in McCutcheon
will subject us to an even stronger plutocracy that no one will be able
to deny. The ‘rule of money’ will become more deeply entrenched at a
time of economic and environmental crisis.
In
the US today, a small group of people rule over hundreds of millions of
us through a government corrupted by money; and controls the economy
through mega-businesses that receive special treatment from that
government, prevent entrepreneurial competition and control tens of
millions of people through low wages and high debt. The plutocrats fund
the only two parties allowed to run for office and the people are
manipulated by fear to vote against their interests in a mirage
democracy of rigged elections.
The
legitimacy of the US government is now in question. By illegitimate we
mean it is rule by the 1%, not a democracy ‘of, by and for the people.’
The US has become a carefully designed plutocracy that creates laws to
favor the few. As Stephen Breyer wrote in his dissenting opinion, American law is now “incapable of dealing with the grave problems of democratic legitimacy.” Or, as former president, Jimmy Carter said on July 16, 2013 “America does not at the moment have a functioning democracy.”
Even members of Congress admit there is a problem. Long before the McCutcheon decision, Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) described the impact of the big banks
on the government saying: “They own the place.” We have moved into an
era of a predatory form of capitalism rooted in big finance where
profits are more important than people’s needs or protection of the
planet.
It
is up to us to use McCutcheon to energize the movement against
money-corruption of the government and economy. Throughout history, bad
court decisions have helped energize movements; people power can make
that happen again. Already there is a growing movement against the
American plutocracy.
Predatory Capitalism Feeds on Public Dollars, Forced Debt
Where
does the strength of the plutocrats come from? Their control of public
policies has created a massive welfare state for the wealthy while the
rest of us are driven into debt. Understanding this relationship is
essential if we are going to end it.
This week Strike Debt, an off-shoot of Occupy Wall Street, published the second edition of The Debt Resisters’ Operations Manual. They open the manual by describing the pervasiveness of debt:
“Everyone
is affected by debt, from people taking out payday loans at 400%
interest to cover basic living costs, to recent graduates paying
hundreds of dollars in interest on their students loans every month, to
working families bankrupted by medical bills, to elders living in
‘underwater’ homes, to the teachers and firefighters forced to take pay
cuts because their cities are broke, to people in the global South
suffering due to their countries being pushed into austerity and poverty
by structural adjustment programs. Everyone seems to owe something, and
most of us are in so deep it’ll be years before we have any chance of
getting out—if we have any chance at all.”
Strike Debt points out that
“over three-quarters of us have some type of personal debt. At least 14%
of people living in the United States are already being pursued by debt
collectors, which is more than double from
a decade ago.” Putting people into the debt of big banks is “a
profoundly effective form of social control.” When students leave school
anchored by massive debt, it limits their choices.
When underpaid
workers are in debt with credit card bills or mortgages, it makes it
impossible for them to fight for fair treatment at work or to quit and
risk not being able to find another job.
Why
do we have these debts? Because the policies put in place by
corporate-dominated political parties have created unjust laws over time
that ensure we accumulate massive debt. As Strike Debt summarizes the
situation:
“The
reason you have tens of thousands of dollars in medical bills is that
we don’t provide medical care to everyone. The reason you have tens of
thousands of dollars of student loans is because the government, banks,
and university administrators have contrived to cut government subsidies
that support education while driving college costs through the roof.
Unlike fifty years ago, it’s simply impossible for all but the
wealthiest to attend college without them. Bubbles drive housing and
food prices up, wages are kept artificially low so that they don’t keep
up with inflation, and more and more of us rely on proliferating forms
of ‘casual,’ ‘flexible,’ and part-time employment.”
The
denial of basic services and education puts Americans from the poor
through the upper middle class in economic peril. To add insult to
injury, our public dollars that could pay for essential services and
education are used instead to enable predatory behavior by big
corporations. The biggest recipients of welfare are big business
interests like Walmart and the big banks.
Walmart is the largest private
employer in the US, with annual profits of over $15 billion. The six
Walmart heirs have more wealth than the bottom 40% of all Americans
combined. How did they get there? Massive government subsidies are central to Walmart’s business plan.
These include tax breaks from state and local governments for each of
their nearly 5,000 stores in the United States. And government subsidies
to their employees for healthcare, food and housing because Walmart
pays poverty wages. Of all retail outlets, Walmart is the largest recipient of government assistance in the country.
However,
the biggest recipients of government assistance are the banks
themselves. Through the private corporation known as the Federal
Reserve, the banks have been given trillions of dollars in virtually
no-interest loans. The banks then lend the money to the government at an
immediate profit or to consumers and businesses for an even bigger
profit. And then the banks borrow on those loans and expand their wealth
even further, using the money to gamble on derivatives or other risky
activities that put the economy at risk.
As if these subsidies aren’t enough, the banks and other large corporations also avoid paying taxes. One of many tax avoidance schemes is to keep money off-shore. A new report from ISI Research finds that U.S. S&P 500 companies now have $1.9 trillion parked outside the country. There have been proposals for a global tax on this income, but in our government owned by banks, these do not move forward.
While there are many predatory
practices by the big banks against people in the United States, it is
sometimes easier to see them when we look at behavior around the world. As the Debt Resister’s Operations Manual points out, “in 2008, the world’s poorest countries were paying $23 million a day in interest payments to
the rich industrial world, for loans where the original principal had
often already been paid back several times over.” In the US and around
the world, they point out that:
“Debt … has become the primary form of extracting and accumulating wealth for the rich.”
As a result of World Bank policies, millions of people are being thrown off their land
because large corporations are being given special rights. The World
Bank is driving this destructive trend with its Doing Business rankings,
which force countries to compete with each other to do away with things
like environmental protections, worker’s rights and corporate taxes.
“The World Bank is facilitating land grabs and sowing poverty by putting
the interests of foreign investors before those of locals,” says Anuradha Mittal, Executive Director of the Oakland Institute.
All of these policies have had a dramatic and harmful impact. As economist Joseph Stiglitz testified recently “America has achieved the distinction of becoming the country with the highest level of income inequality among the advanced countries.” Strike Debt notes “the United States ranks 138th out of 141 countries in terms of wealth equality.” Stiglitz told the Senate Banking Committee there is “a vicious circle: our high inequality is one of the major contributing factors to our weak economy and our low growth.”
But even more stark than income inequality is wealth inequality,
which is worsening. Due to debt, 47% of Americans have zero wealth
while the “richest 0.1 percent of Americans have dramatically expanded
their share of the country’s overall wealth in the last three decades.”
Wealth is important because it represents ownership and control, “a
higher concentration of wealth naturally implies that fewer individuals
control the decisions made by firms in the economy,” according to
Princeton’s Atif Mian and University of Chicago’s Amir Sufi.
The Revolt Against American Plutocracy
People are revolting against plutocracy in a variety of ways
in the US and around the world. There are movements to eliminate the
corrupting influence of money on politics, against austerity, for living
wages, to end extreme energy extraction, to end insurance-based
healthcare, to stop privatization of schools, to transform the Federal
Reserve, to erase debt and many other issues.
The Debt Resister’s Manual
points out that “Movements for debt resistance have a very long
history.
From ancient times, people have challenged the harsh penalties
visited on defaulters, including branding, torture, imprisonment, and
even slavery. In ancient Athens, the first known democratic constitution
came about largely as a result of an outright rebellion of debtors…”
And, they report we see protests growing: “Around the world, popular
movements are beginning to rattle the chains, seeing debt for what it
is—a form of domination and exploitation—and collectively rising up
against it.”
People
recognize that much of debt is illegitimate. The corrupt government
allows usury interest rates and unfair loan practices. Cuts to social
services and education force people into debt. The solutions are
obvious, though we are told they are too radical. The Debt Resister’s
Manual points out that “there was a kind of jubilee in Iceland after the
2008 economic crisis: instead of bailing out their banks, Iceland
canceled a percentage of mortgage debt.”
In
addition to resistance, people are building alternatives to corrupt big
finance capitalism. The new economy that people are striving to create
is defined by our values. Strike Debt summarizes:
“Our
values will serve as our North Star: putting people and nature before
profits; meeting need and not greed; empowering all and not just a few;
becoming less alienated from our work and from each other; and creating
more leisure time to spend with our loved ones.”
Jerome Roos of ROAR Magazine outlines the possibilities of a new finance system that
was described at the Moneylab Conference in Amsterdam last week. He
challenges his readers to think about money differently and to recognize
that though our current monetary system is based on debt, it doesn’t
have to be that way.
The Freelancer’s Union calls the growing new economy the “Quiet Revolution” and they invite people to map what their community is doing – cooperatives, collectives, local food networks.
Another organization, the Democracy Collaborative, publishes a list of projects that we can all learn from on Community-Wealth.org. Next month we are holding a conference in Baltimore
to work on creating a new local economy based on economic democracy
that includes worker-owned businesses, new ways of structuring finance,
affordable housing, clean energy and food security. One new form of
urban agriculture that is taking off is the vertical farm.
People
are discussing essential ideas that elected officials who represent the
plutocrats will not even acknowledge. If we create new models, then
they will eventually become the policy of the US and much of the world.
For example, when you recognize that wealth comes from the commons –
built on infrastructure like roadways and the Internet that we all pay
for, or the intellectual and technical knowledge that universities and
government research grants have paid for – and that major growth in the
economy has always had major government involvement from the railroads
to the Internet, then it becomes evident we must all share the wealth
that this commons has created.
And
because robotics and other technology mean there will be fewer jobs,
indeed in the future we will not have enough jobs, we have to figure out
new ways to provide income so that all can participate in the economy.
One solution that is being discussed by those outside the major
political parties is a guaranteed minimum income. This is one example of why we need to be independent of the two parties and not be limited by the agenda of either ‘rule of money’ based party.
Time to Energize the Movement to End the Rule of Money
The ‘arc of justice’ does not bend toward plutocracy. People powered movements that are building today will end plutocratic rule.
Last week we reported on two campaigns
that were announced for this spring, the Worldwide Wave of Action and
the Global Climate Convergence. After we published that article, two
more campaigns were announced. Reset the Net,
seeks to restore privacy to the Internet by our own actions rather than
waiting for the government. People are taking action now to push
Internet providers to provide privacy. Many would go further and make the Internet a public utility
whose mission is to serve the public. Second, is a campaign against
the abuses of international finance, particularly by the World Bank, Our Land Our Business.
The IMF and World Bank have their meeting from October 10 to 12 in
Washington, DC and actions are being urged around the world during that
time period.
Rather than being despondent about the Supreme Court decision in McCutcheon, we should use it to energize and focus our efforts. Every issue is impacted by the corruption of the ‘rule of money.’
We know we cannot achieve the transformation that is needed so long as
this corruption continues. A focal point of the ‘movement of movements’
must be to end the influence of money in US elections so it can be
legitimately called a democracy.
The
legitimacy of government is at the root of the founding of our nation.
Our favorite ‘founder,’ Thomas Paine, put forward ideas that were
ignored by those who wrote the Constitution, e.g. abolition of slavery,
voting rights for all including woman and African Americans, healthcare
for all and equitable sharing of the wealth of the nation. Now, 238
years later we are still fighting for some of his beliefs. In his
article “We are Radicals at Heart: A New History Gets America Wrong,”
Harvey J. Kaye writes that Paine told us “that history is not over,
that prevailing inequalities and oppressions are not inevitable, and
that we need to remember who we are and recognize that ‘We have it in
our power to begin the world over again.’”
This
will not be the first time in history that a corrupt court decision has
inspired action. Indeed, the recognition that the British Crown was
illegitimate came in part out of a court decision upholding the Great
Writs – which allowed British authorities to search colonists at whim.
In
1761 James Otis argued against the Great Writs on behalf of
Massachusetts colonists subjected to searches by British troops and
Customs officials. He argued in a five hour oration before a packed
State House, a speech that was printed in full in 1773 that searches
without any oath for their basis allows the Crown’s authorities to “enter
our houses when they please.” When the Crown court ruled against Otis
in the Great Writs case, a young court reporter, John Adams, recorded
the event writing “Then and there the child independence was born.”
Let
us turn the corrupt decisions, Citizens United and McCutcheon, into our
rallying cry for a government independent of the corrupting influence
of money; and to create the kind of economic democracy and participatory
government to which the ‘arc of justice’ points us.
This article is produced by PopularResistance.org in conjunction with AlterNet. It is based on PopularResistance.org’s weekly newsletter reviewing the activities of the resistance movement.
Kevin Zeese, JD and Margaret Flowers, MD are participants in PopularResistance.org; they co-direct It’s Our Economy and co-host Clearing the FOG. Their twitters are @KBZeese and MFlowers8.
Hi, Walt McRee and I just started a new radio program, “It’s Our Money,” on Progressive Radio Network at noon PST/3pm EST every second Wednesday (we’re working up to weekly!).
Today’s program features Kevin Zeese and Margaret Flowers, our favorite activists. Listen at noon PST/3pm EST here.
Our first show, on March 12th, featured Professor Tim Canova, who is a wealth of knowledge on the Federal Reserve; and ended with an interview of public banking catalyst Mike Krauss. The archive is here.
Our second show, on March 26th, featured Professor Bob Hockett –
also a wealth of knowledge — on the plan to take underwater mortgages
by eminent domain and renegotiate them on behalf of homeowners. The
archive is here.
Coming soon, journalist and author Nomi Prins, senior fellow at Demos, on her new book All the Presidents’ Bankers. Stay tuned!
Also, don't miss Katie Teague's excellent documentary "Money and Life," available as a DVD here and online here. It features public banking as a major solution, and lots of my favorite experts are in it, including Hazel Henderson, Tom Greco, Charles Eisenstein, and John Fullerton. I'm also in it.
Best wishes, Ellen http://EllenBrown.com >> http://PublicBankingInstitute.org Also, don't miss Katie Teague's excellent documentary "Money and Life," available as a DVD here and online here. It features public banking as a major solution, and lots of my favorite experts are in it, including Hazel Henderson, Tom Greco, Charles Eisenstein, and John Fullerton. I'm also in it.
Ellen Brown, Walt McRee, Kevin Zeese and Margaret Flowers, Et Al, the left we really need as very right on!
ReplyDeleteTwenty first century and digital credit has been around for as long as the idea of 'credit-debt' got sold as a reality. We can and must get our imaginations into the power of Twenty first century digital 'money' as virtually free obviously.