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status quo buster Donating Member (73 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-19-06 11:28 AM
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America's Class War
Class War Weapon of Choice – For the Holidays and All Days

Joel S. Hirschhorn

The motto of the United States of Consumption is “In More We Trust.” The contribution of American culture to humanity is consumption obsession. Our epidemic of obesity, our land gluttonous suburban sprawl, our monster-size environmental footprint, our ravenous automobile addiction, and our heartless greed are symptoms of a deep-seated, sick mental state that keeps the economy humming. And it keeps increasing economic inequality and apartheid.

Mass consumption is also a distraction from the self-inflicted defeat facing working- and middle-class Americans in the class war they are losing. Americans are enslaving themselves with their spending and delusional prosperity. The rich and super-rich in their McMansions, luxury cars, yachts, swank spas and private jets surely are laughing at how easy it is to manipulate the 80 percent of the population that keeps enriching them.

Many common folks are deluding themselves that they have a fair shot at joining America’s super-rich — those households worth at least $10 million. According to an Elite Traveler poll, they will be spending 25 percent more this year than last on holiday parties, travel, and shopping. Among the top holiday spending categories: spirits for entertaining (up 57 percent to $22,300) and yacht charters (up 12 percent to $410,600). The awesomely affluent will also be averaging $91,100 on holiday jewelry, $36,400 on designer fashions, $52,000 on luxury watches, and $25,700 on flat screen TVs and other electronics. Nearly 25 percent of them will travel by private jet just to shop for holiday gifts. Of course, there are many Americans who do have a good chance of joining the super-rich. They are the rich Americans.

Any regular person who does not understand that Americans are in a class war is out of touch with our economic reality. Rich and powerful elites that are running and ruining our country have the upper hand. Wiping out the middle class to create a two-class society nationally and globally suits them. The Upper Class can steer most wealth to themselves and spread a small amount around to keep the Lower Class content enough not to revolt. Ordinary people have a powerful weapon to fight their oppressors, yet have not yet used it. It is their money, more specifically their discretionary consumer spending. The reasons for not controlling and politicizing their spending merit examination. Time is running out to understand why millions of supposedly rational people spend themselves into economic slavery.

The paradox is that though the rich and powerful rig many aspects of the economy, financial markets, and international trade, they remain dependent on consumer spending to create national wealth and keep the economy healthy, because it accounts for some 70 percent of the GDP. In one sense, they are not able to physically force people to spend money. But in another sense they have done something nearly as effective.

They use the mass media, marketing, advertising and technological change to stimulate consumer demand for a host of products and services that people could easily live without. Compulsive consumer spending results from training, conditioning and brain washing that starts in childhood. In a highly stressful society it becomes a form of self-medication. To conform, fit in and deem oneself successful, Americans unquestioningly and reflexively shop until they drop, borrow until they hurt, and spend until they go bankrupt. They have lost control. Personal and household progress is not measured in terms of real increases in income, savings or net worth (wealth), but rather as the consumption of more stuff. People may not have good health insurance or economic security or the money for their kid’s college education, but they have a large plasma TV, a new cell phone and other electronic gizmos. They are networked and connected, and downloading themselves into economic oblivion.

While the Upper Class spends obscene sums on luxury products and services, the economic system creates relatively low prices for mass consumer goods. The key to this strategy has been globalization that uses low cost foreign labor to satisfy the consumption addiction of the Lower Class. Americans have lost and will continue to lose good-paying jobs, but are kept in check with low-priced products appropriate for lower-wage jobs. National wealth is created, but not shared equitably with working- and middle-class Americans. Those who own Wal-Mart became billionaires while providing what is necessary to stabilize the Lower Class.

Easy borrowing is the other way to keep the Lower Class spending and in stressful debt. Borrowing is spending. Credit cards, debit cards, ATMs, education loans and seductive mortgages keep borrowed prosperity alive. Money spent on interest and all sorts of fees pumps up the enormous financial services sector that has replaced domestic manufacturing as the core of the American economy. Debt is better than chains to keep economic slaves docile. Borrowing for home, car and consumer goods purchases creates massive wealth for the Upper Class, while indebtedness keeps the Lower Class compelled to take whatever jobs the system makes available.

Who paid the $40 million bonus for 2006 given to Morgan Stanley CEO (just part of the $16 billion paid in company bonuses)? Where did the company profits come from? Ultimately, it was many millions of working stiffs that paid higher prices for goods and services so that fees could be paid to the banking companies producing the enormous profits that enabled those obscene salaries and bonuses in the financial services sector. Capitalism and the profit motive are fine. But things have gotten completely out of control. Insane corporate compensation saps an inordinate amount of wealth from society. The greed-masters do NOT create wealth – they legally steal it from the system. This is reflected in this awful statistical reality: The share of the nation’s income going to wages and salaries, according to the Commerce Department, has shrunk to 51.8 percent, the lowest share since 1929.

Illegal immigration was another stroke of genius to increase corporate profits. There have always been hordes of very poor people in Mexico and other third world nations. What changed was the decision among the power elites to make jobs readily available to all illegal immigrants that could get into the country. And political influence was used to ensure that the government would not effectively protect our borders. After gutting labor unions, corporate bigwigs realized that illegal immigrants offered the easiest way to depress all wages for ordinary workers. The icing on the cake was that illegal workers would increase demand for imported, low priced goods.

Another sector creating enormous wealth for the Upper Class is gambling, both legal and illegal. It is at remarkable levels among Lower Class people. This is just another form of spending that is critical to another core economic sector – entertainment and leisure. Gambling is the opiate of the masses, and local and state governments eagerly sanction gambling to expand tax revenues, necessary to offset the losses due to lower wages and the high costs of providing government services to illegals and the poor. Speaking of taxes, the more people spend, the more regressive sales taxes they pay. Compulsive consumer spending is important to minimize the tax burden on the Upper Class.

What is the holiday season all about? Wake up! It is not about whatever religious beliefs you have. It is all about spending. The only way to win the class war is to withhold discretionary consumer spending to obtain what is necessary from our MISrepresentative elected officials. Stop spending until our delusional president ends the loss of American lives and treasure in Iraq or the congress withholds funding for it, for example. The best gift of all to give to your loved ones is a drastic slowdown in your spending!

A tiny fraction of Americans have tried to shake consumption cravings, but obviously nothing has caught on sufficiently to reform our culture. A group in San Francisco, known as “the Compact,” swore off buying new things, with very few exceptions. They have bought secondhand, bartered, borrowed, recycled and reused. As one member said, “And people hate us for it? Like it drives them nuts?” They are accused of being un-American. Another campaign is Buy Nothing Day. People are urged to take a 24-hour break from the consumption compulsion on the day after Thanksgiving. The book “Not Buying It: My Year Without Shopping” was a success. Yet these and other efforts have not put a dent in the nation’s voracious consumption. In More We Trust remains strong.

All these marginal efforts only offer psychological or spiritual benefits for committed individuals. Like any addiction, ending compulsive consumption is difficult. By politicizing reduced consumption through buycotts, political gains offset any “suffering” from reduced consumption. So consider tradeoffs between less consumption and political actions that you feel are strongly needed. Your dollars are much more powerful than your votes.

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whistle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-19-06 11:36 AM
Response to Original message
1. It's the L-curve stupid....
http://www.lcurve.org/

<snip>
The L-Curve graph represents income, not wealth. The distribution of wealth is even more skewed. Quoting from a recently-published book by political philosopher David Schweickart,
If we divided the income of the US into thirds, we find that the top ten percent of the population gets a third, the next thirty percent gets another third, and the bottom sixty percent get the last third. If we divide the wealth of the US into thirds, we find that the top one percent own a third, the next nine percent own another third, and the bottom ninety percent claim the rest. (Actually, these percentages, true a decade ago, are now out of date. The top one percent are now estimated to own between forty and fifty percent of the nation's wealth, more than the combined wealth of the bottom 95%.)

Think of the L-Curve when you read your daily news . What are its implications for tax structures, campaign finance reform, the policies of the IMF, the WTO, and the World Bank, abandonment of inner cities, factory closings, sweatshop labor, "guest worker" programs, US foreign policy, why we go to war, etc. How does welfare for the poor stack up against corporate welfare?

Should the goal be to get motivated and get yourself onto the vertical spike? I saw a bumper sticker recently that says it best for me: Everyone does better when everyone does better!

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Sapphire Blue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-19-06 12:03 PM
Response to Original message
2. Link to OP & other articles by this author - about DemoCRAPS, President Kinky, more...
Edited on Tue Dec-19-06 12:33 PM by Sapphire Blue
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JNelson6563 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-20-06 08:05 AM
Response to Reply #2
10. Some interesting stuff there!
Thanks for adding all that.
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guruoo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-19-06 12:08 PM
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3. "In a highly stressful society it becomes a form of self-medication".
Oh man, don't you know it!
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followthemoney Donating Member (745 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-19-06 12:37 PM
Response to Original message
4. Christ was forced out of Xmas by the commodities. Merry Cashmas
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thingfisher Donating Member (445 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-19-06 01:22 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. America, land of the consumer.
When I was growing up I never considered myself or others as primarily "consumers". The term began to be applied to the general population more and more as I grew up and became the main designation for viable humans in our society. It has come to be that anyone without the capacity to consume the products that uor bountiful society has to offer really has no relevance.

The class war has been fueled bby the rise of consumer society because the rich are the conspicuous consumers and the rest of society desires to emulate their "success". The trap is that the average person in no way can ever hope to attain the consumer clout of the rich, who have no need to be concerned for the basic needs of life.

I have the lurking feeling that the great party will soon be over as our economy and indebtedness begins to impinge on our fantacy life here in the USA. Some kind of reckoning is near.
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Manifestor_of_Light Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-20-06 02:07 AM
Response to Original message
6. and what if nobody is watching you?
People who are rich, flashy and insecure want to impress others(New Money). However, conspicuous consumption implies an observer. If nobody is watching you, and nobody cares what kind of car you drive, and nobody judges that you are "better" in some way, than they are, then your actions to impress others are in vain.

My mother and grandmother always worried about what other people think. My dad, fount of common sense and lawyerly wisdom, would tell them, "Most people are worried about what YOU think of THEM. They are self-centered."

That would shut them up and make them mad at the same time. But he was right. :rofl:


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hfojvt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-20-06 02:34 AM
Response to Original message
7. "Debt is better than chains to keep economic slaves docile."
"St. Peter, don't you call me, 'cause I can't go.
I owe my soul to the company store."

K & R
Not sure about the other articles. What is a DemoCRAP?
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earth mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-20-06 03:19 AM
Response to Original message
8. K & R! The Class War is raging-no doubt about it! nt
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Vidar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-20-06 05:58 AM
Response to Original message
9. K&R.
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