Fact-based, commercial-free information and social commentary - “Either write something worth reading or do something worth writing.” ― Ben Franklin. ----- I am a retired social worker, social service planner and administrative analyst for the state of New Jersey.
Thursday, November 10, 2016
A Concise Analysis of Why Trump Won
By Brian T. Lynch, MSW
Donald Trump won because the GOP allowed their party’s popular choice to be nominated even though he wasn't the establishments choice. Democrats lost because of the anti-insurgency bias against a popular anti-establishment candidate, a bias baked into the Democratic primary process.
I blame the DNC for its epic failure to read the mood of the country, for thwarting Bernie Sanders at every turn and for fielding an historically unfavorable establishment candidate. It is clear that the DNC completely underestimated how much Hillary Clinton is disliked, or how well Trump resonated with so many citizens. The electorate clearly wanted to send a message to the establishment. Thanks to the DNC that message has been delivered in it's most virulent form possible.
You can say she lost because she is a woman, and you are be partly right. You can say she lost because President Obama is black, and you are be partly right. But mostly she lost because no establishment candidate could have won. She and the Democratic Party failed to see or understand the lives of so many struggling, marginalized and forgotten families living below the radar, especially in rural America. She lost because she represents the very establishment that let so many American's before, during and since the Great Recession.
I have more to say, but not now. It’s all still too damn depressing.
Friday, October 21, 2016
Of Tax Breaks and Budge Holes
Dear Editor:
I don't think most people in New Jersey get it yet. When politicians
tell us revenue collected for a better 911 system had to go for other law
enforcement priorities, they aren't being honest. Their "spending priorities" mask tax
revenue lost to off budget deals for
special interest tax breaks. These
special tax breaks loosely translate
into campaign donation or political clout for New Jersey politicians.
Special tax deals don't show up as a liabilities on a budget
line. They show up as holes in the budge that must be plugged. They show up as
insufficient revenue to pay for state pensions, or daycare assistance, or NJ
Transit funding, or the Transportation Trust Fund. Every time a dedicated funding stream is
raided to plug a spending gap we should demand to know what created the revenue
gap in the first place.
I believe we are intentionally distracted by dramatic spending
conflicts to conceal the real action behind the revenue side of the ledger. It's time to claw back all those special
interest tax breaks and make the rich and powerful pay their fair share of
taxes. Let's require that all future
budges contain a detailed accounting of all the tax breaks currently in
effect.
Brian T. Lynch
Note: The readers of this blog are free to copy this letter or model their own letter after it to send to their own local newspapers.
A few other points that had to be left out:
1. The tighter the state or municipal budget the greater the disparity between those who pay the taxes they owe and those who cheat on their taxes or get special interest tax breaks. Unfair taxation is at the root of revenue shortfalls.
2. The article makes the point about wealthy corporations and the rich, because they have the means to make cheating on taxes legal (special interest tax loop holes). They also pay the least amout of taxes relative to their income and wealth. But the tax revenue drain also comes from a growing underground cash economy. Just the other day a buildings trade contractor told me he would lower an estimate if I paid cash (I declined).
3. No matter where people fall on the wealth and income spectrum they feel cheated by a tax system that allows others to pay less than their fair share. Everyone feels entitled to cheat a little on their taxes. Today, cleaver manipulation of the tax code to avoid paying even massive amounts of federal taxes is admired. This is a far cry from when the current progressive tax code was first implemented 101 years ago. Paying taxes was considered a patriotic duty. Considering how strongly people voice their support for our military, coupled with the fact that nearly 50 cents of every federal income tax dollar goes to the military, you would think that it would still be patriotic to pay taxes today.
Note: The readers of this blog are free to copy this letter or model their own letter after it to send to their own local newspapers.
A few other points that had to be left out:
1. The tighter the state or municipal budget the greater the disparity between those who pay the taxes they owe and those who cheat on their taxes or get special interest tax breaks. Unfair taxation is at the root of revenue shortfalls.
2. The article makes the point about wealthy corporations and the rich, because they have the means to make cheating on taxes legal (special interest tax loop holes). They also pay the least amout of taxes relative to their income and wealth. But the tax revenue drain also comes from a growing underground cash economy. Just the other day a buildings trade contractor told me he would lower an estimate if I paid cash (I declined).
3. No matter where people fall on the wealth and income spectrum they feel cheated by a tax system that allows others to pay less than their fair share. Everyone feels entitled to cheat a little on their taxes. Today, cleaver manipulation of the tax code to avoid paying even massive amounts of federal taxes is admired. This is a far cry from when the current progressive tax code was first implemented 101 years ago. Paying taxes was considered a patriotic duty. Considering how strongly people voice their support for our military, coupled with the fact that nearly 50 cents of every federal income tax dollar goes to the military, you would think that it would still be patriotic to pay taxes today.
OR AT LEAST YOUR FAIR SHARE OF TAXES
Monday, October 3, 2016
Tax Breaks are the Rigging of a Rigged System
by Brian T. Lynch, MSW
(A letter to the editor I submitted today. Please feel free to copy and send to your own local editors without attribution.)
Have we all lost our minds? Have we all forgotten that special interest tax loopholes are a tax burden for the rest of us? Are we so jaded that we no longer see tax breaks as evidence of political corruption?
Who among your readers would vote for a special tax break knowing it would raise their own taxes? If the majority ruled, as it should in our Republic, most tax breaks wouldn't exist.
While Trump and his supporters say how genius it is of him to so cleverly exploit these disgusting loopholes, wouldn't the financial gains of a corruptly created tax breaks also be tainted?
Muck money! Graft booty! We don't have a precise word for it, but exploiting ill gotten tax breaks for personal gain isn't honorable. It is unfair. It is the rigging in a rigged system. Tax loopholes may be legal but that doesn't make them respectable.
(A letter to the editor I submitted today. Please feel free to copy and send to your own local editors without attribution.)
Have we all lost our minds? Have we all forgotten that special interest tax loopholes are a tax burden for the rest of us? Are we so jaded that we no longer see tax breaks as evidence of political corruption?
Who among your readers would vote for a special tax break knowing it would raise their own taxes? If the majority ruled, as it should in our Republic, most tax breaks wouldn't exist.
While Trump and his supporters say how genius it is of him to so cleverly exploit these disgusting loopholes, wouldn't the financial gains of a corruptly created tax breaks also be tainted?
Muck money! Graft booty! We don't have a precise word for it, but exploiting ill gotten tax breaks for personal gain isn't honorable. It is unfair. It is the rigging in a rigged system. Tax loopholes may be legal but that doesn't make them respectable.
Tuesday, September 27, 2016
Undocumented Immigrant Wages and Impact in New Jersey
by Brian T. Lynch, MSW
I decided I can only respond to certain critics of my blog by breaking down their comments into smaller, more manageable chunks . And then I can only answer their questions that have actual, verifiable answers. Here is a small portion of one of my most recent critics comments from a blog post of mine entitled "America at the Crossroad of Crisis." His comment reads in part:
First, a clarifying anecdote
A few years back I hired a middle aged factory worker named Tony to mow my lawn. I mowed my lawn for many years but suffer allergic reactions every time. I finally got smart.
Tony has a part-time lawn service to supplement his factory salary. He hires kids to help him in the summer. He told me that he paid the last young man $12.00/hr to weed-wack and leaf blow. Several weeks into the summer his helper quit to take a part-time job flipping burgers for $7.25 per hours. The kid said landscaping work was too much work.
If you read my blog or articles you know that I am very concerned about the fact the US wages have been suppressed by big business for nearly 40 years.
The US median household income for a family of four is currently about $52,000 per year. Cost of living varies state by state and New Jersey has among the highest cost of living. It is also among the wealthiest of states. Consequently, the median income for a family of four in New Jersey is $71,637 per year.
Carpenters
The annual average wage for all carpenters (union or otherwise) is $37,000 per year in New Jersey. Annual carpenter wages range from a low of $28,000 to a high of $66,000 per year.
This means that even union carpenters in New Jersey straddle the US median family income, and all carpenters make below the state median income. Nearly half of all the New Jersey carpenters with a family are not financially independent. Either their spouse must work , or they must moonlight to make ends meet. On their own fulltime wages, many single income carpenters in New Jersey qualify for some form of taxpayer subsidy such as daycare assistance or housing assistance.
Electricians
The annual average wage for all electricians (union or otherwise) in New Jersey is $45,000 per year. Annual electricians wages range from a low of $16,000 to a high of $111,000 per year.
Most electricians are better off in New Jersey than are carpenters or plumbers. Even so, the average electrician in New Jersey makes less than the US median income and far less than the New Jersey median income. On their own fulltime wages alone, some single income electricians in New Jersey still qualify for some form of taxpayer subsidy such as daycare assistance or housing assistance.
Plumbers
The annual average wage for all plumbers (union or otherwise) in New Jersey is $26,000 per year. Annual plumber wages range from a low of $22,000 to a high of $102,000 per year.
Notice how close to the average plumber wages the low end of plumber wages are? That means most plumbers are making close to the lower end of the range in New Jersey. Plumbers do worse economically than carpenters or electricians. Most make far less than the US median wage and only about a third of the New Jersey median salary. On their fulltime wages alone, most single income plumbers in New Jersey qualify for some form of taxpayer subsidy such as daycare assistance or housing assistance.
Immigrant Annual Wages
It isn't easy to find solid data on the annual incomes of undocumented immigrants, but there are many independent studies and scholarly works that found undocumented immigrants are not taking away our jobs or costing us taxpayer money (references upon request). Even the very conservative US Chamber of Commerce agrees.
It is estimated that undocumented farm workers in the US make between $10,000 and $12,000 per year. The authors of that analysis also noted that, unlike most workers, wages for an undocumented worker almost never rise over time. This fact agrees with my own experiences. I have many acquaintances who are undocumented aliens. They live in the shadows, don't complain and don't get raises. It is almost certain that undocumented aliens makes less than $23,000 per year, and probably much less. Note that minimum wage in New Jersey is the federal minimum wage rate of $7.25 per hours. A person working 40 hours per week for 52 weeks would make just over $15,000 per year.
Another study in Chicago found that the average wage of undocumented aliens in that city was $7.00 per hour, which is $1.00 below that states minimum wage. I haven't found a similar study for New Jersey's undocumented aliens yet, but suspect their average wage is at or near the minimum wage as well.
New Jersey has the fifth largest number of undocumented aliens in the county. Many work at minimum wage and many also work below minimum wage. Almost all work more than 40 hours per week, so their annual family incomes are not directly comparable to the annual family incomes of others who work more traditional hours. Also, the number of employable adults in immigrant household are often more than in traditional families. For these reasons, the household incomes of undocumented aliens is a skewed measure. What immigrants lack in wage rates they make up for in the number of hours the spend work.
Given the huge wage rate disparity between undocumented immigrants wages and the wages of even the lowest paid, non-union plumbers, none of whom work for minimum wage, it seem unlikely that foreign born workers are taking away many US jobs. It is my experience, living next to a town that is 75% Latino, that most undocumented immigrants have jobs that no one else born here wants for wages that most Americans would never accept. As a result of their discounted labor we enjoy discounted farm produce, discounted nursing home care, discounted restaurant meals, etc.
Immigrants in New Jersey
· The foreign-born share of New Jersey’s population rose from 12.5% in 1990, to 17.5% in 2000, to 21.6% in 2013, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. New Jersey was home to 1.9 million immigrants in 2013, which is more than the population of the entire state of Nebraska.
· 53% of immigrants (or over 1 million people) in New Jersey were naturalized U.S. citizens in2013 —meaning that they are eligible to vote.
Immigrants Economic Impact on New Jersey
I decided I can only respond to certain critics of my blog by breaking down their comments into smaller, more manageable chunks . And then I can only answer their questions that have actual, verifiable answers. Here is a small portion of one of my most recent critics comments from a blog post of mine entitled "America at the Crossroad of Crisis." His comment reads in part:
"The idea that migrants and even those who are here illegally are not taking away the jobs of “Americans” is superficial bull at best. When labor unions price the services of union members to a point that few can afford such labor then will that not create job opportunities for those willing to work for far less? What is the hourly wage for a carpenter in your state or general locality? What is the rate for an electrician or a plumber?"
First, a clarifying anecdote
A few years back I hired a middle aged factory worker named Tony to mow my lawn. I mowed my lawn for many years but suffer allergic reactions every time. I finally got smart.
Tony has a part-time lawn service to supplement his factory salary. He hires kids to help him in the summer. He told me that he paid the last young man $12.00/hr to weed-wack and leaf blow. Several weeks into the summer his helper quit to take a part-time job flipping burgers for $7.25 per hours. The kid said landscaping work was too much work.
If you read my blog or articles you know that I am very concerned about the fact the US wages have been suppressed by big business for nearly 40 years.
The US median household income for a family of four is currently about $52,000 per year. Cost of living varies state by state and New Jersey has among the highest cost of living. It is also among the wealthiest of states. Consequently, the median income for a family of four in New Jersey is $71,637 per year.
Carpenters
The annual average wage for all carpenters (union or otherwise) is $37,000 per year in New Jersey. Annual carpenter wages range from a low of $28,000 to a high of $66,000 per year.
This means that even union carpenters in New Jersey straddle the US median family income, and all carpenters make below the state median income. Nearly half of all the New Jersey carpenters with a family are not financially independent. Either their spouse must work , or they must moonlight to make ends meet. On their own fulltime wages, many single income carpenters in New Jersey qualify for some form of taxpayer subsidy such as daycare assistance or housing assistance.
Electricians
The annual average wage for all electricians (union or otherwise) in New Jersey is $45,000 per year. Annual electricians wages range from a low of $16,000 to a high of $111,000 per year.
Most electricians are better off in New Jersey than are carpenters or plumbers. Even so, the average electrician in New Jersey makes less than the US median income and far less than the New Jersey median income. On their own fulltime wages alone, some single income electricians in New Jersey still qualify for some form of taxpayer subsidy such as daycare assistance or housing assistance.
Plumbers
The annual average wage for all plumbers (union or otherwise) in New Jersey is $26,000 per year. Annual plumber wages range from a low of $22,000 to a high of $102,000 per year.
Notice how close to the average plumber wages the low end of plumber wages are? That means most plumbers are making close to the lower end of the range in New Jersey. Plumbers do worse economically than carpenters or electricians. Most make far less than the US median wage and only about a third of the New Jersey median salary. On their fulltime wages alone, most single income plumbers in New Jersey qualify for some form of taxpayer subsidy such as daycare assistance or housing assistance.
Immigrant Annual Wages
It isn't easy to find solid data on the annual incomes of undocumented immigrants, but there are many independent studies and scholarly works that found undocumented immigrants are not taking away our jobs or costing us taxpayer money (references upon request). Even the very conservative US Chamber of Commerce agrees.
It is estimated that undocumented farm workers in the US make between $10,000 and $12,000 per year. The authors of that analysis also noted that, unlike most workers, wages for an undocumented worker almost never rise over time. This fact agrees with my own experiences. I have many acquaintances who are undocumented aliens. They live in the shadows, don't complain and don't get raises. It is almost certain that undocumented aliens makes less than $23,000 per year, and probably much less. Note that minimum wage in New Jersey is the federal minimum wage rate of $7.25 per hours. A person working 40 hours per week for 52 weeks would make just over $15,000 per year.
Another study in Chicago found that the average wage of undocumented aliens in that city was $7.00 per hour, which is $1.00 below that states minimum wage. I haven't found a similar study for New Jersey's undocumented aliens yet, but suspect their average wage is at or near the minimum wage as well.
New Jersey has the fifth largest number of undocumented aliens in the county. Many work at minimum wage and many also work below minimum wage. Almost all work more than 40 hours per week, so their annual family incomes are not directly comparable to the annual family incomes of others who work more traditional hours. Also, the number of employable adults in immigrant household are often more than in traditional families. For these reasons, the household incomes of undocumented aliens is a skewed measure. What immigrants lack in wage rates they make up for in the number of hours the spend work.
Given the huge wage rate disparity between undocumented immigrants wages and the wages of even the lowest paid, non-union plumbers, none of whom work for minimum wage, it seem unlikely that foreign born workers are taking away many US jobs. It is my experience, living next to a town that is 75% Latino, that most undocumented immigrants have jobs that no one else born here wants for wages that most Americans would never accept. As a result of their discounted labor we enjoy discounted farm produce, discounted nursing home care, discounted restaurant meals, etc.
Immigrants in New Jersey
Immigrants and their children are growing shares of New Jersey’s population and electorate.
(Source: https://www.americanimmigrationcouncil.org/research/new-americans-new-jersey)· The foreign-born share of New Jersey’s population rose from 12.5% in 1990, to 17.5% in 2000, to 21.6% in 2013, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. New Jersey was home to 1.9 million immigrants in 2013, which is more than the population of the entire state of Nebraska.
· 53% of immigrants (or over 1 million people) in New Jersey were naturalized U.S. citizens in2013 —meaning that they are eligible to vote.
Immigrants Economic Impact on New Jersey
- Unauthorized immigrants comprised 5.8% of the state’s population (or 525,000 people) in2012, according to a report by the Pew Hispanic Center
- The 2014 purchasing power of New Jersey’s Latinos totaled $46 billion—an increase of 415% since 1990. Asian buying power totaled $46.3 billion—an increase of 727% since 1990, according to the Selig Center for Economic Growth at the University of Georgia.
- Immigration boosts housing values in communities. From 2000 to 2010, according to the Americas Society/Council of the Americas, the value added by immigration to the price of the average home was $3,730 in Bergen County; $6,121 in Middlesex County; $1,875 in Essex County; $2,050 in Monmouth County; $2,096 in Hudson County, $2,509 in Union County, and $1,896 in Camden County.
- New Jersey’s 67,755 Asian-owned businesses had sales and receipts of $29.9 billion and employed 115,024 people in 2007, the last year for which data is available. The state’s 68,374 Latino-owned businesses had sales and receipts of $10.2 billion and employed 48,059 people in 2007, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s Survey of Business Owners.
- From 2006 to 2010, there were 101,251 new immigrant business owners in New Jersey, and they had total net business income of $6.2 billion, which makes up 22.4% of all net business income in the state, according to Robert Fairlie of the University of California, Santa Cruz.
- In 2010, 28% of all business owners in New Jersey were foreign-born, according to the Fiscal Policy Institute. In 2013,35.3% of business owners in the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island metropolitan area were foreign-born, according to the Fiscal Policy Institute and Americas Society/Council of the Americas. Furthermore, 49% of “Main Street” business owners—owners of businesses in the retail, accommodation and food services, and neighborhood services sectors—in the New York-Northern New Jersey metro area were foreign-born in 2013.
The other point here is this, it is much easy to make credible sounding claims on the internet disparaging other demographic groups of people than it is to research and debunk such claims. The person to whom I am responding will never accept the information I provided here for them to consider, but others who read this might be less inclined to believe everything anyone says about "illegal" immigrants in the future. (I hope)
Sunday, September 25, 2016
How Media Sells Us Wars of Choice
by Brian T. Lynch, MSW
The mainstream "for-profit" media, which are owned by a handful of wealthy global corporations, have become intentional sharpers of our public opinion on issues of war and peace. These corporations don't work for us. They work for the invisible government that Mike Lofgren identifies as the "Deep State" in his essay called Anatomy of the Deep State.
What follows below are excerpts from a paper by James George Jatra which builds on Lofgren's 2014 analyse. The paper details the ways in which mainstream American media have become a tool to gain public support for US military actions and foreign policies that satisfy the ambitions of entrenched power.
The report is lengthy, so I created an excerpted version which I divided into two parts. Below is part-one, focused on what American news media has become. Part-two will focus more in the Deep State itself.
In each of these episodes the media‘s uncritical repetition of government-issued ―information‖ and opinions was a key factor in setting the stage for war. In none of these enterprises was the territorial integrity or independence of the United States at stake. Each can be regarded as a “war of choice” requiring the creation and selling of a rationale not directly based on American national defense.
Deficiency of knowledge as the American norm
• Americans are poorly informed about events in the outside world, and younger Americans appear to be even more ignorant than their elders. This means that when policymakers cite the need for action in a given country and news feeds shift to “crisis” coverage, few people have a contextual reservoir of knowledge that may run counter to the official In none of these enterprises was the territorial integrity or independence of the United States at stake. Each can be regarded as a “war of choice” requiring the creation and selling of a rationale not directly based on American national defense. 3 narrative. This largely nullifies the target audience's capacity for critical evaluation.
• One feature of American TV news programming is a notable scarceness of substantive international news stories. It is not uncommon that an entire half-hour evening network news program will not feature a single event outside the United States.
Reliance on government sources,“ventriloquism,” and information incest
• The official media are less a watchdog over government than themselves part of the governing structure, a bulletin board for government propaganda.
• A vivid illustration of how government influence takes the form of a kind of ―ventriloquism,‖ with poorly informed, mostly young Washington-based journalists playing the role of puppet was given in a candid interview of Ben Rhodes, Obama‘s White House ―Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications and Speechwriting. Rhodes [said]:
• [Use of alternate media shills?]
• Content of information used in the formulation of American global policy is dominated by a few hundred certified “experts” sharing a remarkable uniformity of opinion regardless of party affiliation. These experts, who inhabit a closed loop of Executive Branch departments and agencies, Congress, media, think tanks, and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), are responsible for the generation of policy initiatives and their implementation. Centralized corporate ownership
• Corporate consolidation feeds the tendency toward ratings-based sensationalism, not critical public-interest programming. The large majority of American media are owned by six conglomerates:
• That‘s down from 50 companies that controlled that same share as recently as 1983. This also applies to online media: ―In raw numbers, 80 percent of the top 20 online news sites are owned by the 100 largest media companies. Time Warner owns two of the most visited sites: CNN.com and AOL News, while Gannett, which is the twelfth largest media company, owns USAToday.com along with many local online newspapers.‖ The average viewer ingests some 10 hours of programming daily from a seeming variety of outlets that the consumer may not realize have the same corporate owners.
“Para-journalism,” “infotainment,” and “atrocity porn” as a war trigger
• The major media‟s function as a conduit for government-generated content dovetails with chasing advertising dollars. Consumers are less informed than entertained with prurient images and messages that serve both Caesar and Mammon. The most important new form is the 'tabloid‘ news magazine, . . . They are not news shows that borrow conventions from entertainment television, but the other way around: entertainment programs that borrow the aura of news.
• The trends “are toward the sensational, the hype, the hyperactive, the tabloid values to drive out the serious.” The ultimate expression of sensationalized, entertainment content in the context of global conflict is known as “atrocity porn,” (especially, and obviously, in the case of stories describing rape and other sexual abuse) appeals to prurient interests to manipulate base impulses. . . . Authors of atrocity porn also cynically exploit the predictable reactions it will provoke from decent people.
• Atrocity porn has been essential for selling military action: incubator babies (Kuwait/Iraq); the Racak massacre (Kosovo); the Markale marketplace bombings, Omarska ―living skeletons,‖ and the Srebrenica massacre (Bosnia); rape as calculated instrument of war (Bosnia, Libya); and poison gas in Ghouta and ―Aleppo Boy‖ (Syria). Moreover, as blogger Julia Gorin has noted, the recycling of victim memes has begun, including prodding from governments:
[Example from Boznia the 1990's]
Demonization “Hitler” memes
• Demonizing the intended target neutralizes objections to his removal. How can any decent person oppose getting rid of Hitler? Russia's Vladimir Putin has been characterized by name as another Hitler by Hillary Clinton and others. Among the prominent “Hitlers” since 1991 have been Saddam Hussein (Iraq), Slobodan Milosevic (Yugoslavia/Serbia), Radovan Karadzic (Republika Srpska), Moammar Qaddafi (Libya), and Bashar al-Assad (Syria). “
Weaponization” of media
• In weaponized media, information does not exist to provide insight into objective reality. Rather it is a tool that has meaning only with reference to its subjective purpose. Demonization of targeted countries and leaders fits into a broader narrative of conflict that builds upon the American penchant for understanding all conflicts as pitting the ―good guys‖ in white hats vs. ―bad guys‖ in black hats. Similar events can have a totally different moral character depending whether they are caused by the good side or bad side. Thus, U.S. airstrikes are “humanitarian,” our “collateral damage” is excusable, while others‟ strikes are criminal.
America and the “international community,” the “Free World,” and “American exceptionalism” and “leadership”
• America, like any country, has its own distinctive history, culture, and traditions. Additionally, America's unique founding principles – consent of the governed, due process, division of powers, constitutional limited government – justly have been an inspiration to much of the world for over two centuries and are a valid point of American pride. However, neither of these venerable “exceptional” qualities has much connection to the much-used and abused bastard term (usually capitalized as “American Exceptionalism”) that describes contemporary U.S. global behavior, by which policymakers in Washington assert both an exclusive “leadership” privilege and unsupportable obligation to undertake open-ended, international missions in the name of the “Free World” and the “international community.”
• As noted by British journalist and academic Martin Jacques: “We all know what is meant by the term 'international community,'‟ don't we? It's the west, of course.” Indeed, more precisely than the simply “the west,” the “international community” means the geopolitical bloc of countries led (or less charitably, controlled) by Washington.
• You are either with us or against us: our actions are absolutely good by definition, not relatively good in comparison to the actions of other powers, which on some level are at best only conditionally legitimate to the extent the U.S. President regards them as such.
Disregarding “alternative” media, American samizdat
• As we will see at the end of this analysis, “alternative” media may be part of the eventual breakdown of the system we are describing. But currently the major media operating in concert with their government and corporate sponsors still are in a position to validate what appears in alternative sources by repeating it or to relegate it to a politically powerless realm by ignoring it.
• Alternative information becomes reliable only when picked up and disseminated by the MSM, thus validating the information and its ostensibly “alternative” source. Unless and until that happens, alternative information and opinion is ignored and relegated to “conspiracy theory,” “internet chatter,” or even the dread label of “denier” of some established, obligatory truth.
“We never make mistakes,” “stay the course,” and “MoveOn-ism”
• American policy evidently has no rear-view mirror, no lessons are ever learned. Being right bestows no credit, giving birth to catastrophes incurs no costs.
• President Obama, in answer to the question of what was his biggest mistake as president, replied “not having done enough” in Libya after overthrowing Qaddafi. That “regime change” might have been a bad idea in the first place was not even a point of consideration.
• Even in the midst of an action abroad, it is difficult for American policymakers to readjust to mistaken assumptions. Instead, the preferred course is simply to redouble our efforts (William Astore, citing Professor Andrew Bacevich):
The mainstream "for-profit" media, which are owned by a handful of wealthy global corporations, have become intentional sharpers of our public opinion on issues of war and peace. These corporations don't work for us. They work for the invisible government that Mike Lofgren identifies as the "Deep State" in his essay called Anatomy of the Deep State.
What follows below are excerpts from a paper by James George Jatra which builds on Lofgren's 2014 analyse. The paper details the ways in which mainstream American media have become a tool to gain public support for US military actions and foreign policies that satisfy the ambitions of entrenched power.
The report is lengthy, so I created an excerpted version which I divided into two parts. Below is part-one, focused on what American news media has become. Part-two will focus more in the Deep State itself.
How American Media Serves as a Transmission Belt
for Wars of Choice [Part 1]
by James George Jatra September 2016
[Selected excerpts from original text ]
Introduction
The propaganda of war is almost as old as war itself. But with the advent of modern communications, and especially in the digital age, war propaganda has reached an unprecedented level of sophistication and influence, primarily with regard to the international behavior of the United States. The formal end of the U.S.-Soviet Cold War in 1991 left the U.S. with no serious military or geopolitical opponent just at a time when the role of global media was undergoing a significant shift. Earlier that same year, the First Gulf War had featured the debut of CNN as a provider of ubiquitous, real-time, 24-hour conflict coverage, setting a standard for later hostilities. Also that same year, the Internet went public. The decades following 1991 saw a qualitative evolution in the role of media as not just a reporter of events but as an active participant.
Belligerence of the Post-Cold War America Media
The First Gulf War of 1991 marked a watershed both for America‘s propensity for military action and for the media‘s role in it. Claims of legality and righteousness from the administration of President George H. W. Bush regarding its decision to expel the Iraqi forces of erstwhile American client Saddam Hussein from Kuwait met with little dissent, least of all from major American news organizations. A similar media chorus of approval if not outright encouragement characterized Bill Clinton‘s interventions in Somalia (1993), Haiti (1994), Bosnia (1995), and Kosovo (1999), as well as those of George W. Bush in Afghanistan (2001) and Iraq (2003) after the 9/11 attacks. Even President Barack Obama‘s regime change operation in Libya (2011) benefitted from the same pattern.In each of these episodes the media‘s uncritical repetition of government-issued ―information‖ and opinions was a key factor in setting the stage for war. In none of these enterprises was the territorial integrity or independence of the United States at stake. Each can be regarded as a “war of choice” requiring the creation and selling of a rationale not directly based on American national defense.
Deficiency of knowledge as the American norm
• Americans are poorly informed about events in the outside world, and younger Americans appear to be even more ignorant than their elders. This means that when policymakers cite the need for action in a given country and news feeds shift to “crisis” coverage, few people have a contextual reservoir of knowledge that may run counter to the official In none of these enterprises was the territorial integrity or independence of the United States at stake. Each can be regarded as a “war of choice” requiring the creation and selling of a rationale not directly based on American national defense. 3 narrative. This largely nullifies the target audience's capacity for critical evaluation.
• One feature of American TV news programming is a notable scarceness of substantive international news stories. It is not uncommon that an entire half-hour evening network news program will not feature a single event outside the United States.
Reliance on government sources,“ventriloquism,” and information incest
• The official media are less a watchdog over government than themselves part of the governing structure, a bulletin board for government propaganda.
• A vivid illustration of how government influence takes the form of a kind of ―ventriloquism,‖ with poorly informed, mostly young Washington-based journalists playing the role of puppet was given in a candid interview of Ben Rhodes, Obama‘s White House ―Assistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications and Speechwriting. Rhodes [said]:
“All these newspapers used to have foreign bureaus. . . . Now they don't. They call us to explain to them what's happening in Moscow and Cairo. Most of the outlets are reporting on world events from Washington. The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old, and their only reporting experience consists of being around political campaigns. That's a sea change. They literally know nothing.”
• [Use of alternate media shills?]
"But then there are sort of these force multipliers," he said, adding, "We have our compadres, I will reach out to a couple people, and you know I wouldn‘t want to name them – " . . . "And I‘ll give them some color," Price continued, "and the next thing I know, lots of these guys are in the dotcom publishing space, and have huge Twitter followings, and they‘ll be putting this message out on their own."
• Content of information used in the formulation of American global policy is dominated by a few hundred certified “experts” sharing a remarkable uniformity of opinion regardless of party affiliation. These experts, who inhabit a closed loop of Executive Branch departments and agencies, Congress, media, think tanks, and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), are responsible for the generation of policy initiatives and their implementation. Centralized corporate ownership
• Corporate consolidation feeds the tendency toward ratings-based sensationalism, not critical public-interest programming. The large majority of American media are owned by six conglomerates:
• That‘s down from 50 companies that controlled that same share as recently as 1983. This also applies to online media: ―In raw numbers, 80 percent of the top 20 online news sites are owned by the 100 largest media companies. Time Warner owns two of the most visited sites: CNN.com and AOL News, while Gannett, which is the twelfth largest media company, owns USAToday.com along with many local online newspapers.‖ The average viewer ingests some 10 hours of programming daily from a seeming variety of outlets that the consumer may not realize have the same corporate owners.
“Para-journalism,” “infotainment,” and “atrocity porn” as a war trigger
• The major media‟s function as a conduit for government-generated content dovetails with chasing advertising dollars. Consumers are less informed than entertained with prurient images and messages that serve both Caesar and Mammon. The most important new form is the 'tabloid‘ news magazine, . . . They are not news shows that borrow conventions from entertainment television, but the other way around: entertainment programs that borrow the aura of news.
• The trends “are toward the sensational, the hype, the hyperactive, the tabloid values to drive out the serious.” The ultimate expression of sensationalized, entertainment content in the context of global conflict is known as “atrocity porn,” (especially, and obviously, in the case of stories describing rape and other sexual abuse) appeals to prurient interests to manipulate base impulses. . . . Authors of atrocity porn also cynically exploit the predictable reactions it will provoke from decent people.
• Atrocity porn has been essential for selling military action: incubator babies (Kuwait/Iraq); the Racak massacre (Kosovo); the Markale marketplace bombings, Omarska ―living skeletons,‖ and the Srebrenica massacre (Bosnia); rape as calculated instrument of war (Bosnia, Libya); and poison gas in Ghouta and ―Aleppo Boy‖ (Syria). Moreover, as blogger Julia Gorin has noted, the recycling of victim memes has begun, including prodding from governments:
[Example from Boznia the 1990's]
"The Clinton Administration made it clear: give us a ”trigger” in the form of a suitable atrocity, we‟ll give you a war. In due course, the “Racak Massacre” took place in Kosovo. That is when Bosnian president Alija Izetbegovic followed through on Bill Clinton‘s suggestion that he needed to cough up at least 5,000 dead bodies if he wanted a NATO intervention on his side of a turf war against Serbs."
Demonization “Hitler” memes
• Demonizing the intended target neutralizes objections to his removal. How can any decent person oppose getting rid of Hitler? Russia's Vladimir Putin has been characterized by name as another Hitler by Hillary Clinton and others. Among the prominent “Hitlers” since 1991 have been Saddam Hussein (Iraq), Slobodan Milosevic (Yugoslavia/Serbia), Radovan Karadzic (Republika Srpska), Moammar Qaddafi (Libya), and Bashar al-Assad (Syria). “
Weaponization” of media
• In weaponized media, information does not exist to provide insight into objective reality. Rather it is a tool that has meaning only with reference to its subjective purpose. Demonization of targeted countries and leaders fits into a broader narrative of conflict that builds upon the American penchant for understanding all conflicts as pitting the ―good guys‖ in white hats vs. ―bad guys‖ in black hats. Similar events can have a totally different moral character depending whether they are caused by the good side or bad side. Thus, U.S. airstrikes are “humanitarian,” our “collateral damage” is excusable, while others‟ strikes are criminal.
America and the “international community,” the “Free World,” and “American exceptionalism” and “leadership”
• America, like any country, has its own distinctive history, culture, and traditions. Additionally, America's unique founding principles – consent of the governed, due process, division of powers, constitutional limited government – justly have been an inspiration to much of the world for over two centuries and are a valid point of American pride. However, neither of these venerable “exceptional” qualities has much connection to the much-used and abused bastard term (usually capitalized as “American Exceptionalism”) that describes contemporary U.S. global behavior, by which policymakers in Washington assert both an exclusive “leadership” privilege and unsupportable obligation to undertake open-ended, international missions in the name of the “Free World” and the “international community.”
• As noted by British journalist and academic Martin Jacques: “We all know what is meant by the term 'international community,'‟ don't we? It's the west, of course.” Indeed, more precisely than the simply “the west,” the “international community” means the geopolitical bloc of countries led (or less charitably, controlled) by Washington.
• You are either with us or against us: our actions are absolutely good by definition, not relatively good in comparison to the actions of other powers, which on some level are at best only conditionally legitimate to the extent the U.S. President regards them as such.
Disregarding “alternative” media, American samizdat
• As we will see at the end of this analysis, “alternative” media may be part of the eventual breakdown of the system we are describing. But currently the major media operating in concert with their government and corporate sponsors still are in a position to validate what appears in alternative sources by repeating it or to relegate it to a politically powerless realm by ignoring it.
• Alternative information becomes reliable only when picked up and disseminated by the MSM, thus validating the information and its ostensibly “alternative” source. Unless and until that happens, alternative information and opinion is ignored and relegated to “conspiracy theory,” “internet chatter,” or even the dread label of “denier” of some established, obligatory truth.
“We never make mistakes,” “stay the course,” and “MoveOn-ism”
• American policy evidently has no rear-view mirror, no lessons are ever learned. Being right bestows no credit, giving birth to catastrophes incurs no costs.
• President Obama, in answer to the question of what was his biggest mistake as president, replied “not having done enough” in Libya after overthrowing Qaddafi. That “regime change” might have been a bad idea in the first place was not even a point of consideration.
• Even in the midst of an action abroad, it is difficult for American policymakers to readjust to mistaken assumptions. Instead, the preferred course is simply to redouble our efforts (William Astore, citing Professor Andrew Bacevich):
"Whether [under] a Clinton or a Bush or an Obama matters little. The U.S. can‘t help but meddle, using its powerful military as a more or less blunt instrument, at incredible President Obama, in answer to the question of what was his biggest mistake as president, replied “not having done enough” in Libya after overthrowing Qaddafi. That 'regime change' might have been a bad idea in the first place was not even a point of consideration. 17 expense to our country, and at a staggering cost in foreign lives lost or damaged by incessant warfare. And no matter how catastrophic the results, that national security state can‘t help but find reasons, no matter how discredited by events, to 'stay the course.‘"
[End of Part 1]
Friday, September 23, 2016
Let's Elect.. The Democratic Party Platform!
by Brian T. Lynch, MSW
What I learned while doing this is that this is a pretty good document. If achieved, it would significantly improve the lives of most Americans. It doesn't address Democratic Party reform issues or primary voting reforms, but it does lay out a decent course of actions that most of us can rally behind. More importantly, it gives activist citizens a template by which we can judge the performance of Democratic office holders, including Hillary Clinton if she doesn't loose.
So while I am still upset with the DNC, the establishment Democrats and Hillary for fixing the primary against all others, including Bernie Sanders specifically, I think I can in good conscious vote for the Democratic Party Platform with a self-made promise to hold Hillary and every other Democrat to task in carrying out the Party Platform. I decided it would be better to try and force a Hillary administration to implement the Platform than keep a sociopath away from the nuclear codes.
So without further delay, here is the incomplete, condensed version of the Democratic Party Platform:
Democrats are committed to reforming our
criminal justice system and ending mass incarceration. Something is profoundly
wrong when almost a quarter of the world’s prison population is in the United
States, even though our country has less than five percent of the world’s
population. We will reform mandatory minimum sentences and close private
prisons and detention centers. Research and evidence, rather than slogans and
sound bites, must guide [reforms].
(PS: Notice that the person whose name is plastered everywhere is not mentioned here. What a relief, right?)
Better to hold Hillary's feet to the fire than give a sociopath the nuclear codes!
I decided it would be a good thing to draft a condensed version of the Democratic Party Platform. I reasoned that a concise version of the document would benefit people who don't have time to sit down and read it all, and it might help us keep Democrats accountable to what they say the stand for in the Platform. I didn't realize what a daunting task it would be, or how little time I had to finish the job.What I learned while doing this is that this is a pretty good document. If achieved, it would significantly improve the lives of most Americans. It doesn't address Democratic Party reform issues or primary voting reforms, but it does lay out a decent course of actions that most of us can rally behind. More importantly, it gives activist citizens a template by which we can judge the performance of Democratic office holders, including Hillary Clinton if she doesn't loose.
So while I am still upset with the DNC, the establishment Democrats and Hillary for fixing the primary against all others, including Bernie Sanders specifically, I think I can in good conscious vote for the Democratic Party Platform with a self-made promise to hold Hillary and every other Democrat to task in carrying out the Party Platform. I decided it would be better to try and force a Hillary administration to implement the Platform than keep a sociopath away from the nuclear codes.
So without further delay, here is the incomplete, condensed version of the Democratic Party Platform:
2016 Democratic
Platform (condensed version)
Democrats believe cooperation is better than conflict, unity
is better than division, empowerment is better than resentment, and bridges are
better than walls. We are stronger
together.
Today’s extreme level of income and wealth inequality
makes our economy weaker, our communities poorer, and our politics poisonous. We need an economy that works for everyone. We
can have more economic fairness, so the rewards are shared broadly, not just
with those at the top. An economy that:
·
prioritizes long-term investment over short-term
profit-seeking,
·
rewards the common interest over self-interest
·
promotes innovation and entrepreneurship
·
guarantees equal pay for women.. particularly
women of color
·
protects every American’s right to retire with
dignity
·
[create] jobs and security that come from [transitioning
to] clean energy
·
incentivize companies to share profits with
their employees on top of wages and pay increases
Race still plays a significant role in determining who gets
ahead in America and who gets left behind. We must face that reality and we
must fix it.
A good education is a
basic right of all Americans. We will end the school-to-prison pipeline and
build a cradle-to-college pipeline instead.
Greed, recklessness, and illegal behavior on Wall Street
must be brought to an end. Wall Street must never again be allowed to threaten
families and businesses on Main Street.
Democrats protect citizens’ right to vote, while stopping
corporations’ outsized influence in elections. We will:
·
end the broken campaign finance system
·
overturn the disastrous Citizens United
·
restore the the Voting Rights Act
·
return control of our elections to the American
people
Climate change poses a real and urgent threat to our
economy, our national security, and our children’s health and futures.
The United States can mobilize common action on a truly
global scale, to take on the challenges that transcend borders, from
international terrorism to climate change to health pandemics. We are stronger and safer when America brings
the world together and leads with principle and purpose [and] strengthen our
alliances. We believe in the power of development and diplomacy. Our military
should be the best-trained, best-equipped fighting force in the world.
We must honor and support our veterans.
We respect differences of perspective and belief, and pledge
to work together to move this country forward [and] strive to reach higher
ground. We are proud of our heritage as a nation of immigrants.
We believe in protecting civil liberties and guaranteeing
civil rights and voting rights, women’s rights and workers’ rights, LGBT
rights, and rights for people with disabilities.
support workers through higher wages, workplace protections,
policies to balance work and family, and other investments will help rebuild
the middle class
Raising Workers’ to a
living wage... at least $15 an hour [and]...
and index it [to inflation]. [Establish] one fair wage for all workers
by ending the sub-minimum wage for tipped workers and people with disabilities.
Support a model to leverage federal dollars to support
employers who provide their workers with a living wage, good benefits, and the
opportunity to form a union without reprisal.
Have the right to form or join a union - give all Americans
the ability to join a union regardless of where they work, and create new ways
for workers to have power in the economy and to:
·
make it easier for workers, public and private,
to exercise their right to organize and join unions
·
direct the National Labor Relations Board to
certify a union if a simple majority of eligible workers sign valid
authorization cards
·
bring companies to the negotiating table
·
support binding arbitration to help workers who
have voted to join a union reach a first contract.
[We will oppose]
“right to work” laws are wrong for workers [and] vigorously oppose laws [or]
efforts that:
·
eliminate dues check-off procedures
·
roll-back prevailing wage standards
·
abolish fair share requirements
·
restrict the use of voluntary membership
payments for political purposes
·
attack seniority
·
restrict due process protections
·
require annual recertification efforts
·
legislation
and lawsuits that would strike down laws protecting the rights of teachers and
other public employees
·
We will support efforts to limit the use of forced
arbitration clauses in employment and service contracts, which unfairly strip
consumers, workers, students, retirees, and investors of their right to their
day in court.
Make sure that the United States enacts national paid family
and medical .. that provide[s] at least 12 weeks of paid leave to care for a
new child or address a personal or family member’s serious health issue. [Establish a] workers the right to earn at
least seven days of paid sick leave [and] encourage employers to provide paid
vacation.
We must help family caregivers.. to ensure family caregivers
have the support, respite care, and training they need to support their loved
ones. We will [do this by]:
·
creating a strong stable paid caregiving
workforce by raising wages
·
improving access to training
·
giving workers the opportunity to come together
to make their voices heard
·
address[ing] conditions that make it hard for
workers with unpredictable or inflexible schedules to meet caregiving
responsibilities.
We will take steps to:
·
expand and strengthen the home care workforce
·
increase investments to make quality childcare
more affordable
·
boost wages for childcare workers, and
·
support the millions of people paying for,
coordinating, or providing care for aging relatives or those with disabilities
We will preserve and increase the supply of affordable
rental housing and:
·
substantially increase funding for the National
Housing Trust Fund to construct, preserve, and rehabilitate millions of
affordable housing rental units
·
provide more federal resources to the people
struggling most with unaffordable housing: low-income families, people with
disabilities, veterans, and the elderly
We will address the lingering effects of the foreclosure
crisis through [expanding] programs like the federal Neighborhood Stabilization
Program. We will expand programs to
·
prevent
displacement of existing residents, especially in communities of color
·
create affordable and workforce housing
·
preserve neighborhood-serving nonprofit
organizations and small businesses
·
reinvigorate housing production programs
·
repair public housing
·
increase funding for the housing choice voucher
program and other rental assistance programs
·
[provide] robust funding to end homelessness
through targeted investments to provide the necessary outreach, social
services, and housing options for all populations experiencing homelessness.
·
engage in a stronger, more coordinated, and
better funded partnership among federal, state, and local governments to end
chronic homelessness
·
build on and expand initiatives to end veteran
and family homelessness
·
support more first-time homebuyers preserve the
30-year fixed rate mortgage
·
modernizing credit scoring
·
clarify lending rules
·
expand access to housing counseling
·
defend and strengthening the Fair Housing Act
·
ensure that regulators have the clear direction,
resources, and authority to enforce those rules effectively.
·
prevent predatory lending by defending the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).
Social Security
·
fight every
effort to cut, privatize, or weaken Social Security, including attempts to
raise the retirement age, diminish benefits by cutting cost-of-living
adjustments, or reducing earned benefits. expand Social Security.
·
cost-of- living
adjustments may not reflect the spending patterns of seniors. We are committed
to exploring alternatives that could better serve seniors.
·
make sure Social
Security’s guaranteed benefits continue by taxing some of the income of people
above $250,000.
Retirement
·
defend the right
of workers to collect their defined benefit pensions and make sure workers get
priority and protection when pension plans are in distress.
·
enact legislation
to make sure that the earned pension benefits of Americans will not be cut
·
pay for it by
closing tax loopholes that benefit millionaires and billionaires
·
fight attempt to
roll back the Conflict of Interest Rule which requires that retirement advisors
put the best interests of their clients above their own financial gain
·
support the Older
Americans Act.
US Postal Service
·
eliminating the
unsustainable mandate to “pre-fund” retiree health costs.
·
restore service
to appropriate levels, including overnight delivery of first-class mail and
periodicals within the same metropolitan area,
·
maintaining
six-day and door-to-door delivery
·
expanding postal
services [to include] basic financial services such as paycheck cashing
·
vote-by-mail to
increase voter participation
Create Good-Paying Jobs
Build a full-employment
economy, where everyone has a job that pays enough to raise a family and live
in dignity:
·
rebuild our crumbling infrastructure.. expanding our roads, bridges, public transit,
airports, and passenger and freight rail lines
·
build 21st
century energy and water systems.. modernizing drinking and wastewater systems
·
modernize our
schools
·
support the
expansion of high-speed broadband networks
·
protect
communities from the impact of climate change
·
address the
backlog of deferred maintenance in our four key public land management agencies
·
create an
independent, national infrastructure bank
·
support the
interest tax exemption on municipal bonds..make permanent [a] version of Build
America Bonds
·
revitalize
hard-hit manufacturing communities
·
claw back tax
breaks for companies that ship jobs overseas
·
defend the
Export-Import Bank
·
investing in
industrial energy efficiency
Science, Research,
Education, and Technology
·
educate our people and train our workforce;
support entrepreneurship
·
invest in
research and development, innovation hubs, as well as in getting ideas to
market
·
[provide
opportunities for all students] opportunity to learn computer science by the time
they graduate from high school.
·
High-speed
internet connectivity is not a luxury; it is a necessity
·
connect every
household in America to high-speed broadband
·
increase internet
adoption
·
hook up anchor
institutions so they can offer free WiFi to the public.
·
take action to
widely deploy 5G technology
·
support a free
and open internet at home and abroad
·
oppose any effort
to roll back the historic net neutrality
·
protect the intellectual property rights of
artists, creators, and inventors at home and abroad
·
increase access
to global markets for American intellectual property and other digital trade by
opposing quotas, discriminatory measures, and data localization requirements
·
strengthen
support for NASA and work in partnership with the international scientific
community to launch new missions to space
Small Businesses
·
cut the red tape
that holds back small businesses and entrepreneurs
·
open up access to
credit
·
provide tax
relief and tax simplification
·
expand access to
new markets
·
make Wall Street
work for the job-creating, productive economy—including by making loans more
affordable for small- and medium-sized businesses
Jobs for America’s Young
·
make investments
to spur the creation of millions of jobs for our young people
·
provide direct
federal funding for a range of local programs that will put young people to
work and create new career opportunities
Fight for Economic Fairness
and Against Inequality
Reining in Wall Street and
Fixing our Financial System
·
prohibit Wall
Street from picking and choosing which credit agency will rate its products
·
[prohibit Wall
Street] from imposing excessive fees on consumers
·
hold both
individuals and corporations accountable when they break the law
·
stronger criminal
laws and civil penalties for Wall Street criminals who prey on the public trust
·
extend the
statute of limitations for prosecuting major financial fraud
·
providing the
Department of Justice, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission more resources to prosecute wrongdoing
·
vigorously
implement, enforce, and build on President Obama’s landmark Dodd-Frank
financial reform law
·
stop efforts to hamstring our regulators through
budget cuts
·
oppose any
efforts to change the CFPB’s structure from a single director to a partisan[or]
to remove the Bureau’s independent funding and subject it to the appropriations
process
·
[enact] a
financial transactions tax on Wall Street to curb excessive speculation and
high-frequency trading
·
use and expand
existing authorities [and]empower regulators to downsize or break apart
financial institutions when necessary
·
new authorities
to go after risky shadow-banking
·
support.. an
updated and modernized version of Glass-Steagall
·
nominate and
appoint regulators and officials who are not beholden to the industries they
regulate
·
crack down on the
revolving door between the private sector—particularly Wall Street—and the
federal government.
·
ban golden
parachutes for those taking government jobs
·
limit conflicts
of interest by requiring bank and corporate regulators to recuse themselves
from official work on particular matters that would directly benefit their
former employers
·
bar financial
service regulators from lobbying their former colleagues for at least two years
·
[make] the
Federal Reserve more representative of America as a whole
·
enhance its
independence by ensuring that executives of financial institutions are not
allowed to serve on the boards of regional Federal Reserve banks or to select
members of those boards
Stop Corporate Concentration
·
stop corporate
concentration in any industry where it is unfairly limiting competition
·
make competition
policy and antitrust stronger and more responsive to our economy today
·
enhance antitrust
enforcement [at] the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC)
·
encourage other
agencies to police anti-competitive practices in their areas of jurisdiction
Making the Wealthy Pay Their
Fair Share of Taxes
·
claw back tax
breaks for companies that ship jobs overseas
·
eliminate tax
breaks for big oil and gas companies
·
crack down on
inversions and other methods companies use to dodge their tax responsibilities
·
make sure that
our tax code rewards businesses that make investments and provide good-paying
jobs here in the United States
·
end deferrals so
that American
corporations pay United States taxes immediately on foreign profits and can no
longer escape paying their fair share of U.S. taxes by stashing profits abroad.
·
establish a
multimillionaire surtax to ensure millionaires and billionaires pay their fair
share
·
close egregious
loopholes
·
restore fair
taxation on multimillion dollar estates
·
tax relief to
middle-class families
·
crack down on tax
evasion and promote transparency to fight corruption and terrorism
·
tax relief to
hard working, middle-class families
Promoting Trade That is Fair
and Benefits American Workers
·
develop trade policies that support jobs in
America
·
review agreements
negotiated years ago to update them to reflect [Democratic Party] principles.
·
Any future trade
agreements must make sure our trading partners cannot undercut American workers
by taking shortcuts on labor policy or the environment.
·
[trade
agreements] must not undermine democratic decision-making through special
privileges
·
[trade
agreements] must not undermine democratic decision-making private courts for
corporations
·
trade
negotiations must be transparent and inclusive
·
use all our trade
enforcement tools to hold China and other trading partners accountable
·
These are the standards
Democrats believe must be applied to all trade agreements, including the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
Bring Americans Together and
Remove Barriers to Opportunities
Ending Systemic Racism
·
dismantle the
structures that define lasting racial, economic, political, and social inequity
·
promote racial
justice through fair, just, and equitable governing of all public-serving
institutions and in the formation of public policy
·
remove the
Confederate battle flag from public
·
make it clear
that black lives matter and that there is no place for racism in our country.
Closing the Racial Wealth
Gap
·
close this racial wealth gap
·
eliminat[e]
systemic barriers to wealth accumulation for different racial groups
·
improv[e]
opportunities for people from all racial and ethnic backgrounds to build
wealth.
·
remove barriers
to achieving sustainable homeownership
·
provide for
greater diversity in federal and state contracting practices
·
incentivize and
expand access to retirement investment programs
·
increase
opportunities for quality jobs and education
·
challenge the
deeply rooted structures that perpetuate and exacerbate current disparities and
ultimately stagnate the nation’s economic growth and security
Reforming our Criminal
Justice System
(PS: Notice that the person whose name is plastered everywhere is not mentioned here. What a relief, right?)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)