Monday, 04 November 2013
15:36
America is falling
apart - and this nation's super-rich are to blame.
There was once a time
in America when the super-rich needed you, and me, and working-class Americans
to be successful.
They needed us for
their roads, for their businesses, for their communications, for their
transportation, as their customers, and for their overall success.
The super-rich rode
on the same trains as us, and flew in the same planes as us. They went to our
hospitals and learned at our schools.
Their success
directly depended on us, and on the well-being of the nation, and they knew it.
But times have
changed, and the super-rich of the 21st century no longer think that you and I
are needed for their continued success.
And in some ways,
they have given up on America, period.
As Paul Buchheit
brilliantly points out over at AlterNet,
"As they accumulate more and more wealth, the very rich have less need for
society. At the same time, they've convinced themselves that they made it on
their own, and that contributing to societal needs is unfair to them. There is
ample evidence that this small group of takers is giving up on the country that
made it possible for them to build huge fortune."
Buchheit goes on to
say that, "The rich have always needed the middle class to work in their
factories and buy their products. With globalization this is no longer true...
They don't need our infrastructure for their yachts and helicopters and
submarines. They pay for private schools for their kids, private security for
their homes. They have private emergency rooms to avoid the health care hassle.
All they need is an assortment of servants, who might be guest workers coming
to America on H2B visas, willing to work for less than a middle-class American
can afford"
Unfortunately, these
millionaires and billionaires who have given up on America and on the working
class are in control of the political process in this country.
They have brainwashed
Republicans into thinking that the success of working-class Americans no longer
matters for the future of this nation.
As a result,
Republicans are no longer investing in things that have traditionally made
America - and the working-class - successful.
Take America's
infrastructure for example - or lack thereof.
According to the
American Society of Civil Engineers annual report card on America's infrastructure,
America's infrastructure is a mess.
Our roads are falling
apart, our transportations systems are in turmoil and our energy and electrical
systems are stuck back in the 1900's.
A new graph released by
investment research firm BCA shows why.
Non-defense related
infrastructure spending was around $325 billion per year when George W. Bush
stepped foot inside of the White House.
Today, it's around
$235 billion per year, a $90 billion drop in funding from when Bush took
office.
Republicans,
brainwashed by America's super-rich, have repeatedly refused to fund
comprehensive infrastructure spending bills, all in the name of austerity.
But cutting funding
to the nation's infrastructure isn't the right way to address American's debt
or spending problems. And it certainly isn't the right way to rebuild this
nation.
As Cardiff Garcia
over at The Financial Times points out, "It's also likely that much
of the investment that has been forgone in the name of fiscal consolidation
will have to be made eventually anyways - only it will be made when rates are
higher, exacerbating the long-term fiscal outlook rather than improving it. And
as Think Progress points out, "continued underfunding in this
arena over the coming years will cost businesses a trillion dollars in lost
sales and cost the economy 3.5 million jobs."
The Society of Civil
Engineers says that it will take a staggering $3.6 trillion investment by 2020
- or $450 billion per year - to bring the American infrastructure into the 21st
century, and to avoid risking a complete infrastructure collapse.
But the super-rich
don't care about how much funding is needed to save this country, as long as
they have their private schools, private hospitals, private airports and
private places.
The super-rich in
this country are bleeding working-class Americans dry, while destroying the
infrastructure of the nation that has done so much for their success.
No matter what Jamie
Dimon, Charles Koch, or Shelly Adelson will tell you, America's wealthy elite
did not make their fortunes on their own.
Without a strong
economy and infrastructure, America's millionaires and billionaires would not
be where they are today. It's that simple.
So what can we do
right now to rebuild America's infrastructure and give a boost to the American
economy?
First, it's time to bring
an end to globalization.
We need to be
protecting American jobs, instead of letting the super-rich ship them overseas
and build factories in China and third-world countries.
But more importantly,
we need to roll-back the Reagan tax cuts, and make sure that America's wealthy
elite are paying their fair share to support our economy and infrastructure.
Right now, the burden
for rebuilding America is on the backs of working-class Americans, and that's
just wrong.
It's ridiculous that
working-class Americans struggling to survive day-to-day are paying more in
taxes than billionaire banksters and oil tycoons.
A lot has changed in
America over the past 100 years or so but one thing remains the same: The
success of the super-rich still depends on the success of you and me.
The super-rich still
need us for their roads, for their businesses, for their communications, and
for their transportation.
Our infrastructure
may be crumbling, but there's still time to get America back on the road to
success.
We're all in this
together.
This article was first published on Truthout and any reprint or
reproduction on any other website must acknowledge Truthout as the original
site of publication.
No comments:
Post a Comment