comments_imageCOMMENTS: 21

The Oprah Society

The American belief in the power of the individual creates a society where the odds for many citizens are nearly impossible to overcome.
April 18, 2005  |  
 
 
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It's inspiring to watch someone beat the odds.  If you see the deck is stacked, their triumph is especially sweet.  Day after day, in our made-for-TV society, that's what we're shown: inspiring exceptions--women and men who, by some miracle, overcome insurmountable barriers.  They often weep as we do when we hear their tales of woe.  Indeed, whether it's addiction or affliction, layoffs or payoffs, their stories are meant to convince us "Hey, they made it, why can't we?"

From yesterday's daytime gabfests to today's reality shows, somehow in America, the insurmountable became the inevitable. We went from counting on a family-sustaining job to expecting a pink slip. We've seen whole towns rust and millions lose decent jobs. We've seen still others trapped in jobs that fail to provide the basics of a decent life.  Meanwhile, there aren't enough reality show makeovers to transform whole blocks--let alone entire towns--or get us all college diplomas or decent jobs. 

So a few are chosen, and the rest of us are made to feel like we failed. If only we had tried harder, worked smarter, learned more, invested better, we'd be on TV for all to envy. It's one thing to admire those who beat the odds, quite another to create a society which makes the odds nearly impossible to overcome.

Whatever happened to the Land of Opportunity? To the melting pot that pulled millions from every corner of the world? Drawn by the American Dream, we were told that if you just worked hard, you could support yourself and raise a family, send your children to college, take family vacations, build a nest egg and retire? 

Today, one in four workers--30 million Americans--hold jobs that pay below $9.00 an hour, putting them and their families below the federal poverty line. The work is often grueling, dangerous or humiliating. Most low-wage jobs lack health care, vacation pay, sick leave or pension plans. They provide little flexibility or training.  These jobs sentence child caregivers, janitors and pharmacy techs to a lifetime of poverty, and mock those who work in nursing homes, clean our hotel rooms and offices and process our food.  Most of these workers are adults with at least a high school education who have families to take care of just like the rest of us.

More and more middle-class jobs are taking on the characteristics of low-wage jobs, with little job security, stagnant wages and decreasing health and retirement benefits. In 1987, employers provided health coverage to 70 percent of workers, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute, yet today that number has declined by 10 percent. At the same time, employees are picking up more and more of their health premium costs. Fewer than one-fifth of large and medium-sized companies now pay the full cost of employees' health premiums. A similar shift has occurred with pensions. Nearly half of full-time workers were covered by traditional pensions 30 years ago.  Today, that number has plummeted to below 20 percent. Then there's job security: the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that today a middle-aged man is likely to be in his job for 71/2 years, down from 11 years just 25 years ago.

These conditions are not an act of nature.  We can make different choices.  We could offer quality child care to give all our kids a fair start.  We could insist our jobs provide at least a week of paid sick leave.  We could raise the federal minimum wage--as a start to $7.25 an hour, an option our Congress just turned down last month.  We could insist every American have affordable health care.  We could ensure that every qualified young man and woman can afford to attend college and graduate without mortgaging their future. And at the end of one's work life, we could make sure that all Americans have enough to support themselves.

So what will it be? Will we remain content with a society that rewards the few and continues to erect roadblocks for most Americans, or are we going to live up to the ideals of the American Dream--that if you work hard, you will be able to take care of yourself and your family? The choice is ours.
Beth Shulman is the author of 'The Betrayal of Work:  How Low-Wage Jobs Fail 30 Million Americans' (The New Press, 2003) and works with the Russell Sage Foundation's The Future of Work and Social Inequality projects.
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E
Posted by: edongu on Apr 18, 2005 6:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Whatever happened to the Land of Opportunity?" - This is a question I've asked myself again and again as I try to determine where exactly are we going in our society. The answer I've come up with is not pretty and the solution to what has become our "Lack of Opportunity" is going to require much more than merely recognizing that we have a problem.

When we first began hearing the term "enemy combatant", I recall John Ashcroft being asked about the rights that would be extended to this new breed of criminal. I will never forget his answer, one that I believe reveals the mentality that is as the heart of our problem. Loosely quoted, AG Ashcroft said that he "wasn't sure that they deserved the same rights extended to Americans."

The rights that millions of Americans have defended - some with words and some with their lives - throughout history as rights for all humanity now appear to be "owed" to only a deserving subset of of the global population.

The Land of Opportunity has gone the way of the Bill of Rights in the sense that it has become a reward extended to only the deserving. Where America once extended a helping hand to those less fortunate among us, now she will often barely lift a finger other than to point out the failing of those sad individuals.

The idea that each of us, alone, are responsible not only for the the decisions we make, but for the unforseeable end result of those decisions is an over-simplifying slap in the face to those who have not experienced the good fortune of success. After all, success is a combination of good decisions and/or good luck, is it not?

The Land of Opportunity is a manifestation of our American Community - a community working together as one, rather than as a collection of self-serving individuals, some who've made and some who haven't. Herein lies the solution to our problem.

I do not believe that a sincere message of community is being presented by our leaders in power. Until we hear the rhetoric and see the legislation that hammers home this message as completely as the message of WMD's, I'm afraid it will be up to us as individuals to do the dirty work of turning things around and creating opportunity for others.

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WORK HARD VERSUS WORK SMART
Posted by: WONDERWALEYE on Apr 18, 2005 7:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are two books that folks should read if they want life better than it is!!! The book that made the biggest difference in my life to get what I wanted out of life is: THINK AND GROW RICH by Napolien Hill. The second book tells you how many that are educated fail to achieve and how common sence can give you the funds that you would like. If you want a better life, I would RUN to the book store!!!!!! By the way riches are whatever it is that you want out of life and the book gives simple ways that all can follow. IT WORKS!!!

Now to HEALTH CARE!!
I think this nation needs to make health care a RIGHT for all the folks of this nation!!!! But we fight the BIG MONEY of the AMA, other health care providers, and the GIANT insurance co's. They got us tight in a vice so that they can squeeze every penny out of you and more!!! They make so much money that they can afford to fill the pockets of the elected officials pockets!!! When is the last time you filled their pockets?? There is a web site that all the folks of this nation needs to see and take a part in. Its called: UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE-GRASS ROUTES, AND IT'S ADDRESS IS: www.everybodyinnobodyout.com This is a site that could really make a difference in this nation. I don't think is right to have to FEAR the cost of health care!!! I also don't think it is right to PAY AND PAY the high insurance premiums only to have to pay the deductable and the additional percentage of the bill!!!!! There are facts on that web site that are chilling!! For example, one of the leading causes of death in this country. I sure didn't know this but I should have!!!!! Well enough said with the exception of : MAY THE LOVE OF JESUS BE WITH YOU!!!!! [this has two meanings]

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» THANKS FOR YOUR REPLY!!!!! Posted by: WONDERWALEYE
» RE: THANKS FOR YOUR REPLY!!!!! Posted by: elmysterio

Comments are closed-

Most small business make 5% or less profit
Posted by: SteveSouth on Apr 18, 2005 8:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I own a small business that employees 25 people. We pay them between 17 and 26 dollars an hour. I make about 30k a year from this business, which comes to 10 dollars an hour when you figure the 60 hour week I put in. Last year the business lost 60k (the previous four years it made between 5 and 7.5% profit). We currently do not offer health care. We looked at providing healthcare for our employees but the costs are so high that it would have required that everybody take a 3 to 5 dollar an hour paycut. Well it turns out that they wanted the money instead of the insurance policy. The idea that companies pay for healthcare is a fallicy. The employees pay for it through lower wages, whether the company pays for the policy totally or in part. If I had given it to them out of the business profits we would be out of business and they wouldn't have a job! Just remember when you see the outrageous profits that some companies are making it usually doesn't apply to small business and that small business employs most of the people in the US.

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» Providing healthcare...... Posted by: Diecash1

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Hmm, yes...
Posted by: nakis on Apr 18, 2005 10:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On MAD TV they poke fun at Oprah. In one skit one of the commediennes does an Oprah impression. In her impression she says I made $38,670 just breathing. Inaccurate? Comical? Overstated? Yes. But it accurately reflects our society. Where one person makes incredible amounts of money while their fellow citizens starve. We're certianly not unique. But we do claim a certain morality to our actions. Some our citizens make claim to divine providence. As if some people deserve so much and so many deserve so little. As if God wants it so. Rationalization by any other name stinks just as bad.

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Let's be honest with ourselves
Posted by: crz53 on Apr 18, 2005 12:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think the article does a good job of pointing out the sensationalist nature of our media. What it doesn't address is the inability of most Americans to broaden their frame of reference when considering their lot in life. I'm all for raising the minimum wage. I'm all for universal health care. I'm all for child care to help working parents,and all the other things that a society can do to help those less fortunate help themselves. What most Amercans don't realize, though, is how good we've got it from a world perspective. Yes we should work to help our fellow citizens, but we should be realistic about what we expect, both for them and for ourselves. In order to do this, we must honestly assess what we need and what we want. It is in this respect that shows like "Extreme Makeover:Home Edition" distort our perspective. Not only do these shows (as the author of this article points out) focus our attention on the lucky few who are chosen, they further confuse our notions of needs and wants. Rather than building the lucky, and sometimes deserving recipients a modest new home that is nicer than what they had (and that by world standards might be considered a palace), the show attempts to out-do itself every week in terms of extravagance and over-indulgence. The message (intentional or not) is clear: you cannot, nor should you be happy living in anything less than a fucking mansion. We are being subconciously conditioned to be unhappy with simply having what we need. We are being taught that ensuring out own personal wealth is the be-all-end-all of human existence. In the process, we are forgetting about are forgetting about community, forgetting about our responsibility to others. Our society is happily telling us that with hard work and a little luck, someday every deserving person can have a mansion and a luxury SUV, leaving out the fact that you don't need a mansion or a fancy car to have a happy life.
I firmly believe that any real efforts to raise the standard of living for the tens of millions of people living in poverty, both in America and around the world, must also include a rejection of the materialistic self-indulgence to which so many in the industrialized West (particularily middle and upper-class Americans) have become accustomed. If we as a society can be honest with ourselves about what we want and what we really need, then helping others to achieve what they need will be a much easier task.
- Mike

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Is anyone listening?
Posted by: gideonh on Apr 18, 2005 4:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't think anyone is listening. I hear a lot of "the world isn't fair." (I love when the poor defend the wealthy by blaming the manipulations of the wealthy on "The World" as if the planet was in control. Let's let the people in charge completely off the hook and start blaming the poor state of america's health care system on the rotation of the moon and the stars!) I'm all for contributing and working, but DAMN it's cold to just keep telling everyone to pull themselves up by thier own bootstraps.
Every year working class people slip closer towards being poor people, but they keep trying to deny it and distance themselves by siding with the wealthy. NEWSFLASH- the wealthy want you to believe that you and they are all on the same team, as long as you support thier greedy aspirations, but by no means do THEY consider YOU one of them.
mark my words, we are 4 or 5 decades away from debtor's prisons, and a hop and a skip away from indentured servitude. Half the working population will be forced to work for the credit card companies as collection agents, calling the other half of the working population day and night to extort payments from them, until we all starve to death and rich people win! YEA CAPITALISM! Go team, Go!
Oh screw it,
Nobody's listening.

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» I hear you......... Posted by: Diecash1
» RE: I hear you......... Posted by: crz53
» RE: Is anyone listening? Posted by: edongu

Comments are closed-

First World meet Third World
Posted by: Veblen on Apr 18, 2005 6:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I view America's "Oprah" transition through my experience as a Peace Corps Volunteer in the mid-1980's. The country I served in was ruled by a group of oligarchs that cared less about the long term welfare of their society than the short term profits they obtained as they ran their country into the ground. The vast mass of citizens in this country lived in oppressive poverty and had little recourse to affect change. They knew what was going on, but were powerless to do any thing about it but pick up a gun.

America, on the other hand, is a democracy, weak as it may be. We too are currently being ruled by a group of oligarchs that care less about the long term welfare of our society than the short term profits they obtain as they ran our country into the ground. The ironic thing is that a small majority of average Americans are supporting them. "The Oprah Society" describes in part the constructed reality of the oligarchs that these fellow Americans are accepting. I hope that our fellow citizens wake up. We are less than a generation away from edging into third world status ourselves, and I don't think I'm exaggerating. God bless America!

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Poverty From the Ranks
Posted by: calbyj on Apr 19, 2005 2:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As one who lives well beyond the poverty level-that is in despair- and am attending college as an adult, disabled female, you tell me what I am supposed to do. Even the faculty has little respect for the struggles of individuals who still persevere in the face of all odds to get somewhere. My disability is not evident. I don't use a wheelchair, am not blind, speechless nor in any way give indication of the desperate stuggle to move forward while in the process of recovery from a socially cultivated disease. My grades are outstanding, my attendance and involvement in classes are too. The truth is ,however, that my peers are mostly 25 years younger than I. So send me to school, watch me excel and recoup my past. Then put me in the job market with generation X. You tell me what to do.

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Authoritiative gov
Posted by: wiserd on May 8, 2005 2:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm always amazed at how some of the people best able to list off governmental abuses are so willing to extend it's power. I get the feeling that this comes from a certain level of desperation - a desire for our supposed leaders to "do somthing, do anything" heedless of the repurcussions of the act.

Increasing centralization of power, through nationalized health care for example, will only exacerbate our current problems. We get to choose between authoritarian Democrats and authoritarian Republicans. What fun!

While the government can help protect the environment and put some brakes on the abuses of big business, it is, at the same time, very corruptable.

I'm not sure that this article gets to the root of any problems.

We should separate gov't favored industry in our minds from small and medium sized businesses. Our government funnels huge sums of money to defense contractors, favored construction firms, etc. in a kind of reverse welfare. But it's not fair to turn anger for these misdeeds on small businesses. The guy running a company with 30-40 people is part of the soultion to the increasing centralization of power. God bless the previous poster who detailed the sacrifices he made so his employees could earn a very good wage. There are a lot of risks involved in starting up a business, and small businessmen should be applauded for taking these risks.

Americans currently have a standard of living which is much better than people in the rest of the world. I've lived in China where having a car or even a washing machine marks a person as rich and well off. I'm currently living in the Philippines where a large number of people earn just $6 or less per day. The people we should be concerned about are the third worlders doing factory work for pennies an hour, both because this is a form of slavery and because they compete with us for jobs. A person who is forced to compete in a free market with slaves who are denied freedoms we take for granted will become like slaves through the pressures of the free market.

If we live simply, own our own businesses, and insist on reductions in government spending, particularly millitary spending, we will have the resources to
live the American dream for generations. Or we can go through life with an "I want it now" mentality and spend our lives working to pay off various debts.

It's our choice.

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Alternet Comments:

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E
Posted by: edongu on Apr 18, 2005 6:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Whatever happened to the Land of Opportunity?" - This is a question I've asked myself again and again as I try to determine where exactly are we going in our society. The answer I've come up with is not pretty and the solution to what has become our "Lack of Opportunity" is going to require much more than merely recognizing that we have a problem.

When we first began hearing the term "enemy combatant", I recall John Ashcroft being asked about the rights that would be extended to this new breed of criminal. I will never forget his answer, one that I believe reveals the mentality that is as the heart of our problem. Loosely quoted, AG Ashcroft said that he "wasn't sure that they deserved the same rights extended to Americans."

The rights that millions of Americans have defended - some with words and some with their lives - throughout history as rights for all humanity now appear to be "owed" to only a deserving subset of of the global population.

The Land of Opportunity has gone the way of the Bill of Rights in the sense that it has become a reward extended to only the deserving. Where America once extended a helping hand to those less fortunate among us, now she will often barely lift a finger other than to point out the failing of those sad individuals.

The idea that each of us, alone, are responsible not only for the the decisions we make, but for the unforseeable end result of those decisions is an over-simplifying slap in the face to those who have not experienced the good fortune of success. After all, success is a combination of good decisions and/or good luck, is it not?

The Land of Opportunity is a manifestation of our American Community - a community working together as one, rather than as a collection of self-serving individuals, some who've made and some who haven't. Herein lies the solution to our problem.

I do not believe that a sincere message of community is being presented by our leaders in power. Until we hear the rhetoric and see the legislation that hammers home this message as completely as the message of WMD's, I'm afraid it will be up to us as individuals to do the dirty work of turning things around and creating opportunity for others.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]


Comments are closed-

WORK HARD VERSUS WORK SMART
Posted by: WONDERWALEYE on Apr 18, 2005 7:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are two books that folks should read if they want life better than it is!!! The book that made the biggest difference in my life to get what I wanted out of life is: THINK AND GROW RICH by Napolien Hill. The second book tells you how many that are educated fail to achieve and how common sence can give you the funds that you would like. If you want a better life, I would RUN to the book store!!!!!! By the way riches are whatever it is that you want out of life and the book gives simple ways that all can follow. IT WORKS!!!

Now to HEALTH CARE!!
I think this nation needs to make health care a RIGHT for all the folks of this nation!!!! But we fight the BIG MONEY of the AMA, other health care providers, and the GIANT insurance co's. They got us tight in a vice so that they can squeeze every penny out of you and more!!! They make so much money that they can afford to fill the pockets of the elected officials pockets!!! When is the last time you filled their pockets?? There is a web site that all the folks of this nation needs to see and take a part in. Its called: UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE-GRASS ROUTES, AND IT'S ADDRESS IS: www.everybodyinnobodyout.com This is a site that could really make a difference in this nation. I don't think is right to have to FEAR the cost of health care!!! I also don't think it is right to PAY AND PAY the high insurance premiums only to have to pay the deductable and the additional percentage of the bill!!!!! There are facts on that web site that are chilling!! For example, one of the leading causes of death in this country. I sure didn't know this but I should have!!!!! Well enough said with the exception of : MAY THE LOVE OF JESUS BE WITH YOU!!!!! [this has two meanings]

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» THANKS FOR YOUR REPLY!!!!! Posted by: WONDERWALEYE
» RE: THANKS FOR YOUR REPLY!!!!! Posted by: elmysterio

Comments are closed-

Most small business make 5% or less profit
Posted by: SteveSouth on Apr 18, 2005 8:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I own a small business that employees 25 people. We pay them between 17 and 26 dollars an hour. I make about 30k a year from this business, which comes to 10 dollars an hour when you figure the 60 hour week I put in. Last year the business lost 60k (the previous four years it made between 5 and 7.5% profit). We currently do not offer health care. We looked at providing healthcare for our employees but the costs are so high that it would have required that everybody take a 3 to 5 dollar an hour paycut. Well it turns out that they wanted the money instead of the insurance policy. The idea that companies pay for healthcare is a fallicy. The employees pay for it through lower wages, whether the company pays for the policy totally or in part. If I had given it to them out of the business profits we would be out of business and they wouldn't have a job! Just remember when you see the outrageous profits that some companies are making it usually doesn't apply to small business and that small business employs most of the people in the US.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Providing healthcare...... Posted by: Diecash1

Comments are closed-

Hmm, yes...
Posted by: nakis on Apr 18, 2005 10:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On MAD TV they poke fun at Oprah. In one skit one of the commediennes does an Oprah impression. In her impression she says I made $38,670 just breathing. Inaccurate? Comical? Overstated? Yes. But it accurately reflects our society. Where one person makes incredible amounts of money while their fellow citizens starve. We're certianly not unique. But we do claim a certain morality to our actions. Some our citizens make claim to divine providence. As if some people deserve so much and so many deserve so little. As if God wants it so. Rationalization by any other name stinks just as bad.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]


Comments are closed-

Let's be honest with ourselves
Posted by: crz53 on Apr 18, 2005 12:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think the article does a good job of pointing out the sensationalist nature of our media. What it doesn't address is the inability of most Americans to broaden their frame of reference when considering their lot in life. I'm all for raising the minimum wage. I'm all for universal health care. I'm all for child care to help working parents,and all the other things that a society can do to help those less fortunate help themselves. What most Amercans don't realize, though, is how good we've got it from a world perspective. Yes we should work to help our fellow citizens, but we should be realistic about what we expect, both for them and for ourselves. In order to do this, we must honestly assess what we need and what we want. It is in this respect that shows like "Extreme Makeover:Home Edition" distort our perspective. Not only do these shows (as the author of this article points out) focus our attention on the lucky few who are chosen, they further confuse our notions of needs and wants. Rather than building the lucky, and sometimes deserving recipients a modest new home that is nicer than what they had (and that by world standards might be considered a palace), the show attempts to out-do itself every week in terms of extravagance and over-indulgence. The message (intentional or not) is clear: you cannot, nor should you be happy living in anything less than a fucking mansion. We are being subconciously conditioned to be unhappy with simply having what we need. We are being taught that ensuring out own personal wealth is the be-all-end-all of human existence. In the process, we are forgetting about are forgetting about community, forgetting about our responsibility to others. Our society is happily telling us that with hard work and a little luck, someday every deserving person can have a mansion and a luxury SUV, leaving out the fact that you don't need a mansion or a fancy car to have a happy life.
I firmly believe that any real efforts to raise the standard of living for the tens of millions of people living in poverty, both in America and around the world, must also include a rejection of the materialistic self-indulgence to which so many in the industrialized West (particularily middle and upper-class Americans) have become accustomed. If we as a society can be honest with ourselves about what we want and what we really need, then helping others to achieve what they need will be a much easier task.
- Mike

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Comments are closed-

Is anyone listening?
Posted by: gideonh on Apr 18, 2005 4:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't think anyone is listening. I hear a lot of "the world isn't fair." (I love when the poor defend the wealthy by blaming the manipulations of the wealthy on "The World" as if the planet was in control. Let's let the people in charge completely off the hook and start blaming the poor state of america's health care system on the rotation of the moon and the stars!) I'm all for contributing and working, but DAMN it's cold to just keep telling everyone to pull themselves up by thier own bootstraps.
Every year working class people slip closer towards being poor people, but they keep trying to deny it and distance themselves by siding with the wealthy. NEWSFLASH- the wealthy want you to believe that you and they are all on the same team, as long as you support thier greedy aspirations, but by no means do THEY consider YOU one of them.
mark my words, we are 4 or 5 decades away from debtor's prisons, and a hop and a skip away from indentured servitude. Half the working population will be forced to work for the credit card companies as collection agents, calling the other half of the working population day and night to extort payments from them, until we all starve to death and rich people win! YEA CAPITALISM! Go team, Go!
Oh screw it,
Nobody's listening.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» I hear you......... Posted by: Diecash1
» RE: I hear you......... Posted by: crz53
» RE: Is anyone listening? Posted by: edongu

Comments are closed-

First World meet Third World
Posted by: Veblen on Apr 18, 2005 6:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I view America's "Oprah" transition through my experience as a Peace Corps Volunteer in the mid-1980's. The country I served in was ruled by a group of oligarchs that cared less about the long term welfare of their society than the short term profits they obtained as they ran their country into the ground. The vast mass of citizens in this country lived in oppressive poverty and had little recourse to affect change. They knew what was going on, but were powerless to do any thing about it but pick up a gun.

America, on the other hand, is a democracy, weak as it may be. We too are currently being ruled by a group of oligarchs that care less about the long term welfare of our society than the short term profits they obtain as they ran our country into the ground. The ironic thing is that a small majority of average Americans are supporting them. "The Oprah Society" describes in part the constructed reality of the oligarchs that these fellow Americans are accepting. I hope that our fellow citizens wake up. We are less than a generation away from edging into third world status ourselves, and I don't think I'm exaggerating. God bless America!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]


Comments are closed-

Poverty From the Ranks
Posted by: calbyj on Apr 19, 2005 2:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As one who lives well beyond the poverty level-that is in despair- and am attending college as an adult, disabled female, you tell me what I am supposed to do. Even the faculty has little respect for the struggles of individuals who still persevere in the face of all odds to get somewhere. My disability is not evident. I don't use a wheelchair, am not blind, speechless nor in any way give indication of the desperate stuggle to move forward while in the process of recovery from a socially cultivated disease. My grades are outstanding, my attendance and involvement in classes are too. The truth is ,however, that my peers are mostly 25 years younger than I. So send me to school, watch me excel and recoup my past. Then put me in the job market with generation X. You tell me what to do.

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Authoritiative gov
Posted by: wiserd on May 8, 2005 2:28 PM   
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I'm always amazed at how some of the people best able to list off governmental abuses are so willing to extend it's power. I get the feeling that this comes from a certain level of desperation - a desire for our supposed leaders to "do somthing, do anything" heedless of the repurcussions of the act.

Increasing centralization of power, through nationalized health care for example, will only exacerbate our current problems. We get to choose between authoritarian Democrats and authoritarian Republicans. What fun!

While the government can help protect the environment and put some brakes on the abuses of big business, it is, at the same time, very corruptable.

I'm not sure that this article gets to the root of any problems.

We should separate gov't favored industry in our minds from small and medium sized businesses. Our government funnels huge sums of money to defense contractors, favored construction firms, etc. in a kind of reverse welfare. But it's not fair to turn anger for these misdeeds on small businesses. The guy running a company with 30-40 people is part of the soultion to the increasing centralization of power. God bless the previous poster who detailed the sacrifices he made so his employees could earn a very good wage. There are a lot of risks involved in starting up a business, and small businessmen should be applauded for taking these risks.

Americans currently have a standard of living which is much better than people in the rest of the world. I've lived in China where having a car or even a washing machine marks a person as rich and well off. I'm currently living in the Philippines where a large number of people earn just $6 or less per day. The people we should be concerned about are the third worlders doing factory work for pennies an hour, both because this is a form of slavery and because they compete with us for jobs. A person who is forced to compete in a free market with slaves who are denied freedoms we take for granted will become like slaves through the pressures of the free market.

If we live simply, own our own businesses, and insist on reductions in government spending, particularly millitary spending, we will have the resources to
live the American dream for generations. Or we can go through life with an "I want it now" mentality and spend our lives working to pay off various debts.

It's our choice.

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