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Class Matters

By David Moberg, In These Times. Posted June 30, 2005.


Belief in the myth of the self-made man has made many ordinary people suckers for the right-wing pitch.
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The myth of the self-made man is American culture's own special heart of darkness, helping to explain both its infectious optimism and ruthless greed.

The idea holds enough truth and seductiveness to make it easy to forget its delusional dangers. To reprise Marx's famous formulation, individuals, like humankind, do make their own personal history, but not under conditions they choose. But in America, we choose to ignore the caveat about conditions at our peril.

The myth, or belief, that people are solely what they make of themselves is useful to keep in mind while reading two ongoing series: the New York Times' on class and the Wall Street Journal's on social mobility. Both focus attention on a truth about American society that runs counter to most people's deep-seated beliefs: There is less social mobility in the United States now than in the '80s (and less then than in the '70s) and less mobility than in many other industrial countries, including Canada, Finland, Sweden and Germany.

Yet 40 percent of respondents to a Times poll said that there was a greater chance to move up from one class to another now than 30 years ago, and 46 percent said it was easier to do so in the United States than in Europe.

Although the news about social mobility has not been widely reported, it is generally recognized that inequality has grown over the past thirty years. The Times series highlights how much the super-rich have made out like, well, bandits.

While the real income of the bottom 90 percent of Americans fell from 1980 to 2002, the income of the top 0.1 percent--making $1.6 million or more--went up two and a half times in real terms before taxes. With the help of the Bush tax cuts, the gap between the super-rich and everyone else grew even larger.

The American people accept this, it is argued, because they think not only that there's more social mobility than there is, but also that they'll personally get rich. Indeed, a poll in 2000 indicated that 39 percent of Americans thought they were either in the wealthiest one percent or would be "soon." The Times poll was slightly less exuberant: 11 percent thought it was very likely they would become wealthy, another 34 percent somewhat likely.

"It is okay to have ever-greater differences between rich and poor, [Americans] seem to believe," David Wessel wrote in the Wall Street Journal, "as long as their children have a good chance of grasping the brass ring."

This view is problematic. First, the greater the inequality, the less likely the possibility of mobility. Increased inequality worsens the large disparities in resources that families can devote to education -- resources that are increasingly important for both entering many careers and for social mobility. A college degree, it should be stressed, is important not just because of the knowledge acquired, but because college serves as a class-biased sorting mechanism for entry to certain jobs. In contrast, the record suggests that countries with greater equality also have greater mobility. Substantive equality creates more equality of opportunity.

But even if there were mobility, such inequality would be problematic. Is it fair that society's wealth be divided so unevenly? Isn't there a decent standard of living -- rising as economies become wealthier -- to which everyone who "works hard and plays by the rules," in the Clintonian formulation, should be entitled? Great social disparity means that the financially well-off use their money and greater political leverage to protect their privilege rather than to design policies for the common good.

In defense of the rich getting richer, former Bush economic advisor Gregory Mankiw wrote in response to the Times series that the richest increased their share when the economy boomed; so if we want prosperity, let the plutocrats prosper. But the economy grew faster in the first three decades after World War II when equality was increasing than in the next three decades when equality was decreasing. In any case, if the income from growth is captured by the very rich, as it largely has been for a couple decades, this path to prosperity offers little to most people.

Also, with high inequality, even the pretense of community declines, social conflict increases and society functions more poorly. Individual mobility is not the only way to improve one's lot. Social solidarity and working together can improve everyone's lot.

This brings us back to the self-made man. It becomes clear, as the Times series is titled, that "class matters," just as race, gender and other accidents of history matter. The social class into which someone is born largely defines one's class as an adult, and both make a difference in how healthy or how long-lived the person will be, especially in the absence of universal health insurance. It influences access to education and to jobs.


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David Moberg is a senior editor of In These Times.

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Midwest Agriculture
Posted by: Sojourner on Jun 30, 2005 12:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Having been reared and educated in the Great Plains states, I could never understand why rural voters were Republicans -- until I understood the myth of being self-employed = being self-made.

The Illinois, Iowa, and Wisconsin farmers I knew were periodically raped by competition. But they'd be damned before they'd unionize, even while the game was as fixed as a slot machine.

Then they were given subsidies, and lived and died by those. Now it is corporate farming that has replaced the family farm because of the economic benefits of organization.

The corporations that dominate agriculture survive because they are able to bargain and work together to influence lawmakers at a level matched only by large labor unions. Individuals still in agriculture, while far from poor, are today's version of the tenant farmer. Some gained wealth by selling their land to developers. But the family farm is ancient history.

The pioneer image is of a gambler who survives by his merits. Sociologist Philip Slater called it "The Pursuit of Loneliness." It seems we'd rather lose than learn how to work together.

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» RE: Midwest Agriculture Posted by: zooeyhall
» RE: Midwest Agriculture Posted by: iana_gheddis420
» RE: Midwest Agriculture Posted by: hotlipsin61
WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW?
Posted by: ssegallmd on Jun 30, 2005 2:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So, you ask, why do average Americans embrace the ethos of the antiegalitarian elitists who see them as oxen and cannon fodder? Why would these schnooks support a social program that gives them, the "they"s, such an insignificant chance to succeed while unfairly ensuring even greater power and profits for the haves and have mores, the "we"s? Are they merely fools or is there more to them than meets the eye?

Why would such Americans support such an unfair and lopsided playing field? Because 39+% of the fools believe that they are in the "we"s, in that 1% that will benefit on the backs of others. Yes, they are expecting to exploit others, not to be exploited.

No, these people are not merely fools. They are also cheaters who think that they will be doing the cheating. So, they’ve supported the Bushian Ponzi scheme that will maintain them and their spawn in perpetual indentured servitude.

"Screw universal health care and welfare mothers,” they mindlessly chanted. "No bankruptcy relief for deadbeats!" they added on cue. Those programs, they thought, only supported and encouraged deadbeat atheist crack whores. Neither they nor Jesus approved.

But then came the pink slip or the first uninsured coronary, and they discovered who the "they" really are: whitebread selfish conservatives like themselves who believed that God and their work ethic would protect them. But it is now Beamer Bob who is falling without a net. Such people have helped construct the hell that they will find themselves hopelessly trapped in. That's justice.

"How can I pay my bills without a job? What will my children eat? How can I get back surgery to get back to work?" Didn’t I see a “Bush-Cheney ‘04” sticker on your Hummer before they repo-ed it? Ask them. Or go enlist for Iraq. You didn't care about such problems when you thought that they were only the problems of lazy, drug addled, welfare mothers. Now who's the asshole, asshole?

Hey, Joe Yuppie, can you hear the Bush girls’ drunken laughter? What was it you and Rush called me? Well, this bleeding-heart won’t bleed a single drop for you, Mr. Google IPO? Go fuck y**rself!

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» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: sheherezade
» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: bettsoff
» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: AdamSelene40
» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: ssegallmd
» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: Astroboy
» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: zooeyhall
» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: iana_gheddis420
» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: sheherezade
» RE: ? Posted by: sheherezade
» YOU'RE MISTAKEN, SHEHEREZADE Posted by: ssegallmd
» RE: YOU'RE MISTAKEN, SHEHEREZADE Posted by: sheherezade
» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: mattlubic
» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: beefmaster
» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: ssegallmd
» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: Michiganman
» RE: WHO'S THE ASSHOLE NOW? Posted by: mattlubic
No Class
Posted by: triskela on Jun 30, 2005 4:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The failure to understand the role of class in our society is key and part of early public school brainwashing. In fact, I would argue that it is deeply rooted in our whole political system - even the idea of one man's one vote is part of it. We are all desperate to believe that we are all equal under the law and that no one man is unfairly advantaged just because of his economic status. And catch that, how people are willing to discuss some more attenuated question of "status" rather than just discuss "class" as it is well understood by the rest of the world.

Nope, no class here - just one big ruling class. The voter. The man with the power.

We don't have a "lower class" we have the "lower middle class" - ah, as if that made a difference...

Everybody thinks they are just on the verge of hitting it "big" and cannot look up from the table like gamblers about to lose their last dollars.

Well, perhaps you have heard how fickle is Dame Fortune.

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Welfare is a dirty word in the US
Posted by: philame on Jun 30, 2005 5:49 AM   
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I lived in Copenhagen 4 years ago and over coffee at a cafe my Danish friends and I were discussing class in the US and they all asked me why non-elite Americans stay in our horribly exploitative system. They could not understand why people would work so hard at such low wages with a barely-there social safety net with no certainty that their children would even get a college education. This does defy logic! But I told them about the American Dream and how most people honestly believe they are going to "make it". The American mentality finally clicked for them.

Class is very important that does not get the attention it merits, but we've got to keep race and gender in the mix too. Lower class whites have it bad too - no doubt - but it is often women and non-white people that are *expected* to work for less. Women are often expected to work for free even. Think parenting, caring for other family members and community volunteer work.

Race/gender/class is also important because it is often in the name of punishing the poor non-white mother that any semblance of welfare support we have in this country gets dismantled. Welfare is even a dirty word in the US when in Europe it simply describes the foundation of a healthy, democratic state!

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A balance of responsibility
Posted by: crz53 on Jun 30, 2005 7:39 AM   
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Any argument about class in American society is really going to be an argument about responsibility. Those who buy completely into the "self-made man" concept believe strongly in the personal responsibility of individuals to make wise choices for themselves. They claim that whatever a person's lot in life may be, good or bad, it is ultimately the result of choices that person has made.

On the other hand, people who think about class only in terms of systemic social conditions place the responsibility on society. If our political and economic systems were structured more fairly, if they distributed wealth more evenly, then everyone would better off, they say.

As with most things, I think the truth lies somewhere in between. We run into problems when we veer too far one way or the other. Placing all the responsibility on individuals breaks down our sense of community and can easily be used to justify social inequality. Likewise, relying solely on social structures to be responsible for people's well-being can lead to societal apathy. If a person isn't at least somewhat responsible for their own success, then the incentive to strive for a better society is gone.

What we need is a political and economic system that holds people accountable for their decisions, but at the same time recognizes that one of the hallmarks of a civilized society is its' willingness to pick people up when they are down. Such a system would encourage people to make good personal decisions and take responsibility for themselves; and to also look beyond themselves to help the vulnerable members of their community. It's this necessary balance that is ignored by proponents of both free-market capitalism and state-sponsored socialism. The answer lies somewhere in the middle.

It's too bad that none of our current political and economic leaders are willing to look for that middle ground.

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» RE: A balance of responsibility Posted by: iana_gheddis420
HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!!
Posted by: iana_gheddis420 on Jun 30, 2005 7:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How sad. You cite Marx, whose ideas are unworkable, you compare America unfavourably to Europe, where unemployment is 12% and businesses are leaving. You say 'lucky' businessmen hate unions, and ignore what unions have done to Appalachia, the Midwest and to your beloved Europe. You torture statistics to show how poorer the bottom 90% is without acknowledging that poor families now have more cars, televisions, clothing, HOMES, i-pods and jobs than they did in 1980. They pay FEWER taxes and enjoy even more social programs.
People vote republican because the ideal of the self made man is an offering of hope. You offer some dismal vision of socialist utopia.
As an aside, ever notice that there are no more statutes to individuals? The above essay is part of a long campaign to rid our culture of strong individuals. Now, everyone is a hero and we memorialize “events” with parks and petting zoos so no one is offended. Men now look for opportunities to confess that they too, like the women who castrate them, hate John Wayne. We no longer have heroes because there is no cultural incentive. Just wait until the Marxists rid our nation of incentive to produce wealth and count cars and televisions.
I want John Wayne. I want to live in a world where blacks AND whites look at Clarence Thomas, Ms Rice, and Justice Brown and say, "I can do it", instead of, "I might lose my benefits". I want a world where people are people, forget black and white, men and women. Research it and find that the socialists, not capitalists, need distinction. (don’t take my word for it. Look at Kennedy’s and Reid’s quotes concerning Rice, Thomas, Brown, and Gonzales) Democrats are losing. Hence, articles like the ones found on AlterNet. Think! And read the responses to this rebuttal. (I can’t wait!)
In the end, I'd rather have on my marker that I was a self-made person than that I was some sniveling, ungrateful ward of the state. Listen to yourselves! Is the America you are trying to bring about what you really want?? Thank god it isn’t what more than half the population want.
Of course, all this would be moot if you socialists would have left the country when Bush won like you said you would. Nothing you Marxists say ever really means anything does it? (psst- they can’t leave because they still have a lot of ‘work’ to do here—now there is an exit timetable I’d love to see!)

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» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: philame
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: iana_gheddis420
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: Calamitysams@yahoo.com
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! - Baloney Posted by: ConnecttheDots
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: AnarchX
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: jobloe
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: nellper
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: Buzzygirl
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: ZylogZ80
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: hattonr
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: lostdoggie
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: bettsoff
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: Shehova
» HOORAY FOR SELF DELUSION!!! Posted by: ssegallmd
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF DELUSION!!! Posted by: iana_gheddis420
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF DELUSION!!! Posted by: ssegallmd
» RE: Jingoist? Is that you? Posted by: sheherezade
» RE: Jingoist? Is that you? Posted by: ssegallmd
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: yesman
» RE: HOORAY FOR SELF MADE!!! Posted by: cracker11
Equality = Communism
Posted by: rob_low on Jun 30, 2005 9:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The most stunning difference one notices, upon reading DeToqueville's "Democracy in America", is how important, he observed, that equality was to the early citizens of the Republic. Now, of course, as we move further and further from resembling A Democracy, in any real sense of the word, we insist that the US is a Democracy…, which it, of course, isn’t. As DeToqueville referred to it, and as our own Pledge of Allegiance refers to it, is as a Republic. Which is what the Founding Fathers created.

Because most Americans believe they have access to “The American Dream”, which has degenerated into perhaps having a roof over your head, they believe that they’re “Free” somehow. I see little more than a nation of indentured servants. By actively forming a open foreign policy dedicated to the undermining and eventual destruction of an entire economic system, one that was designed to bring the most equality to the largest amount of its citizens, the US propaganda machine has dedicated generations of spin (“spin” is not the cozy word pundits have lulled us into accepting it as. One spins lies while weaving a web of deceit) to obfuscate the Class Warfare basis of Capitalism. For Capitalism, despite its unarguable success at increasing the productive capacity of Mankind is most closely comparable to the power of Nuclear Fission. It’s an extremely powerful engine for global commerce, as Nuclear is for electric production. However it is just as unstable. The Economic Chernobyl we’ve unleashed on the world by foolishly removing controls from the Economic System is frightening.
Perhaps you’ve noticed that the current administration refers always only to Freedom. Completely forgotten is the fact that the overriding drive in the formation of this country was not freedom, except from foreign taxation and control. But by deriding anyone who mentions that equality is not only unattainable, but it is not even a goal, as Communists, any rational discussion of Equality is never able to be entered into. You’re just considered a Commie hippie pinko fag. End of discussion, the despotic Majority rules. The only ones left to be Free are the Aristocracy. We’ve become a Nation of Pinheads, and damn proud of it.

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define success.
Posted by: sarah on Jun 30, 2005 11:00 AM   
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There has never been such a thing as a self-made man. In fact, much of the notion of the American Dream is based on Horatio Alger stories, where a "good boy" orphan works like a "dickens" to be rewarded in the end with well deserved success and riches. And even in these enduring tales, the hero's success is invariably achieved after a wealthy benefactor materializes to kindly mentor our ragged hero in his ethical climb to the American dream.

FACT: no one can traverse the road to success without help. but sadly, this is often forgotten. In present American society, it is common for an admired man to achieve his dreams & then neglect those who opened the very doors that he locks behind himself. The American Dream is now achieved via manipulation instead of hard work. In fact, i believe that the credo "it's not what you know: it's who you know" has been taken several steps beyond. Now unspoken, the credo is: " contemporary sucess is based on who you use & discard while smiling at everyone else."

And of course, "my stuff" proves this valid to me. For instance, over a decade ago, i helped out a some CA suburban guys who wanted overseas work.Since i had grown up in the US gov't, and therefore had "natural contacts" in DC, incl civil servants, humanitarians, even a few congressman as close family friends, these guys wanted me to help their career goals. Impressed by their consistant assurances of good intentions, I helped, cajoling friends until my guys were given contacts & even a few cool recs. Today, some of them been working decades in careers that i helped them start. But this seems forgotten. They are "important" now, far from beach town where we had met, & they are as cold and as distant as automatons. And the one idealistic college boy whom i "fell for" decades ago (with pledges for commitment when he "came home") does not talk to me at all. He even has a hoighty toighty girlfriend who puts on "airs" about his job status. I want to scream: I GOT HIM STARTED--HE'D BE 20 YRS. IN A CUBICLE WITHOUT ME. but i don't... why? maybe because i could seem crazy... but also because i have more sense than to demand loyalty from someone who only knows where he wants to go, not who & what he needs to respect. Sound bitter? I am, a little... but hey: " the road to hell is paved with the broken hearts of those who were discarded in pursuit of the "Ugly American" Dream."

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» RE: define success. Posted by: Michiganman
I pose a question to all of you...
Posted by: mstenger on Jun 30, 2005 11:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where would George W. Bush be right now had he been born in a small town to a single mother who lived in a trailer park and worked 3 jobs?

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How about just getting by...
Posted by: jaebi on Jun 30, 2005 11:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think a lot of smart headway has been made on the fact that most of us (myself included) believe that at any moment we're going to strike our oil well and move to that house on the hills. All brainwashing aside, there certainly are self-made men just as there are born losers. Mix in our current inundation of classism, racism combined with a unchecked dose of corporate interests altering the political landscape to suit the needs of the bottom line and all that matters is the 'color' of your skin and your next of kin.
Those two factors may put the worlds most talented individuals in prison and imbeciles in the White House (all puns intended). As has been stated, that leaves us with a house of illusions, self-made men and the rest. However, I think it's overpresumptuous to think that we're all sticking around this lopsided, exploitative system because we think we're gonna strike it rich. Many of us, and I'm nearly certain they went un polled in any of the surveys the article mentions, simply have no where else to go, know no other way to live, and couldn't afford to get there if we did. Speaking as the token kid from the neighborhood who 'made' it out, went to university, and change tax brackets every year, I can say that my single mother never pursued any American Dream. In fact, she always knew it as such--a dream, a lie. She knew she would never be rich and had no plan to move on up--she, like most of the families in the community I grew up and others like it--are simply consumed with getting by.
The 'getting by' class is growing. Families across America don't see where they have time to actively better their lives and those of their loved ones let alone find energy to participate in politics or work toward a better state of the union because they're trying to keep a roof over their head and food on the table--constantly. And ironically, the harder Americans are working, the less they're getting from it.

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as is
Posted by: sarah on Jun 30, 2005 11:44 AM   
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I guess what i'm trying to say is that regardless of political affiliations (liberal and conservative) and original intent, in the end, it's all the same... anyone who becomes successful in the current measure of American Success does so at the loss and misuse of others. this seems true of my experiences and in the experiences of others. How many times have you watched an interview with a successful person who announces his intentions of "giving back" to the hood, or the old town, or etc. as if it were the most innovative concept ever. Yet we are also confronted by stories of successful people's greed and excess, as well as the equally common announcements that the celebrity of the hour is being sued or trash talked by someone he or she left behind. The fact is, there is no american dream.

The fact is, the climb to success, no matter how well-intentioned, is a hurtful process, not only to others but the sense of self that we discard in the mad pursuit. In the English classes i teach, when discussing "connotative" and "dennotative" definitions, i pull out the Websters and we read the "agreed upon" definition of "success." Then, i tell my students, who are mostly from marginalized backgrounds, to use examples and predictive descriptions to explain what success means to them. The answers always vary, and there is always something left behind.

i dunno. My personal measures of success are mine mine mine, and my students like them. To me, a successful career is "to work the least amount of hours and stress for the most amount of money, doing something i enjoy on creative, emotional, and intellectual levels." To me, a successful life is "to be liked loved for who i am: to be understood and surrounded by people whom i understand, love, and like, even if we differ in opinion." I have yet to achieve either of my measures of true success, but i'd prefer to wait until death for their fulfillment rather than buy into the cattle prodding method of achieving success that many whom i know or who i've observed buy into as the only means to the American Dream. simple. :) and if people realize that, introspect, and slow it all down, they can find success in unconditional love they feel when they recognize themselves in the smiles and/or honesty of others.

l, sarah daugherty, mfa.

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» RE: as is Posted by: ssegallmd
» RE: as is Posted by: sarah
» RE: as is Posted by: theresa
Ty
Posted by: hotlipsin61 on Jun 30, 2005 11:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's about time Americans start thinking about class. Someone in here said Midwestern farmers have gone broke (bankrupt) by believing in the self-made man myth and have lost everything to corporate farms. (See ConAgra, Kraft, etc)
And we who live in the cities aren't too far behind in losing everything, either. Many of us are in debt, living beyond our means, thinking we could hit it big by appearing on a game show or trudging to a casino.
The "middle" has dropped out more than twenty years ago when "Raygun" took office. Wages stagnated in some non-manufacturing jobs, and it worsened during his time in office.
Middle-class jobs like airline pilots, managerial positions in white-collar professions (aeropsace, defense, media, high-tech, e.g) began to experience job losses in the mid-eighties and the nation has never recovered from that.
Into this variable was the self-made man scenario where, having a college degree, meant one could make that variable fit into their lives. But now as we all know today that no degree meant a life of drudgery at the bottom. Hence the inequality of class. We were sold of the Lockean dream of doing it yourself-and rugged individualism wsa a the way to avoid debt. Now our hubris turned us into debtors.
Therefore, our society is completely out of balance because "lifting yourself up by your bootstraps" is not the way to prosperity anymore. The bootstraps have broken; replaced by Birkenstocks. More and more of us are becoming poor by working at low-wage jobs. The conservative agenda has crippled this country. The conservatives have stymied any hopes of sharing for the greater good-or "commonwealth" away for generations by pissing away economic surpluses on war and other foolish enterprises.
This is what the Europeans are telling us. Either share the wealth fairly or be a nation of debtors. We chose the latter.

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Social networks, not hard work, the key to mobility
Posted by: Michaelmammal on Jun 30, 2005 12:24 PM   
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Most popular beliefs about wealth do not take into account the fact that it is social networking. NOT hard work alone, that makes people successful. It's who you know. Granted, if you have charisma and are able to sell yourself well to strangers, you can move up quickly. But if you aren't connected to people who are connected, you're stuck.

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"Classy" used to refer to quality, not quantity
Posted by: Sojourner on Jun 30, 2005 1:55 PM   
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Our consumer society offers us so many things to buy that we no longer remember what life was like before we defined the ideal of democracy as putting everything up for sale.

To be sure, even that was not heaven. In reference to deTocqueville above, he wrote before the Civil War. Here in the US, at about the same time, we were hearing from Thoreau of 'quiet desperation' and from Emerson of 'silent melancholy.' Where did the notion come from that we could 'buy a stairway to heaven'? That's a perversion of the American Dream.

Even the definition of social class, itself, presumes to tell us that what the rich have is what everyone should want. But that's a hangover from the days when some of the rich were also cultured.

What America lacks is a high culture. Instead we, the richest nation on the planet, represent the worst of mass society: waste, oppression, injustice, etc. True, those suffering from want all over the world may think we have the answer. But they are now learning otherwise, as they see us spread our rat race around the world. Burning up the planet seems to be the way to make money.

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It's a lot like religion
Posted by: ccbite on Jun 30, 2005 4:42 PM   
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I think what lures people to the self-made man myth is 1) the prospect of being in control and 2) the anticipation of reward at the end of the journey. In some ways, this myth is like a religion in that it can be highly individualized, has a whole list of real or imagined 'rules' or credos to live by and forecasts an eventual payoff. And I agree with the author in that the people who really take this myth to heart seem to do so without any concept of history of social or class struggle. In fact, I would argue that 'buying' into this myth helps bring a person's life into focus by simplifying it (one goal: $) and at the same time helps absolve the person's guilt of past social and economic injustices. It's the perfect form of social control, in many ways.

I often wonder if the self-made man story undermines pursuit of post secondary education by perpetuating feelings of entitlement. Male enrollment at colleges and universities is markedly down across the country for the last 30-40 years.

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Entitlement Mentality
Posted by: Euphony_Cacophony on Jul 1, 2005 2:47 AM   
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The myth of the self-made man is based upon the false assumption that birth connotes equality. Further, the myth asserts that all people are born with equal "value". In fact, in America, each individual's "value", in Society's terms, is determined at the moment of birth.

There is an unspoken hierarchical system which ranks people based upon preconceived notions of who they are, and what value that identity entails. At the top of the value hierarchy lies wealth, upper class, race (white), gender (male), and education. At the bottom of the value hierarchy lies poverty, lower class, race (minority), gender (female), and ignorance (uneducated).

Those at the top of the hierarchy believe, due to the condition of their birth and their self-perceived "value", that they are entitled to more than those who fall lower on the hierarchy. It is from this sense of entitlement, that those who were given the most, by virtue of their birth, often believe that they are superior to those below them. Blinded, by self-absorption, to the fact that they had their way paved for them, they believe that they have made themselves what they are through efforts of their own. Thus, they envision themselves as the "elite" (aristocracy).

The elite, having been born in an advantaged position, expect the less advantaged to elevate themselves to a higher position through "hard work" - the same "hard work" that the elite were exempt from. It is through indoctrination, based on the distorted beliefs of those at the top, that the average, non-elite citizen comes to believe that he/she can exert personal effort to attain what the elite were born into.

Entitlement and indoctrination are the two key concepts which keep America enthralled in the belief that we can become something Society says we're not if we make the right choices in life. In fact, what we need in America is a new mythology; one which values what transcends oneself, namely, Humanity. As a nation, we have lost sight of what we inherently are: humans. Society is no longer anthropomorphic. As a people, we have no conceptual identity. Instead, our society is comprised of an amorphous body of mass-produced, homogenized beings, separate yet identical. What we need is a new social framework upon which to build a new Mythology of Humanity - a Society where each member's uniqueness is intrinsically valued, while as a whole we journey on an ascent to Humanity.

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The best defense of the Progressive Income Tax you'll ever read...
Posted by: Linette on Jul 7, 2005 2:32 PM   
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James Kroeger's The Progressive Income Tax: Theoretical Foundations.

He explains why even a steeply progressive income tax--right up to 99% of the highest incomes--actually imposes no real sacrifice on wealthy citizens, in terms of lost purchasing power.

It really does change everything. Democrats pay attention!

Linette

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