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Clitoral Economics

By Barbara Ehrenreich, Barbaraehrenreich.com. Posted January 23, 2008.


Ben Bernanke may not use this imagery, but the immediate challenge is how best to get the economy throbbing again.
bernankegetty050907
bernanke

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With all the talk about how to stimulate it, you'd think that the economy is a giant clitoris. Ben Bernanke may not employ this imagery, but the immediate challenge--and the issue bound to replace Iraq and immigration in the presidential race--is how best to get the economy engorged and throbbing again.

It would be irresponsible to say much about Bush's stimulus plan, the mere mention of which could be enough to send the Nikkei, the DAX, and the curiously named FTSE and Sensex tumbling into the crash zone again. In a typically regressive gesture, Bush proposed to hand out cash tax rebates--except to families earning less than $40,000 a year. This may qualify as an example of what Naomi Klein calls "disaster capitalism," in which any misfortune can be re-jiggered to the advantage of the affluent.

But even the liberal stimulus proposals have me worried--not so much for their content as their rationale. Most liberals want a stimulus package that includes an increase in food stamp allotments and an extension of unemployment benefits, which are both screamingly obvious measures. Currently, the food stamp allotment amounts to about $1 per meal, and when four Democratic congresspersons tried living on that for a week last May they ended up even crankier than if they'd had to sit through a week-long filibuster by Tom DeLay.

As for unemployment benefits: They last just twenty-five weeks in most states and end up covering only a third of people who are laid off. If ever there was a time to create a real working system of unemployment compensation, it is now. Citigroup has announced plans to eliminate 21,000 jobs; investment banks in general will shed 40,000. The mortgage industry is in a state of meltdown; and Sprint--how did they get into this?--will lay off 4,000 full-time employees as well as 1,600 part-time and contract workers.

The economic rationale for more a progressive stimulus package, which we hear now several times a day, is that the poor and the freshly unemployed will spend whatever money they get. Give them more money in the form of food stamps or unemployment benefits and they'll drop more at the mall. Money, it has been observed, sticks to the rich but just slides off the poor, which makes them the lynchpin of stimulus. After decades of hearing the poor stereotyped as lazy, stupid, addicted, and crime-prone, they have been discovered to have this singular virtue: They are veritable spending machines.

All this is true, but it is also a form of economy fetishism--or should I say worship? If we have learned anything in the last few years, it is that the economy is no longer an effective measure of human well-being. We've seen the economy grow without wage gains; we've seen productivity grow without wage gains. We've even seen unemployment fall without wage gains. In fact, when economists want to talk about life "on the ground," where jobs and wages and the price of Special K are paramount, they've taken to talking about "the real economy." If there's a "real economy," then what in the hell is "the economy"?

Once it was real-er, this economy that we have. But that was before we got polarized into the rich, the poor, and the sinking middle class. Gross social inequality is what has "de-coupled" growth and productivity from wage gains for the average household. As far as I can tell, "the economy," as opposed to the "real economy," is the realm of investment, and is occupied by people who live on interest and dividends instead of salaries and wages, aka the rich.

So I'm proposing a radical shift in rhetoric: Any stimulus package should focus on the poor and the unemployed, not because they spend more, but because they are in most in need of help. Yes, when a parent can afford to buy Enfamil, it helps the Enfamil company and no doubt "the economy" too. But let's not throw out the baby with the sensual bubble bath of "stimulus." In any ordinary moral calculus, the baby comes first.

Far be it from me to make the revolutionary suggestion that babies are more important than profits. My point is just that our economy--with its dizzying bubbles, wild lending sprees, reckless downsizings, and planet-wide hyper-sensitivity--has gotten too far disconnected from ordinary human needs. We could take the current crisis as an opportunity to fix that, at least in part, by shoring up government support for the needy and the dislocated. Or we can wait around and watch while the appropriate imagery gets nasty, as this ghostly creature, "the economy," starts acting like a nymphomaniac junkie in withdrawal.

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See more stories tagged with: economy, recession, stimulus package

Barbara Ehrenreich is the author of thirteen books, including the New York Times bestseller Nickel and Dimed. A frequent contributor to the New York Times, Harpers, and the Progressive, she is a contributing writer to Time magazine. She lives in Florida.

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Levitra for a Limp Economic Projection ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Jan 23, 2008 12:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Another outstanding column by Barbara Ehrenreich! We will need all her suggestions to avert the humanitarian disaster that will indeed accompany this financial debacle.

This will not be an economic recession, that is just a symptom of a much more malevolent imbalance in the structure of the economy. What we are seeing is a credit collapse that will starve our economy of cash, and there's really nothing we can do about it. Adding insult to injury is the degradation of our productive economy into a service economy that adds little or no value at all.

We have a Health Care Industry that consumes 15 percent of GDP whereas other nationalized health care systems consume 8 percent or much less. Our financial service industry accounted for over 30 percent of the profit for the S&P 500, whereas twenty-five years ago it was just 6 percent. The Military Industrial Complex takes 9 percent of the economy and produces no real goods.

Between just these three sectors over 20 percent of our GDP is waste, fraud and abuse. Then we can start talking about CEO, CFO and CIO compensation.

But back to the credit collapse. The debt-based fractional banking system can only survive with ever-increasing debt, but the consumer is tapped out and business is cutting back. With no new debt being written, a tsunami of bad loans, systemic risk model failure and mistrust between banks, the die is cast, a meltdown that will shake our country to its core.

Is there a way out? Sure, but it is medicine we will only take as a last resort, if then.

First we fire the Federal Reserve, install a central public bank and use only government-created money, money that bears no interest payments, a "greenback monetary policy." Then reregulate the financial sector.

Second, we provide single-payer health care to all Americans. This will relieve states, counties, cities, industry and small business of healthcare costs, leaving jobs intact and making our products more competitive. It will also relieve people who pay for their own healthcare and insure some 47 million that currently go without, more money left in the system.

Third, we slash the military budget by half, using those funds for infrastructure projects.

Fourth, we declare an energy emergency whereby automakers are ordered to reduce engine sizes and weight immediately and introduce within three years battery electric and hybrid battery electric vehicles. These vehicles should get at least quadruple our fleet average eliminating our foreign oil dependence within fifteen years.

Fifth, we add tariffs until we are below a 2.5 percent trade deficit.

Sixth we fix our income tax system and begin by raising rates, eliminating loopholes and declaring capital gains and dividends personal income for the mega-rich. Then we go after corporations for loopholes, set asides, off-shoring and all other non economic BS they currently practice.

Without these measures we could become another Japan: years of deflation and a stalled economy but with 15% unemployment not 5.

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» Automotive regulation Posted by: BlueTigress
Bush's Plan to Fix Economy - $800 To Each Taxpayer
Posted by: colleenwhalen on Jan 23, 2008 4:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What planet is Bush on? Giving $800 to each taxpayer won't bring back the millions of American job which were outsourced to China, India, Malaysia, Vietnam and other nations. In 1992 I made $17.00 an hour working at an 800# call center, plus I had fantastic health insurance! That kind of job doesn't exist anymore. I have 10 years of college and went on an interview today for $10.00 an hour, no benefits.

Bush's plan does nothing for people living on Social Security, disability benefits or the very poorest on welfare. Does giving $800 to someone who works at Wal-Mart do anything except temporarily give them a bit of money to pay for some bills? Once that $800 is spent we are still going to be in the same mess.

Namely, America is a debtor nation who owns trillions to Saudi and China financiers. Since Bush ran through the billions in surplus he inheirited from the Clinton Adminsitration upon coming into office - Bush has been running up the biggest national deficit in the history of the nation. WIth a treasury that is bankrput, the only way we can pay for the war in Iraq is borrowing huge sums of money from Saudi bankers and financiers from China.

No wonder American can't do anything about Saudi human rights abuse and China selling us toxic dog food and kids toys with lead....you can't exactly play hardball with your banker you owe trillions in debt to!

Best thing we can do to help fix our economy would be to immediately pull out of Iraq. We are hemorraging money with our escalating war debt. Ending the Iraq war won't completely fix our economy, but at least it would be a start.

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» Thank you Clinton Posted by: carbon-based
» RE: Thank you Clinton'(s) Posted by: gazooks
WOW! Another stunner! Thank you Barbara.
Posted by: GarrisonPayneLeonard38H on Jan 23, 2008 6:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ever since the Finance sector diverged from our Manufacturing sector -- about a century ago -- then began to shred Industry with profit-taking and investment scams, Finance has floated free of a real-world base. It has developed its own unique bubble of avarice.

Since the 1980s, Finance has become a business of ever-less-substantial investment fictions, with zero-asset companies debuting to wildly optimistic IPOs. Finance has written and rewritten its own rules, orbiting further from sanity and practicality on every swing, and has become a pursuit solely of, by, and for itself.

Finance now resembles nothing so much as it resembles a self-obsessed amoral child. Finance needs a Parent. That parent must be us, if we care at all about our country.

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» Finance's parent Posted by: BlueTigress
Who says our gov't wants to stimulate the economy?
Posted by: Bic Pentameter on Jan 23, 2008 6:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why do you think lower income people won't see a dime of the so-called stimulus? Our government wants to stimulate investment, and the hope is that improving numbers on Wall Street will hold off widespread selling.

Just as in 1929, sell orders for 10% or 20% of the wealth-on-paper that portfolios purport to represent will bankrupt lots of institutions.

The movers and shakers - most notoriously hedge fund managers - have partied most of the money away. We can't take a chance that average investors will want their money.

That's what the stimulus package seeks to avert.

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It isn't going to work
Posted by: GPFrank on Jan 23, 2008 6:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A clitoris disconnected to the nervous system and brain isn't going to work. Most of Wall Street is now based on buying someone else's business or else finding a shelter outside the country. Hedge funds bat huge companies back and forth like a shuttlecock. Every time something gets shuttled someone's stock goes up. That's all there is to it. How low can the prime rate go? Will they eventually pay these people to borrow money? I mean if they don't pay taxes at all how are you going to cut their taxes?

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Wall Street had lost its way!!
Posted by: xvictor on Jan 23, 2008 7:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There was a time when the business of Wall Street was solely raising cash for upstart companies and those industries needing more cash for infrastructure improvements. And it was good at that. But over the last few decades or so, Wall Street became its own "nation" and used the rest of the country as its own gambling den, enriching only a relative few. And those who became wealthy were rich to begin with.

I saw a program on the history channel about Wall Street and was astonished to learn that it seemed a whole lot different from reality.

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I know a two step solution to our depression
Posted by: witchjug on Jan 23, 2008 7:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The economic one that is. This is not my idea but rather that of Steve Pizzio of newsforreal.com - - -

Step 1 roll back the Bush tax cuts for the top 1%
Step 2 reduce payroll tax for low and middle income households for the same amount as received from completing step 1

Pretty straight forward really, don't cut me a one time check, make all my paychecks bigger. Oh yeah, and if you want our economy to really zing alone, stop funding the Iraq clusterfuck and sue all those war profiting contractors for misplacing our children’s financial future.

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Redolent language
Posted by: fifthworld on Jan 23, 2008 8:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm glad Barb E. took up the sexual imagery, the fetishism, but she really could have jumped on it a bit more, and hit one out of the ballpark. "Stimulus package"? Why didn't she mention that? Or was I supposed to just get it.

Our economic metaphors are often reflective of our war culture/language: full of thrusts and spikes, but (fortunately, necessarily, if you ask me) plenty of plunges and plummetings, sharp falls, drops and flaccid states. And don't forget stag-flation. I wonder what that really is?!

In fact, if we're going to hit bottom and decide collectively to reorganize economic life for human survival, bring on the limpness. It doesn't mean fatal impotence, just nature taking its course for a while. You know, due to extended emotional and mental conflict, not to mention moral and ecological. Maybe this is in fact an opportunity to mount, as it were?! Alright, enough with the word play. But one last thought, what would Reagan do? What would Denny Hastert or Larry Craig say? Or Kennedy? "The working poor just need more sex." Over and out.

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» Uh Posted by: Joshua Holland
» "Go F**k yourselves!" Posted by: Cathyc
» RE: Indeed Posted by: fifthworld
Let's just be honest with each other...
Posted by: lexicon on Jan 23, 2008 8:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The REAL PURPOSE of any economic stimulus package, and for the Fed rate cut, was because some folks got stuck on the wrong side of the gate, and they need to hold it open for a few weeks to let them "adjust" their positions, before the economy is allowed to dump.

I mean, it really doesn't take a rocket scientist any more to figure out how this game is played. Seven years of flatlined employment and wages, with rather good "productivity" gains during that time, point to the divorce of the financial economy from the reality of people's lives, and to it being based on something entirely different.

Because the whole mirage is denominated in our currency, it means that we (the little people) end up "participating" whether we like it or not, but we aren't part of the economy that represents expanding wealth.

The problem is, that wealth IS a mirage, until it is fixed in something real. That "fixing in the real" is what happens when economic downturns occur.

One thing to ponder...a little "hidden truth" in the statistics of US incomes. When it is quoted that the top 1 percent of households have 50% of the income, and that the bottom 20 percent of the households have 1 percent of the income, it is just another way of saying that the bottom 20 percent of the population...some 65 million people...AREN'T actually IN THE ECONOMY. They DON'T MATTER in today's "economy".

lexicon

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ClitEcon
Posted by: progressive farmer ME on Jan 23, 2008 8:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
God, Barb, whether you're engaged or engorged, you've hit another homerun without(?) steroids.
And what a lovely bevy of comments!
I think I'll write you in in November.
nels wight,superannuated (CLASSMATE jackie Bouvier,GWU'53) DC refugee in Belfast, Maine

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Wrong analogy
Posted by: ReallyBearish on Jan 23, 2008 8:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A better analogy would have been to give alcohol to a drunk to cure a hangover. We don't need cheaper money. Credit was pretty cheap last week before the big cuts. If you use REAL interest rates, short term interest is already in negative figures.

Credit is expanding nicely and has been for years. Because of low interest rates, savings have gone negative and borrowers have been on a borrowing binge like a drunk. Making credit cheaper will cause still more borrowing and less savings.

We don't need more credit. We need to clear the past debt binge out of the economy. That isn't going to happen pain free, but it's going to happen one way or another. An economic depression is going to happen. You can't stop it.

The Fed seems to want a hyperinflationary depression rather than a deflationary depression. That's because the rich are in a much better position to excape hyperinflation than the rest of the population. The last deflationary depression destroyed much of the new rich and turned out to be one of the most income and assets leveling event in US history. We can't have that. Better to destroy the currency and the middle class in one fell swoop.

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Just copping a feel
Posted by: Andrew_S on Jan 23, 2008 10:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I fear the commentary is far off the mark, since we have what is in effect a cleptocracy.
How do I know this, simple, anyone with any fiscal sense should read state CAFR, (CAFR.COM, CAFR1.COM) publications. Also of those applicable counties large enough to qualify as large revenue stream earners.

While on the face these reports appear benign, to the lay who simply see yawn material. The reading hides a different fiscal agenda. Offering a truly descriptive but scary view of US executive corporate policy.

The issue really comes down to how much bureacracy Americans can afford. Those so endeared and discerning enough to read the reports correctly will see the state above all others makes a fortune in global derivatives, with what used to be our money and public assets. As for freedom of choices, as so called fabled independent states why not politically use public policy hedonism with a gynocentric theme to usurp the economy. Hitler, Stalin and mussolini did it. Works for me, I think Gramsci had a version of the current policy that has parady and compatible. Especially if we consider the plague of Huey Long'olites who make merry at everybody's expense, particularly our most vulnerable.

So let us guess who is heavily invested in the Golden cockrel that no longer wears underwear and is about to come home.

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Income tax cuts for the middle class
Posted by: militaryhater on Jan 23, 2008 12:07 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here is the best equation:

Let the middle class pay only 17% income tax like the rich get to have, and let the rich pay 28%-30% like the middle class have to. That seems fair to me. Also raise the income tax cap from $97,000 of a person's income to maybe $150,000. This will help Social Security.

Also, if the two top Democratic candidates think we should have the same health coverage as they do, well, how about making employers, by a new law, give us all COLA raises, every year, like the men and women and Congress get every year. We should be able to keep up with inflation just like them. Why should they get COLA raises on top of their raises and the rest of us can't?

I say...17% income tax for middle class and COLA raises would help Americans survive in the current economy. That should give us enough money to live on!

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Just let it happen
Posted by: Merum on Jan 23, 2008 1:45 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That's right, that's what I said. Any "stimulus" package, whether directed at rich or poor, will do little to nothing to solve the problem, it will only prolong the slide. Any money that is given to the rich will just go into their coffers. Any money given to the poor will be spent, sure. However, it will be largely spent on paying utility bills and other such expenses, and end up directly in the hands of the rich again. What little doesn't go towards making ends meet will buy more goods made in China, enriching them, but not creating any meaningful growth in American jobs.

The party is over, and it's time for the hangover. Just like yanking off a band-aid, it's best just to get it over with.

It's painful for me to say these things, because I dislike the suffering that working people go through as much as your average progressive, if not more. I've been there. I'm there now, unemployed and looking for work, wondering where the next electric bill will be paid from, wondering if I'll have enough gas to get to the next interview, afraid of getting sick because whoops, my health insurance disappeared with my layoff notice.

However, I think it's what is necessary to wake people up in this country. I think that once the cable is shut off, once the lights are out, once there's no more American Idol to anesthetize the brain, maybe, just maybe, people will pick their heads up and notice just how they're being fucked by that 1%. Maybe they will decide to do something about it, instead of putting four more years of the same bullshit (Clinton/Obama included here) back into the White House and onto Capitol Hill.

It's hard medicine, but sometimes you just have to pinch your nose and take it.

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» You got your finger on it, baby Posted by: fifthworld
Roll back credit card interest rates
Posted by: harpy on Jan 23, 2008 1:56 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You've got people that charged items when their credit card rate was supposed to be 8 or 10%. Then suddenly the card company raises rates to 25% or up to 30% for no other reason than that they can get away with it. They will do it even if you have no late payments, no missed payments, or even no over-limits. Your payment increases, with less of it going to principal. But they get a break on their interest rate - which they won't pass on to you! Companies like Bank of America buy companies they know are going under, then pass the loss on to you to make up through increased interest.

Roll back those interest rates for consumers and put money back in the consumers' hands where it will go back into the economy. Those little "rebates" are on the credit card and won't amount to anything except for the companies that are getting the real help.

Help the consumer for a change!

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She means EFFLUENT - not Affluent!
Posted by: Cathyc on Jan 23, 2008 2:00 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"any misfortune can be re-jiggered to the advantage of the affluent."

Barbara Ehrenreich, is not much different than one who was conditioned to accept systematic oppression / psychological abuse from a very early age, in that she uses the same forked-tongue language of her schizoid Masters!

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The "sinking middle-class"
Posted by: Cathyc on Jan 23, 2008 2:53 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Barbara Ehrenreich:-

But that was before we got polarized into the rich, the poor, and the sinking middle class

There is no middle class in a society that is controlled by deranged control-freaks! Such a concept is purely illusory.

America is not a democratic culture, it never was. Therefore, the so-called Middle Class are mere imitations of those in power, those who actually control the social order = Wall Street!

America, like all systems built on rape and violence, is a Hierarchy - like any other RELIGIOUS (psychotc) system.

It is POTENTIALLY human, but it is NOT humane!

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Snide
Posted by: gdsnide on Jan 23, 2008 5:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hey, I just had an idea.Strange for me ha
Just take all the BILLIONS we are pouring into IRAQ & spend it in the US
Oh heck, I forgot about about the Military Industrial Complex & Haliburton Stock doubing in price since the IRAQ fiasco.

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fractional reserve banking as economic parasitism
Posted by: vzn on Jan 23, 2008 6:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
learn about why ron paul suggests the basic
economic infrastructure is flawed at the roots.
a paper I wrote called "fractional reserve banking as economic
parasitism"

endorsed by two phd economists. printed in nexus
magazine, 60k world circulation. #1 top downloaded
economics paper. used by economics
teacher in australia as standard classroom material.

more info on request.


"fractional reserve banking as economic parasitism"



recent supporting material:



The Shock Doctrine: Naomi Klein on the Rise of Disaster Capitalism


Confessions of an Economic Hit Man: How the U.S. Uses Globalization to Cheat Poor Countries Out of Trillions


John Perkins on "The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals, and the Truth about Global Corruption"


Video, senator/pres candidate Dennis Kucinich at last years 2005 Monetary Reform Conference


money as debt video by Grignon

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Not Clitoral Economics..
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on Jan 23, 2008 9:19 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Vaginanomics..!

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Our leaders have as much hope of reaching a solution...
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Jan 24, 2008 10:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
as they do of finding the clitoris.

plur

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2 step solution
Posted by: sanlucalady on Jan 24, 2008 1:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Simplication threatens job security for voodoo economists.
This is a brilliant solution and a place to start...vote with our dollars, and organize as well as the corporations and invest in our like minded brethern for the long term....
Civil Disobedience is our obligation not our option if we are to change the tide and remain a democracy in the USA. THIS is the great debate.

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Rethinking Wall Street
Posted by: sanlucalady on Jan 24, 2008 2:10 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Maybe it's time for a power shift anyway.
Wall Street won't stop investing, but they may be forced to change if we shift our buying habits.
What about substituting alternative energy companies for the defense contractors.
What about small business loans for new innovation for food supply instead of industrial farming. That would be a start.

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The "real" economy and the "financial" economy
Posted by: racje on Jan 27, 2008 8:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One small change that could make a difference in public discourse: every time you read, speak or write about what economists call "the economy," substitute "the financial economy," and raise a question about what's going on in the real economy, "life 'on the ground,' where jobs and wages and the price of Special K are paramount."

Americans and our public media have bought the illusion that the financial economy is a real object in our world, more than a house of accounting cards. If we can place "the financial economy" in the realm of illusory constructs, we can redirect our attention to "the real economy," to our real daily lives and what we actually need for life.

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