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Bitter? You Should Be!

By Nicholas von Hoffman, The Nation. Posted April 17, 2008.


Those who aren't bitter and/or angry at this point are simply not paying attention.

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Last week Barack Obama, destiny's tot, suggested blue-collar Americans are feeling bitter about their financial condition, which has been on a bit of a decline during the last five, ten, fifteen, twenty years or so. Rival politicians immediately pounced and they've been whaling on him ever since.

How dare Obama suggest people are bitter? Americans are not bitter! Americans are happy, proud, peppy, content and optimistic!

Maybe. But if millions of them are not bitter and/or angry at this point, there is probably something wrong with them.

In his new book, The Big Squeeze: Tough Times for the American Worker, Steven Greenhouse of the New York Times writes, "Since 1979, hourly earnings for 80 percent of American workers (those in private-sector, non-supervisory jobs) have risen by just 1, after inflation. For male workers, the average hourly wage actually slid by 5 percent since 1979.... the nation's economic pie is growing, but corporations by and large have not given their workers a bigger piece." A 1 percent raise in almost thirty years? Still not bitter?

And who is getting ever larger chunks of pie? The Wall Street Journal has isolated some of the most energetic pie pigs: "the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans earned 21.2 percent of all income in 2005, according to new data from the Internal Revenue Service. That is up sharply from 19 percent in 2004, and surpasses the previous high of 20.8 percent set in 2000, at the peak of the previous bull market in stocks. The bottom 50 percent earned 12.8 percent of all income, down from 13.4 percent in 2004 and a bit less than their 13 percent share in 2000." You can be sure that a substantial portion of the bottom half of the population is living in small towns similar to the ones in which Obama sniffed out a degree of bitterness.

Even the 1 percent increase in hourly wages over the past generation or so is illusory. During the same period, unavoidable expenses -- such as medical insurance, child care and transportation -- have expanded explosively. Whatever progress that's been made in living a little better has been achieved by working a lot harder and a lot longer.

"In a survey by the Families and Work Institute," Greenhouse writes, "two-thirds of employed parents responded that they didn't have enough time with their kids and just under two-thirds said they didn't have enough time with their spouses. The typical American worker toils 1,804 hours a year, 135 hours more per year than the typical British worker, 240 hours more than the average French worker, and 370 hours (or nine full-time weeks) more than the average German worker. No one in the world's advanced economies works more."

Compared to workers in other countries, where the standard of living is as high or higher than it is in the United States, Americans, with fewer and shorter vacations, are worked like donkeys. Politicians repeatedly insist on telling the voters that America is the richest country in the world, which is a true enough statement but also provides little comfort to the massive population of under-appreciated workers, in small towns and big cities, who don't get their share.

Every election season, candidates pretend to tear up as they assure millions of Americans who are working for less -- or not at all -- with the phrase the Clintons made famous:"I feel your pain." That empty empathy will get you a bag of groceries in the basement of that church across town.

This year, the politicians are back with their speeches about how they are going to arrange for vocational classes so the voters will be able to compete in the twenty-first century. The first decade of the twenty-first century is already almost over. Time to drop that line, lest the small-town people turn bitter.

Obama is getting drubbed for saying that people, in their bitterness, are looking to God and their guns. If you had to choose who to go to for economic assistance, Hillary or God, who would you be clinging to? As for the guns, American politicians, with their frequently broken promises, are just lucky they aren't picking birdshot out of their derriƩres.


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See more stories tagged with: economy, obama, bittergate

Nicholas Von Hoffman is a columnist for the New York Observer and is the author, most recently, of "Hoax" (Nation Books, 2004).

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View:
Nobody reading Alternet is bitter?
Posted by: WhatNow? on Apr 17, 2008 9:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It must be nice not to be bitter. I wouldn't say I am bitter. It's not a word I use much if at all. But I am disappointed, disgusted, angered, sick, unsatisified, and sad about what big business, the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government have done to the world and the majority of it's people. So maybe if I were just bitter, I might be a little happier than I actually am. When you've been cheated, deceived, and told lies constantly and you're not bitter, you're a fool!

"Those who aren't bitter and/or angry at this point are simply not paying attention."

There's also a lot of suckers and people who are comfortable enough to not care.

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Bitter--Heck, yes!
Posted by: kabac55 on Apr 17, 2008 9:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While I don't live in rural PA or have a gun, I am bitter about the American economy. The Bush administration threw our country into bankruptcy for a war in Iraq promoted by lies based upon fear. They have systematically eroded our constitutional rights, social programs and plundered our and other countries' natural resources. They have made the world a great deal less safe for us all.

Still I am fairly lucky--with a full-time job with benefits such as health insurance & retirement, but I am furious at the unraveling of what was once the greatest and richest country in the world. The opportunities I have had, my nieces and nephew will not.

Just think of what good use that $1000+/month/US citizen being spent in Iraq or lining the portfolios of the obscenely wealthy could do. Economic stimulus packages aren't going to do much other than make me picture Dubya in a Marie Antoinette costume and cowboy boots saying "lettum eat cake".

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» RE: Bitter--Heck, yes! Posted by: peacefullaim
The economic desert
Posted by: Gegner on Apr 17, 2008 9:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
continues to grow, a problem that cannot and will not be solved via the 'ballot box'.

The denizens of this 'broken land' have but one option open to them, they must unite to put an end to the kind of exploitation that our elected officials routinely ignore.

Our patriot forefathers recognized that no one was going to 'rescue' them and acted accordingly, the time has come for us to do likewise.

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» RE: The economic desert Posted by: steamie
We'll really be bitter
Posted by: jzelensk on Apr 17, 2008 9:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...when McCain becomes president. The 8 years of Bush have been devastating, but adding another 4 years compounds and escalates things. Unless the Democrats get veto-proof majorities (and yet even then...), the American people are about to sign our death knell as a nation.

The economy, our foreign debt (to our new masters - the "Sovereign Wealth Funds" of China, Saudi, etc.), our weary soldiers, a fascist Supreme Court, the final chapter in corporate consolidation of power over our lives and the government not to mention the media.

Serfdom here we come!

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» how long Posted by: meetmeineleusis
bitter CHUMPS is what we are
Posted by: jiclemens on Apr 17, 2008 9:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How much "let them eat cake" are we supposed to listen to? What will it take to start a revolution? You're right, they should be worried about all those guns out there.

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Alternet Guilty of Main Stream Reporting
Posted by: maggzilla on Apr 17, 2008 10:05 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Shame on Alternet to use a serious issue to defend a mistake by the arrogant Barack Obama. The man doesn't get it and neither do his supporters.

It's not about saying people are bitter, it's about not understanding where they are coming from or having a plan to help them. People who cheat to get themselves nice things like under priced million dollar homes rarely remember from where they came.

Alternet's ridiculous defense of Obama's statement proves that it is as partisan as Fox News. Just report the news and leave the favoritism drama for the networks.

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We did it to ourselves so why be bitter?
Posted by: riotoustanpdx on Apr 17, 2008 2:54 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the 1980s we celebrated Greed as the new American Standard. We have gone downhill from there.

History tells us, however, that CAPITAL is created by work. As soon as we converted our economy to a service of pleasure, and to a paperwork and paper-value standard, creating an unlimited amount of artificial value but little growth in the way of substantial assets that back up the value . . . we doomed ourselves.

Why be bitter at the politicians that we have elected to office since the death of Robert Kennedy? Why be bitter at them, since we have expected and demanded no leadership or courage of them since 1968?

We have acted like insatiable children and they have treated us this way, so why be bitter?

Disingenuous, I say.

So, now we know that Obama is another who would suck up to the insatiable greed in us. We know this because he boldly points the finger at "Them" who have made the mainstream (assumed) "victims" "bitter" through changes in the economy that exploit the spoiled children who want more for little effort.

Discern the difference between cynicism and empathy; an exploiting opportunist has no empathy.

We can HOPE for CHANGE, but it is really the work-produces-capital (value-added) "ethic" that is required as the starting point. This means that it has always been up to the individual, not the politicians.

If you are bitter, go look in the mirror and ask yourself some basic questions, like What have I done to help prevent dependency on the Big Corporate Machine from dominating the lives of my neighbors, my family or my friends? (Voting, obviously, is worth nothing)

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BITTER, YOU BET
Posted by: mindtrvlr on Apr 17, 2008 10:40 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
AND NOW WE HAVE ONLY TWO LOSERS AND A CANDIDATE THAT NO ONE SEEMS TO LIKE. I RATHER HAVE HILLARY, THAN A TERRORIST OR A ALZHEIMER PATIENT.

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» Than a terrorist? Posted by: ReallyBearish
» RE: BITTER, YOU BET Posted by: EinMD
» RE: BITTER, YOU BET Posted by: riotoustanpdx
Loud Dobbs Audience is BITTER! 4.15.08
Posted by: Phred42 on Apr 19, 2008 6:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lou Dobbs Nightly poll 4.15.08 BACKFIRES!

Which of these Best Describes your Attitude as an American Citizen?
- Partisan & Pitiful
- Bitter & Angry
- Independent & Proud


Dobbs took every opportunity during the show to escalate and legitimize the attack on Obama for his 'Bitter" statement.

I Missed the end of the show so I don't know if Dobbs aired the results - sometimes he doesn't for various reasons

Here are the Results - KEEP IN MIND THAT THIS IS DOBBS' Audience! Taken from Dobbs Website immediately after the show.

Which of these Best Describes your Attitude as an American Citizen?
- Partisan & Pitiful.....2% (151)
- Bitter & Angry........66% (5030)
- Independent & Proud...32% (2493)

Sorry Lou - Your Viewers are Bitter and apparently WITH Obama - now cut the crap!
:rofl:


pS I have a screen print of the website to prove these numbers but I don't have the authority to post it here.

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CommonDreamer
Posted by: CommonDreamer on Apr 19, 2008 11:51 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember, they outlawed anger way back when...say, Howard Dean got angry...and there was a senseless uproar. Since then, the corportacized citizenry has been having their Soma (i-Pods smashed up to their ears)...not listening...just consuming like good little sheep...not paying attention...and certainly not getting angry as any mentally healthy society would do.

It's just what the right wing wanted - rampant, mindless consumerism and keeping up with the Jones mentality, while at the same time the plutocrats engineered subprime wages that could never keep up with the inflation of assets by the tax-cut enabled wealthiest constiutents.

This article astutely cites the fact that we work longer and harder than most European nations and yet our standard of living has gone down, thanks bogus economic asset-inflationary policies, extremely regressive tax policies, mass consumerism, lack of savings, and lack of education in simple finance.

Finally, why, since most men and women are in the outside workforce now (and hardly anyone one is in the "inside" or home workforce anymore)...why are we hewing to an old, outdated schedule that does not take the needs of families into consideration? This is not a women's issue...it is a family issue. For those with family values in mind, I would suggest you question the corporations as to why 2 weeks off is enough to get anything done in today's extremely busy world, and for that matter, it's certainly not enough time off from which to come back to work refreshed and mentally healthy. Sick leave? Many times only the very fortunate - who have nannies at home along with their maids - who do not need it get it (read CEOs and upper management). Sometimes it's just called PTO - Personal Time Off - a whopping 13 days off in a single year to deal with sickness, broken down cars, human problems, childcare, and all of the other important things in human life that the corporatocracy has conveniently been let off the hook about.

This is why you will almost certainly never meet a French, Spanish or German person who wants to immigrate here....although Wall Street would like to convince you that European lifestyles are bad. Europe is only bad if you're incomparably greedy and you don't care about a healthy society.

The consumer who is too busy enriching Wall Street while he sinks into debt buying another large screen TV...(more Soma so he doesn't have to think about real issues)...are the ones who enabled this travesty. That consumer/worker didn't demand of corporations more time off to be with his/her children or perhaps for self renewal...when in reality, we should not be working more than 4 days a week (all of us). In an incredibly complicated and stressful world (of all corporation's own making), it is not necessary to have 40 hour weeks anymore because we now have both sexes working mostly, when in the past we usually only had men working.

I am tired of hearing about the GNP as if it were the only hallmark of success. We must demand other benchmarks than this, such as a healthy, rested society with upward mobility and happiness - and moral values that include generosity, not greed and selfishness. For now we hear only on TV about Wall Street and what's good for it...not what's good for families.

Someday, real anger might take hold (it seems to be starting, finally)...and real mental health and morals might come back to society, when we get angry enough to see that this society is run by and for the plutocrats whose sole motivation is getting more money, not enriching society as a whole.

Anger and activism must come back to America to save it. Thank you for this great article.

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» RE: CommonDreamer Posted by: steamie
» RE: CommonDreamer Posted by: CommonDreamer
» RE: CommonDreamer Posted by: riotoustanpdx
» RE: CommonDreamer Posted by: LMNOP
» RE: CommonDreamer Posted by: LavenderBlue
» RE: CommonDreamer Posted by: CommonDreamer
» RE: CommonDreamer Posted by: CommonDreamer
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