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Tom Rinaldo

(22,912 posts)
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 11:38 AM Mar 2013

This Middle Class Amnesia Won’t Last Much Longer

In these enduring economic hard times, class consciousness in a lagging indicator that most Americans are still loath to recognize. Wall Street C.E.O.s lend their support to campaigns for sweeping “entitlement reforms” for wage earners and the elderly, but pocket escalating bonuses and generous benefit packages for themselves. Repeatedly Americans are warned that if we don’t embrace prudent national austerity now, the United States of the future will become like Greece today. But for the chronically unemployed, underemployed, over worked and underpaid, there is no need to wait; the American Greece has already arrived. The “corrective course” that the elites plot for America’s future consigns many of us to a grimmer reality today. There is a fundamental disconnect in America that centers on class. We face different economic worlds. We don’t all live in the same America.

America’s self conscious socioeconomic landscape is still lit by the afterglow of the late 20th Century, when Americans swore allegiance to an elastic middle class, a one size fits all middle class big enough to hold virtually us all, Sure some were better off than others but everyone, or so it seemed at the time to most, could readily avail ourselves of a few material comforts and still look forward to the promise of a poverty free retirement. Back then the wealthy and poor bracketed the rest of us as “average Americans” by contrast, America was defined by its middle class, thereby blurring the harsh lines that separate privilege from exploitation.

Those stark divides never vanished; they just became hard to focus on. America was never a classless society. Even in the best of 20th century times a few of us were filthy rich while many of us were dirt poor, but the middle class grew to mythic proportions back then. Half of the poor identified themselves as “lower middle class” while half of the wealthy called themselves “upper middle class”. Those were the days when janitors morphed into sanitary supervisors with no one changing uniforms, or pay. Unions were still strong but growing weaker. Having already secured 40 hour work weeks, true living wages, safer working conditions, health benefits and retirement packages for tens of millions of American workers, what real use were they of anymore? The working class never shrank, but that identification slowly faded, absorbed into the amorphous American description of “the middle class’.

Dreams die slowly, and Americans are reluctant to let go of our dream of an expanding and ever more affluent middle class where almost all of us belong. Data that indicates otherwise is discreetly compartmentalized away from our aspirations, in special nerd and wonk files where they are unlikely to disturb our self image of ourselves. But there comes a time when walls start to crumble, when the state of denial becomes undeniable, and that time has arrived. Americans had long taken it as a matter of faith that each succeeding generation would live longer than its parents, receive a better education, find more gainful employment, and enjoy a less stressful retirement as our nation as a whole moved forward in shared prosperity. That dream is already succumbing; the one of the mythical all encompassing and ever benevolent middle class follows close at its heels.

These are epic sea changes that don’t happen over night. There first is a period of churning as some waves advance while others seemingly retreat. But the turning point in hind sight leaves a high tide mark on the shore, often seen best from a perspective gained by distance, or in the case of us humans, by pain. The day the future grew dimmer was that turning point for most Americans. The return of class consciousness is next.

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This Middle Class Amnesia Won’t Last Much Longer (Original Post) Tom Rinaldo Mar 2013 OP
K&R Teamster Jeff Mar 2013 #1
K&R nt abelenkpe Mar 2013 #2
We need to capture, then keep the national conversation. namaste2 Mar 2013 #3
This was in a way inspired by a conversation I once had with my one really wealthy friend Tom Rinaldo Mar 2013 #6
Here is how they are dismantling what is left of the middle class jobs in Wisconsin: midnight Mar 2013 #4
This is the real meaning of the attack on "entitlements" starroute Mar 2013 #5
"Yes, we are entitled, just by being human." Yes. To a fair return on our labor at least. Tom Rinaldo Mar 2013 #7
Maybe if we used the work "endowments" instead bigbrother05 Mar 2013 #13
K&R and thankyou olddots Mar 2013 #8
well, we better hurry up corkhead Mar 2013 #9
Believe this line or not: 99Forever Mar 2013 #10
1+ Lifelong Protester Mar 2013 #16
Nice Post, Tom... KoKo Mar 2013 #11
No we aren't there yet, but I believe the tide is inevitably turning Tom Rinaldo Mar 2013 #20
The Greek crisis was caused by tax avoidance by the rich & corps bigbrother05 Mar 2013 #12
And shortly before the Ship finally sinks... Tom Rinaldo Mar 2013 #23
For your listening pleasure kelliekat44 Mar 2013 #14
a big K & R Lifelong Protester Mar 2013 #15
The middle class in America as such never really existed in the first place Spider Jerusalem Mar 2013 #17
I essentially agree Tom Rinaldo Mar 2013 #21
There's no logical reason for this amnesia, but for the effect of social issues on voter's minds. Populist_Prole Mar 2013 #18
They would be by now. Tom Rinaldo Mar 2013 #22
Quite right. Sad to see reality such a lagging indicator Populist_Prole Mar 2013 #25
K&R. But is it only Wall Street CEOs and not politicians who have been involved with this? AnotherMcIntosh Mar 2013 #19
Indeed...the CREW WHO BROKE THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM... KoKo Mar 2013 #26
k&r... spanone Mar 2013 #24

namaste2

(74 posts)
3. We need to capture, then keep the national conversation.
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 12:28 PM
Mar 2013

All the time we spend responding to "austerity" and leaving debt to our kids and grandkids needs to be refocused on the reality that when we have a strong middle class we have a strong economy. Anything that helps that helps our nation and we can pay our bills if we have employment and lose the tax loopholes for oil companies and such that make more profit in a quarter than the world has ever seen. They need a tax break so we can drop programs that feed the hungry and educuate our kids? REFOCUS the conversation! The smallest brains seem to have the biggest microphones!

Tom Rinaldo

(22,912 posts)
6. This was in a way inspired by a conversation I once had with my one really wealthy friend
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 12:50 PM
Mar 2013

He's from the corporate CEO world, and essentially is a moderate Republican who voted for Obama the first time with some reluctance but supported Romney in 2012. He raised the spector of the U.S. becoming another Greece some day if we don't reign in entitlements. I countered that it already is like living in Greece now for many of us. Once you have essentially lost all security in life and can't afford even the essentials of living, your personalo economy has already cratered. Scare talk about the future is meaningless, you must vote your interests now. He saw that logic and concluded that he hoped only a small minority of Americans fit that description, or we wouldn't be able to make the painful changes needed to protect our economic future. He was pretty blind about seeing that he was focused on the future of his own class and others who are relatively well off now only.

midnight

(26,624 posts)
4. Here is how they are dismantling what is left of the middle class jobs in Wisconsin:
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 12:32 PM
Mar 2013

Special Session Assembly Bill 11 was announced to the public on February 11th and would be officially introduced on February 15th. The bill was eventually signed into law by Governor Walker on March 11th as Act 10.

“It’s working, pure and simple,” said Healy. “In October, we announced that the savings to state and local governments has topped $2 billion and the total continues to grow. Act 10 gave government at all levels the tools they need to rein in costs while continuing to provide the same level of service. While states like Illinois are increasing taxes, laying off teachers and cutting services, Wisconsin continues to be an example of how to budget responsibly.

AFPF and MacIver joined forces in 2011 to create the “It’s Working” project. The effort educated the public on the benefits of Act 10 through a series of town halls, social media and paid advertising.

For more information, or to interview David Fladeboe, call (414) 559-0281.

Americans for Prosperity Foundation (AFP Foundation) is a nationwide organization of citizen-leaders committed to advancing every individual’s right to economic freedom and opportunity. AFP Foundation believes reducing the size and intrusiveness of government is the best way to promote individual productivity and prosperity for all Americans. AFP Foundation educates and engages citizens to support restraining state and federal government growth and returning government to its constitutional limits. AFP Foundation is more than 1.9 million activists strong, with citizen-leaders in all 50 states. AFP Foundation has 34 state chapters and affiliates. For more information, visit http://www.americansforprosperityfoundation.org


http://wispolitics.com/index.iml?Article=289593

starroute

(12,977 posts)
5. This is the real meaning of the attack on "entitlements"
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 12:49 PM
Mar 2013

It's not just about Social Security and Medicare. It's about the middle class expectation that all Americans were entitled to a decent standard of living -- encompassing food, shelter, health care, education, a reasonable allocation for recreation and minor luxuries, and a dignified retirement -- and that it was the job of the government to make those things possible.

Right now, the message coming through loud and clear is that nobody is "entitled" to any of those things -- that if you bust your ass for 60 hours a week, you might "earn" some of them, and that the rest were never more than an illusion sold by liberal candidates out to attract voters by giving them free stuff.

That's what we have to push back against. That's where we have to take a stand and argue that we have an unalienable right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" -- which includes the necessities for survival, freedom from corporate tyranny, and something left over for self-realization.

If we don't do that now, we're screwed forever. And it starts by saying, "Yes, we are entitled, just by being human."

Tom Rinaldo

(22,912 posts)
7. "Yes, we are entitled, just by being human." Yes. To a fair return on our labor at least.
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 12:52 PM
Mar 2013

Much more entitled than those who are born into wealth and think they own the world as a result.

bigbrother05

(5,995 posts)
13. Maybe if we used the work "endowments" instead
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 01:27 PM
Mar 2013

After all, the Declaration states the we are "endowed by our creator" with inalienable rights. The upper class ought to be familiar with endowments and who would argue with our creator?

The real problem is calling them something other what they really are, earned benefits. We either worked and paid for them directly ourselves or our families/friends/communities contributed collectively to share the cost of providing for our neighbors.

corkhead

(6,119 posts)
9. well, we better hurry up
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 01:06 PM
Mar 2013

Today's "Job Creators" have no qualms about destroying the environment to suit their ends and have created a race to the bottom for wages under the banner of "Free Trade"

The Wall Street's Robber Barons want "entitlement reform", for the purpose of creating a huge transfer of wealth into their own pockets under the name of "privatization"


Both of them are hoarding and scooping money up for themselves like there is no tomorrow; perhaps they think they will need it for the armed guarded geo-bubble they and their spawn will need to live in because of the destruction of the planet and society they have caused.


99Forever

(14,524 posts)
10. Believe this line or not:
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 01:07 PM
Mar 2013
"But for the chronically unemployed, underemployed, over worked and underpaid, there is no need to wait; the American Greece has already arrived."

It is the harsh reality that this huge inequality gap and the willfully blind ignoring of what it is doing to us will either be effectively addressed or it will trigger the end of life in America as you know it. The anger and desperation will boil to the surface and no amount feel good propaganda bullshit will stop it. The clock is ticking.

KoKo

(84,711 posts)
11. Nice Post, Tom...
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 01:14 PM
Mar 2013

Don't think we are there yet...but, there are stirrings. Working against the enormous power of the Military/Industrial/Wall St./Banking/Media Empire has proven to be a "start and stop" ...one step forward--three steps back process so far.


But, I'm trying to be hopeful that now that evidence of the enormity of the problem of the loss of the Middle Class in America is being identified then the work can begin to try to regain what we lost resulting in more equality for all of us and not just the 1%.

Tom Rinaldo

(22,912 posts)
20. No we aren't there yet, but I believe the tide is inevitably turning
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 03:01 PM
Mar 2013

It is happening because the abstraction that is the fate of the "middle class" is becoming an increasingly tangible reality to millions of Americans, who themselves are close to millions more whose "luck" might not as yet have run out. The statistics have faces, the hardships are increasingly suffered by those we know, if they haven't visited us personally yet.

bigbrother05

(5,995 posts)
12. The Greek crisis was caused by tax avoidance by the rich & corps
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 01:16 PM
Mar 2013

The true lesson from Greece is that low taxes for the wealth and corporate welfare loop holes will destroy an economy. The "solutions" being imposed by the central banks only protect their own and will never repair their economy.

When the middle class realized that the game was fixed, they quit paying too and the bottom fell out very quickly. Why would you pay taxes when the shipping industry and its leaders were exempt? A text book case of the failure of trickle down theory.

Tom Rinaldo

(22,912 posts)
23. And shortly before the Ship finally sinks...
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 03:56 PM
Mar 2013

...the ultra rich pack their bags and move on to a new tax haven.

Lifelong Protester

(8,421 posts)
15. a big K & R
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 01:41 PM
Mar 2013

as Scarlett said, we need to quit talking nonsense about 'someone' being 'winnowed out' when it is US who are being 'winnowed out'. (I'm paraphrasing, but this was her conversation with Ashely who was more worried about keeping his honor and putting an historical perspective to the aftermath of the CW).

 

Spider Jerusalem

(21,786 posts)
17. The middle class in America as such never really existed in the first place
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 01:42 PM
Mar 2013

it was only ever a rebranding of the working class by politicians in order to kill that very class-consciousness you mention.

Tom Rinaldo

(22,912 posts)
21. I essentially agree
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 03:17 PM
Mar 2013

Whatever the classic original concept of the "middle class" was - shop keepers and professional service providers or whatever, it was once seen as a much smaller sliver of our total population. What happened is, due to the efforts of organized labor plus the overall prosperity immediately post WWII when America had almost no international competition that actually allowed for some "trickle down" to occur, for a period time the working class could aspire to earning enough to live a decent if still modest lifestyle. And most Americans began calling themselves middle class.

Populist_Prole

(5,364 posts)
18. There's no logical reason for this amnesia, but for the effect of social issues on voter's minds.
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 01:57 PM
Mar 2013

"God & Guns" and all that codswallop. Were it not for those letting these social issues dictate their voting behavior, the 1 percent would be buried under an avalanche.

Tom Rinaldo

(22,912 posts)
22. They would be by now.
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 03:35 PM
Mar 2013

It has definately slowed the reaction to the clas war waged on most of us. But part of it is a hangover also of nostalgia for former days before so much of the income was redistributed upward to the 1%. People are still reluctant to admit that those days will never come back without a really major fight.

Populist_Prole

(5,364 posts)
25. Quite right. Sad to see reality such a lagging indicator
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 06:27 PM
Mar 2013

On the plus side I'm glad I'm not the only one who feels this way, and it's good to come to this site and see so many people who "have their minds right" and employ critical thinking.

 

AnotherMcIntosh

(11,064 posts)
19. K&R. But is it only Wall Street CEOs and not politicians who have been involved with this?
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 02:42 PM
Mar 2013

And if politicians have been involved with this, are they only a numerical minority and only have big (R)'s after their names?

When a group of politicians collectively pull off one of the biggest cons in history to benefit the super rich (and themselves and related parties), we should give them credit for what they've done.

KoKo

(84,711 posts)
26. Indeed...the CREW WHO BROKE THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM...
Mon Mar 11, 2013, 09:37 PM
Mar 2013

The "Too Big to Fail....Too Big to Jail" Crowd. They deserve the credit.

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