Sunday, July 10, 2011

The People Speak

Last night I watched a DVD of The People Speak. It was long and I watched the scenes at the end that were shown as a bonus. I couldn’t stop watching...and, did I mention that it was long? To make a long story even longer, I didn’t get to bed until the wee hours of the morning...a departure for me since nothing holds my interest for more than a nanosecond these days.

As daylight peaked its head at around 5 o'clock this morning I was crawling into bed telling myself not to be surprised if I were wasted when I was supposed to be getting up.

It was well worth it! The People Speak is a must-see for any American. The video offers the viewer a compilation of Howard Zinn’s two best-selling books: A People’s History of the United States (first published in 1980). Today People’s History remains one of the best-selling history books in the United States. (Betcha can’t find it in Texas.) 

The film features the actual words (in letters, songs, poems, speeches, and manifestos) of rebels, dissenters, and visionaries from our past  and present. Dramatic moments are brought to life by a group of remarkable musicians and actors.

Visit The People Speak.com for details.

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   If there is no struggle,there is no progress. Power concedes
   nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.

                                                —Howard Zinn (1922–2010)
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I discovered I scream the same way whether I'm
about to be devoured by a great white shark
or if a piece of seaweed touches my foot.
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The Ideological Crisis of Western Capitalism

By Joseph E. Stiglitz,
Project Syndicate Op-Ed, July 10, 2011


Just a few years ago, a powerful ideology –- the belief in free and unfettered markets –- brought the world to the brink of ruin. Even in its hey-day, from the early 1980’s until 2007, American-style deregulated capitalism brought greater material well-being only to the very richest in the richest country of the world. Indeed, over the course of this ideology’s 30-year ascendance, most Americans saw their incomes decline or stagnate year after year.

Moreover, output growth in the United States was not economically sustainable. With so much of US national income going to so few, growth could continue only through consumption financed by a mounting pile of debt.

I was among those who hoped that, somehow, the financial crisis would teach Americans (and others) a lesson about the need for greater equality, stronger regulation, and a better balance between the market and government. Alas, that has not been the case. On the contrary, a resurgence of right-wing economics, driven, as always, by ideology and special interests, once again threatens the global economy -– or at least the economies of Europe and America, where these ideas continue to flourish.

In the US, this right-wing resurgence, whose adherents evidently seek to repeal the basic laws of math and economics, is threatening to force a default on the national debt. If Congress mandates expenditures that exceed revenues, there will be a deficit, and that deficit has to be financed. Rather than carefully balancing the benefits of each government expenditure program with the costs of raising taxes to finance those benefits, the right seeks to use a sledgehammer –- not allowing the national debt to increase forces expenditures to be limited to taxes.

This leaves open the question of which expenditures get priority –- and if expenditures to pay interest on the national debt do not, a default is inevitable. Moreover, to cut back expenditures now, in the midst of an ongoing crisis brought on by free-market ideology, would inevitably simply prolong the downturn.

A decade ago, in the midst of an economic boom, the US faced a surplus so large that it threatened to eliminate the national debt. Unaffordable tax cuts and wars, a major recession, and soaring health-care costs –- fueled in part by the commitment of George W. Bush’s administration to giving drug companies free rein in setting prices, even with government money at stake –- quickly transformed a huge surplus into record peacetime deficits.

The remedies to the US deficit follow immediately from this diagnosis: put America back to work by stimulating the economy; end the mindless wars; rein in military and drug costs; and raise taxes, at least on the very rich. But the right will have none of this, and instead is pushing for even more tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy, together with expenditure cuts in investments and social protection that put the future of the US economy in peril and that shred what remains of the social contract. Meanwhile, the US financial sector has been lobbying hard to free itself of regulations, so that it can return to its previous, disastrously carefree, ways.