Represent The People

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U.S. politicians, particularly at the national level, have long since failed to represent the interests of everyday working people in the United States. One could make a strong argument that this truism has remained a constant since the founding of the Republic. Even so, U.S. political culture has veered sharply away from the interests of ordinary people in the years following the now infamous Powell Manifesto.[1] Since that time, relentless promotion of pro-business, “free market” dogma has systematically suppressed, often violently, all competitive social, economic and political ideologies.

The lies pushed out to the rest of us generally first take shape in a “think tank” of one sort or another. A typical example is a “report” published in July, 2011 by the Heritage Foundation, a mouthpiece for big business launched in 1973 by former “young Republicans,” conservative political hacks and an assortment of wealthy and rabidly right-wing businessmen. The report -- titled “Air Conditioning, Cable TV, and an Xbox: What is Poverty in the United States Today?” -- essentially attempts to subvert mounting evidence, no matter how plainly visible to the naked eye, of the rapidly growing destitution spreading throughout the land.

We can put aside the disingenuous reference to color televisions, video game machines and microwave ovens as sure signs that a triumphant free market has utterly vanquished poverty for all but the most depraved, shiftless and needlessly “needy” among us. Post-consumer rubbish like last year’s game box, three year-old televisions and cheap microwave ovens are readily available cast-offs one can find at virtually any exurban garbage dump or by quickly scanning the freebies on Craig’s List.[2] Poorly constructed housing stock, particularly that built post WWII, explains the ubiquity of air conditioning more than anything else. Until recent decades, dwellings and work places were cooled through intelligent use of shade trees and windows. The shoddily built crackerbox built over the past couple of generations requires forced air cooling just to keep occupants from suffocating or dying of heat stroke.

The Collapsing Veil

Financial crisis and the bailouts.

Special Period

The “North Korea” approach vs the “Cuba” approach.

External Links

References