By Steve Hynd
I read the news today, oh boy.
-- The Republicans are holding unemployment benefits hostage to make sure the ultra-rich get to keep their tax break...and Obama seems to be willing to pay the ransom.
-- The "elite can�t easily visualize the pain of Social Security cuts" on those earning far less than they do, so that's why SS is a favorite target of those earning over $250k a year.
-- That tax cut for the Fat Cats will cost us $60+ billion a year - imagine what else it could buy instead.
-- "Many state and local governments have so much debt � several trillion dollars� worth, with much of it off the books and largely hidden from view � that it could overwhelm them in the next few years." That means, of course, that the poorest and least able suffer most: cutbacks in food stamps even though food assistance claims are way up, reductions in Medicare coverage, fewer cops on the beat and teachers in schools, shortchanged pension funds, cutbacks in mental healthcare services.
-- Meanwhile, the elite are more worried about the deficit, because that potentially effects returns on their investments, than on whether the economy is recovering. "Deficit hysteria is just a pretext for ideological and class warfare by 'bipartisan' means."
-- And don't forget the big picture of wealth inequality that's fuelling all this. :
Forget the poor souls who had to try to make ends meet on a dole of $320 (�200) per week for a family of four...Wealth in America is now concentrated to a degree unprecedented since the Great Depression. The top 1 per cent of taxpayers � roughly those making $500,000-plus annually � now receive almost a quarter of all national income, and own more than a third of the country's private sector assets. The same pattern is visible in the financial sector, whose recklessness was the main cause of the crisis. Since the crash of 2008, the concentration of power in a handful of giant financial institutions has only increased.
As the Middle Class continues to shrink and we wonder who will stand up to the super-rich, it's time we admitted that America is in the midst of a full-on Class War.
That war can be waged with rhetoric, with protests and strikes, with support for a true party of the labor movement instead of wasting our time voting for the whiggish Dems. But we also need to gain popular support, a pop-culture realisation that something is rotten and needs a revolution. Without that, it'll always be a minority of activists pitting themselves against an overwhelming national preference for Apathy and Ignorance ("I don't know and I don't care") created by the corporate media. As long as we're kept divided by the manufactured bigotry of "social issues" - guns, Gods, gays and faux-patriotism - the people will always be defeated.
Yet nothing seems to have really changed since I lamented in a 2005 post that all the good working-class protest songs were from yesteryear, that few modern bands were writing songs that could be the soundtrack to a revolution. If I'm wrong, please educate me in comments.
In the meantime, here's a soundtrack for the Class War that modern bands and musicians might want to take some tips from.
Start softly but meaningfully.
If you do "cover versions" make sure they're the real classics:
State things plainly; arty-farty doesn't speak to the masses.
Remember what the labor movement was always all about.
And don't forget your own roots. I was appalled to discover none of my teen boys' friends down here in Texas knew who Joe Hill was. He, like anything that might impact Republican supremacy at the voting booth, is decidely contra-indicated in school curriculums.
Have a good Sunday, folks.
Good-looking post, Steve. And the email from your friend makes an excellent point, that the dissemination of music is as co-opted by money interests as the rest of the economy. I noticed several of the links started with commercial advertisements or later had pop-ups for the same purpose. Such irony, considering the content.
ReplyDeleteAnother challenge that has not changed since the Sixties (and I'm sure was alive and well in the Thirties and before) is the reluctance of the very people who need to be revolting to take to the streets. When we watch videos of people throwing stones (great video, that second one) few people relate personally because even the most destitute in this country either still have too much to lose or have simply given up hope. We like to think that principles drive protest but the main thrust comes from rage and desperation. It is for this reason the Tea Party Insurgency and its zealous offspring are so dangerous.
Contrast and compare the Haitian response to the earthquake with a very different response to the Cholera outbreak. The earthquake was seen as the natural catastrophe it was and the response was humbling to witness -- singing hymns in the darkness and coping as best they could. The Cholera epidemic, on the other hand, is seen as a plague brought from elsewhere and the response has been civil unrest all over the country, aimed first at the Nepalese UN contingent and later to any target that resembles the UN. I don't know where matters stand now, but I know it's not a pretty picture.
If a way is ever found to redirect the rage on the right (which is visceral) at the real perpetrators of their misery that will become a force to be reckoned with. Unfortunately the rage of the Left is conceptual rather than visceral and far less likely to ignite the anger of the right. (Michael Moore was/is on the right track but his approach turns off too many potential supporters.)
It was no accident that the civil rights movement was started by and for Blacks, and only later did non-Blacks join and support them in any great numbers.
Good roundup, Steve, thanks. What's going on right now is unconscionable � but it was also unconscionable the past thirty-some years.
ReplyDeleteEarlier this year, I wrote a long post on wealth inequity and plutocracy, mainly so I could refer to it in subsequent posts, but I've found it's been relevant to most stories.
Check Anne Feeney's website ("Union Maid, Hellraiser, and Labor Singer), and then follow the "fellow travelers" links in the drop-down list.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.annefeeney.com/
(Anne is ill right now, but she's as tough as ever!)
The class war is over. What is happening now is the class purge.
ReplyDelete