Thursday, February 25, 2010

Golden Rules

Aloha Friend!


Click on the photos
Home Sweet Home - Hawaiian Style



"...if Americans felt the level of economic security that people take for granted in, say, Germany, France, or Denmark, it would be a huge improvement over what we have now. People should be able to count on healthcare, a decent retirement, and other basic necessities of life. To a large extent, even upper-middle-class Americans can't assume this level of security."



"There is an incredible elitism in the idea that autoworkers, steelworkers, and textile workers are losing their jobs or facing pay cuts because they don't have enough skills or education to compete in the twenty-first century economy . . . Plenty of foreign doctors would be delighted to come here and work for less than most American doctors, but they are not allowed to because our doctors are protected by trade agreements. Yet in these same trade agreements conservatives dismantle protections for American blue-collar workers, calling the protections
'barriers to trade.'"


"I don't think we have a free market model.

what we have is the wealthy using their power to control government

and shape the rules in ways that redistribute wealth upward.

The so-called free-marketers don't want the market left alone;

they just want the government to structure the market to serve their interests. . .

Show me someone who's made lots of money, and I'll show you how we wrote the

rules so that he or she made money."


Two creatures sharing a moment, yet unaware of one another.


"In the three decades prior to 1980 the U.S. economy was relatively strong. It grew steadily, productivity increased rapidly, the unemployment rate was low, and the benefits of that economic growth were shared widely.

It was a virtuous circle in which more productivity translated into wage increases, which gave people more buying power, which translated into more demand. . .

But as unions lost strength, gains in productivity didn't translate into wage growth. Instead the benefits of all that productivity increasingly went to those at the top. . . Reagan also blocked increases to the minimum wage which meant that the real value of the minimum wage was eroded each year by inflation. Average American workers saw their real wages stagnate between 1980 and 1995.
Because many people were losing income,
borrowing was the only way they could maintain their standard of living."


><> ><>

Perhaps you've heard it said

that the Golden Rule means

that those who have the gold

make all the rules.


In 2002, economist Dean Baker wrote a piece called:
The Run-up in Home Prices: Is It Real or Is It Another Bubble?
His reasoned predictions of a Bust where ignored.
He is co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research [CEPR]
and posts a popular blog at the American Prospect [Here].

The quotes above where taken from an interview
in the February 2010 issue of The Sun

He ended the interview by saying:
"People are looking for alternatives.
The dominant economic paradigm is hugely vulnerable.
We just need to reframe the debate."


ALOHA! cloudia

16 comments:

magiceye said...

:) gold rules!

namaste /\
aloha!

the walking man said...

The debate is going to be re-framed sure enough. The thing is how will it be defined, violently, silently or openly defiant?

Personally I would that the homeless gather themselves en masse and head to the bankers estates and towns and live off their stolen largess. The terminally uninsured ill gather themselves together on the capitol steps and die there. The hungry go and sit at the food warehouses until they are fed.

This revolution of the past 3 decades has been well televised but no paid it attention until the final bubble of their personal security burst. Now millions are paying attention and looking for a guide to lead them. They will not find it on their television.

Anonymous said...

Yes, those who have the gold make all the rules...for sure! Anyone who thinks Americans live in a democracy has not been thinking very deeply.

Dianne said...

amen!
and I will sign up to all that walking man suggested

and stine is right as well

incredibly frustrating

sealaura said...

interesting post. people always assume that because I teach I have a "safe" or tenured spot. The truth is I don't but I try not to stress about it because most people don't have a"tenured, safe job" . During these scary times, I just keep doing the best I can and hope that good things are in store for all of us :)

Cloudia said...

EXCELLENT remarks, each of you.

As usual, Walking Man speaks the vision that i have myself. If I had nothing left to lose, and nowhere to be, I'd spend every day at the govt/legislature buildings in down town Honolulu with a sign.

I may make a sign anyway:
"Shame on incumbents"

Actually, I'm strangely hope-filled now that the previously "comfortable" are now paying some attention to all this.

Thanks for joining us today!

David Cranmer said...

Just had to stop in for some sun. Thanks.

Cloudia said...

You bring some good vibes with you too!

Jew Wishes said...

Thought-provoking post with lovely images.

Shalom

DT ~ RDH said...

Aloha!

nonizamboni said...

And we are the most vulnerable in transition. Ughh, I'm sickened by how health care reform has been whittled to the bone, and disappointed in my fellow Dems.
Really thought provoking post, my friend. Thanks for missing me too.

Maude Lynn said...

Excellent!

SandyCarlson said...

We do indeed need a new paradigm.

Snaggle Tooth said...

Thankyou for my vacation in Hawaii today- I need it!
Great pics!
Is that a ceremonial parade dragon?

Interesting quotes- thanks for "The Sun" link
n yes, it seems the gold does make the rules-

unfortunately i've noticed alot of erosion in economic stability since the Computer has grown more in use... (It replaced too many jobs)
Economic rule No 1 learned in college- the more people who work, the more pay into the tax base, n the more money government has for programs to make more work...
This is how to cure our economy!

Republicans want to grow business.
Democrats want to build government.
Growth of both equals more jobs.

It would be nice if the humble had more power over the fairness of wealth distribution...

Nancy said...

Our elected officials are bombarded by special interests in Washington. Until we do something about the absurd number of lobbyists, nothing will change. Those that can pay for our politicians - will.

Cloudia said...

Yeah!

Thanks for visiting today-