"Compassion isn't a principle, but a practice, arising out of the recognition of our own complexities and contradictions."
Monday, September 15, 2008
Could High Taxes Save Us?
Could high taxes save us from this insanity?
Would high taxes draw dawn corporate profits so corporations would have to be more thoughtful and less risky about their work, their investments, their expansion programs?
Would high taxes compel the super-rich to be a little more thoughtful about their extravagant life-styles?
Would high taxes destroy incentive for making money?
That's been the sick mantra of the free-market idiots who've brought us to our knees.
Heavens no.
Folks always want to make money, and they'll make in spite of taxes.
So why high taxes?
High taxes will diminish disposable income, that's for sure, and it's high time we fat, sassy, silly and self-indulgent had a little to spend on ourselves.
And a whole lot more for good government ... the kind of government that funds universal health care and then really cares for the environment, safe products and the kind of food we eat, because now the government is picking up the health tab.
Education for all - the billions spent on failing corporate dreams cooked up on the third cocktail on the fantail of a 90 foot yacht would provide every child with safe and healthy schools, with plenty of toilet paper, computers, white boards and well-trained teachers with well-trained aids.
A living wage - do folks really have to live 100 million dollar life-styles when working Moms still have to rely on minimum wage, terrible working conditions and multiple jobs, without health benefits?
And what about our infrastructure - everything from rail lines to sewer lines; our bridges and our highways; our public transportation system could be the best in the world. High taxes could make this country shine!
High taxes would well put a stop to charity without change. Yes, billions for charity, but hardly dime to change the conditions that produce poverty. Yes, charity makes the giver feel good, but is that the goal? To feel good about dropping some big bucks into the Salvation Army bucket? Reminds me a bit of the Pharisees and their bags of gold, and the utter disdain Jesus showed for that "kind of giving."
We need fundamental changes in attitudes and structures in order to lift up millions from the slough of despond, millions who deserve it; yes, deserve it, because they work harder than any corporate board president, their fret and fear endlessly about the next meal, and they hurt ever so much when they can't afford decent medical and dental care for their children, not to mention themselves. Yes, they deserve something better than a handout, and something far better than charity without change.
I'm not a Utopian, but civilized countries around the world shake their head in disbelief as carry on so foolishly.
Let's hear it for high taxes - a corporate morality of mutual care and building for the future!
Sunday, August 24, 2008
Big Biz Welfare
Other than age and size, is there any difference?
Both are oak, trees, right?
To disregard the small oak, to neither care for it not protect it, while lavishing all of our energies on the mature tree, jeopardises the future, though at the time, the small tree appears insignificant in the shadow of the larger.
Ever since Reagan (the Evil President) introduced numerous lies into the American psyche regarding the sanctity of big biz and the worthlessness of "welfare moms driving Cadillacs," we've been neglecting the little tree - while pouring billions into government bailouts for the big ones - including now the prospect of a bailout for Freddie Mae and Fanny Mac, done in by their own greed and lack of foresight.
Once again, we see how big biz is anything but a savior, and hardly to be trusted with the nephews and nieces. Big biz, like strange uncle Howard, has no sense of boundary and will feed only its own appetites.
Without government regulation (Reagan and his deregulation), big biz does what's natural - it devours everything around it.
At a recent conference on economics, it's been suggested that government listens too closely to Wall Street, that Wall Street is coming to rely upon Uncle Same to clean up the mess, a la Freddie Mac and Fanny Mae.
"The Fed listens to Wall Street," said Willem Buiter, professor of European political economy at the London School of Economics and Political Science. "Throughout the 12 months of the crisis, it is difficult to avoid the impression that the Fed is too close to the financial markets and leading financial institutions, and too responsive to their special pleadings, to make the right decisions for the economy as a whole," he wrote in a paper presented to the conference.
Critics like Buiter worry that the Fed's unprecedented actions — including financial backing for JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s takeover of Bear Stearns Cos. — are putting taxpayers on the hook for billions of dollars of potential losses. They also say it encourages "moral hazard," that is, allowing financial companies to gamble more recklessly in the future.
Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who spoke to the conference on Friday, defended the Fed's actions, saying they were "necessary and justified" to avert a meltdown of the entire financial system, which would have devastated the U.S. economy.
Yet, Bernanke also acknowledged that mitigating moral hazard is one of the critical challenges policymakers face as they weigh steps — including strengthening regulation — to make the financial system better able to withstand shocks down the road.
"If no countervailing actions are taken, what would be perceived as an implicit expansion of the safety net could exacerbate the problem of `too big to fail,' possibly resultin
g in excessive risk-taking and yet greater systemic risk in the future," Bernanke said.
And with billions no longer going for our expansionist war in Iraq and adequate regulation of the greed factor, we might once again reweave the social security net, create more jobs, bolster the American working family, boost education, provide universal health care, rebuild our aging infrastructure and create mass transit.
Greatness is measured, not by the success of Wall Street, but rather by the way we care for the little trees.
One of these days, we may learn: a just society is a profitable one!