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Beyond Capitalism: Problems and Solutions

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Message Charles Sullivan
Too often my neoconservative detractors accuse me of being a whining liberal eager to point out problems but short on solutions. While I would argue that has never been the case, the following is one man's attempt to not only clearly define some of our most pressing social problems, but also to provide practical solutions. These solutions, while not easy, can provide a way out of the hell we are creating for ourselves. There are no guarantees that any of them will work; although I believe they will if enough people participate. What I am certain they will do, however, is offer hope. To do nothing and allow matters to run their course is certain to destroy not only our country but also much of the world. That would be unforgivable.

During the height of the great depression of the late 1920-30s, Franklin D. Roosevelt changed the face of America by giving us the 'New Deal.' Roosevelt's New Deal created the present Social Security system, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Civilian Conservation Corps, along with a wealth of other programs of social uplift. These social programs were intended to lift the nation out of the depression and to put people to work rebuilding the nation's crumbling infrastructure. Because of its benefit to working class people and to the common good, Roosevelt's New Deal has been under assault since its inception: a process that continues to this day.

The idea of an American president giving aide to the nation's working class was more than some conservatives could stomach. Roosevelt's detractors declared that he was "a traitor to his class." Between the years 1929-1933 the unemployment rate rose from 4% to 25%. Fortunately, Roosevelt's economic policies worked as intended. They lifted the nation out of depression and put the nation back on its feet. Millions of the unemployed went back to work which in turn stimulated the economy. Social security is a concept borrowed from socialism in that it provides for the common good rather than the more customary privatized wealth of capitalism.

No one will ever accuse George Bush of being a traitor to his class. Bush's self proclaimed political base consists of the wealthiest one percent of the population; and he has rewarded them handsomely for their financial support. You see, elites think of themselves as privileged; more deserving of wealth than the rest of us. The elite believe they are our moral and intellectual superiors as a right of birth, like royalty. Thus, in only a few years of transparent class warfare Bush has managed to turn the huge budget surplus he inherited into the greatest national debt in history. At the same time he has essentially bankrupted the nation both economically and morally. During this time of economic downturn suffered by working people (the fat cats on Wall Street are still making money), Bush has managed to provide enormous welfare to the rich by stealing from the poor. His every policy is detrimental to working class people while simultaneously beneficial to the wealthy. There can be no question about Bush's class loyalty, or the class loyalty of those who preceded him into the White House.

One might suppose that Bush's brutish behavior is aberrant. To the contrary, this is exactly how Plutocracy is supposed to work. Those in power maintain their positions of privilege by operating beyond the pale of the law; by enjoying advantages that the rest of us do not. Every policy enacted by Bush demonstrates his attitude of contempt for the common people, as well as for the rule of law. Mr. Bush sees himself as an emperor, not as a servant of the people. The emperor views the people as his servants. He takes from them what he wants and does not hesitate to send them to die in foreign conflicts not of their making. The defining character of the emperor is hubris that knows no bounds and a profound lack of respect for ordinary people in their daily struggles.

Bill Clinton, like those who came before him, exhibited many of the same traits as Bush. His policies were equally harmful to working class people, but he was more clandestine than Bush and a superior actor. Clinton passed welfare reform legislation that made life more difficult for millions of poor families; he bombed Kosovo relentlessly for seventy-eight days and nights, killing thousands of civilians; he maintained an economic embargo on the people of Iraq that resulted in the death of more than half a million people, most of them children. This is not a Democrat versus Republican or liberal versus conservative issue. It is a class issue; and it has always been a class issue. This is Plutocracy in action, capitalism's finest frenzy. American history consists of thousands of similar episodes that have resulted in the genocide of millions of innocent victims in every part of the planet. Capitalism is what capitalism does; and what it does is not pretty or humane.

According to journalist Bill Moyers, 17% of Americans are living below the poverty line. The middle class is rapidly dissolving into the under class. Take home wages are falling even as worker productivity continues to rise. Workers are producing more goods and services, but their productivity is rewarded by lower pay and longer hours. Corporate CEOs are realizing obscene profits but workers are losing their pensions. Every penny squeezed from the workers means increased wealth for the corporation. Under capitalism, profits are king and people are just a disposable source of cheap labor.

Every year more families are falling deeper into debt. Last year Bush signed into law legislation that was written by banking and credit card industry lobbyists. The new law makes it very difficult for millions of struggling families to extricate themselves from the debt loads that stifle their ability to provide the staples for a good and decent life. Yet it remains comparatively easy for corporations to file for bankruptcy in order to discharge their debt loads and make a fresh start. Capitalism, as the name implies, values capital but not people or the public welfare. Money is all that matters.

Millions of working class families are spending the majority of their hard earned income paying credit card bills whose monthly balances are never reduced and in many cases are actually increasing. The unregulated credit card companies have recently doubled their minimum payment requirements, while also shortening the due dates period from thirty to twenty-eight days. These companies use further chicanery to insure that millions of card holders no longer have the ability to pay on time. This assures that the credit card and banking industry rake in billions of dollars by charging late fees and increasing interest rates as a response to late payments. This strategy of robbing workers provides instant wealth without lifting a finger to do any work""a privilege obtained through private ownership. This is clearly predatory behavior by which some of the wealthiest institutions on earth are fleecing the underclass and forcing them to live in debt slavery. This occurred when industry placed its own in key positions of government and then proceeded to remove every mode of consumer protection, exposing the raw flesh of consumers to the talons of corporate greed. The result has been disastrous for families and communities alike, but immensely profitable to the heads of the banking and credit card industries. This is what happens when money is valued more than people and above the public welfare.

In the old days workers referred to the Plutocrats as parasites""a term that continues to describe them perfectly, as revealed by the above example. Despite what we are told, none of the institutions of this country exist to serve the people. In fact, they are arrayed against us like a nuclear arsenal. Not even the police or the militia exists to protect the people. In times of social unrest such as labor strikes, civil rights marches and anti-war rallies, the police and the militia have always protected the property owners; the oppressors rather than the oppressed.

One suspects that most citizens have never thought about their country in these terms. Why would they? History books and the corporate media portray a different America. But despite all the allusions to freedom and democracy, ordinary Americans have always been preyed upon by wealthy Plutocrats. This is simply the history of our nation recorded in deed. America's wealthiest and most prominent families, including names like Bush, Mellon, Dulles, Rockefeller and Kennedy have amassed their extraordinary wealth and political power through slave labor and by the ruthless exploitation of the working class. It was John D. Rockefeller, Jr. who had the poor families of miners evicted from their homes and forced them to live in tent colonies in Colorado. It was Rockefeller who hired agents of the Baldwin-Felts Detective Agency to pour machine gun fire into those tents. It was he who had the tents doused with kerosene and set ablaze, killing five men, two women and twelve children. The event known as the Ludlow Massacre occurred on April 20, 1914. Rockefeller was never punished for his crimes.

The ignorance of labor history, in combination with the lies propagated in the corporate media foster the notion that the fortunes of men like John D. Rockefeller were amassed through hard work and superior intellect. They were not. The Ludlow Massacre is not an anomaly of labor history""far from it. This is how fortunes are amassed in America. George Bush, Dick Cheney and all the others are simply continuing a history of Plutocratic rule. The tradition of ruthless exploitation continues in the Middle East and beyond. Fortunes continue to be amassed on the spoils of war by the CEOs and investors of America's defense contractors.
Plutocrats everywhere are raking in billions, including the Bush family and the bin Laden's. The events in Iraq bear an eerie similarity to the Ludlow Massacre of 1914. George Bush and John D. Rockefeller have much in common. So do the dead of Ludlow and Iraq. Such are the spoils of class warfare.

The working class people of yesterday, as now, had no protections to insulate them from the predation of wealthy Plutocrats like George Bush and John D. Rockefeller. Like the victims of hurricane Katrina, we are on our own. The neocon cabal that is running the world is turning back the hands of time. Working class people the world over are being exploited and pitted against one another as they always have. Wages are falling, layoffs are on the rise, and more workers have to put in longer hours to keep their heads above water. Parasites like Bush and Rockefeller will bleed us dry if we do not rise up and fight back. The struggle between the ruling class and the working class continues.

Inevitably, the question arises: What can we do to protect ourselves? First we must read and understand labor history as the class struggle that it is. We must recognize that we are living under Plutocratic rule rather than a Democracy. Men like George Bush and Rockefeller are the product of capitalism""an economic system that is inherently unstable and unjust. An abundant supply of cheap oil and the massive consumption of frivolous goods and services is all that keeps capitalism afloat. Cheap oil is running out and when it does it will certainly bring about a global economic collapse that will be the death knell for capitalism. With the demise of capitalism a great emancipation of the working class will be possible. But we do not have to wait for economic calamity to begin freeing ourselves from wage and debt slavery.

Every good and decent citizen who wants George Bush and the neocon cabal removed from power can and should immediately initiate that process. I am convinced that it is possible to remove these robber barons from office with minimal personal risk, and by completely lawful and non-violent means. With total solidarity this could be accomplished in no more than six months and possibly much sooner. I am calling for every American and world citizen of conscience to immediately reduce their consumption of goods and services to the bare minimum. By withdrawing our economic support from the system that produces the inequity that is the source of most human misery, we can bring it to its knees. We must enact an economic embargo, a boycott of the very system that enslaves us as a class; and we must maintain that embargo until Bush is removed from office and the workers are emancipated from the chains of capitalism.

In concert with a global economic embargo on the goods and services of capitalism-general strikes, work slow downs and sick-ins should be organized. Random non-violent acts of covert sabotage might be carried out under favorable conditions. New and more radical unions must be formed that will champion the rights of workers and democratize the workplace. Workers must take ownership of the means of economic production or they will always be the slaves of Plutocratic rulers. This can only occur by organizing the work force globally. Workers must think globally but act locally.

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Charles Sullivan is a photographer, social activist and free lance writer residing in the hinterland of West Virgina.
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