Thursday, October 30, 2008

Middle-Class Muddle

My response to this is at the bottom.

You know, there is so much gushing going on over Obama it makes me sick. I can understand people not wanting to see John McCain get elected. But, for those proclaiming themselves to be liberal and progressive to so thoroughly distort--- and convincingly, continuingly, and intentionally distort--- where Obama stands on the issues is nothing short of dishonest. To me it is just as deceitful as the reasons George Bush provided in going to war in Iraq.

This anything goes just to get Obama elected is the absolute bottom of the garbage can down among the maggots as far as I am concerned especially when it comes from outfits like the Campaign for America’s Future and the AFL-CIO who, together with about thirty of their “coalition partners” put forward a “program” in opposition to the bailout but then kept on spending and spending on Obama’s campaign to the tune of some 160 million dollars while not providing one single penny for implementing a grassroots and rank and file fight-back around their program which now just sits there hidden away in some archives on the Internet except for when one of these groups or their “coalition partners” drag it out to say, “Look we have a response to Bush.” Well, why haven’t they asked Obama to respond since he, not Bush, is going to be the next President?

In fact, the reason for this complete dishonesty is that the Democratic Party hacks have seen up close what is taking place in this country--- millions of working people no longer are buying what Obama and the Democrats are selling in their infomercials.

I also hope you will check out another discussion taking place on the Campaign for America’s Future web site… the one on health care I have highlighted; just click on the topic: How Universal Health Care Changes Everything
Alan Maki


Joel Kotkin's Middle-Class Muddle



By Amy Traub

October 29th, 2008 - 11:48am ET



October 28, 2008



by OurFuture.org Staff

October 30, 2008

When Alan Greenspan admits free market ideology is flawed, you know conservative thought is up a creek.

But never fear: if conservative economic ideas have been discredited, the Right can still distort progressive ones.

Joel Kotkin’s recent article in Politico is a prime example of such misinformation. Kotkin recognizes that economic polarization has put the future of the nation’s middle class at risk. He doesn’t appear impressed by McCain’s warmed-over tax-cuts-cure-all dogma. But he isn’t willing to honestly assess Obama’s plans. Instead, Kotkin chooses to focus exclusively on Obama’s agenda for short-term economic rescue, which he discovers doesn’t adequately address the long-term problems of inequality and a faltering middle class. This disingenuous look at “recent proposals” conveniently overlooks the candidate’s larger agenda – including policies with real potential to strengthen and expand America’s middle class over time. But since Obama didn’t discover the middle-class squeeze just last week, his plans to address it aren’t part of Kotkin’s roundup of what’s been happening lately.

Kotkin’s instance on manufacturing political fault lines in absurd places (Al Gore is against infrastructure?) and implying cynical political payoffs behind every policy initiative suggest that he is not genuinely interested in Obama’s long-term plans to bolster the middle class. But the rest of us should be. And there’s plenty there.

Kotkin’s refusal to look at the big picture blinds him to Obama’s health care plan, for example, which would extend coverage to 34 million Americans while lowering costs for millions more. While the Obama health care plan is far from perfect, his proposed reforms would nevertheless reduce a major cause of strain and instability for middle-class families struggling to afford sky-high premiums, deductibles, and co-pays, or even purchase coverage at all. In short, they’d be a major step toward strengthening the middle class.

Creating middle-class is jobs is critical, Kotkin agrees. But he proceeds to overlook both Obama’s short-term Jobs and Growth Fund that would put Americans to work immediately building needed infrastructure projects and the candidate’s longer term plan to invest in green jobs that would help to foster an entirely new sector of the U.S. economy.

Kotkin complains that Obama’s tax cuts don’t create upward mobility, and when it comes to many of the tax plans, he’s right. But Kotkin must have missed the memo about the overwhelming bipartisan, cross-ideological consensus that the Earned Income Tax Credit lifts millions of working Americans out of poverty. And it leaves us with the question: what does create upward mobility? After all, Kotkin denounces Obama’s support for education as nothing more than a sop to the liberal professoriate. And Kotkin neglects to even mention the Employee Free Choice Act which would make it easier for working people to join unions – another proven route to earning middle-class wages and benefits. While our critic would no doubt find it easy to uncover a political payoff in Obama’s support for this measure, the truth is it has tremendous potential to grow the middle class by enabling working Americans to improve their own jobs.

Obama has endorsed policies to help middle-class families cope with income and job loss when they take time off to care for a new baby or a sick relative. He has crafted plans to help middle-class families hold on to their single greatest asset – their homes. And he has thought out proposals to improve middle-class retirement security. Kotkin’s cheap shots do justice to none of this and prevent us from evaluating policies that could genuinely address the future of the American middle class.




The middle class squeeze...

By Alan Maki | October 30th, 2008 - 9:50am GMT

I can appreciate that the middle class is being squeezed; but, what about the working class being squished?

Obama talks, "middle class, middle class, middle class" as if there is no working class.

This is an important distinction because when Obama talks about "tax-cuts for the middle class," this leaves out millions of working class people who are so poor they don't even have to pay taxes. I hope you will give this some thought because in just the one industry where I represent workers employed in the Indian Gaming Industry, most of these workers are so poor because they receive such miserly wages they don't pay any taxes as it is and no matter how big of a "tax cut" Obama provides for education or health care or anything else it is not going to do these working class people any good.

This is why our Organizing Committees working through the Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council are supporting "universal" reforms which provide social programs for EVERYONE.

Health care: we are for single-payer universal health care as a step towards socialized health care.

The minimum wage: we are for a universal minimum wage legislatively established to correspond to cost of living factors--- ALL COST OF LIVING FACTORS--- including the cost of higher education.

It is the epitome of arrogance to continue talking about "middle class tax-cuts here and protecting middle class incomes there" when everyone knows that a huge segment of the working class is living in poverty with all the personal and social ills that accompany this poverty.

We all know why Barack Obama has chosen to harp on the "middle class;" he is already being attacked by McCain and Palin for being a socialist and an advocate of income distribution. Others on the right are attacking Obama as a Marxist and a Communist.

Obama has turned these attacks into a joke when it is not the viciousness of the attacks that need to be responded to but a defense of working people to live in dignity free from poverty.

And I couldn't care less what the right-wing has to say or what the right-wing calls what needs to be done.

We need to implement those social programs that will enable all working people to live lives free from poverty. Now if this means a real living minimum wage, so be it... the employers are going to have to shell out or do the work themselves. If this means funding social programs to compensate for a lack of an adequate minimum wage, so be it.

The wealth of this country has been created by working people and in the wealthiest country in the world, workers should at least be able to live free of poverty with access to everything from adequate housing to food to health care and a higher education.

The middle class is already doing fairly well I would say--- as far as having achieved more than adequate incomes; not that I begrudge them the right to do even better so they can own a million dollar home rather than a 650-thousand dollar home, take two trips to the Caribbean Islands every year--- one to deposit their money in off-shore bank accounts and one to soak up the sun, go to Las Vegas three times a year instead of twice and spend three days at the golf course instead of two. No doubt Obama's program offers the middle class a great deal.

However, in offering the middle class something in return for their votes, Obama is ignoring the plight of the working class, and most shamefully, is ignoring the plight of the poorest of the poor whose poverty will increase with every middle class tax break.

I say first things first and the middle class has a responsibility to join with the working class in raising the standard of living of working people first.

Yes, it is true that some "middle income" working class people might find some benefit in Obama's programs; but, given the closings of mines, mills and factories in this country coupled with the cuts in public services "middle income" wage earners are fast disappearing in our country and Obama has not put forward one single solution for the problem of mines, mills and plant closings.

His "green economy" will offer many workers previously employed in "middle income" paying jobs... poverty jobs. The proof is in the pudding as they say.

We see previously employed workers from the steel mills who were making upwards of fifty-thousand dollars a year now working in the wind generating industry for eleven, twelve, thirteen dollars an hour while those previously employed on the Iron Range in the taconite industry going to work in casinos for seven and eight dollars an hour... you do the math... millions of workers have gone from "middle income" wage earners to living in poverty.

The intent to create poverty wage jobs is nothing to be boasting about.

Barack Obama jokes about McCain calling him a socialist and ridicules those calling him a communist as he clings to defending the "middle class" while failing to advocate for the kind of universal solutions to the problems being experienced by the working class.

And let me tell you a little something that you obviously do not know about this "Employee Free Choice Act," which Democrats are touting. John Edwards was the great protagonist of the "Employee Free Choice Act" until he was caught with his pants down and his heroic defense of working America came to an abrupt end. But, this "Employee Free Choice Act" isn't what it is cracked up to be simply because in the twenty-eight states have "at-will hiring; at-will firing" legislation, for working people trying to organize, the "Employee Free Choice Act" will mean absolutely nothing. But then again, this is something those making appeals to the "middle class" do not understand. But, understand this: As long as "at-will hiring; at-will firing" legislation remains on the books in twenty-eight states--- including states like Minnesota and Michigan--- your argument that the "Employee Free Choice Act" will in any way contribute towards eliminating poverty among the working class is shot right to hell.

My conclusion is this, which is--- obviously--- at odds with yours, is that too many middle class people are sticking their noses into this campaign who know nothing about working class problems and the shame of it is, you have turned even politics into no more than a middle class game where the only object is to win... when the power to do what is right is conceded to big business and the Wall Street bankers and coupon clippers and in the process of ignoring the plight of the working class, the middle class will suffer, too--- just look at your 401k's.

I had $289.00 in my 401k; now I have $202.00... how is your middle class 401k doing?

One final comment about Alan Greenspan's "free market ideology" being flawed. This is also a nice middle class perspective that if we just change the thinking, provide a regulation here and some oversight there the system--- capitalism--- will work just fine--- maybe capitalism will work just fine for the middle class with a little tweak here and a little tweak there. But, most working class people think the entire system is rotten to the core. If you don't believe me just ask any of the millions out of work, the millions "living" on poverty wages or the millions being foreclosed on and evicted from their homes or the millions more without health care whose children will have about as much opportunity to get a college education as they will have to get heart surgery when their arteries clog up from working in smoke-filled casinos without any rights.

I know all of this is too much for you and Barack Obama to understand; this is why I voted early for Cynthia McKinney... at least when she visited the Twin Cities here in Minnesota, one of the first stops she made was to talk with workers at the St. Paul Ford Twin Cities Assembly Plant slated to close and put another two-thousand workers out on the streets. Obama has come to Minnesota and never had the decency to mention the Ford Plant closing out of fear someone might have asked him what he would do to keep the plant open. Cynthia McKinney came with an idea--- bring the plant under public ownership with worker and community control.

Alan L. Maki
Director of Organizing,
Midwest Casino Workers Organizing Council