This article originally provided by Inequality.org
June 16, 2004
This is the Fight of Our Lives
by Bill Moyers
Keynote speech
Inequality Matters Forum
New York University
June 3, 2004
"The middle class and working poor are told that
what's happening to them is the consequence of Adam Smith's
'Invisible Hand.' This is a lie. What's happening to them is
the direct consequence of corporate activism, intellectual
propaganda, the rise of a religious orthodoxy that in its
hunger for government subsidies has made an idol of power,
and a string of political decisions favoring the powerful
and the privileged who bought the political system right out
from under us."
-- Bill Moyers, Keynote speech, June 3, 2004
It is important from time to time to remember that some
things are worth getting mad about.
Here's one: On March 10 of this year, on page B8, with a
headline that stretched across all six columns, The New York
Times reported that tuition in the city's elite private
schools would hit $26,000 for the coming school year -- for
kindergarten as well as high school. On the same page, under
a two-column headline, Michael Wineraub wrote about a school
in nearby Mount Vernon, the first stop out of the Bronx,
with a student body that is 97 percent black. It is the
poorest school in the town: nine out of ten children qualify
for free lunches; one out of 10 lives in a homeless shelter.
During black history month this past February, a sixth
grader wanted to write a report on Langston Hughes. There
were no books on Langston Hughes in the library -- no books
about the great poet, nor any of his poems. There is only
one book in the library on Frederick Douglass. None on Rosa
Parks, Josephine Baker, Leontyne Price, or other giants like
them in the modern era. In fact, except for a few Newberry
Award books the librarian bought with her own money, the
library is mostly old books -- largely from the 1950s and
60s when the school was all white. A 1960 child's primer on
work begins with a youngster learning how to be a telegraph
delivery boy. All the workers in the book -- the dry
cleaner, the deliveryman, the cleaning lady -- are white.
There's a 1967 book about telephones which says: "when
you phone you usually dial the number. But on some new
phones you can push buttons." The newest encyclopedia
dates from l991, with two volumes -- "b" and
"r" -- missing. There is no card catalog in the
library -- no index cards or computer.
Something to get mad about.
Here's something else: Caroline Payne's face and gums are
distorted because her Medicaid-financed dentures don't fit.
Because they don't fit, she is continuously turned down for
jobs on account of her appearance. Caroline Payne is one of
the people in David Shipler's new book,' The Working Poor: Invisible in America'.
She was born poor, and in spite of having once owned her own
home and having earned a two-year college degree, Caroline
Payne has bounced from one poverty-wage job to another all
her life, equipped with the will to move up, but not the
resources to deal with unexpected and overlapping problems
like a mentally handicapped daughter, a broken marriage, a
sudden layoff crisis that forced her to sell her few assets,
pull up roots and move on. "In the house of the
poor," Shipler writes "...the walls are thin and
fragile and troubles seep into one another."
Here's something else to get mad about. Two weeks ago,
the House of Representatives, the body of Congress owned and
operated by the corporate, political, and religious right,
approved new tax credits for children. Not for poor
children, mind you. But for families earning as much as
$309,000 a year -- families that already enjoy significant
benefits from earlier tax cuts. The editorial page of The
Washington Post called this "bad social policy, bad tax
policy, and bad fiscal policy. You'd think they'd be
embarrassed," said the Post, "but they're
not."
And this, too, is something to get mad about. Nothing
seems to embarrass the political class in Washington today.
Not the fact that more children are growing up in poverty in
America than in any other industrial nation; not the fact
that millions of workers are actually making less money
today in real dollars than they did twenty years ago; not
the fact that working people are putting in longer and
longer hours and still falling behind; not the fact that
while we have the most advanced medical care in the world,
nearly 44 million Americans -- eight out of ten of them in
working families -- are uninsured and cannot get the basic
care they need.
Astonishing as it seems, no one in official Washington
seems embarrassed by the fact that the gap between rich and
poor is greater than it's been in 50 years -- the worst
inequality among all western nations. Or that we are
experiencing a shift in poverty. For years it was said those
people down there at the bottom were single, jobless
mothers. For years they were told work, education, and
marriage is how they move up the economic ladder. But
poverty is showing up where we didn't expect it -- among
families that include two parents, a worker, and a head of
the household with more than a high school education. These
are the newly poor. Our political, financial and business
class expects them to climb out of poverty on an escalator
moving downward.
Let me tell you about the Stanleys and the Neumanns.
During the last decade, I produced a series of documentaries
for PBS called "Surviving the Good Times." The
title refers to the boom time of the '90s when the country
achieved the longest period of economic growth in its entire
history. Some good things happened then, but not everyone
shared equally in the benefits. To the contrary. The decade
began with a sustained period of downsizing by corporations
moving jobs out of America and many of those people never
recovered what was taken from them. We decided early on to
tell the stories of two families in Milwaukee -- one black,
one white -- whose breadwinners were laid off in the first
wave of layoffs in 1991. We reported on how they were coping
with the wrenching changes in their lives, and we stayed
with them over the next ten years as they tried to find a
place in the new global economy. They're the kind of
Americans my mother would have called "the salt of the
earth." They love their kids, care about their
communities, go to church every Sunday, and work hard all
week -- both mothers have had to take full-time jobs.
During our time with them, the fathers in both families
became seriously ill. One had to stay in the hospital two
months, putting his family $30,000 in debt because they
didn't have adequate health insurance. We were there with
our camera when the bank started to foreclose on the modest
home of the other family because they couldn't meet the
mortgage payments after dad lost his good-paying
manufacturing job. Like millions of Americans, the Stanleys
and the Neumanns were playing by the rules and still getting
stiffed. By the end of the decade they were running harder
but slipping behind, and the gap between them and prosperous
America was widening.
What turns their personal tragedy into a political
travesty is that they are patriotic. They love this country.
But they no longer believe they matter to the people who run
the country. When our film opens, both families are watching
the inauguration of Bill Clinton on television in 1992. By
the end of the decade they were no longer paying attention
to politics. They don't see it connecting to their lives.
They don't think their concerns will ever be addressed by
the political, corporate, and media elites who make up our
dominant class. They are not cynical, because they are
deeply religious people with no capacity for cynicism, but
they know the system is rigged against them. They know this,
and we know this. For years now a small fraction of American
households have been garnering an extreme concentration of
wealth and income while large corporations and financial
institutions have obtained unprecedented levels of economic
and political power over daily life. In 1960, the gap in
terms of wealth between the top 20% and the bottom 20% was
30 fold. Four decades later it is more than 75 fold.
Such concentrations of wealth would be far less of an
issue if the rest of society were benefiting
proportionately. But that's not the case. As the economist
Jeff Madrick reminds us, the pressures of inequality on
middle and working class Americans are now quite severe.
"The strain on working people and on family life, as
spouses have gone to work in dramatic numbers, has become
significant. VCRs and television sets are cheap, but higher
education, health care, public transportation, drugs,
housing and cars have risen faster in price than typical
family incomes. And life has grown neither calm nor secure
for most Americans, by any means." You can find many
sources to support this conclusion. I like the language of a
small outfit here in New York called the Commonwealth
Foundation/Center for the Renewal of American Democracy.
They conclude that working families and the poor "are
losing ground under economic pressures that deeply affect
household stability, family dynamics, social mobility,
political participation, and civic life."
Household economics is not the only area where inequality
is growing in America. Equality doesn't mean equal incomes,
but a fair and decent society where money is not the sole
arbiter of status or comfort. In a fair and just society,
the commonwealth will be valued even as individual wealth is
encouraged.
Let me make something clear here. I wasn't born
yesterday. I'm old enough to know that the tension between
haves and have-nots are built into human psychology, it is a
constant in human history, and it has been a factor in every
society. But I also know America was going to be different.
I know that because I read Mr. Jefferson's writings, Mr.
Lincoln's speeches and other documents in the growing
American creed. I presumptuously disagreed with Thomas
Jefferson about human equality being self-evident. Where I
lived, neither talent, nor opportunity, nor outcomes were
equal. Life is rarely fair and never equal. So what could he
possibly have meant by that ringing but ambiguous
declaration: "All men are created equal"? Two
things, possibly. One, although none of us are good, all of
us are sacred (Glenn Tinder), that's the basis for thinking
we are by nature kin.
Second, he may have come to see the meaning of those
words through the experience of the slave who was his
mistress. As is now widely acknowledged, the hands that
wrote "all men are created equal" also stroked the
breasts and caressed the thighs of a black woman named Sally
Hennings. She bore him six children whom he never
acknowledged as his own, but who were the only slaves freed
by his will when he died -- the one request we think Sally
Hennings made of her master. Thomas Jefferson could not have
been insensitive to the flesh-and-blood woman in his arms.
He had to know she was his equal in her desire for life, her
longing for liberty, her passion for happiness.
In his book on the Declaration, my late friend Mortimer
Adler said Jefferson realized that whatever things are
really good for any human being are really good for all
other human beings. The happy or good life is essentially
the same for all: a satisfaction of the same needs inherent
in human nature. A just society is grounded in that
recognition. So Jefferson kept as a slave a woman whose
nature he knew was equal to his. All Sally Hennings got from
her long sufferance -- perhaps it was all she sought from
what may have grown into a secret and unacknowledged love --
was that he let her children go. "Let my children
go" -- one of the oldest of all petitions. It has long
been the promise of America -- a broken promise, to be sure.
But the idea took hold that we could fix what was broken so
that our children would live a bountiful life. We could
prevent the polarization between the very rich and the very
poor that poisoned other societies. We could provide that
each and every citizen would enjoy the basic necessities of
life, a voice in the system of self-government, and a better
chance for their children. We could preclude the vast
divides that produced the turmoil and tyranny of the very
countries from which so many of our families had fled.
We were going to do these things because we understood
our dark side -- none of us is good -- but we also
understood the other side -- all of us are sacred. From
Jefferson forward we have grappled with these two notions in
our collective head -- that we are worthy of the creator but
that power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
Believing the one and knowing the other, we created a
country where the winners didn't take all. Through a system
of checks and balances we were going to maintain a safe, if
shifting, equilibrium between wealth and commonwealth. We
believed equitable access to public resources is the
lifeblood of any democracy. So early on [in Jeff Madrick's
description,] primary schooling was made free to all. States
changed laws to protect debtors, often the relatively poor,
against their rich creditors. Charters to establish
corporations were open to most, if not all, white comers,
rather than held for the elite. The government encouraged
Americans to own their own piece of land, and even supported
squatters' rights. The court challenged monopoly -- all in
the name of we the people.
In my time we went to public schools. My brother made it
to college on the GI bill. When I bought my first car for
$450 I drove to a subsidized university on free public
highways and stopped to rest in state-maintained public
parks. This is what I mean by the commonwealth. Rudely
recognized in its formative years, always subject to
struggle, constantly vulnerable to reactionary
counterattacks, the notion of America as a shared project
has been the central engine of our national experience.
Until now. I don't have to tell you that a profound
transformation is occurring in America: the balance between
wealth and the commonwealth is being upended. By design.
Deliberately. We have been subjected to what the
Commonwealth Foundation calls "a fanatical drive to
dismantle the political institutions, the legal and
statutory canons, and the intellectual and cultural
frameworks that have shaped public responsibility for social
harms arising from the excesses of private power." From
land, water and other natural resources, to media and the
broadcast and digital spectrums, to scientific discovery and
medical breakthroughs, and to politics itself, a broad range
of the American commons is undergoing a powerful shift
toward private and corporate control. And with little public
debate. Indeed, what passes for 'political debate' in this
country has become a cynical charade behind which the real
business goes on -- the not-so-scrupulous business of
getting and keeping power in order to divide up the spoils.
We could have seen this coming if we had followed the
money. The veteran Washington reporter, Elizabeth Drew, says
"the greatest change in Washington over the past 25
years -- in its culture, in the way it does business and the
ever-burgeoning amount of business transactions that go on
here -- has been in the preoccupation with money."
Jeffrey Birnbaum, who covered Washington for nearly twenty
years for the Wall Street Journal, put it more strongly:
"[campaign cash] has flooded over the gunwales of the
ship of state and threatens to sink the entire vessel.
Political donations determine the course and speed of many
government actions that deeply affect our daily lives."
Politics is suffocating from the stranglehold of money.
During his brief campaign in 2000, before he was ambushed by
the dirty tricks of the religious right in South Carolina
and big money from George W. Bush's wealthy elites, John
McCain said elections today are nothing less than an
"influence peddling scheme in which both parties
compete to stay in office by selling the country to the
highest bidder."
Small wonder that with the exception of people like John
McCain and Russ Feingold, official Washington no longer
finds anything wrong with a democracy dominated by the
people with money. Hit the pause button here, and recall
Roger Tamraz. He's the wealthy oilman who paid $300,000 to
get a private meeting in the White House with President
Clinton; he wanted help in securing a big pipeline in
central Asia. This got him called before congressional
hearings on the financial excesses of the 1996 campaign. If
you watched the hearings on C-Span you heard him say he
didn't think he had done anything out of the ordinary. When
they pressed him he told the senators: "Look, when it
comes to money and politics, you make the rules. I'm just
playing by your rules." One senator then asked if
Tamraz had registered and voted. And he was blunt in his
reply: "No, senator, I think money's a bit more
(important) than the vote."
So what does this come down to, practically?
Here is one accounting:
"When powerful interests shower Washington with
millions in campaign contributions, they often get what they
want. But it's ordinary citizens and firms that pay the
price and most of them never see it coming. This is what
happens if you don't contribute to their campaigns or spend
generously on lobbying. You pick up a disproportionate share
of America's tax bill. You pay higher prices for a broad
range of products from peanuts to prescriptions. You pay
taxes that others in a similar situation have been excused
from paying. You're compelled to abide by laws while others
are granted immunity from them. You must pay debts that you
incur while others do not. You're barred from writing off on
your tax returns some of the money spent on necessities
while others deduct the cost of their entertainment. You
must run your business by one set of rules, while the
government creates another set for your competitors. In
contrast, the fortunate few who contribute to the right
politicians and hire the right lobbyists enjoy all the
benefits of their special status. Make a bad business deal;
the government bails them out. If they want to hire workers
at below market wages, the government provides the means to
do so. If they want more time to pay their debts, the
government gives them an extension. If they want immunity
from certain laws, the government gives it. If they want to
ignore rules their competition must comply with, the
government gives its approval. If they want to kill
legislation that is intended for the public, it gets
killed."
I'm not quoting from Karl Marx's Das Kapital or Mao's
Little Red Book. I'm quoting Time magazine. Time's premier
investigative journalists -- Donald Bartlett and James
Steele -- concluded in a series last year that America now
has "government for the few at the expense of the
many." Economic inequality begets political inequality,
and vice versa.
That's why the Stanleys and the Neumanns were turned off
by politics. It's why we're losing the balance between
wealth and the commonwealth. It's why we can't put things
right. And it is the single most destructive force tearing
at the soul of democracy. Hear the great justice Learned
Hand on this: "If we are to keep our democracy, there
must be one commandment: 'Thou shalt not ration justice.'
" Learned Hand was a prophet of democracy. The rich
have the right to buy more homes than anyone else. They have
the right to buy more cars than anyone else, more gizmos
than anyone else, more clothes and vacations than anyone
else. But they do not have the right to buy more democracy
than anyone else.
I know, I know: this sounds very much like a call for
class war. But the class war was declared a generation ago,
in a powerful paperback polemic by William Simon, who was
soon to be Secretary of the Treasury. He called on the
financial and business class, in effect, to take back the
power and privileges they had lost in the depression and new
deal. They got the message, and soon they began a stealthy
class war against the rest of society and the principles of
our democracy. They set out to trash the social contract, to
cut their workforces and wages, to scour the globe in search
of cheap labor, and to shred the social safety net that was
supposed to protect people from hardships beyond their
control. Business Week put it bluntly at the time:
"Some people will obviously have to do with less....it
will be a bitter pill for many Americans to swallow the idea
of doing with less so that big business can have more."
The middle class and working poor are told that what's
happening to them is the consequence of Adam Smith's
"Invisible Hand." This is a lie. What's happening
to them is the direct consequence of corporate activism,
intellectual propaganda, the rise of a religious orthodoxy
that in its hunger for government subsidies has made an idol
of power, and a string of political decisions favoring the
powerful and the privileged who bought the political system
right out from under us.
To create the intellectual framework for this takeover of
public policy they funded conservative think tanks -- The
Heritage Foundation, the Hoover Institution, and the
American Enterprise Institute -- that churned out study
after study advocating their agenda.
To put political muscle behind these ideas they created a
formidable political machine. One of the few journalists to
cover the issues of class -- Thomas Edsall of The Washington
Post -- wrote: "During the 1970s, business refined its
ability to act as a class, submerging competitive instincts
in favor of joint, cooperate action in the legislative
area." Big business political action committees flooded
the political arena with a deluge of dollars. And they built
alliances with the religious right -- Jerry Falwell's Moral
Majority and Pat Robertson's Christian Coalition -- who
mounted a cultural war providing a smokescreen for the class
war, hiding the economic plunder of the very people who were
enlisted as foot soldiers in the cause of privilege.
In a book to be published this summer, Daniel Altman
describes what he calls the "neo-economy -- a place
without taxes, without a social safety net, where rich and
poor live in different financial worlds -- and [said Altman]
it's coming to America." He's a little late. It's here.
Says Warren Buffett, the savviest investor of them all:
"My class won."
Look at the spoils of victory:
Over the past three years, they've pushed through $2
trillion dollars in tax cuts -- almost all tilted towards
the wealthiest people in the country.
Cuts in taxes on the largest incomes.
Cuts in taxes on investment income.
And cuts in taxes on huge inheritances.
More than half of the benefits are going to the
wealthiest one percent. You could call it trickle-down
economics, except that the only thing that trickled down was
a sea of red ink in our state and local governments, forcing
them to cut services for and raise taxes on middle class
working America.
Now the Congressional Budget Office forecasts deficits
totaling $2.75 trillion over the next ten years.
These deficits have been part of their strategy. Some of
you will remember that Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan tried
to warn us 20 years ago, when he predicted that President
Ronald Reagan's real strategy was to force the government to
cut domestic social programs by fostering federal deficits
of historic dimensions. Reagan's own budget director, David
Stockman, admitted as such. Now the leading rightwing
political strategist, Grover Norquist, says the goal is to
"starve the beast" -- with trillions of dollars in
deficits resulting from trillions of dollars in tax cuts,
until the United States Government is so anemic and anorexic
it can be drowned in the bathtub.
There's no question about it: The corporate conservatives
and their allies in the political and religious right are
achieving a vast transformation of American life that only
they understand because they are its advocates, its
architects, and its beneficiaries. In creating the greatest
economic inequality in the advanced world, they have saddled
our nation, our states, and our cities and counties with
structural deficits that will last until our children's
children are ready for retirement, and they are
systematically stripping government of all its functions
except rewarding the rich and waging war.
And they are proud of what they have done to our economy
and our society. If instead of practicing journalism I was
writing for Saturday Night Live, I couldn't have made up the
things that this crew have been saying. The president's
chief economic adviser says shipping technical and
professional jobs overseas is good for the economy. The
president's Council of Economic Advisers report that
hamburger chefs in fast food restaurants can be considered
manufacturing workers. The president's Federal Reserve
Chairman says that the tax cuts may force cutbacks in social
security - but hey, we should make the tax cuts permanent
anyway. The president's Labor Secretary says it doesn't
matter if job growth has stalled because "the stock
market is the ultimate arbiter."
You just can't make this stuff up. You have to hear it to
believe it. This may be the first class war in history where
the victims will die laughing.
But what they are doing to middle class and working
Americans -- and to the workings of American democracy -- is
no laughing matter. Go online and read the transcripts of
Enron traders in the energy crisis four years ago,
discussing how they were manipulating the California power
market in telephone calls in which they gloat about ripping
off "those poor grandmothers." Read how they talk
about political contributions to politicians like
"Kenny Boy" Lay's best friend George W. Bush. Go
on line and read how Citigroup has been fined $70 Million
for abuses in loans to low-income, high risk borrowers - the
largest penalty ever imposed by the Federal Reserve. A few
clicks later, you can find the story of how a subsidiary of
the corporate computer giant NEC has been fined over $20
million after pleading guilty to corruption in a federal
plan to bring Internet access to poor schools and libraries.
And this, the story says, is just one piece of a nationwide
scheme to rip off the government and the poor.
Let's face the reality: If ripping off the public trust;
if distributing tax breaks to the wealthy at the expense of
the poor; if driving the country into deficits deliberately
to starve social benefits; if requiring states to balance
their budgets on the backs of the poor; if squeezing the
wages of workers until the labor force resembles a nation of
serfs -- if this isn't class war, what is?
It's un-American. It's unpatriotic. And it's wrong.
But I don't need to tell you this. You wouldn't be here
if you didn't know it. Your presence at this gathering
confirms that while an America with liberty and justice for
all is a broken promise, it is not a lost cause. Once upon a
time I thought the mass media -- my industry -- would help
mend this broken promise and save this cause. After all, the
sight of police dogs attacking peaceful demonstrators forced
America to recognize the reality of racial injustice. The
sight of carnage in Vietnam forced us to recognize the war
was unwinnable. The sight of terrorists striking the World
Trade Center woke us from a long slumber of denial and
distraction. I thought the mass media might awaken Americans
to the reality that this ideology of winner-take-all is
working against them and not for them. I was wrong. With
honorable exceptions, we can't count on the mass media.
What we need is a mass movement of people like you. Get
mad, yes -- there's plenty to be mad about. Then get
organized and get busy. This is the fight of our lives.
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