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Reich begins: "Suddenly, manufacturing is back - at least on the election trail. But don't be fooled. The real issue isn't how to get manufacturing back. It's how to get good jobs and good wages back. They aren't at all the same thing."

Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)
Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)



Manufacturing Illusions

By Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Blog

18 February 12

 

uddenly, manufacturing is back - at least on the election trail. But don't be fooled. The real issue isn't how to get manufacturing back. It's how to get good jobs and good wages back. They aren't at all the same thing.

Republicans have become born-again champions of American manufacturing. This may have something to do with crucial primaries occurring next week in Michigan and the following week in Ohio, both of them former arsenals of American manufacturing.

Mitt Romney says he'll "work to bring manufacturing back" to America by being tough on China, which he describes as "stealing jobs" by keeping value of its currency artificially low and thereby making its exports cheaper.

Rick Santorum promises to "fight for American manufacturing" by eliminating corporate income taxes on manufacturers and allowing corporations to bring their foreign profits back to American tax free as long as they use the money to build new factories.

President Obama has also been pushing a manufacturing agenda. Last month the President unveiled a six-point plan to eliminate tax incentives for companies to move offshore and create new lures for them to bring jobs home. "Our goal," he says, is to "create opportunities for hard-working Americans to start making stuff again."

Meanwhile, American consumers' pent-up demand for appliances, cars, and trucks have created a small boomlet in American manufacturing - setting off a wave of hope, mixed with nostalgic patriotism, that American manufacturing could be coming back. Clint Eastwood's Super Bowl "Halftime in America" hit the mood exactly.

But American manufacturing won't be coming back. Although 404,000 manufacturing jobs have been added since January 2010, that still leaves us with 5.5 million fewer factory jobs today than in July 2000 - and 12 million fewer than in 1990. The long-term trend is fewer and fewer factory jobs.

Even if we didn't have to compete with lower-wage workers overseas, we'd still have fewer factory jobs because the old assembly line has been replaced by numerically-controlled machine tools and robotics. Manufacturing is going high-tech.

Bringing back American manufacturing isn't the real challenge, anyway. It's creating good jobs for the majority of Americans who lack four-year college degrees.

Manufacturing used to supply lots of these kind of jobs, but that was only because factory workers were represented by unions powerful enough to get high wages.

That's no longer the case. Even the once-mighty United Auto Workers has been forced to accept pay packages for new hires at the Big Three that provide half what new hires got a decade ago. At $14 an hour, new auto workers earn about the same as most of America's service-sector workers.

GM just announced record profits but its new workers won't be getting much of a share.

In the 1950s, more than a third of American workers were represented by a union. Now, fewer than 7 percent of private-sector workers have a union behind them. If there's a single reason why the median wage has dropped dramatically for non-college workers over the past three and a half decades, it's the decline of unions.

How do the candidates stand on unions? Mitt Romney has done nothing but bash them. He vows to pass so-called "right to work" legislation barring job requirements of union membership and payment of union dues. "I've taken on union bosses before, " he says," and I'm happy to take them on again." When Romney's not blaming China for American manufacturers' competitive problems he blames high union wages. Romney accuses the President of "stacking" the National Labor Relations Board with "union stooges."

Rick Santorum says he's supportive of private-sector unions. While in the Senate he voted against a national right to work law (Romney is now attacking him on this) but Santorum isn't interested in strengthening unions, and he doesn't like them in the public sector.

President Obama praises "unionized plants" - such as Master Lock, the Milwaukee maker of padlocks he visited last week, which brought back one hundred jobs from China. But the President has not promised that if reelected he'd push for the Employee Free Choice Act, which would make it easier for workers to organize a union. He had supported it in the 2008 election but never moved the legislation once elected.

The President has also been noticeably silent on the labor struggles that have been roiling the Midwest - from Wisconsin's assault on the bargaining rights of public employees, through Indiana's recently-enacted right to work law - the first in the rust belt.

The fact is, American corporations - both manufacturing and services - are doing wonderfully well. Their third quarter profits (the latest data available) totaled $2 trillion. That's 19 percent higher than the pre-recession peak five years ago.

But American workers aren't sharing in this bounty. Although jobs are slowly returning, wages continue to drop, adjusted for inflation. Of every dollar of income earned in the United States in the third quarter, just 44 cents went to workers' wages and salaries - the smallest share since the government began keeping track in 1947.

The fundamental problem isn't the decline of American manufacturing, and reviving manufacturing won't solve it. The problem is the declining power of American workers to share in the gains of the American economy.


Robert Reich is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. He has written thirteen books, including "The Work of Nations," "Locked in the Cabinet," "Supercapitalism" and his latest book, "AFTERSHOCK: The Next Economy and America's Future." His 'Marketplace' commentaries can be found on publicradio.com and iTunes.

 

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+57 # angelfish 2012-02-18 11:14
Mitt Romney will Poop if he eats regularly and that's about ALL he'll do! WHERE has he or ANY of these Geniuses been since their Mentor, Ronald "Mindless" Reagan got into the White House and Wreaked Havoc on the American Workforce? I can't HEAR you? If Americans are wise they will RUN, not walk AWAY from Romney, Santorum, Paul and Gingrich! None of them have the "chops" to do the necessary and REALLY bring WORK back to this Country in the numbers needed to get us back up and on our feet! REMOVE the "Me Firsters" and sycophants from Washington. Get RID of the "Blue Dogs" and ReTHUGlicans who ONLY root for the Wealthy! Remember on Election Day and return this Country to it's RIGHTFUL constituents, the ones who MADE her the Greatest Country in the World, the 99%! The People, United will NEVER be defeated!
 
 
+2 # disgusted American 2012-02-18 18:52
Well, angelfish, you need to include Obama in your comment cuz he's done zip and is only acting like he's for you b/c he wants to get in for another term.

Get rid of Democrats and Republicans b/c they are a one-party system masquerading as two parties.

Or hadn't you noticed cuz you are so scared of Republicans that you can't see the forest for the trees?

If Obama wins, we'll have more of the same and worse b/c your vote for him says you support what he has done like nothing for us and signing the NDAA, etc.

If a Republican gets in, we'll have more of the same and worse . . .

You have a choice to stand up for yourself and the rest of the 99 percent. You can vote for Jill Stein or any of the others third-party candidates and, at least, you won't be an enabler.

Vote for Obama and don't ever complain again about what he does to the 99 percent and the wars he continues and the new ones he starts.
 
 
+3 # angelfish 2012-02-19 08:58
I will NEVER waste my Precious Vote on a Third Party candidate! Say what you will about President Obama, he will be a THOUSAND times better than ANY ReTHUGlican they choose to run against him! Fellow Americans! Do NOT be Shahoolahed into voting for a Third Party Candidate! You might as well flush your Vote down the Toilet if you do!
 
 
+2 # Wilka 2012-02-20 04:44
Quoting
I will NEVER waste my Precious Vote on a Third Party candidate! Say what you will about President Obama, he will be a THOUSAND times better than ANY ReTHUGlican they choose to run against him! Fellow Americans! Do NOT be Shahoolahed into voting for a Third Party Candidate! You might as well flush your Vote down the Toilet if you do!


It is often the case that the Rethugs visit leftist leaning blogs, and urge people to vote 3rd party (Libertarian) candidates. It splits the dem vote, and allows the Rethugs to win elections. However, if Bernie, Barnie, or Elizabeth were to run, I'd be dealing with a voter's delimma.
 
 
-3 # bluevistas 2012-02-20 08:06
working within the Democratic Party hasn't worked. I won't support the neo-liberal, New Democrats. Obama lied and betrayed us. He doesn't deserve re-election.

I will vote for Jill Stein, Green Party candidate for President.
 
 
+4 # Sweet Pea 2012-02-18 19:13
You gave me my laugh for the day with the statement that the only thing that Romney will do is poop if he eats regularly.
 
 
-1 # angelfish 2012-02-19 22:42
Quoting
You gave me my laugh for the day with the statement that the only thing that Romney will do is poop if he eats regularly.

Thanks, Sweet Pea, I try to do my part!
 
 
+51 # Billsy 2012-02-18 11:31
I well recall candidates during the 2008 election espousing support of manufacturing jobs, especially while in Ohio and Michigan. Secretary Clinton went so far as to suggest a renegotiation of NAFTA speaking at a Youngstown campaign rally. Then such causes become ignored post campaign. Let's keep the pressure on our elected public servants to renegotiate these treaties, eliminate corporate tax loopholes and support better paying jobs and education at home.
 
 
+47 # corallady 2012-02-18 11:34
If Reich is correct--and I believe that he is--we aren't going to see our way out of the financial mess we're in any time soon. And that mess will only deepen if Republicans win in November because they don't really care about the consequences of income inequality. They care about shoveling more money to the rich at the expense of the poor and what's left of the middle class. That will only make the income gap wider. President Obama has disappointed many of us, but he has tried to make things better and been blocked time and again; even so, he has accomplished more than most people realize. If he is replaced by a Republican, this country will be in deep, deep trouble. Vote Obama in November. He's our best hope for sanity in the White House.
 
 
+2 # disgusted American 2012-02-18 18:56
What sanity is that corallady? The signing of the NDAA? His executive order that he can execute Americans with no proof of anything? His continuation of the tax cuts for the wealthy? His drum beat for war with Iran based on the same lies as Bush with Iraq and WMD? His continuation of the war in Afganistan that has no victory?
His dropping drones wherever the hell he wants and killing kids and innocent civilians?

If that's your best hope for sanity in the White House, we are doomed.

Vote for a third party candidate or stay home.
 
 
+17 # Patriot 2012-02-18 19:20
Small correction, disgusted American: Our faithful Congress passed legislation "that [a President] can execute Americans with no proof of anything"; Obama did not issue an executive order. Also, he's not dropping the drones; long-range control of drones isn't quite THAT long. Moreover, although I have to admit that he's been a disappointment, much of what Obama wanted to do has been blocked by Republicans in the House, then sabotaged by Reublicans in the Senate.
 
 
+3 # dorianb@fuse.net 2012-02-19 09:53
Disgusted American: I agree with you whole-heartedly. But, Rick Santorum & his misinformed, fundamenalist, archaic, Tea Party banter is scaring me! He wants to take us back to the 18th century when there was no equality and with Obama signing the NDAA, as you say "we are doomed"! Not sure a 3rd party is the way
to go.
 
 
+42 # bluepilgrim 2012-02-18 11:38
Reich is right: the issue is not how many manufacturing jobs but what the workers are getting. By increasing badly paying jobs and having a cheaply paid labot force with many unemployed long enough so they will work cheaply we get not only human misery but an increasingly failing economy, except, for a short while, further richs for the wealthy as the wealth gap increases.

See http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/feb2012/mich-f18.shtml
29,500 long-term unemployed Michigan workers lose benefits
By Matthew Brennan
18 February 2012
 
 
+11 # Kiwikid 2012-02-18 20:42
Yep, under Romney and his friends it'll be McJobs all round, and only for those who can get them. It's tragic that the motor giants are paying the same rates - a far cry from Henry Ford's vision and gumption when he paid his auto workers double the going rate, recognising that the middle class is the engine room to the economy - if they can't afford to consume what they manufacture the whole economy eventually grinds to a halt.
 
 
+42 # amye 2012-02-18 12:31
Guess they don't remember the old saying by Mr. Ford himself....whose going to buy my cars if my employees can't afford them?
 
 
+35 # Cliff 2012-02-18 12:44
When I was young and idealistic I thought that robots were going to help people take more vacations, maybe work less days per week. What a fool I was. They allowed people rich enough to buy them to decrease the biggest expense in every company, people.
 
 
+2 # greenheart 2012-02-20 11:24
Quoting
When I was young and idealistic I thought that robots were going to help people take more vacations, maybe work less days per week. What a fool I was. They allowed people rich enough to buy them to decrease the biggest expense in every company, people.

Right -- so it is unions that can change life. How about being able to work 3 or 4 days a week for your current salary? Instead we let the companies/shareholders swallow up the profits! That's where the fight is.
 
 
+18 # cordleycoit 2012-02-18 12:47
In 1905 The Industrial Workers of the World were formed not to patch and mend the capitalist system but to change it. They organized across craft barriers created by the Corporations and Trusts. They were crushed by the jingoism of a world war and the hands of the Justice Department with the aid of the Communist Party. The solution that the IWW came up with is a valid alternative to capitalism. To force the changes on an armed state with minimum violence one must organize: educate labor, build parallel institutions, then strike.
Simple but not easy.
 
 
+19 # doojem 2012-02-18 13:15
Professor Reich: Your comments, as usual, make a lot of sense. I would ask you, though, where are the higher paying jobs in America today, especially for people without a college degree (although increasingly good jobs are scarce for people with degrees too)? Without mechanisms to share the wealth that profitable business ventures yield - there are diverse means to accomplish this, including enlightened self-interest of capitalists determined to preserve a thriving middle class - as well as means to keep jobs at home, there will be fewer and fewer well paying jobs in the U.S. no matter how many degrees one has. As you have pointed out, real wages in the U.S. have stagnated for the last 30 years. Where are large numbers of skilled, or at least well-paying, jobs going to be? This is where investments in, for example, renewable energy, infrastructure repair and development, services of all kinds, local self-reliant economies, and innovative skunkworks to develop new forms of employment are going to be essential. All of us - business people, government, and communities - need to invest in developing new economies that can provide for satisfying lives. It is very difficult to see how globalization can do this. Global business inherently has profits from every geography flowing to its top echelons. We need economies where profit stays in local communities and flows to community members. How do we engineer that?
 
 
+15 # Kiwikid 2012-02-18 20:51
If you read Reich's books (very accessible and often entertaining reads) you'll see that he's obsessed with education and upskilling. High school isn't enough to get people into good jobs. Country's like the US (and New Zealand where I live) can't compete with the low wage (often third world) economies where most manufacturing is now done. He argues that we shouldn't be trying - we should be putting our efforts into high end goods and services where our people can get adequately rewarded for their educated efforts. Further, we shouldn't be sending our raw materials overseas (You do, we do). We need to be processing them at home and exporting finished product.
 
 
+1 # dorianb@fuse.net 2012-02-21 22:44
Andrew: Robert Reich is right to be "obsessed with education and upskilling"..."We should be putting
our efforts into high end goods and
services where our people can get
adequately rewarded for their
educated efforts". To achieve this we have to put more effort in motivating our students & teachers and upskiling our Public Education system.
 
 
+17 # colvictoria 2012-02-18 13:28
Yes Obama has been very silent on the struggles of Chicago Public School unionized teachers.
Arne Duncan, Rahm Emanuel and Jean Claude Brizard all are in favor of privatizing every public school in the city. They want to create charter schools from the local neighborhood schools. Many schools are on probation because of poor test scores and the plan is to "reconfigure" the schools. This means firing all of the teachers(tenure d)and hiring all new fresh out of college teachers.
They do not care that the children have developed relationships with their teachers and mentors and that a teacher is more than just a dispenser of test taking knowledge.
Charter schools do no better as far as test scores go but the fact that charter teachers get paid a lot less and can't form a union is a clear sign that Obama and his cronies do not favor the CTU. Unbelievable considering this is his home town. He will have to deal with many unhappy teachers when he comes back home after his 2nd term.
 
 
+7 # pgobrien 2012-02-18 13:44
Unions have done themselves a disservice by becoming to much like management -- run by bureaucrats and strong-arming their members and workers who compete with them. I believe in unions, and I believe in fair wages for a good day's work, and I think labor must have champions, but I have a very bad taste in my mouth from a lot of American unions (not all of them, really, but a lot of the bigger ones), and that makes me sad.
 
 
+23 # Todd Williams 2012-02-18 13:49
A key to a revival of the American economy is the rapid development of alternative energy sources. The govt. must move forward on this by imroving the power grid infrastructure, investing in research and by putting dollars into two-year degrees for technicians, system designers,and installers. The former head of Shell Oil recently said he felt America could be 100% independent of foreign oil by keeping our oil in this country, developing more natural gas through safe (non-fracking) drilling, and by accelerating solar and wind production. The Germans have vowed to be off nuclear as well as fossil fuel power production in 20 years. There the government is investing heavily in solar power. The goal there is to eliminate central power stations. All power will be produced in every house as well as commercial and public buildings, and that power will be sent into the grid and distributed over the country. We have the ability to do the same thing, but lack the political balls to implement a massive, coordinated national effort. Just look how we ratcheted up our manufacturing at the beginning of WWII. America has become weak and has lost our collective focus. Instead of starting two wars and telling Americans to spend money after 9-11, Bush should have turned our collective focus on energy independence with the goal of becoming less involved and less vulnerable to Mideast machinations.
 
 
+7 # dorianb@fuse.net 2012-02-18 16:47
Todd: Excellent comment!
 
 
+12 # jwb110 2012-02-18 14:47
If the workers in America want to make real changes in the labor situation just stop buying useless stuff. Buy only essential items. Sometimes the best vote is your dollars.
 
 
+7 # Buddha 2012-02-18 15:15
Attacking public workers and their compensation is part of this, of course. We have a unified job market, and driving public worker compensation lower trickles through and subsequently lowers PRIVATE sector wages. And this is all to the benefit of the Ownership class (they think), driving wages down supposedly increases their margins. The problem is falling wages also decreases the ability of our workers, our CONSUMERS, to buy goods and services, which really hurts our manufacturers and business owners.
 
 
+15 # Eliza D 2012-02-18 15:18
The demise of unions is one of the major factors contributing to the feudal state we are fast approaching. The next generation may well fondly recall the twentieth century as a golden age in which families could do well on one income because unions bargained for salaries and benefits that allowed families to be relatively comfortable. Now governors around the country are negotiating lower salaries, fewer benefits and the elimination of pensions for the few unions left, while their lackeys in the conservative press paint unions as their enemies-greeedily gobbling up a shrinking pie. Nothing could be further from the truth. Bank CEOs, high-ranking government officials and their kind retire with huge pensions. The average pension of CSEA workers, for example, is $35,000 a year-hardly a king's ransom. But it's not only the Republicans-Obama stated in his SOTU that he intends to provide incentives to "get rid of" the lowest performing teachers. Teachers are only as good as their students are willing to let them be. The real goal is to get rid of more highly paid (older) teachers and replace them with a revolving circus of young, inexperienced, lower-salaried teachers, who will shortly be replaced with younger, less experienced teachers. This benefits no one. Not the students-who must suffer through the first-year blues of new teachers, not the parents, who will have to adjust to a stream of new faces, not the teachers, who will find themselves tossed on the trash heap of society.
 
 
+20 # Ellioth 2012-02-18 15:36
Reich is partially correct. Loss of unions is a serious problem. However, too many unions are stuck in the industrial era mindset which is gone - period. Many of our unions need to come into the 21st century.
The more critical issues are that we live in a global economy (good or bad) whereby major corporations (American and others) could care less about their home countries and the middle class. Profits are all that matters. Robots and other technological gadgetry (which does make us more productive) have taken the manufacturing floor. That will only continue in industrialize nations. They do not need vacations, sick days or homes to live in. Looking out 100 years, there may be no need for humans to make anything; companies will be able to have nearly all functions done my machines (including white collar). It's the system!
Either we dedicate ourselves to creating a new system whereby the dividends of capitalism are shared more equitably or the middle class disappears. Mr. Ford's cars will be sold to the billions of global citizens who have never driven a car before, dishwashers purchased by billions who have never seen one.
As long as capital is in control - as it is today - the vast majority (perhaps 99%) of Americans are screwed.
Remember what we were taught in kindergarten - "share and play nicely with others". Our corporate and financial chieftans need some remedial schooling.
 
 
+4 # Kiwikid 2012-02-18 20:53
Beautifully put!
 
 
+7 # reiverpacific 2012-02-18 18:06
Much as I respect Dr Reich (and he's one of the few) yet again, not one word about help for small businesses, who have quite a bit of hiring power when flourishing -and they don't move offshore!
 
 
+3 # tomslockett 2012-02-19 00:45
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45755883/vp/46320398#46321122

I asked for a response when you earlier touted Obamacare for cutting the 50 million not covered by health care to 20 million. The above link to Lawrence O'Donnell's comments focus on those who will never be covered by Obamacare, the majority women. I very much appreciate your perspective on other matters and hope you will identity yourself as someone in favor of eliminating the provision of health care by employers, and instead covering the unemployed and poor. I feel sure this is your actual position and would welcome a statement correcting any impression to the contrary. Thank you.
 
 
+9 # Bruce Gruber 2012-02-19 05:44
Why DO WE HAVE TO WORK? Theoretically because you cannot get anything DONE without labor. But as technology advances fewer workers are needed to produce more and better stuff faster and more efficiently. Mechanized mega-farming, mining, and robotic assembly lines are examples. Labor for hand work (and 'customer service' phone banks) in CHEAP labor markets has grown corporate profits. American labor is no longer 'necessary' for much of our globalized productivity.

So, if mankind can produce so much more without each of us working at it, where does the moral imperative of WORK come from? The ethic of motivating surfs, peasants or "good, hard working Americans" to "Get a job!" seems to lose its meaning. If large numbers of jobs no longer exist, why should we have to compete for labor "chances" by lowering our benefits and pay?

The PRESUMED best, smartest, most successful controlling owners of the "Means" of Production - the capitalists, financial gurus, global corporatists and 'premiers' of socialist/communist economic entities have partnered up. Their efficiencies and negotiation skills show that wealth can be aggregated and invested very profitably.

If their goals included the overall well being of mankind, these successes would herald a golden age for humanity. Health, comfort, education and artistic expression might flourish. Of course, if individual greed and power are the measurements of that "success" ... only "Arbeit macht frei".
 
 
+2 # dorianb@fuse.net 2012-02-19 12:04
Bruce, you are posing some phenomenal questions here. Working and the "work ethic" has always been central to a democratic government. We, evidently are no longer living in a democracy if wealth & production are aggregated & controlled by the top 1% leaving 99% of the people without a means of acquiring enough money to live on, since they are no longer needed to produce goods due to being replaced by machines, computers & cheap, labor markets. This debunks the Moral Imperative to work. You can not motivate people to work when there is no work. This is an increasing problem for laborers in the US who will be seeing, not less but more economic decline. As you said, "American labor is no longer "necessary" for much of our globalized productivity". I doubt that the 1% controlling the wealth and means of production intend to use their skills to promote a Renaissance "golden age for humanity". Nor are there any politicians up to such a lofty task. But, the very idea that you could come up with such an inspiring "mirage" when we are knee deep in a political & economical
quagmire is brilliant, Bruce Gruber!
 
 
+3 # Bruce Gruber 2012-02-19 16:29
dorianb: Thank you. You are too kind by 'powers of 10'. I believe that the "inspiring mirage" is really a simple goal. For me, to apply the human principles enumerated by prophets like Buddha, Christ and Muhammad, Gandhi, King and Mandela is only a starting point. Building on the concept of fair and caring treatment of our fellow humans and our planet should be a goal worthy of international public debate.

It should not be necessary for us to encounter 'powerful enemy aliens from outer space' to motivate us to work together. There is no rational or compelling reason why we cannot make efforts toward a future when poverty, disease and war are contemplated in ancient history books.

This is NOT 'pie in the sky' idealism. Mankind has been around for about six million years according to scientific analyses. Only the last thousand years have accounted for our 'enlightenment' and industrial development. Universal democratic governmental decision making is still in the experimental stage after only 250 years or so. Progress in science, medicine, technology, even space exploration, is accelerating.

Ethics and philosophy are ignored, decried as OBSTACLES to 'progress'. Progress is now a euphemism for profit, our current measure of successful exploitation. Our goal is no longer a 'better' life in a better world. The essence of our public will, GOVERNMENT, has been slandered as UNprofitable and hijacked by money.
 
 
+1 # dorianb@fuse.net 2012-02-19 20:16
If this is not "pie in the sky" idealism,
Bruce Gruber; please follow the prophets
and bring enlightenment to the world,
grounded in Ethics & Philosophy.

"Building on the concept of fair and caring treatment of our fellow humans and our planet should be a goal worthy of international public debate". This is so powerful and inspiring!
 
 
+1 # Bruce Gruber 2012-02-21 05:45
Our gestures and words, the tone and focus of our expression, project, individually, the essences of our communal awareness. When "OCCUPY" started, one could sense the change in the air. The smell and taste of dreams, wishes, hopes and the murmur of dissatisfaction and demand became palpable for me.

Reflections emerged on the connectedness of the Arab Spring, Tienanmen Square, The Million Man March, Fall of the Berlin Wall, Viet Nam protests, Civil Rights marches, the Bonus Army, Suffrage Movement, Emancipation, Trail of Tears ... so much sweat and sinew, so many minds and hearts connected in outrage, determination and betrayal.

It is such a contrast with the myth of 'individualism', the force of promoted, advertised, indoctrinated commitment and dedication to 'me'ism that alienates us from our neighbors in competition for diminishing or limited opportunity. Rather than affecting "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" or "freedom and justice for all" we are conditioned to compete for the 'limited' scholarships, the 'Black Monday" specials. We stand in long lines at job fairs while corporate executives smoke hundred dollar cigars and contemplate huge bonuses for removing mountaintops in West Virginia.

Sweat, sinew and slag ... I vacillate between elation at the potential and resilience of 'humanity' and worry at the seductive poison of division and greed. Our institutions and dreams - church, state and hope - are being stolen from us.
 
 
0 # dorianb@fuse.net 2012-02-21 10:23
Bruce: The focus on "me'ism" and Ayn Rand self-interest trumping ethics & morality in the top 1% and the corrupt politicians who feed their cause has trickled down into the "Collective Consciousness" of the masses. How often do you hear a poster commenting on "the seductive poison of division and greed" or how the decline in spirituality and ethics is harming us as human beings? It's all about "fighting fire with fire", "winning at any cost", "the end justifying the means," "not bringing a knife to a gun fight" and "thumbs down" in droves to anyone daring to suggest a more highly evolved way of living... as a human being.
 
 
+1 # Bruce Gruber 2012-02-21 11:21
It is scarey out there! We are a materialist culture that measures success and power in dollars and what they buy. Those without money and influence command no audience and can afford no voice. Ours is a life of defense against economic predators and vicissitudes of "fate".

The 'dream' of winning the lottery, or achieving a 'signing' bonus offers a shortcut to the universe of the 1%. We forget that the "house" always wins We pay them so we can bet against one another. "Me'ism" is deceptive and false. It is propaganda designed to keep us from working together. Anti-union efforts are an example of how WE fight US, protecting the profits of the plutocrats.

It is so easy for wealth and power to consolidate and self justify by funding sycophants and controlling communication. The individualist "Rocky"/"Trump" philosophy of "fighting fire with fire", "winning at any cost", "the end justifying the means," "not bringing a knife to a gun fight" and "thumbs down" is a primitive testosterone challenge designed to make us feel we HAVE to fight alone.

Collectively our voices have meaning and volume. Individually we are a whisper of desire, assuming we have the guts to speak up. Our fellow citizens are conditioned to "stay quiet and wait your turn" - or you won't get chosen!

Reich's "Manufacturing Illusions" addresses aspects of this BUT the question remains - "WHO SAYS WE HAVE TO WORK!" when there's no work to be done?
 
 
0 # dorianb@fuse.net 2012-02-21 14:00
OMG, Bruce Gruber: You have to get this published! I don't know if you are a professional writer but I am and this comment combined with your previous comments need to be shared with the American public. I think you should send it to Robert Reich at RSN, because it's timely, brilliant and poetic writing.
 
 
+8 # RMDC 2012-02-19 06:22
There was an article here recently about Catapiller moving manufacturing from Canada to the US because of lower wages in the US. For at least since the 80s the real goal of conservatives has been to make the US a low wage and low benefit nation. They have now achieved that. $14 an hour for United Auto Workers is $28,000 a year and that is before all deductions. I think the poverty rate for a family of four is $24,000. So unionized auto workers -- what used to be the middle class -- are now working at the poverty rate, so they will be eligible for food stamps, federal healthcare for their kids, and free school lunches. So the government actually subsidizes the wages of the auto manufacturers.

The insanity of this is beyond belief. GMAC the parent of GM auto division is a bank and is rolling in cash, in spite of the trillions of dollars in worthless derivatives. It could afford to pay a living wage to all employees. It chooses not not and there no one -- no unions -- to make it pay living wages.

What a hell hole America has become.
 
 
+3 # dorianb@fuse.net 2012-02-19 11:01
RMDC: Your comments are on the mark & I really appreciate what you have to say. America has become a "hell hole" because too many people in America no longer care about justice, fairness, kindness or have compassion for others. It's not only the wealthy. I can see it on the Posts. A person can be wealthy & care about justice like Henry Ford who paid his workers a living wage so they could buy his cars & live a decent life.

Unfortunately, greed & self-interest, which is rooted in fear, has overtaken justice & fairness resulting in wealth being aggregated in the top 1% causing a severe financial decline in the rest of the people. As long as our goverment leaders & politicians take billions of dollars in exchange for favors which will keep their "benefactors" in the top 1%; nothing will change. Both parties are corrupt & have turned their back on the people who are suffering. "The People" used to be what America was all about. When a nation is in moral decline, the people become "de trop".
 
 
0 # dorianb@fuse.net 2012-02-21 14:11
RMDC: go to the Post "Obama's War on Pot"
and read the Posts by Lorenbliss,
Richard Razilov, and myself, which carries this discussion farther,
 
 
0 # dorianb@fuse.net 2012-02-21 14:20
To Robert Reich: Mr. Reich, your choice of topics and writing style have to make you the most brilliant journalist of our time. I cannot adequately express to you how much your editorials have inspired me and increased my knowledge. Thank You.
 
 
0 # Steve5551 2012-03-01 15:43
BOYCOTT WALMART! If you wish to see jobs return to America don't purchase anything not made in America. Demand American made stuff. Shop at Goodwill. Shop locally. Join a trade union if at all possible. Boycott Walmart!!!
 

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