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Jim Hightower
Jim Hightower
15 Feb 2012
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Fighting Back in America's 30-Year Class War

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David Brooks was upset. You can tell when this conservative and rather-professorial columnist for The New York Times gets upset, because his words almost sag with disappointment — you can practically hear the tsk-tsks and the heavy sighs in each paragraph. When most commentators on the right see things that offend them, they get snarling mad; Brooks gets sad.

What saddened Brother Brooks this time was Barack Obama's budget. In a recent column, he noted that the $3.6 trillion total is "gargantuan" (we columnists are paid to make keen observations like that), but what really upset him was that the tax burden to finance universal health care, energy independence and other big initiatives in Obama's budget "is predicated on a class divide."

With heavy sighs, Brooks expressed great despair that "no new burdens will fall on 95 percent of the American people," adding with a tsk-tsk that "all the costs will be borne by the rich and all benefits redistributed downward."

Leaving aside the fact that such things as health-care coverage for every American and a booming green energy economy will benefit the rich as well as the rest of us, Brooks' column was echoing a prevalent theme in all of the right's attacks on Obama's economic proposals: Class War! Indeed, the Times' columnist even suggested (sadly) that Obama's budget was fundamentally un-American: "The U.S. has never been a society riven by class resentment," he sniffed.

Whoa, professor, get a grip! Better yet, get a good history book (Howard Zinn's "A People's History of the United States" would be an eye-opening place to start). While our schools, media and politicians rarely mention it, America's history is replete with class rebellions against various moneyed elites who act as though they're the top dogs and ordinary folks are just a bunch of fire hydrants.

Check out the Tenant Uprisings of 1766, Shay's Rebellion in the 1780s, the Workingmen's Movement of the 1830s ... on into the post-Civil War populist movement that confronted the robber barons, the bloody labor battles at Haymarket and Homestead in the late 1800s, Coxey's Army in 1894, the Bonus March of 1932, the Penny Auctions by farmers in the 1920s and '30s, the rise of the CIO in the Depression years ...

and right into modern-day fights involving environmental justice, fair trade, women's pay, workplace safety, tenant rights, janitors, farmworkers, union-busting, bank redlining, consumer gouging, clean elections and so forth.

If Brooks & Co. are so isolated as to imagine that our citizenry harbors no class resentment, they should go to any Chat & Chew Cafe across the land and listen to the locals express their innermost feelings about today's greedheaded Wall Streeters who wrecked our economy for their own enrichment. There is a fury in the countryside toward these plutocratic purse-snatchers who are being allowed to keep their exalted executive positions, draw fat paychecks and get trillions of dollars in bailout money from common taxpayers. People don't merely resent them, they yearn for the legalization of tar-and-feathering!

Yet, Brooks and his political brethren are now bemoaning the plight of the plutocrats, assailing the "redistributionists" who talk of spreading America's wealth. In his column, Brooks cried out for a conservative vision of "a nation in which we're all in it together — in which burdens are shared broadly, rather than simply inflicted on a small minority."

Do we look like we have suckerwrappers around our heads? Where were these tender-hearted champions of sharing throughout the last 30 years, when that same "small minority" was absolutely giddy with redistributionist fervor — redistributing upward, that is?

With the full support of their political hirelings from both parties, this minority created tax dodges, trade scams, corporate subsidies, deregulation fantasies, financial hustles, de-unionization schemes, bankruptcy loopholes and other mechanisms that turned government into a redistributionist bulldozer, shoving wealth from the workaday majority into their own pockets.

Brooks might have missed this 30-year class war, but most folks have been right in the thick of it and are not the least bit squeamish about supporting a national effort to right those wrongs. After all, even a dog knows the difference between being stumbled over — and being kicked.

To find out more about Jim Hightower, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

8 Comments | Post Comment
Sir;...I get the feeling that Mr. Brooks was a coddled child who would stomp his feet and pout till he got is way... But; he is not right, and it is good of you to point that fact out...Every society that was not in decline has manged to support all its members without throwing people overboard.. We throw a lot of people over board in one way or another...We all know it is good for profits and overhead to lay off workers, and use machines to produce goods... Does anyone consider what becomes of the society that does that on a vast scale???Where is your economy when everyone is living on the corn dole???Twenty percent of our economy involves actual production of goods, and eighty percent is service related...Does anyone know how far such an economy could fall- filled with so much emptyness???Mr. Brooks may be correct, that we are not a land rife with class antagonisms... That does not mean that class warfare does not go on apace... Every time the rich cut themselves a sweetheart deal on taxes it is class warfare...When the Supreme Court ruled against every effective tool of organized labor, there was class warfare...Pollution is class warfare... Junk consumer goods are class warfare... Health insurance is class warfare... There are a lot of methods made to divide working people... There are a lot of methods to chain working people to debt, and make them slaves as the price of progress, property, or education... Does Mr. Brooks think the rich have created the wealth they want to keep unchallenged???If so, let them depart this land poor to some devil's island where they can create all the wealth they need, and a living paradise on earth... They cannot... The rich man's gain is the poor man's loss; and we are not the problem, and our support is not the problem; but the fact that we have too few working at productive employment to support the rich in the manor to which they have become accustomed...They took too much... They have made an issue of our insecurity and our poverty... Again, this society, as every society before -must support all its members... If that means the rich being a little more poor, then fine; because the poor cannot be made any more poor without being made dead...We like our rich people... We have always admired them, and identified with them, and dreamed of being them... But we cannot be them, and we cannot afford their support...They have run capitalism to its ultimate conclusion, and now the fun will begin... But Mr. Brooks should not stomp and pout... The people are the law no matter how much they choose to not act the part... When action is forced upon them it will be different here, to put it mildly...The people are the law...Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Wed Mar 11, 2009 8:46 PM
Well said Jim and Mr. Sweeney. Private for profit "Health insurance is class warfare" as we do it. Let us not however mistake what Obama has in mind for us for anything other than what it is. It appears that he proposes nothing but a massive subsidy to the predatory, benefit denying, inefficient, resource sucking, self enriching private insurance scavengers. Think of a stinking vulture with its' featherless head dripping with offal. HR 676 single payer is the only sane and compassionate plan with the possibility of real efficiency that we have and the powers that be have dismissed it out of hand.
They'd rather see another version of the awful Medicare prescription give away to big Pharma this time taking care of another of their elite friends.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Tom Macchia
Fri Mar 13, 2009 12:31 AM
Agree wholeheartedly! Something Mr. Brooks and his ilk seem to have missed is the story of the golden goose. "The rest of us" are that goose. To mix metaphors (ouch!), you can't get blood from a dead goose.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Paula B.
Sun Mar 15, 2009 9:18 AM
Since the 1980's, class war has been central to public policy and social changes in the US. Even our otherwise-progressive community is oblivious to the impact of welfare "reform", not only on individuals in poverty, but on our entire legal and economic system. Where are the editorials condemning those policies that actually eliminate a number of fundamental legal rights and protections solely on the basis of one's economic status? Where is the ACLU? Who could have imagined just 30 years ago that we would see a day when people were prohibited by law from feeding the homeless? And where are all the opinion pieces questioning the morality of arresting people for not being able to afford a room? Nowhere, because we are, indeed, in the midst of a class war.
Comment: #4
Posted by: DHFabian
Sun Mar 15, 2009 9:28 AM
Conservatives do not see a class struggle simply because they only acknowledge one class, the weathy, their friends. So long as their class is well off all is well with the world. Need health care? go buy a doctor.
Comment: #5
Posted by: eric greene
Sun Mar 15, 2009 10:24 AM
If every citizen earning $15 an hour disappeared from this earth, watch the empires crumble.
When many companies do well, the management gets bonuses, the investors get dividends and the workers get paid at the same flat wage that buys less and less.
People are not commodities.
If a person does well at providing a service then they should get a decent wage.
On December 3, 1861, President Abraham Lincoln told Congress that, "Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital, and deserves much the higher consideration."
Comment: #6
Posted by: Lynn Marquardt
Sun Mar 15, 2009 9:06 PM
What do you expect from a guy who could so piously (and sadly) proclaim the invasion of Iraq to be a "noble cause", and who now seems to feel absolutely no obligation to acknowledge what an utter failure his contribution to that debate was? He may be sad, but he sure has no conscience.
Comment: #7
Posted by: Masako
Sat Mar 21, 2009 8:57 AM
Wall Sreat has forgotten the Kentucky miners wars in the 1930s against the minowners and the government,the food riots in Kansas and Okalhoma during the depression years and Steinbeck's novel The Grapes of Wrath. Wake up America , how much do you think Americans will stand for.
Comment: #8
Posted by: anthony
Mon Apr 11, 2011 12:56 PM
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