America's wealth-takers are all too ready to abandon people when they aren't useful.

© Via Wylio http://bit.ly/t8fOzE
One of the themes of the writing of
Henry Giroux is that more and more Americans are becoming "disposable," recognized as either commodities or criminals by the more fortunate members of society. There seems to be a method to the madness of winner-take-all capitalism. The following steps, whether due to greed, indifference or disdain, are the means by which America's wealth-takers dispose of the people they don't need.
1. Deplete Their Wealth Recent
analysis has determined that
half of America is in or near poverty. This is confirmed by researchers
Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, who point out: "The bottom half of the distribution always owns close to zero wealth on net. Hence, the bottom 90% wealth share is the same as the share of wealth owned by top 50-90 families - what can be described as the middle class."
The United States has one of the
highest poverty rates in the
developed world. It's much worse since the recession, especially for
blacks and Hispanics.
From 2008 to 2013 the stock market, which is largely
owned by just 10% of Americans, gained
18% per year. Well-to-do stockholders get capital gains tax breaks, including a carried interest subsidy
Robert Reich calls "a pure scam."
The bottom half of America, relying on regular bank accounts,
earn about one percent on their savings.
2. Strip Away Their Income Earnings due to workers for their years of productivity have been withheld by people in power. Based on inflation, the minimum wage should be nearly
three times its current level. An investor report from J.P. Morgan
noted a direct correlation between record profits and cutbacks in wages.
We hear occasional news about job growth, but
low-wage jobs ($7.69 to $13.83 per hour), which made up just one fifth of the jobs lost to the recession,
accounted for nearly three-fifths of the jobs regained during the recovery. And it's getting worse. Nine out of 10 of the fastest-growing
occupations are considered low-wage, generally not requiring a college degree,
including food service, healthcare, housekeeping, and retail sales.
Among rich countries, according to OECD data, the U.S. is
near the bottom in both
union participation and
employee protection laws.
3. Take Away Their Homes A
study by the National Low Income Housing Coalition concluded that an average American renter would need to earn $18.92 per hour - well over
twice the minimum wage -
to afford a two-bedroom apartment. "In no state," its report says, "can a full-time minimum wage worker afford a one-bedroom or a two-bedroom rental unit at Fair Market Rent." Over
one-eighth of the nation's supply of low income housing has been permanently lost since 2001.
Little wonder so many people are
homeless: over
600,000 on any January night in the U.S.,
tens of thousands of children, tens of thousands of veterans, and one of every five suffering from mental illness.
4. Hit Them with Fines, Fees and Fleecings The poor half of America is victimized by the
banking industry, which takes an average of $2,412 each year from underserved households for interest and fees on alternative financial services; by
rental centers that charge effective annual interest rates over 100 percent; by
payday lenders that
charge effective annual
interest rates of over 1,000 percent; and by the burgeoning
prison industry, which charges prisoners for food, healthcare, phone calls, and even probation monitoring.
On top of all this, bubbly TV personalities rave about all the lottery money just waiting to be taken home. Poor families account for
most of the lottery sales.
5. Criminalize Them Matt Taibbi's recently published
book The Divide: American Injustice in the Age of the Wealth Gap contrasts the targeting of the poor for trivial offenses with a tolerance for the architects of billion-dollar financial
crimes.
The U.S. court system is
flooded with cases for minor infractions, including loitering charges reminiscent of the infamous
Black Codes of post-slavery years. The buildup of arrests has added one out of every three U.S. adults to the FBI's criminal database.
The poor are criminalized for lying down or sleeping in public, for sharing food, for having nowhere to go.
6. Most Insidious: Let Their Children Suffer The U.S. has one of the highest relative
child poverty rates in the developed world.
Almost half of black children under the age of six are living in poverty. Nearly half of all
food stamp participants are children.
The number of homeless children has risen by 50 percent in less than 10 years.
Early education is certainly part of the solution, for
numerous studies have shown that pre-school helps all children to achieve more and earn more through adulthood, with the most disadvantaged benefiting the most. But even though the U.S. ranks near the
bottom of developed countries in the percentage of 4-year-olds in early childhood education, Head Start was recently hit with the
worst cutbacks in its history.
Meanwhile, public schools in the inner-city are being closed
to satisfy the profit urges of the privatizers, who view our children as commodities. Said community organizer
Jitu Brown after 50 schools were shut down in Chicago: "It has ripped black communities apart."
Americans seek reasons for all the violence in our city streets.
With so many "disposable" citizens deprived of living-wage jobs, a meaningful education and equal treatment by our system of justice, rebellion in the form of violence is not hard to understand. The privileged members of society would lash out, too, if they were stripped of everything they own and tossed into the streets.
Great article.
The only unfortunate aspect of the appearance of this article, is the story's origin, which is Alternet, a site of despicable and participatory fraud, another website steaming pile of hypocritical shit.
But, hey?
No one's perfect--hope remains--so long as the ship of state is still steaming and the federal and international money.making presses are printing and pasting and copying more eloquent effusive elegance with the smell removed.
ned