With hardly a hitch, the Democrat-controlled House voted for a $740-billion military spend for the following year. The Senate is also expected to follow suit and pass the bill in short order. President Trump is griping about it, not because of the increased fiscal largesse, but because the bill contains an add-on measure to rename military bases named after Civil War Confederate generals. Talk about absurd political correctness!
Meanwhile over half the nation's population of 330 million are haunted by deprivation exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic. Tens of millions have lost their jobs, and as many more again are facing eviction from their houses due to unpaid debts.
Hospitals in every state are struggling to cope with the surge in people sickened by the Covid-19 virus as the death toll in the US heads towards 300,000 since the pandemic erupted nearly nine months ago. The US has by far the biggest number of deaths from the disease in the world, yet its citizens are abandoned without adequate social welfare and medical care.
Americans are crying out for urgent economic assistance to cope with unemployment and to put food on the table for their families, and yet their Congress is still wrangling and delaying over passing a pandemic relief bill because "it would cost too much".
One easy fix would be if the US military budget was re-directed to meet social needs and the burgeoning plight of its citizens struggling with poverty and disease.
Another source of relief and possible social reconstruction would be if a reasonable, progressive tax was levied on the inordinate elite wealth in a nation where a handful of billionaires possess as much capital as half of the population.
A study published this week by Americans for Tax Fairness found that US billionaires increased their net wealth by $1,000 billion since the pandemic broke out in March. Yes, that's right: in just nine months, the billionaire class increased their combined wealth by $1 trillion.
"Never before has America seen such an accumulation of wealth in so few hands," said Frank Clemente, executive director of Americans for Tax Fairness.He poignantly added: "As tens of millions of Americans suffer from the health and economic ravages of this pandemic, a few hundred billionaires add to their massive fortunes. Their pandemic profits are so immense that America's billionaires could pay for a major Covid relief bill and still not lose a dime of their pre-virus riches."
It should therefore be no surprise that the US is collapsing from the pandemic. That society is in death throes because of its endemic pathological political economy which the pandemic is but ruthlessly exposing.
The American political class is bought and paid for by billionaires who want endless wars to feed the military-industrial complex and endless tax privileges to feed their insatiable and irrational wealth accumulation. The political system is divorced from the needs of the vast majority who are left to die in poverty, disease and deprivation.
America is the antithesis of "democracy" despite all the brainwashing to the contrary declaring virtuous "exceptionalism" and "greatness". It is a putrid plutocracy, run by and for the obscenely wealthy and their political flunkies in Washington, many of whom are plutocrats themselves.
Donald Trump didn't change the system, and neither will Joe Biden. They aren't even capable of conceiving of the necessary changes needed. The task is way beyond a mere change in personnel in the White House or in the Congress. What needs to change is the entire system which is organized to function as a plutocratic wealth and war-generating machine. That will require mass action by organized political consciousness. The ultimate priority is delivering for social need over private profit, requiring the breaking of capitalism and its chains on human potential.
Republicans and Democrats, including millionaires like self-declared "socialist" Bernie Sanders and other so-called progressives, are part of the problem, not the solution.
The supposed right-left divide in US politics is a mirage. An absurd illusion. Both parties are two faces of the same gold doubloon that always ends up in the bottomless pockets of the rich - the bankers, corporations and war-racketeers.
When any entity is so absolutely corrupt it inevitably becomes outwardly moribund. The misery of American people is reflected in the death and suffering of so many others around the world from the US wars, from Afghanistan to Yemen and beyond. Sick priorities produce more sickness and death. The evidence is staring us in the face.
Reader Comments
So the changing of the guard is really taking place, isn't it? The empire is crumpled, and probably beyond repair. Someone here had a great comment about that recently. I am making a New Years resolution, a bit early, to sit back and just observe. Without bowing down. And just to say, I really like the support I find here on SOTT.
The democrats are (mostly) destructive and evil, the republicans are hopelessly inept. What to do?
IMHO, an overall meritocracy would be the best "extremely effective tool".
RC
Similarly, free markets and capitalism are the best economic system. It does NOT follow that it's a perfect system and that no matter where it leads we just have to accept the carnage. Again - err on the side of free markets, but when it's obvious some control is needed, then do that.
Of course the people accumulating the most wealth these days aren't doing it because of free markets and by being super productive. They do it by gaming the system. Even more reason to keep them from becoming even more powerful so they can corrupt even more. That most likely leads to a socialist revolution too, by the way.
It's not lost on me that human beings, and even worse, politicians, are the ones to decide when adjustments are needed and what those adjustments should be. I don't think that's a fixable problem!
Ever since my youth, I have been, from both nature and nurture, acutely aware of the concept of how society should always seek the proper balance between the rights of individuals and government with the defaults/ties going to the individual. I even ended up with degrees expressly on that point in order to pursue my career for those same reasons. A man after my own heart! The two examples which I routinely give out as re my views on how and what is the best way to have a well governed society are:
1) Pollution (I usually use the example that my neighbor might own his land, but that doesn't give him the right to pour oil into his dirt and OUR water supply;
2) I'm blanking on this because I've got to go but it kinda relates to the whole lesson from K of I can swing my arms so long as I don't hit your nose. Ah caught it; the propriety of a free market and the evil of monopolies / trusts, etc.
I agree with this also: I look forward to us talking someday.
RC
RC
Y'all have a good one; I'm gonna shoot some pool. RC