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A Mandate for Spreading the Wealth

by: Norman Solomon, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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People raise their hands at an Obama rally when the candidate asked who made less than $250,000. (Photo: Damon Winter / The New York Times)

    Two days before he lost the election, John McCain summarized what had become the central message of his campaign: "Redistribute the wealth, spread the wealth around - we can't do that."

    Oh, yes we can.

    The 2008 presidential election became something of a referendum on "spreading the wealth."

    "My attitude is that if the economy's good for folks from the bottom up, it's gonna be good for everybody," Barack Obama said on October 12, in a conversation with an Ohio resident named Joe. The candidate quickly added, "I think when you spread the wealth around, it's good for everybody."

    McCain eagerly attacked the concept, most dramatically three days later during the last debate. While instantly creating the "Joe the Plumber" everyman myth, McCain sharpened the distinctions between the two tickets while the nation watched and listened. He charged, "The whole premise behind Senator Obama's plans are class warfare - let's spread the wealth around."

    Obama has routinely reframed the issue in terms of fairness. "Exxon Mobil, which made $12 billion, record profits, over the last several quarters," he replied during the final debate, "they can afford to pay a little more so that ordinary families who are hurting out there - they're trying to figure out how they're going to afford food, how they're going to save for their kids' college education, they need a break."

    This fall, the candidates and their surrogates endlessly repeated such arguments. As much as anything else, the presidential campaign turned into a dispute over the wisdom of "spreading the wealth." Most voters were comfortable enough with the concept to send its leading advocate to the Oval Office.

    In the process, the top of the GOP ticket recycled attacks on the principles of the New Deal. Like Franklin Roosevelt when he first ran for president in 1932, Barack Obama put forward economic prescriptions that were hardly radical. Yet, in the next few years, Obama's administration could accomplish great things - reminiscent of the New Deal, with its safety-net guarantees, (redistributive) progressive income tax, support for labor rights and its mammoth commitment to public works programs that created jobs. Today, we need green jobs that cure our economy and heal our environment.

    Let's be clear: Despite their rhetoric, even McCain and Palin know that spreading the wealth from greedy elites to the masses of people is quite popular in our country. That's why their campaign emphasized how Palin "stood up to the oil industry" in Alaska. She did it by imposing a windfall profits tax on big oil that put money into the hands of every man, woman and child in the state. If it's good for Alaska, why wouldn't it be good for America as a whole?

    Obama and his activist base won a mandate for strong government action on behalf of economic fairness. But since election night, countless pundits and politicians have somberly warned the president-elect to govern from "the center." Presumably, such governance would preclude doing much to spread the wealth. Before that sort of conventional wisdom further hardens like political cement, national discussions should highlight options for moving toward a more egalitarian society.

    Government policies in that direction would be a sharp reversal of what's been happening over the last few decades. No matter how you slice it, more of the economic pie has been going to fewer people.

    "The top 1 percent of households received 22.9 percent of all pre-tax income in 2006, more than double what that figure was in the 1970s," the Working Group on Extreme Inequality reports. "This is the greatest concentration of income since 1928." And: "Between 1979 and 2006, the top 5 percent of American families saw their real incomes increase 87 percent. Over the same period, the lowest-income fifth saw zero increase in real income."

    Current tax structures are steeply tilted to make the rich richer at the expense of others: "In the 2008 tax year, households in the bottom 20 percent will receive $26 due to the Bush tax cuts. Households in the middle 20 percent will receive $784. Households in the top 1 percent will receive $50,495. And households in the top 0.1 percent will receive $266,151."

    We can reverse those trends. The time and opportunity have come to "spread the wealth."

    When President Franklin Roosevelt heard pleas for bold steps to counter extreme economic inequality, he replied: "Go out and make me do it."

    Barack Obama won the presidency after clearly saying that he wants to spread the wealth. Let's make him do it.

    --------

    Norman Solomon, a national co-chair of Healthcare NOT Warfare, is the author of many books, including "War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death." He is on the advisory board of Progressive Democrats of America.

  

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Yes! Spread the wealth!

Yes! Spread the wealth!

Open letter to the Keith

Open letter to the Keith Olbermanns and Rachel Maddows of the world. You made a career of Bush bashing the last couple of years, (he deserved it), and now that career is over. Your new career will be to keep Obama honest and on message. He has no mandate. That is a term reserved for royalty mandated to rule by act of God. Obama got a majority, not a mandate. He did not get a blank check to do whatever he and Nancy want to do. (watch out for her). I voted for Obama because I believed in his message. We all have a duty to keep him true to that message.

Redistributing the wealth to

Redistributing the wealth to alleviate the suffering of those at the bottom of society is not only not reprehensible, as McCain believes: it is the essence of a just society. Failure to do so is what brought us today's obscene gap between the 5% haves and the 95% have nots. If yesterday's election means anything, it means government's acting to close that gap.

It's beyond obvious the

It's beyond obvious the reckless ideologically based magic thinking doesn't work in the 21st Century. Free markets don't provide. Trickle down is not a substitute for a safety net. Abstinence only doesn't reduce teen pregnancy. Demonizing other Americans doesn't always win elections. Those who drive wedges between fellow americans for the purpose of gaining power don't always govern well. Tax and spend may in the long run be better than cut and spend. Making the wealthy richer does not make them more christian or more charitable.

Every rich dollar is used to

Every rich dollar is used to pay for a bribe or to support a racket. They are the enemy domestic and they have done more damage than every foreign enemy combined. It is time to break their money supply line and take over their rackets. Rich crooks should not have power over any necessity.

The world dances before our

The world dances before our eyes, and yet again we think this is all about US. If we don't share the wealth we will see another depression, but how does that help the world? Obama has a whole prayerful world behind him to think about-a new age, a new face. Can we share our wealth with the world?

Wall Street has voted the

Wall Street has voted the past two days on Obama's higher taxes and spread the wealth plan: the markets don't like it! I'm all in favor of fairness and greater equity, but if it is not done carefully, we will destroy the economy and there will be much less wealth to spread around. The U.S. is the world's greatest debtor nation, and if wealth flees overseas to avoid poorly conceived taxes, we will see a depression to rival the Great Depression, for sure. If you just want to "soak the rich," all you will do is make everyone poor.

"ordinary families who are

"ordinary families who are hurting out there - they're trying to figure out how they're going to afford food, how they're going to save for their kids' college education, they need a break." They need more than a break, they need a complete overhaul of the our institutional structures. This will not happen under Obama, no matter what kind of "pressure" us progressives think we can put on him. He never even appealed to us during the election, what makes you think he would care to listen to us now? Leftists didn't win this election for Obama, Goldman Sachs won this election for Obama. To think otherwise is to disregard history, and the way that power structures operate.

Those pundits who make

Those pundits who make incomes in the high six figures will all have to pay more ... too damn bad. It's time to end the redistribution of wealth upward, which is exactly what Bush, McCain and their ilk have been doing for eight years. The current brand of Republicans are not any friends of the middle class, obviously. The days of mindless sloganeering and denigrating basic intelligence are finished. (Africa is no country, Sarah. All your fussing can't change a geographical fact. And certainly no country for old men. Couldn't resist that.) Isn't it great that we finally have a president who can think cogently again!! Time to sweep out the fascist Republican insect that preys on the middle class and its sensible American values. Spread the wealth? Not only yes, but hell, yes!!

Originally I believe the

Originally I believe the phrase was to "redistribute" the wealth. Anyone looking at the statistics comparing 1980 with 2008 knows that the "trickle down theory" believed in redistributing the wealth as well. Unfortunately, not much of it "trickled down," most of it just made the rich richer and created an indefensible gap between the have's and the have nots. So it is time to reverse the direction of "redistribution."

It's simple common sense,

It's simple common sense, when you think about it. Back in the 80s, some economists started talking about how capital was no longer the measure of a business, but cash-flow was- and in actual practice, that is true. We have to begin to see money not just as an "object" but as a measure of energy- human energy. The energy "tokens" have to flow between people to be of any use in terms of stimulating the processes of human endeavor. When one person has a billion dollars, there's no way they can spend the money fast enough to create an adequate flow. This is why trickle-down doesn't work. We do better when a billion people have one dollar- because all those dollars are changing hands and all those people are part of the flow. As I've preached in other places and times, we also need to decentralize all of our systems- energy, food, clothing, housing, and healthcare need to be removed from the top-down systems and reworked as "webcentric"- communities need to be as autonomous in terms of food and energy especially as possible- because the old systems were predicated on cheap fuel, and that's not going to work any more. Decentralize, decentralize, decentralize- that's my mantra.

I really don't know about

I really don't know about the 'spread' the wealth concept at all. In fact I am way too skeptical for any good changes that comes from the European economic model if that is what Obama wants to have. If it is then well there is one thing I could hold on to and that is guns,cash,family,precious metals,food supplies,and medicine. I will not have ANY part of 'force' the spread of wealth through taxation and other forms of malicious robbery. I could live without having ANY government hoarding cash to give out to the other who made quite irresponsible mistakes or just plain stupid mistakes. If it is a redistribution of that kind of wealth then I will do one thing: revolt and destroy my citizenship for this country.

Used to be that the wealthy

Used to be that the wealthy paid a lot more in taxes, and the thinking was that it was fair, because they were lucky enough to live in a country that offered them the opportunities to make that kind of wealth. Since those times it seems that the wealthy have gotten greedier and feel more and more entitled to keep their money, as if they aren't lucky, as if they make it all by themselves, which isn't true. They make that money with the assistance of lots of others. I think its about time the rich of this country give up the greed and start feeling lucky again. And happily pay their taxes.

For a heads-up on what the

For a heads-up on what the US income distribution looks like, see http://www.lcurve.org. Then come back and talk about redistribution of income. The very wealthy have had the wealth generated by working people distributed upward to them to the point where 1% own essentially half the economy. Changing the rules to shift some of that back down the scale is giving people what they have earned.

Corporate welfare and

Corporate welfare and government enforcement of monopolies have been disastrous. I hope Obama will address this, especially banking, defense, and utility monopolies. As for corporate welfare, one of the worst has been pesticides broadly sprayed at taxpayer expense, at the behest sometimes of The Nature Conservancy and Democratic legislators. I pray Obama will summon the courage to address issues where some neighborhoods, e.g. Santa Barbara and D.C. along the Potomac, do not get sprayed at taxpayer expense, while less-advantaged neighborhoods do. People must be freed to recover from polluters with honest testimony which represents peer-reviewed science. Stuff dumped into EPA records in remote locations by company-paid Ph.D's is not acceptable. This sickening verbiage, repudiated by other scientists, is used to prolong hurtful practices by companies and to let them get out of helping the places and people they have harmed. Prevention of greedy-CEO syndrome should happen before taxpayers are robbed and sprayed. Democrats have facilitated this harm. Obama and his team should take this on. Recovering wealth that was accumulated through harm and coercion should be a first priority. Correcting records that do not acknowledge harm from "inert" ingredients such as surfactants is urgent. I did not vote for Obama because I feel corporations have had too much influence on the regular Democratic Party. Reports on convention private parties were sickening. Broad citizen pressure will be necessary for his team to stand up to corporate pressure and to do what is right for little people.

If we had an economic system

If we had an economic system that took care of working people, maybe we'd work forty hour weeks, have four to six weeks of annual paid vacations, schooling paid by society, healthcare paid for by society, old-age pensions paid by society, unemployment security, far lower percentage of poor people or street people, and executives NOT being paid 400 or 500 or 1000 times that of the average worker's income. That sort of society might be worth my paying 40% of my income to support.

Just think of the number of

Just think of the number of jobs that would be created if thousands of this country's unemployed could be put to work in repairing the long-neglected infrastructure projects in this country. They would also regain the dignity that comes with honest employment, not to mention restoring with pride the crumbling state of so many public areas. Right now, for instance, due for budget cuts the maintenance of our national parks has stopped. Their roadways are crumbling, trash isn't picked up with regularity and even restrooms don't get cleaned consistently. Let's get vocal with Washington about this and begin again to restore our pride in this beautiful country.

'Trickle down' is a culinary

'Trickle down' is a culinary term for sauce, like chocolate and gravy! Enough said. 'Resources' is the word used instead of 'wealth'. Wealth is an excess of anything--no judgment. The problem is working peoples' resources are being sold/traded at far less than their value[outsourcing]. Equitable pay for ones' resources used. In street talk, this would be:' go pick on someone your own size now'. Regulations readjust the 'size'.

It all showed just how much

It all showed just how much McCain was/is out of touch with the reality of average Americans' lives. There are not as many greedy, status-quo types as he must imagine, down here where we Little People live. The majority of us struggle to various degrees where money is concerned. McCain's snide sarcasm about "spreading the wealth around" didn't resonate well, especially considering his own financial position. It certainly didn't show any particular concern for those less privileged than he. The rich have stolen from the poor in so many ways, for so long in this country . . .

Everybody but everybody

Everybody but everybody believes in spreading the wealth. It's just a question of who spreads how much to whom. I wonder if folks like INDEPENDENCE 1776 really are as ready to live, or do live, without "the spread of wealth through taxation and other forms of malicious robbery" as they say they are or do. No public schools or libraries, no roads, no grain, sugar, meat, vegetables or fruit but what they've grown themselves, no petroleum or petroleum products, no certified drugs or doctors or nurses, nothing imported from outside the US or their state or locality depending on how strict they are, no police, no military, no courts, and my list is only just started. Can't even own land since taxes enforce contracts. So where and how are you going to live out your thoroughly romanticized version of pioneer life? By the way, if you're true to your vision, you'll hoard nothing on your list of "guns,cash,family,precious metals,food supplies,and medicine" but family, since all the rest are tainted by taxes. Likely you and your family can't be on the list either unless everyone is entirely un- or home educated. Good luck.

One other aspect of the

One other aspect of the "trickle down" philosophy, which has choked the resources [thank you, culinarian] of the middle class is the fact that as the bottom drops out on the majority of "consumer" citizens, the number of customers for the corporations also declines. The uroburos swallows its own tail, here. Corporations are hunter-gatherer, predatory entities, who swoop into an economic landscape and take what they want. But resources are grown and built up over time, in an agricole sort of way, and when the swoopers have finished destroying that economic landscape, there's nothing left. We are witnessing what happens to a landscape out of balance- the rest of us have to plant the seeds and rebuild while the plundering bankers walk off with their booty. We can't afford to buy what manufacturers are selling any more, so they don't have an income, either. The whole system is on the verge of collapse, and the worth of the bankers' loot will devolve along with it. Shortsighted and selfish in the extreme. Decentralizing our systems is necessary not just for the sake of function but as a safeguard against the mindless marauders.

I am (what you might call) a

I am (what you might call) a have, versus a have not. I voted for Obama. I do not believe in redistributing wealth, but I do believe in 'balancing the playing field' Words are important. I don't want our government's policies to take anything from anybody who has earned it, just because they are successful; however, I also don't believe that laws (tax or otherwise) should be skewed in favor of one group, or groups, because they can spend millions per year on lobbyists. Why we are paying billions to subsidize big oil is beyond me. In 2005 the Bush administration authorized an additional 32.9 billion dollars in NEW subsidies over a five-year period. This to an industry which has recorded record profits each quarter for the last 2 years. The corporate give-aways must end and we need to strengthen the 'safety net' that protects the average American who needs health care or TEMPORARY assistance based upon the economy and job loss. I agree with 'Conan' who talked about using the unemployed to help improve the U.S. infrastructure, as was done with the New Deal. Justice is the removal of inequality. No one should be talking about 'taking' from people because they have wealth; it is counterproductive. Instead we should be asking for equality under the law (which is our right as citizens) Not even the most dyed in the wool conservative could argue with that.

Though I deem myself a

Though I deem myself a progressive, and so very happy that Obama is the President-Elect, in all of this, I cannot help but bring to mind certain famous Churchill edicts: "Jaw, jaw, instead of War, war!!" and, "Democracy is the worst of governments, except for all the others" I'm looking forward to "kitchen-table"-style "Jaw, jaw" to discuss and debate how that wealth can be redistributed and, yes, created too!

Profit is theft. It means

Profit is theft. It means paying less for labor than what it is worth, and it is the basis for this whole corrupt system. Let's please keep in mind what James Madison wrote about the purpose of government: "To protect the minority of the opulent against the majority". Having lived in a socialist country, where profit is kept to a minimum, I can tell you that everyone there is better off for it. Homelessness is practically non-existent, everyone has enough, and property crime is practically nil. The people are safer, happier, live longer and healthier lives, and the dire poverty that still exists in the 'wealthiest country in the world" is a fading memory there. We've seen decades of the psychopathic 'trickle-down" economics and corporate welfare. It's time for some trickle-up. "Our upside down welfare state is "socialism for the rich, free enterprise for the poor." The great welfare scandal of the age concerns the dole we give rich people." William O. Douglas, former U.S. Supreme Court Justice, 1969

THE SPREAD THE WEALTH CHANT

THE SPREAD THE WEALTH CHANT WAS DISGUISED RACISM TO REPLACE the Reagan "WELFARE QUEEN" chant. Joe is meant to typify the outraged white male's racist fears. To build a political campaign with Joe the Plumber as it's cornerstone is an obvious act of desperation by the McCain, or is it the Palin campaign. The "REAL AMERICANS" CHANT was also a not so DISGUISED APPEAL TO RACISM MEANING WHITES ARE THE REAL Americans. As for the tax burden it is THE WEALTHY who GET THE MOST BENEFITS FROM TAX MONEY. The American MILITARY IS TO PROTECT THEIR WORLD WIDE INVESTMENTS for which they are the greatest beneficiaries. The WEALTHY also are awarded the LOAN PROCEEDS which FINANCE THE Federal deficit. They get the loan proceeds and THE INTEREST AND PRINCIPLE ARE PAID BACK BY THE INDIVIDUAL AMERICAN TAXPAYERS. Since it is the wealthy who benefit the most from taxes they should pay more, along the line of a user fee, so to speak.

McCain and Bush Junior

McCain and Bush Junior cling to Reaganomics that George Bush Senior labeled "Voodoonomics" in Senior's debate(s) with Reagan decades ago. And the evidence has become overwhelming that Reaganomic "privatisation, deregulation and tax cuts" for the very wealthy at the expense of the many has torn apart our nation under republican presidents Reagan, Bush and Bush. President Clinton and Vice President Gore understood that our nation needs to nurture the many for the many to produce as a garden of riches....and Clinton-Gore caused the most productive economy in our nation's history. I can't wait to see the synergy of an Obama-Clinton-Biden-Gore team now.

There will be no wealth to

There will be no wealth to "spread around" if the CEO's that have all kinds of shelters for money and real properties hidden offshore,move it before Jan.1... It would be interesting for the average person to "follow the money",since the bailout.

Norman, you're so good on

Norman, you're so good on issues of war and peace, but like most liberals you fail to see the connection between warfare and welfare. Aggressive war is immoral, we all agree. What liberals don't get, however, is that "spreading the wealth" is just another form of aggression against innocents. In this case, the gov'mt forcefully confiscates the wealth of its own citizens. Any resistance to the tax man is punished with violence. If you don't believe me, withhold your income taxes next year and you'll eventually experience the reality. Some might counter that tax schemes are legitimized through democratic processes, but this is hogwash. Aggression is aggression whether it is initiated by a dictator or by a democracy. So, please, for the sake of moral consistency and for the sake of peace, withdraw your cries for a new New Deal. It'll hurt us all.

Instead of spread the

Instead of spread the wealth, how about spread the pain.