Socialism and capitalism are economic systems. Democracy
(government of, by and for the people) is what we were promised with the
Declaration of Independence; plutocracy (government by the wealthy) is what we
got and totalitarianism (total control by the state) is what the USSR got.
Socialism advocates ownership of the means of production by
workers collectively or through the government, an equitable sharing by all of
the burdens and benefits of a society and the realization that justice denied
to anyone, anywhere is justice denied to all.
Capitalism advocates private ownership of the means of
production, free markets, free trade and no government regulations. Unless
tightly regulated, capitalism by its nature creates greater and greater
inequality between those at the top and the rest of the heap. It creates boom
and bust cycles such as the Great Depression of the ’30s and the current Great
Recession
We, the American people, should get to choose our form of
government and economic system. That’s democracy. I would choose democracy and
socialism, democratic socialism because I believe both democracy and socialism
are the natural progression of the Declaration of Independence’s, “all men are
created equal . . . with certain inalienable rights . . . life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness.” Our present non-democratic combination of elite
(plutocratic) capitalism is great for those at the top, while the rest of the
heap get what’s left. Lately, it has been less and less.
- From 1976 to 2006, the
wealthiest 1 percent of U.S. households increased their share of total
U.S. income 2½ times from 8.9 percent of all U.S. income to 22.9 percent.
- In the U.S. in 1977, the
wealth of the top 1 percent equaled the wealth of the bottom 49 million
Americans. In 1999, it equaled the wealth of the bottom 100 million. Inequality
doubled in 22 years.
- Average CEO pay in 1965
was 20 times that of the average worker.
- Average CEO pay in 2000
was 458 times that of the average worker.
Former Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis said, “We can
have a democracy or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of the
few. We cannot have both.”
The consent of the majority is necessary to continue this
destructive system. It is time for the American people to withhold their
consent. Say no to elite capitalism with its progressive inequality, wars of
aggression, torture, unemployment, underemployment, outsourced jobs, pollution
and private insurance healthcare for profit. Tell both of our corporate
political parties who support these crimes against the people and planet that
they no longer have your consent.
As Americans start to look outside the corporate media, they
are becoming more and more aware that what we have now is broken. Some search
for answers from the right and some from the left, but as long as we have elite
capitalism running the show, there will be no people solutions from the
Democratic and Republican Parties, only solutions such as the Wall Street
bailout for the elite. This particular bi-partisan effort netted the same Wall
Street firms responsible for the financial debacle a total of $12.8 trillion. $850
billion was voted by Congress, but the rest was largely made up of funds from
the Federal Reserve. We the people don’t even know if these massive funds
approved by the Federal Reserve (a private entity), but in actuality from the
U.S. treasury, have to be repaid. The $12.8 trillion figure first reported by
Bloomberg News (a conservative outfit) amounts to $42,000 to the Wall Street
‘banksters’ from every man, woman and child in the country.
All eyes focus on the current healthcare debate in which
both political parties are supporting corporate America. The Republicans do so
by saying stay the course and keep government out of healthcare. The Democratic
Party refuses to even discuss a government single-payer plan (enhanced Medicare
for all) in spite of the fact that a majority of Americans support something like
this. The Democratic Party’s position has further eroded from that of their
grassroots base by not even standing firm on requiring a public option for
those who don’t wish to continue subsidizing insurance companies.
Those on the right state that healthcare is not a right
provided for in the U.S. Constitution. Our president, content to occupy the
center while giving lip service to desiring ‘change,’ takes the position that a
single-payer system, which would cover all Americans with identical coverage;
including mental, dental, prescription drugs, no previous condition exclusion,
no premiums, no deductibles and no co-pays, all paid for by funneling
employers’ current contributions to the federal government and increasing taxes
on those most fortunate in our society, would be “too disruptive.” Does anyone
seriously think it would be “too disruptive” to guarantee all Americans the
freedom from worry about healthcare expenses?
The absence of a comprehensive national healthcare program
for all Americans is only one of many issues facing us. While many on the right
scream at town hall meetings and in letters to the editor that the right to
healthcare is not contained in the U.S. Constitution, I believe there is a
strong legal case to be made that not only is the right to healthcare in the
Constitution, so is the right to basic democratic socialism.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Article 25 (1)
“Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and
well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and
medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the
event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack
of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.”
Above is Article 25 from the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights. The United Nations Charter is a legal treaty signed by the United
States and ratified by the U.S. Senate (89-2). The Supremacy Clause (Art VI,
Par 2) of the U.S. Constitution states that all treaties made . . . shall be
the supreme Law of the Land.”
The UN Charter states “WE THE PEOPLES OF THE UNITED NATIONS
DETERMINED . . . to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights . . .” The
members of the UN felt it was necessary to be more specific about these
“fundamental human rights.” In 1948 the member nations, including the United
States, unanimously voted 48-0 (with eight Soviet bloc countries abstaining) to
adopt the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. For 61 years, it has been the
standard for international law concerning the rights of individuals and has
been unchallenged in that regard in the U.S. and as such defines the rights of
individuals called for in the UN Charter and our Constitution through the
Supremacy Clause.
I have provided my definition of democratic socialism. Should
we retain markets in some form? What should the wage structure be? Should there
be some private and some public ownership of production? Should we have a
government single-payer healthcare system or actual socialized medicine similar
to the care our servicemen and women receive? It’s up to us, all 304 million of
us, to sort this out and make these decisions. That’s participatory democracy. I’m
sure that we will make some mistakes and not always get it right the first
time, but I’m also sure that the improvement over the present elite capitalist
system will be measured in light years.
After the carnage of two successive world wars the peoples
of the world, including the U.S., put in place the United Nations and the
Declaration of Human Rights. The American colonists fought a revolution for the
idea “all men are created equal . . . with certain inalienable rights . . . life,
liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” Elite capitalism has proved itself
incapable of bringing this about. Democratic socialism can. It is the
unfulfilled spirit of the American Revolution, the United Nations Charter and
the Declaration of Human Rights.
Nick Egnatz of Munster, Indiana, is a Vietnam
veteran and member of Veterans For Peace. He has been actively protesting our
government’s crimes of empire in both person and print for some years now and
was named “Citizen of the Year” for Northwest Indiana in 2006 by the National
Association of Social Workers for his peace activism.