(I dedicate this essay to the memory of the millions
of victims of the Capitalist Imperial wars of conquest waged by the United
States under the pretext of spreading freedom and liberty).
Rolling through virtually any reasonably populous city or
town in America, one encounters a surreal landscape blighted by grotesque
temples to America’s twin gods of Capitalism and Consumerism. As an increasing
number of individual proprietors are driven to extinction, Wal-Mart,
McDonald’s, and hundreds more leviathan corporations continue their rapid
construction of more houses of worship to serve their zealous congregation.
Once inside, many Americans gleefully sacrifice an abundance of their
greenbacks at altars attended by Consumerism’s unwitting acolytes.
For appallingly meager wages and benefits, the cashiers
tending the sacred Churches of Capitalism and Consumerism gather the offerings
which enable their fellow faithful to reap the fruits of practicing their
devotion.
Good little Consumers can receive a veritable cornucopia of
“blessings” which include working in jobs amounting to indentured servitude,
obesity, insurmountable debt, insularity from the rest of the world, unwitting
support of a merciless militaristic regime which is evolving into fascism,
idolatrous worship of celebrities and money, facilitation of obscene
concentration of wealth into the hands of a few, and participation in the
severe desecration of our environment.
They may exist in a spiritual wasteland, but at least those
Americans who are fortunate enough to find themselves in the shrinking middle
class have access to basic human necessities, some creature comforts, and
relative stability and safety (at least for the short term). However, a growing
number of Americans find themselves wandering in a barren desert, lacking both
sustenance for the soul and the corporeal “blessings” bestowed upon the middle
class wage earners by the high priests of Capitalism and Consumerism.
How Did This Nightmare Evolve?
As the Magna Charta emerged and evolved, and the United
States Constitution was conceived and implemented, “feudalism” and monarchy
began to gasp their dying breaths. Ostensibly, the rule of law was superseding
the rule of men to deliver a sound measure of justice and equality.
In truth, humanity simply traded one set of tyrants for
another. To this day many still cling to the myth that the United States is the
nexus of freedom, equality and human rights. Yet the constitutional republic of
the United States was forged primarily by white men, many of whom were wealthy
land owners looking to free themselves from the tyranny of King George while
preserving their narrow interests. The fact that there was significant
resistance to the inclusion of the Bill of Rights in the Constitution speaks
volumes of the priorities of many of our Founding Fathers.
In creating a powerful federal government, minimizing the
decision-making power of the poor and working class to occasional elections of
representatives (while limiting the impact of their votes by forming the
Electoral College), ignoring the Native American population, and maintaining
the legality of slavery, our founders created a nation which afforded freedom
and equality almost exclusively to white males who possessed a measure of
wealth.
America’s propertied ruling class quickly learned to
manipulate their laws to exploit the rest of the population in ways not unlike
their predecessors who reigned from thrones. As they lived like lords and
kings, the elites of the United States basked in the glow of admiration of
their “enlightened values.” Over the years they showed their true colors to the
world by engaging in numerous imperialistic endeavors, nearly wiping out the
Native American population, and fighting progressive movements like Abolition
and Women’s Suffrage with virtually every fiber of their collective being.
Capitalism: Economic Rule of the Rich, by the Rich, for
the Rich
Founded on the principles of individual liberty and
self-determination (for white male property owners), the nascent United States
provided fertile ground for the seeds of Capitalism. Conditions such as
slavery, explosive growth in the number of banks, America’s powerful drive to
expand its territory, neutral trade during the war between Great Britain and
France, and ultimately, the Industrial Revolution enabled American Capitalism
to grow into a thriving jungle.
By the late nineteenth century, trusts and monopolies
flourished. Laissez faire economic policy prevented the government “of the
people” from meddling in the wealthy elite’s obscene human and environmental
exploitation. America’s plutocracy was living large while the rest of the population
struggled and suffered.
For years, America’s schools and media have inculcated us
with the notion that Capitalism is the superlative socioeconomic system in the
history of humankind. In spite of the “feel good” propaganda intended to keep
us pacified, working, and consuming, there is a very dark side to the much
vaunted American Way.
"America's abundance was created not by public
sacrifices to the common good, but by the productive genius of free men who
pursued their own personal interests and the making of their own private
fortunes."
Thank you, Ayn Rand, for affirming the naked brutality and
avarice of America’s socioeconomic system, a system which enables a privileged
few who “play the game” well to mercilessly pursue their personal interests, amass
private fortunes, and hoard the lion’s share of “America’s abundance.”
The economy of the United States, which possesses many
elements of commonly accepted definitions of Capitalism, is tempered to some
degree by components which would more appropriately be attributed to Socialism
or Progressive Utilization Theory (PROUT), socioeconomic systems devoted in
large part to ensuring the welfare of society as a whole and which value humans
as sentient beings rather than commodities.
Unfortunately, by and large, Capitalism predominates in the
American socioeconomic system and represents a substantial portion of our
national character (or lack thereof). America embodies ruthless exploitation of
humanity and the Earth. In the capitalist paradigm, human beings and the planet
are simply material objects which exist to fulfill the desires of the
bourgeoisie masters. Imperialism and Neoliberalism go hand in glove with
Capitalism. Insatiable greed and objectification do not respect borders or
boundaries.
Cruel and brutal as the United States is, imagine how
ruthless it would be were the Social Darwinists of the upper stratum of our
society given free rein to implement their Hobbesian vision.
Relentless Momentum
After years of gains for the poor, women, minorities, and
labor throughout the twentieth century, a champion arose for America’s White
Capitalist Patriarchy in 1980. When Ronald Reagan took the driver’s seat, he
wasn’t content to simply return justice and compassion to the back seat. He
threw them in the trunk and left them there to rot.
Reagan’s successors, Republican and Democrat alike, have
worked feverishly to refortify the Capitalist bulwarks of privatization,
property laws, deregulation, cuts in social spending, and free trade
agreements.
American Capitalism is a pyramid scheme shaped and forged
over time to ensure that a small minority of principally white males garner a
majority of the wealth. A few token minorities are allowed to “join the club,”
while some women enter the upper stratosphere (usually by virtue of their
birthright and inheritance), but by and large, the White Patriarchy maintains
its strangle-hold on choice properties like Boardwalk and Park Place. A
majority of Americans wind up holding Mediterranean and Baltic.
You Might as Well Stand Around Waiting to Be Struck by
Lightning
Horatio Alger wrote over 130 very popular fiction novels in
the nineteenth century. Unfortunately, his ideal notions of attaining “rags to
riches” success through hard work and determination in the Capitalist system
were principally fiction, too. Calling him a useful idiot would be unfair
because his heart was in the right place, but his works did provide very useful
propaganda for the wealthy ruling class who wanted their modern day serfs to
believe they had a realistic chance of rising to the top of the economic or
political food chain. Undeniably there are those who started with virtually
nothing and accrued vast fortunes or became powerful people, but for each one
who did, millions failed. And the same is true today.
He Who Has the Gold Makes the Rules
Consider that over half of our presidents came from families
ranking amongst the wealthiest 3 percent of Americans while at least a dozen
sprang from the loins of elitists in the top 1 percent.
In 2005, 143 of 435 US Representatives and one in three
Senators were millionaires.
Statistics from 2002 indicate that eight of the 15
wealthiest individuals in America had acquired their fortunes through
inheritance. Five of these eight were Waltons. The other three were progeny of
the founder of the Mars Candy empire. No concentration of wealth in the hands
of a few there, is there?
Reports from 2002 also indicate that Bill Gates had acquired
as much wealth as the bottom 40 percent of US households. And the Walton clan
possessed 771,287 times the wealth of the average US household. Here is to the
land of equal opportunity!
In 2004, the United States had 374 billionaires and 7.5
million millionaires (about 2 percent of the population). The wealthiest
Americans possessed $11 trillion in assets. Meanwhile 13 percent of Americans
lived below poverty level. What was that Horatio Alger myth again?
Yes, the bourgeoisie is thriving and dominating in the
United States. We are indeed experiencing the dawn of the Second Gilded Age.
According to Friedrich Engels, the bourgeoisie are: " .
. . the class of modern capitalists, owners of the means of social production
and employers of wage labour." Whose function is: " . . . the
appropriation and therefore control of the labour of others and . . . the
selling of the products of this labour." And who are differentiated from
the small proprietors (which their massive corporate entities often crush)
by:"capitalist production requires an individual capital big enough to
employ a fairly large number of workers at a time; only when he himself is
wholly released from labour does the employer of labour become a full-blooded
capitalist."
More staggering statistics demonstrate who reaps the bounty
in a Capitalist system (even one constrained by elements of more just and
humane economic systems):
- More
than 99 percent of American businesses have fewer than 500 employees and
account for less than 37 percent of all business sales.
- Elite
corporations (those employing more than 5,000 people) comprise a fraction
of the remaining 1 percent of American businesses, yet ring up over 40
percent of sales.
- Within
specific business sectors, corporate monopolists shine brightly. The 50
largest banks control over 35 percent of bank assets in the United States.
- The
largest 100 corporations alone account for over 46 percent of corporate
net income after taxes.
- One
percent of Americans own more stock than the 90 percent of us who dwell at
the bottom of Bush’s “ownership society.”
While a tiny segment of the US population becomes
increasingly powerful both economically and politically, working class families
continue to rely on two incomes to make ends meet, while 13 percent of the
population lives below the poverty level.
As the semblance of a meritocracy in America succumbs to the
forces of plutocratic ambition and greed under the Bush Regime, the American
economic system’s “noble and fair” reputation is dutifully maintained by
genuflecting mainstream media pundits. Yet there is one particularly shameful
stain that not even master propagandists can mask.
Material Prosperity . . . Spiritual Bankruptcy
In a self-proclaimed Christian nation awash in a sea of
money, guided by allegedly noble principles, and purported to have a Manifest
Destiny to convert the world to the American Way, a significant number of
discarded, hopelessly poor human beings are living proof of the cruel hypocrisy
of the ruling elite of the United States. America’s homeless are living
testaments to the gross injustices of Capitalism, even in an economy tempered
with elements of government-funded social programs and regulations on
businesses.
"Let all bear in mind that a society is judged not so
much by the standards attained by its more affluent and privileged members as
by the quality of life which it is able to assure for its weakest
members." --Javier Perez de Cuellar (former Prime Minister of Peru and
Secretary General to the UN)
Each year 3.5 million Americans experience homelessness. Of
these unfortunates, 750,000 are chronically homeless. Forty-nine percent are
Black while only 35 percent are white (which represents an obviously gross
disproportion when compared to the racial make-up of the general population). A
startling 40 percent of the homeless include families.
Who Are These
Nameless, Forgotten, “Disposable” Human Beings?
Homelessness is not limited to the conventional notion of
people sleeping in a cardboard box or on a park bench. America’s homeless
people include those who live in their cars, abandoned buildings, cheap motels
called flop-houses, and train or bus stations.
Many homeless maintain jobs making sub-standard wages. Other
ways the homeless obtain their meager incomes is through begging, street
performance, selling street magazines (written and distributed by the
homeless), and selling their blood. In their desperation, some feign illness to
gain admission to hospitals while others commit crimes so they can get “three
hots and a cot.”
Those with untreated mental illness are amongst the most
vulnerable of our society. Tragically, the mentally afflicted comprise 25
percent of the homeless population. In the 1960s, the United States government
de-institutionalized many suffering with chronic mental illness. Our ruling
elites at multiple levels of government failed (and continue to fail) to
establish and fund adequate community service programs necessary for these
people to achieve stability in their lives. Without adequate support systems in
their communities, many mentally ill individuals wind up living on the street.
At least 38 percent of the homeless are reported to
self-medicate with drugs and alcohol to escape the misery of their situation,
thus greatly diminishing the likelihood they can reclaim stable lives.
About 5 percent of the homeless are runaway teens. It is a
travesty that due to a dearth of government social safety nets, many of these
children fall prey to drugs, street gangs, prostitution, or the pornography
industry.
Representing a particularly searing indictment of America’s
Capitalist constitutional republic are the 500,000 US military veterans who
experience homelessness each year. Conscripted or manipulated by propaganda to
fight in wars of imperial aggression (like Vietnam), homeless veterans were
used by the elites and cast aside like yesterday’s garbage. The Veterans
Administration only provides housing for veterans who are chronically ill and
has severely neglected the needs of those with mental illness, and cut most
Vietnam War Veterans adrift with no job training. Risk your life to expand the
American Empire and you get to spend the rest of your days eating out of trash
dumpsters.
Many choose homelessness, at least temporarily, because they
are unable to make a living wage in America’s “booming” economy or find
themselves completely unemployed. Offshoring of American jobs, stagnant wages,
the soaring cost of housing, and the agonizing loss of industrial sector jobs
with healthy wages are leaving many Americans vulnerable to financial disaster.
Overwhelmed by bills and crippled by insufficient income, some Americans are
forced to choose amongst basic necessities. Naturally housing goes before food
and clothing, leaving people living on the street, or if they are lucky, in
their cars.
Natural disasters like Hurricane Katrina can add
dramatically to the number of homeless. At least 50,000 Katrina victims remain
homeless. New Orleans is a particularly instructive case because it clearly
demonstrates the Capitalist elites’ obsession with property rights and their
callous disregard for humanity. Our Constitution charges the federal government
with promoting the general welfare. Yet the Bush Regime had cut funding for the
levees despite warnings of the impending disaster dating back to 2001, provided
a slow and anemic relief effort by utilizing a FEMA entity which they had
gutted, and patrolled the streets with heavily armed Blackwater contractors to
secure property and assets.
Principally because of its draconian crackdown on
non-violent drug-users, particularly in the black community, the United States
has the world’s largest prison population (5 percent of the world’s population
and 25 percent of the prison population: more evidence that preservation of the
propertied class and their holdings must come before all other considerations
in a nation dominated by Capitalist elites).
Since the American justice system emphasizes punitive
measures over rehabilitation, many of the 2 million incarcerated face bleak
possibilities once they have completed their sentences. Lacking job training
and adequate social coping skills while bearing the stigma of a felony
conviction, former convicts find it extremely difficult to reassimilate into
society. Many wind up homeless, living with the friends with whom they got into
trouble in the first place, in homeless shelters, in flop-houses, or under
bridges.
Their Milk of Human
Kindness Soured Long Ago
As the moneyed class strengthens its dominance over our
society, the plight of the homeless is worsening. The US Conference of Mayors
(representing 270 cities) reported that the demand for homeless shelter space
increased by 13 percent in 2001 and by 25 percent in 2005. Twenty-two percent
of those seeking shelter in 2005 were refused.
Demonstrating the depths of their compassion, our
“benevolent” leaders have begun to criminalize homelessness. Of the 224
American cities that participated in a recent National Coalition for the
Homeless survey, approximately 30 percent are taking measures targeting the
homeless, including banning panhandling and “camping,” initiating frequent
police sweeps of public areas to arrest or “evict” homeless persons, and
selectively enforcing loitering laws.
While our heavily entrenched corporate elites and affluent
decision-makers cut their own taxes, reduce spending on social programs, and
lavish insane amounts of the working poor’s and middle class’s tax money on a
military which exists to protect and expand their pecuniary interests, they
offer the weakest members of our society, our homeless people, a quality of
life that would repulse a sewer rat.
Thanks to the pathological greed unleashed and rewarded by
Capitalism, America has forged a Faustian pact. It is inevitable that
Mephistopheles will come to collect his due. Or perhaps he already has.
Jason
Miller is a 39-year-old sociopolitical essayist with a degree in liberal arts
and an extensive self-education (derived from an insatiable appetite for
reading). He is a member of Amnesty International and an avid supporter of
Oxfam International and Human Rights Watch. He welcomes responses at willpowerful@hotmail.com
or comments on his blog, Thomas
Paine's Corner.