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The F Word: No Armistice in War on Poor
Armistice Day reminds us that when wars end, the winners and losers are supposed to make peace. For the first time, in 2009, leaders of World War II enemies, Germany and France, commemorated the date together as a sign of new mutual respect. But this week also marked the ten-year anniversary of a different kind of war -- a war on Americans' assets and the poor. Ten years later, while the winners and losers are obvious, there's no armistice in sight.
On November 12, 1999, after decades of banking deregulation, congress repealed the 1933 Glass-Steagall Act, which up until that point had kept Main Street banks and commercial financial speculation apart. Glass-Steagall's repeal unleashed a wave of derivative marketing that rewarded shameless loan sharks for selling the most vulnerable Americans into a bubble of debt.
The bubble having burst, now the stock market is up. Companies are reporting strong earnings and Wall Street's clearly at peace. The top three banks announced this week that they'll be giving out their biggest bonuses yet. But this week's news also brought US double-digit unemployment and regardless of those good earnings, the layoffs just don't stop; Sprint says it's cutting another 2,500 jobs; Pfizer, 2,000 jobs; even supposedly new and growing parts of the economy aren't growing -- software developer Adobe's cutting 6 percent of its workforce, game-maker Electronic Arts is cutting 1,500 jobs. And that's just this week.
Winners and losers? You betcha. And the winners have won some serious loot.
Having suppressed wages for decades, now employers are suppressing jobs. Workers are not only making do with less -- they're working harder than ever, and there are no new hires, because fewer people seem to get the job done just fine. In fact, productivity's up, and the personal costs are off the books.
Call me crazy, but the spoils are pretty nifty: fewer workers, lower wages, a more terrified workforce. From a winners' point of view, what's not to like?
The proof of no-peace is in the fact that the president and congress keep talking about recovery and jobs bouncing back...but there's no real structural change on the table, no new economic tools, no regulation -- certainly no reparations -- in sight. The losers are weak and the winners are stronger than ever.
The US economy has lost some 10 million jobs since the recession began. Do you really think those 10 million jobs are coming back? It seems to me, the war is far from over and the spoils are just beginning to mount.
The F Word is a regular commentary by Laura Flanders, the host of GRITtv which broadcasts weekdays on satellite TV (Dish Network Ch. 9415 Free Speech TV) on cable, and online at GRITtv.org and TheNation.com. Follow GRITtv or GRITlaura on Twitter.com.

The war started a lot longer than 10 yrs ago. 1974 Buckley vs Valeo was a big move in lifting limits on money to buy politics and public opinion. That in response to the successes of the middle- and working-classes throughout 1960s and 70s in Anti Vietnam movement, clean air, clearn water, labor, civil, women’s movements, all of which cost the capitalist class dearly from profits and dividends, and which they claimed threatened their “property rights” as enshrouded in the complexities of the constitution.
They appealed to the Madisonian principles of the Constitution designed to protect land- and slave-owners from democratic “tyranny of the masses”.
They have been progressively winning de-regulation and Supreme Court rulings on basis of “property rights”, “free-speech”, etc, and wrestled media ownership and concentration out of hands of “liberals” to poison our minds, divide us against each other, and get our votes on spurious emotional and politics of fear basis etc for a lot longer than 10 yrs.
By AlbyFlugzeug on November 11th, 2009 at 3:45 pm
I couldn’t agree more Alby, this is a “work in progress”. This started long before Bush, even before Regan.
The Left is a disconnected mess, some want to pass anything and call that reform and fix it later. Others want Radical Change (which is what I want) because nothing in this country gets done unless you force it down their throats, you have to make “Change” happen.
Everybody on the Right want to kill Reform, weather its Health Care, Economy, Energy, Climate, etc, etc.
So this is our time to shine, we need to reboot this health care reform and start over with Medicare For All.
By djfourmoney on November 11th, 2009 at 6:18 pm