30 Years Ago Today: The Middle Class Died

signalmankenneth

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From time to time, someone under 30 will ask me, "When did this all begin, America's downward slide?" They say they've heard of a time when working people could raise a family and send the kids to college on just one parent's income (and that college in states like California and New York was almost free). That anyone who wanted a decent paying job could get one. That people only worked five days a week, eight hours a day, got the whole weekend off and had a paid vacation every summer.

That many jobs were union jobs, from baggers at the grocery store to the guy painting your house.

And this meant that no matter how "lowly" your job was you had guarantees of a pension, occasional raises, health insurance and someone to stick up for you if you were unfairly treated.

Young people have heard of this mythical time -- but it was no myth, it was real. And when they ask, "When did this all end?", I say, "It ended on this day: August 5th, 1981."

Beginning on this date, 30 years ago, Big Business and the Right Wing decided to "go for it" -- to see if they could actually destroy the middle class so that they could become richer themselves.

And they've succeeded.

On August 5, 1981, President Ronald Reagan fired every member of the air traffic controllers union (PATCO) who'd defied his order to return to work and declared their union illegal. They had been on strike for just two days.

It was a bold and brash move. No one had ever tried it. What made it even bolder was that PATCO was one of only three unions that had endorsed Reagan for president! It sent a shock wave through workers across the country. If he would do this to the people who were with him, what would he do to us?

Reagan had been backed by Wall Street in his run for the White House and they, along with right-wing Christians, wanted to restructure America and turn back the tide that President Franklin D. Roosevelt started -- a tide that was intended to make life better for the average working person. The rich hated paying better wages and providing benefits. They hated paying taxes even more. And they despised unions. The right-wing Christians hated anything that sounded like socialism or holding out a helping hand to minorities or women.

Reagan promised to end all that. So when the air traffic controllers went on strike, he seized the moment. In getting rid of every single last one of them and outlawing their union, he sent a clear and strong message: The days of everyone having a comfortable middle class life were over. America, from now on, would be run this way:

* The super-rich will make more, much much more, and the rest of you will scramble for the crumbs that are left.

* Everyone must work! Mom, Dad, the teenagers in the house! Dad, you work a second job! Kids, here's your latch-key! Your parents might be home in time to put you to bed.

* 50 million of you must go without health insurance! And health insurance companies: you go ahead and decide who you want to help -- or not.

* Unions are evil! You will not belong to a union! You do not need an advocate! Shut up and get back to work! No, you can't leave now, we're not done. Your kids can make their own dinner.

* You want to go to college? No problem -- just sign here and be in hock to a bank for the next 20 years!

* What's "a raise"? Get back to work and shut up!

And so it went. But Reagan could not have pulled this off by himself in 1981. He had some big help:

The AFL-CIO.

The biggest organization of unions in America told its members to cross the picket lines of the air traffic controllers and go to work. And that's just what these union members did. Union pilots, flight attendants, delivery truck drivers, baggage handlers -- they all crossed the line and helped to break the strike. And union members of all stripes crossed the picket lines and continued to fly.

Reagan and Wall Street could not believe their eyes! Hundreds of thousands of working people and union members endorsing the firing of fellow union members. It was Christmas in August for Corporate America.

And that was the beginning of the end. Reagan and the Republicans knew they could get away with anything -- and they did. They slashed taxes on the rich. They made it harder for you to start a union at your workplace. They eliminated safety regulations on the job. They ignored the monopoly laws and allowed thousands of companies to merge or be bought out and closed down. Corporations froze wages and threatened to move overseas if the workers didn't accept lower pay and less benefits. And when the workers agreed to work for less, they moved the jobs overseas anyway.

And at every step along the way, the majority of Americans went along with this. There was little opposition or fight-back. The "masses" did not rise up and protect their jobs, their homes, their schools (which used to be the best in the world). They just accepted their fate and took the beating.

I have often wondered what would have happened had we all just stopped flying, period, back in 1981. What if all the unions had said to Reagan, "Give those controllers their jobs back or we're shutting the country down!"? You know what would have happened. The corporate elite and their boy Reagan would have buckled.

But we didn't do it. And so, bit by bit, piece by piece, in the ensuing 30 years, those in power have destroyed the middle class of our country and, in turn, have wrecked the future for our young people. Wages have remained stagnant for 30 years. Take a look at the statistics and you can see that every decline we're now suffering with had its beginning in 1981 (here's a little scene to illustrate that from my last movie).

It all began on this day, 30 years ago. One of the darkest days in American history. And we let it happen to us. Yes, they had the money, and the media and the cops. But we had 200 million of us. Ever wonder what it would look like if 200 million got truly upset and wanted their country, their life, their job, their weekend, their time with their kids back?

Have we all just given up? What are we waiting for? Forget about the 20% who support the Tea Party -- we are the other 80%! This decline will only end when we demand it. And not through an online petition or a tweet. We are going to have to turn the TV and the computer and the video games off and get out in the streets (like they've done in Wisconsin). Some of you need to run for local office next year. We need to demand that the Democrats either get a spine and stop taking corporate money -- or step aside.

When is enough, enough? The middle class dream will not just magically reappear. Wall Street's plan is clear: America is to be a nation of Haves and Have Nothings. Is that OK for you?

Why not use today to pause and think about the little steps you can take to turn this around in your neighborhood, at your workplace, in your school? Is there any better day to start than today?

by: Michael Moore
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God bless Michael Moore; a guy who tells the truth no matter how uncomfortable it makes people feel. And Micheal is right, Ronald Reagan was the pied piper on the road to serfdom. Ronbo was the biggest socialist in American history, he redistributed wealth from the hard working middle class to the opulent and elite. Reagan was a staunch socialist, totally committed to his cause of wealth redistribution towards the affluent. How much wealth transfer has occurred through Reagan’s policies? At least $3 trillion.

BTW, for over 200 years, the term "entitlement" referred to aristocrats. Aristocrats had titles, and they thought that they were thereby entitled to various things, particularly the deference of the common people.

Reagan: The great American Socialist

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God bless Michael Moore; a guy who tells the truth no matter how uncomfortable it makes people feel.

That is a joke. I am not commenting on the rest, but Michael Moore has no problem lying. He has lied outright, and used innuendo, misleading comments, and creative editing to lie his ass off. (and thats a BIG ass)
 
That is a joke. I am not commenting on the rest, but Michael Moore has no problem lying. He has lied outright, and used innuendo, misleading comments, and creative editing to lie his ass off. (and thats a BIG ass)

Be specific, WITH links.

My Apologies to Michael Moore

By Wendell Potter

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In advance of my appearance with Michael Moore on Countdown with Keith Olbermann tonight on MSNBC, I would like to offer an apology to both Moore and his archenemy, the health insurance industry, which spent a lot of policyholder premiums in 2007 to attack his movie, Sicko.

I need to apologize to Moore for the role I played in the insurance industry's public relations attack campaign against him and Sicko, which was about the increasingly unfair and dysfunctional U.S. health care system. (I was head of corporate communications at one of the country's biggest insurance companies when I left my job in May 2008.) And I need to apologize to health insurers for failing to note in my new book, Deadly Spin, that the front group they used to attack Moore and Sicko -- Health Care America -- was originally a front group for drug companies.

APCO Worldwide, the PR firm that operated the front group for insurers during the summer of 2007, was outraged -- outraged, I tell you -- that I wrote in the book that the raison d'être for Health Care America was to disseminate the insurance industry's talking points as part of a multi-pronged, fear-mongering campaign against Moore and his movie. An APCO executive told a reporter who had reviewed the book that I was guilty of one of the deceptive PR tactics I condemned: the selective disclosure of information to manipulate public opinion.

Which Industry Was Really Behind 'Health Care America'?

Well, shucks. Ignorance is no defense, I know, but no one at APCO ever told me, even when I was on the insurance industry's side, that Health Care America's first benefactor was Big Pharma.

Here are the offending sentences, excerpted from the chapter entitled "The Campaign Against Sicko," in which I described a top-secret meeting of insurance company flacks -- including me -- where APCO and America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), the lobbying group for insurers, laid out the industry's strategy:

[AHIP's Mike] Tuffin and [APCO's Robert] Schooling said they had already begun recruiting conservative and free-market think tanks, including the American Enterprise Institute and the Galen Institute, as third-party allies. Those allies, they said, would be working aggressively to discredit Moore and his movie. They then mentioned an ally that most of us had never heard of, Health Care America. It had been created by AHIP and APCO for the sole purpose of attacking Moore and his contention that people in countries with government-run systems spent far less and got better care than people in the United States. The sole reason Health Care America exists, they said, was to talk about the shortcomings of government-run systems.


I learned a few days ago from Jack O'Dwyer, longtime watchdog of the PR profession and publisher of O'Dwyer's PR Daily, that an APCO executive told him I had failed to disclose that APCO had originally set up Health Care America in 2006 with money primarily from big drug companies. Big Pharma was worried at the time that drug makers would be Moore's main target in the movie. Thinking ahead, they feared that being vilified in Sicko would increase the odds that lawmakers would cast them as the chief villain when the health care reform debate got underway.

More

Wendell Potter

After a 20-year career as a corporate public relations executive, Wendell left his job as head of communications for one of the nation's largest health insurers and became a vocal critic of insurance company abuses.

In widely covered testimony before the Senate Commerce, Science and Technology Committee in June 2009, Wendell disclosed how insurance companies, as part of their efforts to boost profits, have engaged in practices that have resulted in millions of Americans being forced into the ranks of the uninsured. Wendell also described how the insurance industry has developed and implemented strategic communications plans, based on deceptive public relations and advertising and lobbying efforts, to defeat or weaken reform initiatives.

During his business career, Wendell held a variety of positions at Humana Inc. and CIGNA Corporation. When he left CIGNA in May 2008 he was serving as head of corporate communications and as the company's chief corporate spokesperson.
 
His bullshit in Bowling for Columbine is well documented. The scene where he opens a bank account and they hand him a rifle? That is absolute bullshit. And his hack job on Heston is shameful.
 
His bullshit in Bowling for Columbine is well documented. The scene where he opens a bank account and they hand him a rifle? That is absolute bullshit. And his hack job on Heston is shameful.

Winterborn, not to get personal or anything, I like you. This just seems like a clear cut case of attacking the messenger (Moore). I get that you don't like him. What about the points he made here though?
 
Winterborn, not to get personal or anything, I like you. This just seems like a clear cut case of attacking the messenger (Moore). I get that you don't like him. What about the points he made here though?

He did make some good points. I was answering BFgrn's question about my accusation that Moore does, in fact, lie when it suits him.
 
Ahhh, it's sweet, the troll likes you WinterBorn. Channeling my inner Bill Murray from Caddyshack "So I have that going for me, which is nice."
 
Ahhh, it's sweet, the troll likes you WinterBorn. Channeling my inner Bill Murray from Caddyshack "So I have that going for me, which is nice."

LOL! Its not often a quote from Caddy Shack applies here, huh?
 
the middle class is dead? that is amazing, most of my town is middle class. the middle class isn't dead at all, they make up the majority of americans. you can still survive on one income, especially if you live like people did 30 years ago. no internet, no cell phones etc.... people spend far more money now than they did 30 years ago. due to liberal policies, the cost of housing went up to ridiculous levels. raising the taxes on the wealthy isn't going to create a bigger middle class. that is nonsense.
 
On the contrary, you said something quite reasonable, which is the problem. :cof1:

Oh, my apologies. I forgot where I was for a minute.

How about this........

You scum-sucking faggot! I'll post whatever I want. Obama is a socialist who wants to destroy this nation!! The Tea Party is a bunch of racists who want our poor to die of starvation!



Better?
 
the middle class is dead? that is amazing, most of my town is middle class. the middle class isn't dead at all, they make up the majority of americans. you can still survive on one income, especially if you live like people did 30 years ago. no internet, no cell phones etc.... people spend far more money now than they did 30 years ago. due to liberal policies, the cost of housing went up to ridiculous levels. raising the taxes on the wealthy isn't going to create a bigger middle class. that is nonsense.

Ah, the over consumption MYTH...typical right wing parrot talk...LOL

PLEASE give us the 'liberal policies' that caused the cost of housing to go up to ridiculous levels?

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What was it that I said that you think is unreasonable?


Originally Posted by cawacko
Ahhh, it's sweet, the troll likes you WinterBorn. Channeling my inner Bill Murray from Caddyshack "So I have that going for me, which is nice."
LOL! Its not often a quote from Caddy Shack applies here, huh?

I guess I am not happy about cawacko's wacko insitence that I am a troll.
 
Moore only need to look at New York City in the '70's to see where his dream died. New York was a high tax city where school was free to cheap and health care was free to cheap. The City racked up so much debt that it almost went BK until it was bailed out. That right there ended its socialstic dreams.
 
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