We'll
be hearing a lot about the tea party movement after the tax day
protests. They are angry, and some of that anger at the tax system
is justified.
Like
all social movements, the tea party wave is not monolithic. There
are hard-core libertarians, white supremacists and partisan Republicans
that are not interested in dialogue. But in my conversations with
rank-and-file tea party activists, there are important points of
common ground.
Many
participants have seen their personal economic security devastated
by the economic meltdown. They are worried about their tax bills,
national debt and the economy their children will inherit. They
feel isolated and the tea party is a community.
Here
are a few conversation points I've found useful in talking with
the open-minded participants at tea party activities:
We
Agree
The
middle class is overtaxed. After fifty years of major "tax
reform" by both political parties, the middle class pays the
same percent of income in taxes today as it did in 1960. The very
rich (with incomes over $2 million) pay half as much as they did
in 1960 and the richest 400 households pay two-thirds less.
Big
corporations like ExxonMobil and General Electric have gamed the
system so that they pay zero or little taxes.
We
are borrowing recklessly from the future, from our children's standard
of living. We borrowed to give rich and global corporations tax
breaks and fight two wars. In the last eight years, we borrowed
$700 billion to give tax breaks to people with incomes over $250,000.
The
middle class standard of living is under attack. For thirty years
real wages have been flat and our economic security has declined.
This was masked by people working more hours and taking on unprecedented
amounts of personal debt. The economic crisis unmasked how our security
was built on a bubble of debt. A job is no longer a source of health
insurance or retirement security. We have been told: You are on
your own.
Wall
Street is squeezing us at every turn. In addition to the government,
corporations are also "taxing" us, with their fees, charges
and monopoly control over markets. We pay more and more to Visa,
Verizon, AT&T, Blue Cross Blue Shield, ExxonMobil, US Airways,
etc. These are forms of taxes paid to corporations. They won't stop
unless we organize to stop them.
Where
We May Disagree
President
Obama is not the enemy. Both major parties have been hijacked by
corporate overlords whose first priority is to protect Wall Street
financiers and greedy corporations. President Obama is pushing back
more than President Bush did, and he had an enormous mess to clean
up (he inherited two wars, the Wall Street meltdown and a $10 trillion
national debt). If we demand a government that protects Main Street
and ordinary people against organized greed, he will respond.
Scapegoating
vulnerable people is a dead end. Our economic problems were not
caused by immigrants or low-income people. Wall Street greed in
high places is what drove the economy over a cliff. Powerful elites
want to distract us by having us fight among ourselves, with racial
divides and class wars. Let's not be distracted.
Weak
government is not the answer. If we shrink government, who will
defend us against Wall Street and the corporate looters? The parts
of government that should protect us against Wall Street greed,
speculation and the assaults on the middle class have been weakened
under both political parties.
Solutions
A
fair and accountable tax system. Wealthy people and corporations
should pay their fair share and reduce the bite on middle-class
taxpayers. We should eliminate tax dodges that create one tax system
for the privileged and another for everyone else.
Reduce
national debt and make real investments. We need to pay down our
national debt and make long overdue investments in public infrastructure
that our small businesses and communities depend on.
Oversight
of Wall Street. The financial sector is incapable of policing itself.
We need strong public institutions to oversee the financial markets
so that the reckless, greedy and unregulated financial activities
that wrecked our economy cannot happen again.
Rein
in big corporations. We need a constitutional amendment to limit
the power of corporations to dominate our political process including
elections, campaigns and lobbying. This is key to preserving our
democracy and liberties.
Copyright © 2010 The Nation – distributed
by Agence Globa
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator Chuck Collins directs the program on Inequality
and the Common Good at the Washington, DC-based Institute
for Policy Studies and coordinates the Working Group on Extreme
Inequality. He is co-author, with Mary Wright, of The
Moral Measure of the Economy
(Orbis). Click here
to contact Mr. Collins. |