The
Food Research and Action Center released a disturbing report
about food hardship and hunger in the United States. According
to the report, nearly one in five Americans simply does
not have enough money to buy food that they and their family
need. In 21 states, at least 20 percent of respondents
said they did not have enough money to buy food in the past
12 months, while at least 15 percent of respondents in 45
states answered in the affirmative. No part of the country
is untouched by this crisis.
And yet, Tea Party-sponsored governors and lawmakers around
the country will make no mention of this, as they channel
their inner tyrant and slash state budgets at the expense
of the poor and working people. Megalomaniacs, they seem
to derive pleasure from using their power to make people
hurt - certain people, that is. After all, their talk of
fiscal responsibility is selective, as austerity is reserved
for the poor. The rich are not being asked to tighten their
belt, but rather are being rewarded with tax breaks. In
that regard, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker is doing exactly
what his masters, the Koch brothers, instructed him to do.
When America, backward and crumbling, should be investing
in infrastructure and technology to create jobs and promote
growth, some governors reject high-speed
rail projects and wear their ignorance as a badge of
honor.
Moreover, the concept of the budget crisis is being used
as a subterfuge—a scam, if you will— to strip unions of
their collective bargaining rights in states such as Wisconsin,
Ohio and Indiana. And all the better for the extreme right
if they can slip something devious like anti-gay
language in the legislation when no one is looking. Because
that’s what tricksters do.
Unions have lost ground over the years, and not surprisingly,
so too have working people, in terms of declining wages
and a lower standard of living. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie
and others would make public unions the new welfare queens,
the new bogeyman. And we are supposed to believe that public
school teachers are the new millionaires, getting rich at
the public’s expense and breaking the backs of state budgets
with their exorbitant salaries—if you consider $40,000 or
$60,000 a lot, that is. And when nobody is looking, the
true millionaires and billionaires are making out like true
bandits, taking away most of the nation’s wealth.
But people are starting to wake up, which is why they are
engaging in nonviolent protest by the thousands in Madison
and elsewhere in America. They have much in common with
protestors in Tripoli, Cairo and other nations in the Mideast,
where the masses are divesting themselves of the mob bosses,
potentates and presidents-for-life that have passed for
leadership in that part of the world. All they want is
to be able to put food on the table, to feed their children.
But they are unable to do so.
Like Egypt’s Mubarak and Qaddafi, America’s Tea Party rulers
- kleptocrats who feign populist tendencies - are driven
by delusions of grandeur and utter contempt for the will
of the masses. When the people do not go along with the
program, these authoritarian leaders maintain power by brute
force, arrests
or through
the barrel of a gun - or at least consider
it is an option. The primary difference is that the
Mideast rulers operate under no pretense of democracy.
Politics in the U.S. enjoys at least a democratic veneer.
And in a technical sense the electorate, however uninformed
and prone to act in their own economic interests, actually
cast their ballots for such walking disasters as Gov. Rick
Scott of Florida, John Kasich of Ohio, and Walker of Wisconsin.
But thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizen
United decision, corporations and wealthy interests
have unlimited influence over elections. America really
is owned by a handful of individuals, and the electoral
system has turned into a tool to do the bidding of the oligarchs.
So what is the real difference between an autocrat who holds
no elections, or holds a sham election and declares victory,
and an oligarch who purchases an election with cash and
utilizes corporate cronies to rule by proxy?
When the poor and working poor cannot afford to feed their
families, all bets are off. Faced with rising inequality,
oppressive laws and the naked greed of the powerful, people
take to the streets. Here in the land of opportunity, wealthy
conservative
interests are jonesing to destroy the unions, the only thing
standing between them and unlimited political and economic
power. Who wins depends on how far the common folks are
able and willing to take it.
Perhaps Frederick Douglass said it best: “Find out just what
any people will quietly submit to and you have found out
the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed
upon them, and these will continue till they are resisted
with either words or blows, or with both. The limits of
tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they
oppress.”
BlackCommentator.com Executive
Editor, David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights
advocate based in Philadelphia, is
a graduate of Harvard College and
the University of Pennsylvania Law School. and
a contributor to The Huffington
Post, theGrio, The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune
News Service, In
These Times and Philadelphia
Independent Media Center. He also blogs at davidalove.com, NewsOne, Daily
Kos, and Open Salon. Click here to contact Mr. Love.
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