With
the news early this week of a compromise between the two
factions of the ruling party in American politics on the
debt ceiling drama, the future and welfare of the working
class is on the block, to be reduced to flaccid rhetoric
or elimination.
Faced
with the prospect of continued 9-10 percent unemployment
(double that, if real unemployment and underemployment are
calculated) for the foreseeable future, the Republicans
and, now, the Democrats, have decided that the so-called
entitlements can be sacrificed on the altar of the “low
taxes-no government” policy of the nation’s extreme right
wing.
Therefore,
Medicare can be chopped down a little, Medicaid, which serves
the poorest and most vulnerable among us, can be reduced
or eliminated, and the integrity of Social Security can
be attacked, to the extent that it will provide social insecurity.
The next generation will be made to pay for tax breaks for
the rich and for Corporate America.
Coming
generations should not be made to suffer the demise of Social
Security and Medicare. Powerful elements have tried to convince
them that such benefits will not be there when they need
them. These same interests have tried their best to discourage
them from fighting to save the retirement benefits. As well,
young people are trying to survive at relatively low-paying
jobs, while paying off their college loans.
The
prospects for their futures are being further limited as
months and years go by, because the jobs that allowed their
parents to enjoy the lives they have had between World War
II and the turn of the 21st Century have all but disappeared.
The single-family house, a couple of cars, vacations, health
care, education, and all of the perks of the “American dream”
have been disappearing at an increasingly fast pace.
The
fortunes of the working class have risen and fallen with
the fortunes of the 90 percent of Americans who are not
among the wealthy. The fortunes of those workers rose at
the end of World War II, when the great union organizing
drives began. Organized labor was the engine of wealth for
the millions in the U.S. There has not been enough
research to say without reservation that, as the working
class prospered, the entire economy of America prospered, but it certainly seems that
this was the case for nearly half-century.
The
past two decades, however, have seen such an assault on
the well being of American workers and their unions that
the standard of living of millions of families has been
reduced to a low level, and the assault by Republicans and
those on the right, assisted by too many Democrats, continues.
What is happening is the inexorable dismantling of the New
Deal of 75 years ago. That, too, was a time of economic
misery and potential danger to the political structure.
Instead
of retracting and regressing, however, President Franklin
D. Roosevelt pursued bold government programs that put people
to work and provided a way for communities to develop and
for farmers to survive on the land. At that time, farmers
were important to the survival of the country.
FDR’s
actions as president were in sharp contrast to what is happening
in the U.S. right now. Smelling blood, those who want
to finish off government programs are poised to do so. This
week’s debt ceiling agreement prepares politicians of every
stripe to begin the process of eliminating the social structures
that came out of the New Deal, most of which were a benefit
to the masses of the people. To Tea Party Republicans and
some Democrats and Independents, the masses of Americans
have already been written off. To a high tech and consumer
economy, people, especially the unemployed, are excess numbers,
excess baggage.
The
indicator of the health of the economy says that America
is not doing so well. What is called “union density” (the
percentage of the wage and salary workers who are in unions)
has dropped again, from 2009 to 2010. According
to the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS), the percentage of unionized workers last year was
11.9 percent, down from 12.3 percent a year earlier.
Those
numbers have been in decline for a number of years. In 1983,
the first year for which comparable union data are available,
the union membership rate was 20.1 percent, and there were
17.7 million union workers. The BLS also pointed out this
year that, in 2010, 7.6 million public sector employees
belonged to a union, compared with 7.1 million union workers
in the private sector. The union membership rate for public
sector workers (36.2 percent) was substantially higher than
the rate for private sector workers (6.9 percent). The declines
of both union membership and the national economy have been
spiraling downward together.
The
old saying that you can’t do the same thing over and over
and expect that there will be a different outcome is appropriate
here. In a country in which there is a democratic structure
and people can vote for or against their politicians, how
is it that there seems to be no way for the working class
to make any progress? (For some sociologists, working class
is described as those white collar and blue-collar workers
who are paid wages or a salary.)
Although
there are many reasons, one of the primary reasons is that
our two-party system tends to keep out any third party or
parties that might threaten to alter the status quo that
keeps them in power. Neither of the two parties actually
wants to see any change in the way the system is structured,
because they are comfortable in it and they benefit from
it every day of their lives. The pay is good, the perks
are good, and there isn’t a lot of heavy lifting. Also,
politicians (most of them, with few exceptions) have a direct
pipeline into Corporate America which, in 2011, is accustomed
to calling the shots and pays for the campaigns. More importantly,
they fund some of the most scurrilous campaigns against
anyone who might challenge their hegemony over the economy.
Also
of great importance to the powers that be in maintaining
control of both the economic and political structure was
to create and maintain splits in the working class: ethnic
differences, regional differences, skilled versus unskilled
workers, and of course, the primary and old split between
black and white. Keeping those separations open was the
key to controlling the working class.
G.
William Domhoff, a sociologist from University
of California at Santa
Cruz, in a paper on social power, wrote of the working class:
“First, the ‘primary producers’ in the United
States, those who work with their hands
in factories and fields, were more seriously divided among
themselves until the 1930s than in most other countries.
The deepest and most important of these divisions was between
whites and African-Americans. In the beginning, of course,
the African-Americans had no social power because of their
enslavement, which meant that there was no way to organize
workers in the South. But even after African-Americans gained
their freedom, prejudices in the white working class kept
the two groups apart.”
Even
after laws were passed in the 1930s to allow union organizing,
it still was difficult for workers to organize, because
the police could be called in to arrest picketers and the
courts would issue injunctions against workers and the unions
trying to organize them. This happens to this day, and union
density numbers show this very clearly. Without political
or social power, workers are relegated to the bottom of
the heap.
As
if to emphasize the powerlessness of the working class,
during the entire “debate” over the debt ceiling, neither
side mentioned the plight of American workers. This is a
real tragedy that is shaping up, with 14 million looking
for work and an equal number who are underemployed and largely
forgotten. An even greater tragedy is the unemployment rate
in ghettoes and on Indian reservations. No one talked about
it and no one can be expected to talk about it, because,
if they talk about it, they might be expected to do something
about it. As it is, silence is golden for politicians and
Corporate America.
The
only time during the entire debate when there was anything
close to mentioning the working class was when they discussed
“entitlements,” meaning such things as Medicare, Medicaid,
Social Security, and any other social or welfare program
that is a benefit to the masses of America.
And the only reason they mentioned entitlements was to prepare
the people for reduction or abolishment of those programs,
on which so many depend for their very lives.
One
of the supreme ironies of the past few years is the emergence
of the Tea Party, a right wing movement that has directed
the momentum of the Republicans during its short lifetime.
Most Tea party members are working class as we have described
and they have allowed themselves to be used by the very
people who have pushed the working class to the edges of
society. Yet, they would defend the idea that the rich should
not pay their fair share of taxes and that social programs
that their parents or their children might need should be
eliminated to ensure the rich their continued privileged
position.
Rank-and-file
Americans have been easily controlled by the divide-and-conquer
strategy, whether at work, in their places of worship, in
election campaigns, between generations, and in other areas.
Even
so, they believe they are the freest people in the world,
because the country has a democratic structure, guaranteed
by the U.S. Constitution and expressed in the Declaration
of Independence. As long as the people believe they are
free because they are allowed to cast a ballot every couple
of years, they will believe that the political and social
structures are not oppressive and that their government
is of the people, by the people and for the people.
Working
class Americans need to address all the elements of the
nation that divides them. Only when they mend the divisions
will they create the kind of society that will truly strive
to achieve the constitutionally mandated public welfare,
the public good, or the common good. Right now, solidarity
is what America needs.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, John Funiciello, is a labor organizer and former
union organizer. His union work started when he became a
local president of The Newspaper Guild in the early 1970s.
He was a reporter for 14 years for newspapers in New York State. In
addition to labor work, he is organizing family farmers
as they struggle to stay on the land under enormous pressure
from factory food producers and land developers. Click here
to contact Mr. Funiciello.
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