Gordon Gecko had a long run of it, but now the party
is over. I’m talking, of course, about the character in the film Wall
Street, that conniving titan of finance who would sell his mother for
a buck and a quarter, and there is scant evidence that he had not already
accomplished that goal. “Greed is good,” he declared.
Gecko began to have his heyday in the Reagan era.
That’s when the “conventional wisdom,” fueled by greed, began to call
for a supply-side economic policy in which financial benefits would be
bestowed upon the wealthy and businesses in the form of tax cuts. And
as the theory goes, the benefits would “trickle down” to the common folk.
In reality, the result was more like “trickle on”.
Another hallmark of the Reagan era, which was perfected
in the Clinton and Bush years, was the deregulation of the financial markets
and other industries. Over the years,these
policies were bought and paid for to the tune of $5 billion in contributions, given by Wall Street to Democratic and Republican politicians
alike, to keep the government out of the gambling casinos, I mean financial
markets. This led to the proliferation of exotic financial instruments
called derivatives, which have turned out to be a little more than a high-tech,
blue chip hustle. Unregulated, unmonitored, and getting their money’s
worth, the banks were able to engage in predatory lending, sucking homeowners
- particularly homeowners of color - into unconscionable subprime mortgages.
When applied to the environment and food and safety standards, deregulation
has resulted in salmonella - and rat - infested peanuts, E-coli tainted
beef and climate change.
Meanwhile, as The land of opportunity became the most unequal, top-heavy society
in the West.the media - deregulated, conglomerated and with fewer
diverse voices (thank you, President Clinton) - provided us with empty
calories for our entertainment, many of us did not realize what was taking
place right under our noses: the most dramatic upward redistribution
of wealth in history, and a level of income inequality which makes democracy
unsustainable.
Since the 1980s, when much of the New Deal regulatory
framework has given way to the best unbridled capitalism money could buy,
society has steered its best and brightest into the whole Wall Street
thing. As the nation’s infrastructure began to crumble and its students
fell behind the rest of the developed world in math and science, everyone,
including yours truly in a former life, wanted a job shuffling paper and
moving numbers around but not creating anything tangible, not building
anything of much use to society.
With the adoration of the rich and famous, and the
glorification of wealth as a virtue, came the vilification of the poor
and the stigmatization of poverty. This gave birth to the concept of the
welfare queen, the fictional Black woman on welfare who has six children,
wears a mink coat and drives a Cadillac. The typical welfare recipient
is White, but never mind. What a worthy scapegoat, no doubt created in
some conservative think tank. And what better justification for taking
from the poor (unworthy as they are, living off the government dole),
and giving to the rich (needy as they are, and unable to live the American
dream)? It was “reverse Robin Hood”, as Jesse Jackson aptly described
it, which culminated in the passage of welfare reform by President Clinton
and a Republican Congress.
A Dickensian treatment of the poor was in full fashion.
Poverty became a moral failing, an issue of genetics. “Are there no debtors’
prisons? No poor houses?” Well, given that American capitalism never was
meant to employ everyone (for more information, see slavery), and given
that many of the good blue collar and even white collar jobs have been
sent overseas, what do you do with that surplus population, as Dickens
called it? It seems no accident that the prison boom, the war on drugs,
and draconian prison sentencing came at a time when there were no jobs
to be found in the inner cities. The “land of the free” has the world’s
largest prison population, even more than China, which is a police state
and has over four times the population of the U.S. Prisons are one of
America’s primary forms of social control, and there is profit in the
warehousing of Black, Brown, and poor bodies.
And as all of this was going on, the people at the
top were having a big party at our expense. There has been very little
mention of the plight of the poor, although their ranks rose under Bush.
In America, over
41 million people were poor as of 2005. Further, 18
percent of children live in poverty, and 1
in 50 children is homeless. With the collapse of the financial system, how
can you scapegoat the poor when everyone is either poor or has real potential
to join its ranks? This time around, the anger is directed towards the
real culprits: the people who, like the robber barons of old, actually
stole the money and brought us to where we are today.
It is cathartic to watch the spectacle of bank executives
hauled before Congress to explain themselves. What got these people in
trouble was not merely their obscenely immense wealth or the manner in
which they earned or stole that wealth. Rather, in the midst of all the
destruction they left in their path, the broken lives and stolen futures,
these individuals still wanted to be rewarded for their failure, for being
the special people they think they are. With their pernicious sense of
entitlement, the robber barons looked at the rest of society with contempt,
as if they are superior to the regular everyday chumps at the bottom of
the pyramid scheme.
In a moment of clarity, everyday people have identified
the real problem - unfettered capitalism. The robber barons have replaced
the welfare queens, and so we have come full circle. This time around,
the public refused to fall for the okeedoke and allow themselves to be
distracted by some straw man or scapegoat. The Right’s early contention
- that Black and Latino homeowners brought the financial system down with
mortgages they could not afford - did not hold water. So, is this a sign
of political maturity for the common folk, a new populism? Perhaps, but
it is too early to tell. The test will come in how society responds to
the crisis, learns the lessons of history, and constructs an economic
system that seeks fairness, equity and justice. Heaven forbid we become
more like those so-called “socialist” Europeans, with their universal
healthcare, lower levels of inequality, lower poverty rates and higher
educational standards. In the meantime, it will probably get worse before
it gets better. But no one said it would be a pretty sight.
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