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The Coming Fury of an Angry America

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  • The Coming Fury of an Angry America

    The Coming Fury of an Angry America

    A tiny part of a tiny part of the population of the earth will set the terms for the future of all humans. A tiny part that is broken, spent out, and increasingly disillusioned. That sliver of humanity is the broken, spent out, and increasingly disillusioned American middle class, burdened with the task of spending all America out of catastrophe. When they break under the weight of desperate impossibility, how will the heartlands good citizens react, and what will they do?

    According to the World Bank, there are about 6,692,030,277 human beings on the earth. 308,108,741 of them live in the United States, about 4.6% of the total. Of these fortunate Americans, about 231,000,000 are of voting age. In general elections in history's greatest democracy, about half those eligible to vote actually do...115 million people. History's greatest democracy has only two options every election, a choice between two almost similar positions, and the winning option typically enjoys the support of only half of those who choose, approximately 60 million individuals. For a scant 90 years, America has been the wealthiest, most powerful group of humans in all 20,000 years of recorded civilization. Decisions made by Americans can and do affect the lives of every other human on the planet, often for both present and future, good and bad. By brute force of American economics alone, a single, small 0.9% of the 6.6 billion people who call earth home set the agenda for each and every one of all the rest of us. Not even by force of arms has there ever been a time in glorious history when so few people dominated so many in so complete a way.

    Centuries from now, historians will want to know whom these few people were, if only to understand how they lived and thought, and better know the cause of global events that shaped the world they live in. As we in our time grapple to understand who the powers were that made a Roman, a Roman, future thinkers will want to dissect the condition of the less than one per cent of all humanity who call themselves American, and who alone make America, America... and the earth, American as well.

    It cost 1 billion dollars and four years to have .9% of the earth elect the President of the United States in 2008. It took a similar amount of time and money to be the guy that lost. Hundreds of millions more are expended to elect the 535 people who make up the United States Congress. No statistical analysis is required to understand that these are among the wealthiest and most privileged humans in all of history. A tiny fraction of a tiny fraction of a tiny fraction of the population of the planet. This, we are led to believe is democracy, and so this small sliver is at least nominally responsible to those few who elected them, and nobody else.

    Like all great empires, America has a well-defined class structure. As a fedora on a table, at one brim is the thin cruel line of poverty and disenfranchisement, at the other brim another thin line of luxury and excess, and a middle where the head goes which has historically been the big, fat, American middle class. The middle class sets the agenda by dearth of weight, the luxury class promoting the agenda where and when it suits them. The lower class don't matter at all.

    The great American middle class, then, at least nominally controls the fate of the planet. They do so by electing wealthy folks who pander to their interests, those wealthy folks whose interpretations of the middle class becomes policy. Future folks will want to understand how representative those interpretations were, and will want to see if changes in the middle class over time were responsible for changes in American policy towards the world.

    If anything defines the great American middle class, it is the concept of the American Dream. The basic building block of the American Dream is the family - mom, dad, 2.4 kids and a dog. The "dream" part is the very American right to economic freedom, freedom to accumulate stuff. A box on a postage stamp in a sea of urban sprawl called home, a couple of cars, a good education for the kids, and unrestricted ability to consume as much surplus crap as possible. Americans define success completely in economic terms and then attach the flag, religion, and everything else to it. Without this absolute right to consume hordes of junk, there is no American Dream, and no middle class. There is left only a lower class, (whatever that is), and a powerful capitalist class existing as it always has throughout time, changing flags and philosophy depending on how the winds blow. Caesar, Czar, King, or CEO of Goldman Sachs.

    The rise of the middle class at the end of the 19th century tracks the rise of wealth and power for most western, industrialized nations. Production, trade, and consumption of machine made goods became a near universal indicator of the rise of modern civilization. However, 40 years of crushing war amongst European powers stalled the growth for most, but emerging America remained unscathed, benefiting from the misdemeanours of a now dead age. History will fix the date of the birth of absolute America to the year 1914, the dawn of the American age to 1945, and no doubt, the golden era to the short period that began to erode in 1971. Of the time since, we the generation here and now and in the teeth of it, can only speculate.

    In the summer of 1914, America was an outlier in a world of teetering monarchies, festering colonial empires, and rancid landed aristocracies. While the rest of the world fed its gold and its young to the insatiable maw of industrial war, Americans were building a dream from limitless resources and the economic opportunities of a conflict that left America unspoiled and prosperous. By the close of hostilities in 1945, with the capital of the planet spent and exhausted, America burst from the ruins to begin the greatest run of prosperity and innovation of all time. The American middle class exploded, living the dream so thoughtfully given to them over a generation of global war.

    Powerhouse America imposed its vision of a liberal, free market democracy on the "free world" through the Bretton Woods agreement of 1944. The United States became the world's greatest manufacturer of goods, trader of goods, and consumer of goods. Rebuilding the planet became a God given mission, the profits manna from heaven. The American dollar became the world's dollar. Freedom and cash registers rang.

    But with the US greenback backed by gold, American economic expansion was limited to the bullion it horded. Wars in Korea and Viet Nam, and the massive expansion of "entitlements" with Social Security and Medicare among others, began to strain the American Dream. By the early 1970's the US had ceased to be an exporter of stuff, and the middle class began to buy increasingly cheaper stuff from abroad - at the expense of their own manufacturing and jobs. Given that the dream of freewheeling consumption was the bedrock of the burgeoning, voting middle class, politics insisted on a populist solution to the increasingly broke US economy. In 1971, Richard Nixon elected to abandon Bretton Woods, leave the gold standard, and America was free to print its way out of deficit and keep the dream alive.

    At the same time as the US set the world awash in USD's, untold wealth and prosperity inflated its way through the massive baby boomer cohort. Women were entering the workforce in exponential numbers, soaking up inflated dollars with double incomes, and less kids. American politics became a contest of pandering to the hedonistic desires of the American household, boom times embraced and fuelled by lax regulation and credit, busts fought off with the simple printing of even more money. Good times.

    The American household saved 11% of its income in 1970, and had only 1.4% of their cash going to newfangled credit cards and auto loans. Everything else exchanged for clothes, appliances, food, houses, and shiny happy stuff, increasingly from overseas. Unknown to all, it was to be the high water mark for the middle class of America.

    In 1971, American imports exceeded exports for the first time in modern history, by 2.6 billion dollars. At a time when a billion was a lot, America began paying to simply exist. Gross Public Debt had grown from 43 billion in 1940, to 381 billion by 1970. Within a single generation - the age of narcissism, the computer age, the age of globalization - the baby boomers of the American middle class had tilted the entire planets resources towards an unsustainable consumer culture. No longer living the dream, those alive just moments before Lehman Brothers listed over, rolled under, and disappeared below the waves of history, were fighting simply to keep the stuff they had.

    The future had evaporated right before their shuttered eyes, and for over forty years.

    The current version of the American middle class bears no resemblance at all to that of the end of the golden era in 1970. Forty years ago, Americans saved 11% of their earnings - which had evaporated by 2005, reaching the oxymoron of negative savings. Credit card debt shot from 1.4% to 15%. In the space of a generation, a single income family flush with cash, savings, and dreams had become a double income nightmare staggered with debt.
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  • #2
    Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

    thanks again for another thought-provoking and well-written post.

    Since this depression began, I always wondered why we are so focused on other issues (though they are important) than the key and critical issue: decent-paying jobs for American citizens.

    why are we not as a people have an even having a much larger conversation about competing economically with Chinese and India?

    We need to start building world-class products and services that people around the world want to buy again.

    fyi:

    caveat: this is a couple of years old:

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

      ‘Don’t-Be-Evil’ Guys Tell China to Google This
      http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aMdCaWY5tQVI
      Last edited by touchring; January 17, 2010, 02:26 PM.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

        Originally posted by touchring View Post
        ‘Don’t-Be-Evil’ Guys Tell China to Google This
        http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aMdCaWY5tQVI
        My hunch is that this Google-China affair is the tip of an iceberg of international cyberwarfare, and that some U.S. State or Intelligence department willingly encouraged this announcement by Google.
        Most folks are good; a few aren't.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

          And please don't ignore the Australian government's less-than-genuine attemps to censore the internet under the guise of child protection

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

            Great stuff Rajiv. Thanks for sharing.

            You see, a lot of us understand it, but few can express it so elegantly.

            My favorite quote:


            ...

            In the space of a generation, a single income family flush with cash, savings, and dreams had become a double income nightmare staggered with debt.

            In 2008, there were more household bankruptcies than divorces.

            ...

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

              Originally posted by ThePythonicCow View Post
              My hunch is that this Google-China affair is the tip of an iceberg of international cyberwarfare, and that some U.S. State or Intelligence department willingly encouraged this announcement by Google.

              Could be, but unlikely, Obama is like a mouse in front of the Chinese.

              He has a lot to learn from Sergey Brin.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

                The real danger here is when is the tipping point when public anger turns violent. So far, I've seen calls for lawful means to protest Wall Street excesses. How much longer will this last particularly as Americans see the continued looting of the public coffers to pay out record bonuses? I can only imagine the thousands and millions of angry retiring baby boomers who've seen their life savings wiped out. It will only take one nut job shooter to make the copy cats to come out of the closet. If I worked for an investment bank on Wall Street, I would be awfully worried and would probably be looking for another line of work. I'm not advocating anything here: just stating the obvious. I can practically guarantee that something like this will happen, and it will be newsworthy when it does. :eek:

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

                  Originally posted by bcassill View Post
                  The real danger here is when is the tipping point when public anger turns violent. So far, I've seen calls for lawful means to protest Wall Street excesses. How much longer will this last particularly as Americans see the continued looting of the public coffers to pay out record bonuses? I can only imagine the thousands and millions of angry retiring baby boomers who've seen their life savings wiped out. It will only take one nut job shooter to make the copy cats to come out of the closet. If I worked for an investment bank on Wall Street, I would be awfully worried and would probably be looking for another line of work. I'm not advocating anything here: just stating the obvious. I can practically guarantee that something like this will happen, and it will be newsworthy when it does. :eek:
                  Yeah, it'll happen but when it does it'll be some idiot with a six shooter walking in and shooting a secretary or low level manager.
                  I'm not advocating anything either, BUT, I would hope the shooter would have enough common sense to hit some of the fuckers really responsible for this mess (not that he/she could get em all) which would actually require some planning and brains.

                  A couple or three banking bigwigs get randomly taken out by some proles in a way that couldn't be easily defended against and that'd do more to fix the bonus problem and continued raping of america than all the tax levies & laws being threatened by the WH. IMO.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

                    Originally posted by touchring View Post
                    Could be, but unlikely, Obama is like a mouse in front of the Chinese.
                    Whatever is really going on here, Obama's irrelevant (in my view.)

                    Sergey knows Russian tyranny first hand. He's tough.
                    Most folks are good; a few aren't.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

                      Originally posted by ThePythonicCow View Post
                      Whatever is really going on here, Obama's irrelevant (in my view.)

                      Sergey knows Russian tyranny first hand. He's tough.

                      Of cos it does. To Sergey, he is only dealing with China as Google founder. To Obama, he is dealing with China as the US president.

                      One guy is the boss of one big company, the other guy is the boss of thousands of big companies and millions of small businesses.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

                        Originally posted by bcassill View Post
                        The real danger here is when is the tipping point when public anger turns violent. So far, I've seen calls for lawful means to protest Wall Street excesses. How much longer will this last particularly as Americans see the continued looting of the public coffers to pay out record bonuses? I can only imagine the thousands and millions of angry retiring baby boomers who've seen their life savings wiped out. It will only take one nut job shooter to make the copy cats to come out of the closet. If I worked for an investment bank on Wall Street, I would be awfully worried and would probably be looking for another line of work. I'm not advocating anything here: just stating the obvious. I can practically guarantee that something like this will happen, and it will be newsworthy when it does. :eek:
                        Maybe you guys could help me out with the onvious.

                        Example = Lets take one fortune 500 financial company that is a regional type bank - you pick the name. They pay next to no dividend and they have paid tarp back and they pay big bonuses to the top officers. My question is as a stock holder and employee how do you do anything to fix the problem. You gonna vote your stock - no help there. You could call a board member and get fired or riffed, you could complain to HR or ask for a meeting with the president. Whatever the answer is to this question, if any, is a beginning of the solution. Personally I think nothing short of a hostile takeover is going to do much good.

                        Cindy

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

                          Originally posted by cindykimlisa View Post
                          Maybe you guys could help me out with the onvious.

                          Example = Lets take one fortune 500 financial company that is a regional type bank - you pick the name. They pay next to no dividend and they have paid tarp back and they pay big bonuses to the top officers. My question is as a stock holder and employee how do you do anything to fix the problem. You gonna vote your stock - no help there. You could call a board member and get fired or riffed, you could complain to HR or ask for a meeting with the president. Whatever the answer is to this question, if any, is a beginning of the solution. Personally I think nothing short of a hostile takeover is going to do much good.

                          Cindy

                          You form a third party or vote in a third party to vote out the bank collaborators.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: The Coming Fury of an Angry America

                            Originally posted by cindykimlisa View Post
                            Maybe you guys could help me out with the onvious.

                            Example = Lets take one fortune 500 financial company that is a regional type bank - you pick the name. They pay next to no dividend and they have paid tarp back and they pay big bonuses to the top officers. My question is as a stock holder and employee how do you do anything to fix the problem. You gonna vote your stock - no help there. You could call a board member and get fired or riffed, you could complain to HR or ask for a meeting with the president. Whatever the answer is to this question, if any, is a beginning of the solution. Personally I think nothing short of a hostile takeover is going to do much good.

                            Cindy
                            Cindy,

                            The fact of the matter is that the large regionals along with the top tier banks are all insolvent. If the regulators had simply done their job, all of the troubled financial institutions would have been taken into receivership. Unfortunately, the Wall Street oligarchs have control over the regulatory machinations of this country. Your best bet is to take your money out of the larger banks and move it to a small community bank. Next talk to anyone you know who has substantial savings sitting in a CD or money market account. Tell them to move their money at their first opportunity. Tell them that the bank is insolvent and that all their earnings go into the pockets of the executives with nothing going towards either the shareholders or to depositors' interest rates. I worked in financial services for many years. The high dollar savers are the life blood of a bank's retail deposit base. Once that begins to disappear, a bank gets into trouble very, very quickly.

                            Hope this helps.;)

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Good article, Rajiv. Thanks for posting it.
                              I decided to convert a copy into a pdf and save it for reading again later.

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