Posted on 11/08/2005 4:20:51 PM PST by SJackson
I was watching MSNBC a few nights ago, or maybe it was CNN, and one of the programs featured shots was a live picture from Bourbon Street in New Orleans. It was packed and the people were sassy and partying normal, in other words.
Indeed, the commentator used that, very word and stressed the importance of it. He said it again New Orleans is returning to normal.
How depressing it was to hear that because of all things we want for that city, we should not ever again want it to be its old normal self. Normal in the context of what New Orleans used to be meant not just a good time in the French Quarter. It meant severe and cruel poverty for a significant portion of the population.
We only got to meet that latter group in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Through stark and dramatic photos, we saw their misery, and we could also see the wretchedness that had embraced their lives even before the storm hit.
I love Bourbon Street as much as the next person, and Im glad to see it up and running. Hooray for those who want to rebuild their businesses and bring tourism back.
But lets not forget the lesson the hurricane taught us: the region needs not only a new levee infrastructure but a new economic infrastructure that can provide the areas poor with a decent and better life.
As disastrous as it was, Katrina offered up a great opportunity for a social experiment, for a new and creative War on Poverty.
Unfortunately, as the nightly news shifts its focus from the poor-flooded neighborhoods, the opportunities before us are fast being gulped away, like a quick Jack and Coke on Bourbon Street.
Our country will spend more than $200 billion in Katrina recovery efforts, we know that much. But how will it be spent? Unfortunately most of it is going not to needy individuals but to big corporations for large-scale construction projects, many of them based nowhere near the Gulf Coast.
In other words, the Bush administration is applying the trickle-down approach to aid, rather than providing needy people with the direct help they need.
A better way to approach rebuilding would be to guarantee for a period of two or three years the incomes of those who lost their jobs in the disaster. If we took just that small step, the economic and social benefits would be enormous.
Those who lost everything would be able to return home and provide continuity for their children. The money would be pumped into local economies, accelerating economic recovery and re-establishing vital community centers. New businesses would be started, and the wage subsidies would help guarantee the employment of the local population.
The cost for all this bounty? A drop in the bucket.
It is estimated that about 400,000 jobs were lost. Even if those jobs averaged $30,000 a year, the price tag would be $12 billion, or $24 billion if extended to two years. Thats only about 10 percent of the federal dollars expected to be spent, and probably less since new cost estimates are edging closer to $300 billion than to $200 billion.
If the grand experiment worked and I think it would then the country should take the next logical step: a guaranteed annual income for every American. The minimum should be enough to guarantee that no American would ever again be called poor.
Ah, in the words of John Lennon, you may call me a dreamer, but I hope someday youll join us. Consider just who some of the dreamers have been:
Well, as one might expect, there was the social reformer Michael Harrington.
Even in a society based on private economic power, the Government can be an agency of social, rather than corporate, purpose, Harrington wrote in 1968. This does not require a fundamental transformation of the system. It does, however, mean that the society will democratically plan uneconomic allocations of significant resources.
Sounds radical, doesnt it? But guess who came to the same theoretical conclusion and specifically endorsed a guaranteed national income?
A lot of conservatives, thats who.
Actually, there was broad support for the idea beyond the liberal left. The conservative economist Milton Friedman endorsed the concept as early as 1962, and in 1968 1,300 economists signed a petition urging Congress to pass a national system of income guarantees and supplements.
President Richard M. Nixon joined the parade in 1969 with his Family Assistance Plan.
Now, its true, Nixons plan was skimpy and fell far short of what was needed. But that really is beside the point. What was important was that, had it passed, it would have codified in law the principle of a legal end to poverty, if not of a living wage.
Simply put, by the late 1960s, Democrats and Republicans alike were not really debating whether there should be a guaranteed annual income but the level at which it should be set. Compare that to today, when politicians of both parties avoid debates about the precise role of the federal government in abolishing poverty and engage instead in a debate about whether there should be any federal role at all.
Lets be frank. Today, unlike in the 1960s, most Democrats and Republicans are quite content to let the poor starve, and that shows just how fundamentally the political paradigm has shifted in the past 40 years.
Back then, New York Times columnist James Reston understood the importance of the GOPs philosophical acceptance of the idea. In 1969 he wrote:
The main thing about President Nixons proposals for dealing with poverty in America is that he recognizes the governments responsibility for removing it. He has been denouncing the welfare state for 20 years, but he is now saying that poverty in America in the midst of spectacular prosperity is intolerable and must be wiped out ... A Republican president has condemned the word welfare, emphasized work and training as conditions of public assistance, suggested that the states and the cities be given more federal money to deal with their social and economic problems, but still comes out in the end with a policy of spending more money for relief of more poor people than the welfare state Democrats ever dared to propose in the past. This is beginning to be the story of American politics ...
Unfortunately, Reston was wrong; it was more like the end of the story in American politics. At the moment the columnist was penning those words, a new and potent laissez-faire force was gaining ascendancy within the Republican Party, and these days it has pretty much gained ascendancy within the Democratic Party, too.
The domination by laissez-faire politicians always extolling the virtues of private mostly nationally controlled monopolies over the value of decentralized and local democratic planning, no matter what that fundamental shift of the political paradigm is one reason why the Gulf Coast looked like a Third World country after Hurricane Katrina.
Its because we are already a Third World country in most respects. Katrina didnt so much create those conditions as expose them.
Sure, there are pockets of the middle class left, mostly in the suburbs, but they are voting themselves out of existence every time they cast a Republican ballot, and most every time they cast a Democratic ballot. They may get away with their living standards intact, but their children almost certainly will not.
We are once again in need of a paradigmatic shift in political thinking. The effects of Hurricane Katrina and the consequences of corporate governing are becoming obvious validations of that need.
In truth, the disasters we increasingly face are not random events, chaotic and unpredictable, but the absolutely predictable outcomes of the modern American political mindset.
Put bluntly, we need to fundamentally change the way we organize society. Instead of from the top down, as we do now, lets for once give the bottom up a chance. A guaranteed income is one way to achieve just such a goal.
Redistribution... thy name is socialism!!!
The "War on Povery/Great Society" programs target their benefits only to those who don't work. See my #71. I would suggest that a (low) guaranteed income combined with an absolutely flat tax structure would be far better than the welfare/tax system as it exists today.
As far as I'm concerned, every dollar a person earns should make that person $0.70 (or thereabouts) richer, whether it's the first or the billionth. Under today's welfare system, that isn't the case. The lowest "net income retention" (amount one will net from earning an extra dollar) is for those below the poverty line. Why should someone get a job if 40 hours of work won't even net them $40 over what they'd get from not working?
Great post
Just as it should be. What New Orleans needs is to blow the levees and let the lake assume it's natural banks. Let the people move to where the jobs are and break up that democrat run hell hole forever. Then we can let the Mississippi assume it's natural course and stop fighting every flood to keep it in it's current unnatural course. (The real course runs through Morgan City LA. It's about 145 miles to the seas vice the 300 or so on the current course.)
With a "guaranteed income" of up to $30,000, they can buy a lot of drugs and booze, but the money, in most cases, will not be used to improve their economic situation.
A $30,000 "guaranteed income" is way too high. But replacing the current welfare system with a $6,000 or so straight payment would IMHO be an improvement. The people who would misspend that are the same ones who misspend what they get now.
Read post 71 for more on the subject.
A more compassionate dollar amount would offer $250,000.00 taxpayer dollars per annum to each and every victim of the result of BushandRoves's "dynamite the levee" act of domestic terrorism. The money would be available until the victims decided it would no longer be needed.
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