Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) rallied South Carolina voters Saturday morning as he weighs a potential presidential bid to challenge early Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton.Speaking at the South Carolina Democratic Convention, Sanders said he understands middle-class fury about what he calls nationwide inequality.“They should be angry,” Sanders said, according to the South Carolina’s Post and Courier.Sanders drew a line between the wealthy and the middle class, which he said is struggling through one of the most difficult economies since the Great Depression.“They have the money, but we’ve got the people,” Sanders said. “Our job is to educate, to organize and to say enough is enough. America does not belong to the billionaire class it belongs to all of us.”Hillary Clinton did not attend the convention Saturday.In February, Sanders attacked Clinton, saying she wouldn’t fight for the middle class against income inequality.“Is Hillary Clinton — are other candidates — prepared to take on the billionaire class?” Sanders asked at the time. “Based on her record, I don’t [think so].”Sanders also proposed a so-called “war tax” last month that would rely on millionaires to finance war.“Wars are enormously expensive, not only in terms of human life and suffering, but in terms of the budget. If the Republicans want another war in the Mideast, they are going to have to tell the American people how much it will cost them and how it will be paid for,” Sanders said.
We need leadership to awaken all American citizens to force the politicians to follow the people and lift all legal barriers to universal capital ownership access by every child, woman, and man as a fundamental right of citizenship and the basis of personal liberty and empowerment. The goal should be to enable every child, woman, and man to become an owner of ever-advancing labor-displacing technologies, new and sustainable energy systems, new rentable space, new enterprises, new infrastructure assets, and productive land and natural resources as a growing and independent source of their future incomes.
On the basic issue of economic empowerment of each individual, the essential goal needs to be economic democracy, which will finally make political democracy a meaningful reality.
As Kurland points out, the emphasis on the systemic injustices of monopoly capitalism can only be addressed by comprehensive reforms to the tax, monetary and inheritance policies favoring the top 1 percent at the expense of the 99 percent. The current system perpetuates budget deficits and unsustainable government debt, underutilized workers, a lack of financing for financing advanced energy and green technologies, and outsourcing of U.S. industrial jobs to low-wage countries, trade deficits, shrinking consumption incomes among the poor and middle class, and conventional methods for financing productive growth that increase the ownership and power gaps between the top 1 percent and the 90 percent whose combined ownership accumulations are already less than the elite whose money power is widely known as the source of political corruption and the breakdown of political democracy.
The unworkability of the traditional market economy is evidenced by the diverse and growing deficits––federal budget deficit, trade deficit, city, county and state budget deficits––which are making it increasingly impossible for governments at every level to function. The increasing deficit burden is the result of the growing numbers of people who cannot earn, from legitimate participation in production, enough income to support themselves and their families. Thus government is obliged to “redistribute” to starve off economic collapse. The key means of redistribution is taxation––taking from the legitimate producers and giving to the non- or under-producers––to make up the economy’s ever wider income and purchasing power shortfalls.
The fact is that political democracy is impossible without economic democracy. Those who control money control the laws that foster wage slavery, welfare slavery, debt slavery and charity slavery. These laws can and should be changed by the 99 percent and those among the 1 percent who are committed to a just and economically classless market economy, true equality of opportunity, and a level playing field in the future for 100 percent of Americans. By adopting economic policies and programs that acknowledge every citizen’s right to contribute productively to the economy as a capital owner as well as a labor worker, the result will be an end to perpetual labor servitude and the liberation of people from progressive increments of subsistence toil and compulsive poverty as the 99 percent benefits from the rewards of productive capital-sourced income.
i have been saying for years tht there really is no political party for the middle class. maybe noe that the rift between the upper middle and the wealthy is widening significantly, such a thing could happen. evryone i talk to in this group has about the same feelings, so how does it not happen? good articles. best, dr. c.