It’s the time of year that we’re all inundated, from email to postal mail to ads on TV, to give to charity. Christmas puts us into a giving spirit, and for those who itemize their taxes the 2021 deductions vanish on December 31st.
Yet I keep finding myself talking back to the TV and crushed by the mail appeals.
Why is a children’s hospital on TV asking for money when every other developed country in the world finances pediatric research and pays the full cost of kids who need medical care?
Why are there over a dozen charities just here in Portland helping homeless people when Finland — a country nowhere near as wealthy as America (including per-capita) — has functionally ended homelessness according to a 2020 report at HUD’s website? (They note it’s “essentially a political choice…we could choose differently.”)
Why are we running charity-funded food banks when hunger in America — which stalks the lives of one in five American children — could be ended with $25 billion a year which, ironically, is the same identical amount of money Congress gave the Pentagon over and above what they asked for this year?
Why are gofundme sites filled with appeals for help buying essential pharmaceuticals like insulin which costs $25 in Canada and is paid for by the government, while here it can cost $500 or more?
Check out our new book “How to make America Utopia: Take away the economy from those who rigged it” today knowing you (1) Get communication techniques & (2) Support Progressive message delivery.
Why are our candidates for public office begging for cash to take on dark money interests when in most other functioning democracies billionaires are forbidden by law from bribing politicians and corporate campaign activity is strictly limited?
Why are kids asking their parents or friends to help pay off student loans when such loans pretty much don’t exist in any other developed democracy (and didn’t in America before the Reagan administration)?
I spent about 20 years of my life in some of the world’s worst war and famine regions doing international relief work through the German charity Salem International (and wrote a book about it), as well as Louise and I starting a community for abused kids that ran as a charity here in the US for over 30 years.
Living in both the United States and Europe, we noticed that Europeans are big givers to the truly destitute of the world, while Americans are more preoccupied with helping out each other here in America.
Why is it that people in England, for example, give around 20 percent of their charitable contributions to groups and people in desperately poor countries outside the UK, while Americans only send 4 percent of our philanthropy overseas?
Is it because there’s such deep and profound need here in the US?
The answer, it appears, is “Yes”: American government, uniquely in the developed world, routinely fails the majority of its people in need — all while handing billions in subsidies and tax breaks every year to the top 1 percent.
Check out our new book “It’s Worth It: How to Talk To Your Right-Wing Relatives, Friends, and Neighbors” today knowing you (1) Get communication techniques & (2) Support Progressive message delivery.
This is no accident.
A rightwing network of billionaires and foundations began, in the 1970s, following an outline by Lewis Powell selling Americans on the idea that government is an evil and dysfunctional thing and that the real core idea of America is “rugged individualism.” That instead of government looking out for the general welfare of its people, Americans in need can “just stand on their own two feet.”
Their motivation, of course, was greed: they wanted the then-top personal income tax bracket of 74% abolished, the estate tax gutted, and corporate tax laws so shot-through with loopholes that they could make hundreds of billions in reported profits and not pay a penny in taxes.
These people and their think tanks, publications and media networks argued that when society helped people with food, housing, medicine or even walking-around money they didn’t “work for,” it made them lazy and destroyed their self-initiative.
There was, however, an exception to their sales pitch: When their morbidly rich children inherit “unearned money,” that instantly turns them into “Job Creators.” So it’s imperative to eliminate the estate tax to “rescue” the jobs they can use their inherited money to “create.” Free money, using their bizarre logic, “motivates” wealthy children while “destroying the initiative” of poor children.
The big lie these billionaires and their political and media shills have sold us since the Reagan Revolution is that nature designed humans to be “on our own,” and to “stand on our own two feet.” When Americans live in places that are deeply impoverished, where jobs were shipped overseas, where local big-box/fast-food employers only pay crap wages, well, that’s just our own damn fault.
Margaret Thatcher, Reagan’s idol, went so far as to say that low-income people “are casting their problems on society. And, you know, there is no such thing as society. There are individual men and women and there are families. And no governments can do anything except through people, and people must look to themselves first.”
But she’s wrong. Humans are social animals, and have helped each other out through our social and cultural systems since the dawn of humanity.
Even those of us fortunate enough to have been born with advantages like having middle-class, educated parents and in places with good schools and employment opportunities didn’t stand up in life on our own.
We have clean food and water, warm housing, safe medications and reliable transportation systems because we Americans have historically worked together — through the institution of government that we created for this very purpose (the “General Welfare” in the Preamble of the Constitution) — to protect and lift up even the least among us.
In 1991 I was working during a brutal winter in the Kaliningrad region after the Soviet Union fell, helping people recover their long-lost “peasant” agricultural systems so they could feed their rural small villages. Everywhere we went there were hitchhikers, ranging in age from 10 to 80.
Check out our book “As I See It – Class Warfare: The Only Resort To Right Wing Doom” today knowing you (1) Will understand government/economy & (2) Support Progressive message delivery.
Horst von Heyer was a dear German friend who’s now passed away but remembered the terrors and horrors of World War II (he was 15 in Bavaria when the war ended) and spent much of his life afterwards working for Salem in places in crisis, particularly in Africa. That winter in Kaliningrad, he commented to me one afternoon as we drove near the Polish border past dozens of shivering people with their thumbs out, “You can tell how poor a country is by the number of hitchhikers you see on the road.”
Here in America, I’d rewrite Horst’s dictum. The 2022 version, I’d argue, is: “You can tell the social and spiritual level of distress of a country by the number and desperation of its private charitable appeals.”
America can do better.
We have the means — more easily than any other country in the world, based on our wealth — to make sure every American has housing, healthcare, food and a good education.
We can end student and medical debt.
We can free the next generation to fulfill their potential and bring peace and harmony to the world.
And if Americans can get past the “rugged individualism” lie peddled every day by our billionaires’ rightwing media, we will.
(For the “Daily Audio” of me reading this article check the “Daily Audio” tab.)
Originally posted at The Hartmann Report
Check out my books on our economic fraud, the necessity to engage the other side, and the creation of a real economy that serves us all. Subscribe to our YouTube Channel to help us get to 100,000 subscribers. Help us deliver the progressive message widely by joining our YouTube channel.
SET YOUR REMINDER: Watch/listen/engage in the civil discourse on these and many issues at Politics Done Right daily (3 PM CT/4 PM ET/1 PM PT/2 PM MT). Podcasts (Video — Audio).
Viewers are encouraged to subscribe and join the conversation for more insightful commentary and to support progressive messages. Together, we can populate the internet with progressive messages that represent the true aspirations of most Americans.
Peggy Lopez says
If my hearing this discussion about the false bootstraps that we all have to raise ourselves up hasn’t changed the thinking of Americans in the past 70 years, it is one of those discussions that Sonia Johnson claimed would allow the powerful to immunize themselves against the rabble of anyone who is not them. She was correct in her observation’s in the 1970″s. Her claim was , the harder we fought the stronger they get. Now they are rabble rousing their true believers, without any repercussions. They are removing the vote from millions of Americans, without any repercussions. They are holding workers hostage at jobs that do not pay enough to support their lives, without any repercussions. They are killing millions of Americans with freedom is more valuable than live with vaccines from a deadly virus, without any repercussions. When Sonia said our battle only made them stronger, she was right.