Economic Justice
for All
by David Krieger*, May 23, 2003
“We hold these truths to be self-evident,
that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their
Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are
Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness – That to secure
these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their
just Powers from the Consent of the Governed, that whenever any
Form of Government becomes destructive of these Ends, it is the
Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute
new Government, laying its Foundation on such Principles, and
organizing its Powers in such Form, as to them shall seem most
likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.”
These revolutionary words from the Declaration
of Independence are worth reflecting upon in light of the current
struggle for economic justice in America. The government of the
United States, the richest and most powerful country in the world,
is perpetuating economic injustice within the United States and
throughout the world. While the government seems to have unlimited
funds for missiles and munitions, it is failing to provide health
care, housing or education for large segments of the US population.
Millions of Americans, including working Americans,
live below the poverty line. There are more than 40 million Americans
without health insurance with little or no access to basic medical
care. There are tens of millions of Americans without homes, and
home ownership is becoming an impossible dream for most young
Americans. The possibilities of a college education are also receding
for young Americans, as the funds provided for education diminish.
The truth is that we have no economic justice in this country
and the situation is growing rapidly worse under the Bush administration.
State budgets are running in the red, and that
means that their services to the people are diminishing. In 2002,
states cut $49 billion in health care, welfare benefits, education
and other public services. They plan to cut another $25.7 billion
in 2003. State budget cuts this year and last year will be nearly
equivalent to the initial amounts requested by Mr. Bush and allocated
by Congress for the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Rather than
help the states in meeting their budgets, and thereby support
the American people, Mr. Bush has squandered our federal funds
on an illegal foreign war.
In spite of these shortfalls, Mr. Bush pressed
for tax cuts of over $700 billion over a ten year period, tax
relief that would go largely to the wealthiest Americans. Congress
ended up passing tax cuts of $330 billion, less than half of the
Bush request. While some $20 billion will go back to the states,
the bulk of the relief will benefit the very rich, including Mr.
Bush and many in his cabinet. Most Americans will receive a few
hundred dollars or less, and the poorest Americans will receive
nothing or next to nothing. By contrast, the richest Americans
will receive tens of thousands if not hundreds of thousands of
dollars in tax relief.
This means that those at the top of the economic
pyramid will have more money to contribute to the candidates of
their choice, who in turn will help them to get a larger share
of the economic pie. The rest of us predictably will get a smaller
share of the pie, and there are far more of us to compete for
these leftovers.
In America, if you are rich, it is very likely
that the president and the Congress will be working for your interests,
by providing tax cuts and other benefits. If you are poor, who
will be representing you in our democracy? It is not likely to
be the present incumbent of the White House. Nor is it likely
to be your member of Congress, when many in Congress are indebted
to corporate interests.
If you are poor and not well educated in America,
you may be able to work for minimum wage. That will probably be
enough to keep you struggling below the poverty line, particularly
if you have children, and your children will be forced to join
you in poverty. Further, if these children do not receive a decent
education, the cycle will go on and will likely be perpetuated
to their children.
If you are poor in America and you are young, you
may be able to join the military. We couldn’t have a voluntary
military without high levels of poverty. And without a voluntary
military, we couldn’t have perpetual wars because then the
politicians and their financial supporters would have to send
their own sons and daughters to fight. They wouldn’t be
any more likely to do this than they would be to volunteer to
go themselves to fight. They far prefer to send your sons and
daughters to kill and die in foreign lands. In actuality, only
one member of Congress had a child fighting in Iraq.
The war against Iraq is likely to cost the American
taxpayer at least $100 billion and possibly much more. Those who
profit will certainly include the Defense Contractors, those who
provide the munitions and other material expended in the war.
Other profiteers from the war will be those contracted to rebuild
what we have destroyed in Iraq and, of course, the multinational
oil companies.
Corporate names such as Halliburton, Dick Cheney’s
old company, and Bechtel will be among the winners from this war.
Lockheed Martin, Ratheon, the Carlyle Group and other giant defense
contractors will undoubtedly also be among the winners. The poor
and middle class in America, as well as the people of Iraq, will
be among the losers.
We are now spending some $400 billion a year on
our military forces, not including the special expenditures for
the war in Iraq. This is approximately one-half of the money that
Congress has discretion to allocate each year. The money that
goes to the military cannot go to social programs that would lead
to economic justice in our country. Money that goes to the military
cannot even defend America as 9/11 demonstrated so dramatically.
Four hundred billion dollars a year on the military
is over $1.1 billion dollars a day. It works out to $45.5 million
per hour, $761,000 per minute. Imagine all of the important social
programs that will go unfunded or underfunded to pay that $400
billion per year for a military that cannot defend us.
Some 500 billionaires on this planet, mostly Americans,
have the equivalent assets of half of the world’s population.
Three billion people on our planet live on less that $2 per day.
More than one billion people live on less than $1 dollar per day.
Over a billion people lack access to clean water, and over 2.5
billion people do not have access to basic sanitation. Millions
of people die annually throughout the developing world due to
water-borne diseases and inadequate sanitation.
On our planet over one billion people are illiterate,
and some 100 million children are denied access to primary education.
For a small portion of what the US government spends on its military,
it could be saving lives and building friendships by humanitarian
assistance in food, health care, education and sanitation.
Secretary of State Colin Powell has called for
battling against poverty in the war against terrorism. “We
have to go after poverty,” he said. “We have to go
after despair. We have to go after hopelessness.”
Of course, Secretary Powell is right about this,
but it isn’t what our country has done historically, and
Powell’s clarion call will not likely be heard in the White
House. The US remains last among industrialized countries in the
amount of its gross domestic product that it allocates for international
development at 0.11 percent. The US is spending more on its plans
to research, develop and deploy missile defenses ($7.8 billion)
than it for its international humanitarian and development assistance
($7.6 billion). We are not seriously “going after poverty,”
as Mr. Powell advised, but rather going after bombs, wars and
missile shields.
Our failure to make a serious effort to stem poverty
and injustice in the world is leading to resentment, anger and
aggression toward America and innocent Americans. Pumping large
amounts of money into the military is not an answer to these problems
and makes the situation even less secure for the average American.
We need to change our policies both at home and abroad to bolster
economic and social justice. We need to fund bread rather than
bombs.
If we want economic justice in America, we are
going to have to change our direction. We are going to have to
share the resources of the country with its people, not only the
wealthy few, and also be more generous abroad. The United States
is not meant to be a country “of the rich, by the rich and
for the rich.” It is a country, we are taught, “of
the people, by the people, and for the people.” We are the
People and, for the good of ourselves and the world, we had better
reclaim our country and reallocate our resources.
This means a far greater involvement of the people
in our democratic processes. It means throwing out the politicians
of both political parties who serve the interests of the corporations
over the interests of the People. It means reallocating resources
away from the militarization of America toward meeting the social
needs of the poorest among us and allowing all Americans to live
a better life.
The American dream is being squandered by a small
group of extremist ideologues who are both greedy and myopic.
Let us reclaim our land from these extremists. Let us strive to
be a great country because we care for each other, particularly
the least among us, and for the world in which we live. The implications
of restoring economic justice are profound. They lie at the heart
of environmental devastation of our planet and the suffering of
large portions of humanity. Economic justice may prove to be a
far more important factor in quelling terrorism than military
force.
We can begin by empowering ourselves to bring about
the changes necessary to achieve economic justice in our country
and in the world. We can start by speaking out and urging our
members of Congress to oppose tax cuts and instead allocate this
money to support health care, housing and education. Let us also
urge our members of Congress to vote to cut back on obscene military
expenditures and transfer these funds instead to meeting human
needs, in the United States and throughout the world. The next
step should be to work through the electoral process to replace
those political leaders who remain indebted to corporate interests
and committed to the militarization of America. By taking these
steps, by our engagement, we can move toward restoring dignity
and economic justice at home and abroad.
* David Krieger is president
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (www.wagingpeace.org). He
is the co-author of Choose Hope, and the editor of Hope in a Dark
Time, Reflections on Humanity’s Future.
Readers Comments
If you'd like to send us your comments please e-mail
us at: letters@napf.org
(Please include the name of the article in the subject line)
America needs to seperate itself from the imperilist
Corporate giants who drive the economy and our government.I think
the first thing we could do is start to elect officials that are
not so easily corrupted and lust after money,I think the first
Question that should be asked any new candidate for any political
office should be "Do you wish to partake in or put a stop
to the plunder of the American People?"We need men who are
strong willed and moraly driven not profit driven if we abide
by Gods law we will prosper without manipulating markets and enslaving
poor third world economys with high interest loans taken under
deress and with conditions that are impossible to meet That would
be the Imf and its buisness practices.
--Stephen, USA
Timely comments. In my opinion the current Bush
tax cut proposal amounts to a radical departure from sound principles
not only of economic justice but also of fiscal management ---
aided and abetted by what Alan Greenspan refers to as "the
deafening silence" of Congress. This proposal is merely the
latest in a series of measures thinly disguised as economic stimulants
but cynically calculated to divide our society further into two
economic spheres and to consolidate political power in the hands
of the wealthy few. As you suggest, this plutocratic system (let's
not call it "democracy") builds upon itself --- as money
influences our political processes, the moneyed interests are
able to expand their control over those processes and eventually
come to dominate all policy. Having consolidated their control
and governed in their own interests, they then denounce any dissenters
as fomenters of "class division." The question is, how
may we free our politics from the grip of money and thus approach
"Democracy in America?"
---Rob, USA
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