-Caveat Lector-

Reposted by reader request
http://whatreallyhappened.com/lindex.html
"You load 16 tons, what do you get?
Another day older and you're deeper in debt.
Saint Peter don't you call me, 'cause I can't go.
I owe my soul to the company store!"

 In the early 1900's, one of the worst abuses of workers involved what was
called the "company town". This was a town wholly owned by a mining
company in a remote location. Workers were attracted to move there by
the lure of high wages. However, once there, they discovered that the
cost of living was even higher, kept there by the "...company store", the
only source for the necessities of life. The company was free to hand out
high wages, knowing they would take that same money back in as profits at
the company store. No matter how hard the workers tried, they could
never make enough money to live on and would be in debt to the company
store. As long as they were in debt, the company could legally prevent the
workers from leaving. It was a form of corporate slavery, concealed in a
bookkeeping trick.

 The abuses of the company towns led eventually to the formation of labor
unions, and threatened at one point to spark a communist revolution in
the United States. The threat of such a revolution caused corporations to
adopt more humane attitudes towards their workers. As word spread of
what a trap the company towns could be spread through folk songs similar
to the one quoted above, workers simply refused to sign up, and the
company towns faded into history.

 I have received a lot of email regarding the article "The United States
Government is Dying". Most of it has been positive. The negative email
always seems to point out the standard of living Americans have, usually
defined in terms of the possessions we own. But for the most part we
don't own those things we display to others for their esteem and
admiration. The vast majority of Americans are deeply in debt for the items
they buy, TV sets, cars, recreational vehicles, vacations, even
supermarkets have credit card machines to purchase food with. Using
credit for the basic necessities of life has become so ubiquitous that it is
almost invisible.

 The debt-based economy has turned the entire nation into a "...company
town". Americans are living on borrowing, and when the economy slows
down, the repayment of those loans becomes a trap. Eventually, the
lenders acquire those few things Americans own that actually have any
worth, namely their homes. And it is worth reminding to those readers
who claim that our nation is still doing well that private ownership of
homes has been in decline for quite some time. Whereas home ownership
was the reality for most of our parents and grandparents, a far larger
percentage of Americans are now renting. Americans are working their
lives out, and at the end, they have little but a few status-icons to show
for it. Our rear ends are well decorated with designer jeans, but if you
think about it, blue jeans are pretty much what the workers  in those
older company towns wore into the mines every day. Is there any
difference between the blue jeans you wear, made expensive with a
designer label, and their blue jeans, made expensive by the company
store? Is it not really the same trap at work?

 During the "boom times" of the 90s, the media assured us that the
economy was doing wonderfully, that the good times would roll on forever.
In reality, 80% of the population suffered a decline in living standards, and
to make up for it, they bought on credit, assured that eventually there
would be money to pay for it all. Then the crash happened. People are
losing their homes, their retirements, their businesses, all those things
they had worked for that had real worth, lost to that "company store"
called the debt-based economy.

 The trap is that the US Government has been running itself pretty much
the same way. Never able to balance its books the US Government just
keeps borrowing and borrowing to make ends meet. The people get stuck
with the bills. The interest alone now exceeds all the income tax paid by
all the US citizens. You're not supposed to notice, of course, since taxed
into near poverty you too are living on your credit cards. And never mind
that the government borrows so much money that it drives interest rates
up, making the money you do have to borrow more costly to repay.

 So for those who claim that an economy based on debts rather than on
worth is a good thing, it usually is from the point of view of the bank which
gets to print up those debt notes at whim and then lend them out at full
value. But for the people, who are as trapped into paying the interest on
all those debt notes spent, the nation has been turned into one gigantic
"company town", where prices are always kept just a hair above wages,
where the people are kept in perpetual debt, so that no matter how hard
they work, the vast majority of Americans can never buy their soul back
from that company store.

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