-Caveat Lector-

 <A HREF="http://members.aol.com/bblum6/American_holocaust.htm">The American
Holocaust</A>

Written March 1999

By William Blum author of
Killing Hope: U.S. Military and CIA
Interventions Since World War II


The myth of America's "booming economy"
     You cannot escape it.  You read it and hear it everywhere.
>From every news medium, every politician -- the economy is
booming ... thriving ... soaring ... the leading economic
indicators are looking great ... stock market is going
through the roof ... "economy showed signs of continued strength in
January as American's personal income rose by a robust .6 percent"
... prosperity everywhere ... the world's richest country ...
     But ... but what about ... what about ...

the working poor, the millions who toil at full-time jobs, yet
remain below the official poverty level (an unrealistically
low figure to begin with), their real purchasing power below
1979 levels

the husbands and wives each having to work full time so
together they manage to rise a little above the poverty level

the millions who surrender 30 to 70 percent of their
paycheck for rent

those living in severely substandard housing

the more than a million families who do not have indoor
bathrooms or hot-and-cold running water

the unemployed (the real amount, not the fudged figures
announced to the public)

those who want and need a full-time job, but can only get
a part-time job, minus benefits

those who want and need a permanent job, but can only get
a temporary job, minus benefits

the underemployed -- college graduates and those with
advanced degrees working at relatively menial jobs with no
connection to their studies

the more than 43 million without any health insurance

the even greater number without dental insurance

the further millions with inadequate health insurance,
including those with Medicare and Medicaid

the elderly who spend half their income for health care
and prescriptions

the elderly who have to choose between prescriptions and food;
(about half the prescriptions written go unfilled because
many elderly people literally have to make this choice)

the elderly who purchase cat and dog food, but don't own
any pets

the millions with inadequate sick leave or maternity leave,
or none at all

those -- the great majority of employees -- who are lucky to
get two weeks vacation, compared to the European norm of
five weeks

those forced to choose between heat and sufficient food in
the winter

those literally dying on sweltering summer days because
they can't afford an air conditioner or are concerned
about their electricity bill

those whos phone, gas or electricity has been turned off for
non-payment

the homeless

those one paycheck or one illness or one divorce away from
homelessness

those living five to ten people in a one-bedroom apartment

the millions who go to bed hungry at least part of every
month; (the largest network of food banks, Second Harvest,
reported that 26 million people sought help during 1997)

those frightened by the welfare reform law of 1996 into not
applying for food stamps, welfare or Medicaid

the 1.8 million souls in prisons and jails

those who have enlisted in the military to escape dead-end poverty

those who want to go to college but can't afford to

those who go to college at the cost of a huge debt hanging
round their neck for years

the illegal aliens working as semi-slaves in sweatshops

the almost 20 percent of American households who are broke, with
a net worth of zero or less, more than double the number of 30
years ago

those living on their credit cards, making only the minimum
payments each month, as the exorbitant interest piles up
year after year

the more than 50,000 businesses which filed for bankruptcy
last year

the million and a half individuals who filed for bankruptcy
last year

the numerous cleaning women and maids who spend four hours on a
bus each to and from their minimum-wage job

the middle-class people who maintain their standard of living by
working 50, 60, 70 hours per week, by their choice or their
employer's dictate, plus a daily two- or three-hour commute,
returning home totally wiped out and overstressed

those hanging on to jobs they hate, jobs making them sick,
only because of the health insurance and pension

those forced by their employers to pay more and more of
their insurance and pension costs

those living only on social security

those living only on welfare

the more than a million native Americans living on
reservations, for whom much of the above has to be multiplied
What's booming are soup kitchens and homeless shelters.  And a
growing majority of those waiting in line for a meal or a bed
are actually employed.
Written by William Blum, author of Killing Hope: U.S. Military
and CIA Interventions Since World War II
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
(If you can think of any additions to this list, please let me know.)
A companion piece to the above
Dancing on the electric grid
By Per Fagereng
     Picture this standard experiment in psychology: A group
of rats is placed on an electric grid and the voltage is slowly
increased.  After a while the rats feel a burning tingle in
their feet.  The experimenters up the voltage some more, and watch
the rats dance and bite each other.
     The experimenters are seeking knowledge, and the rats'
pain is presumably worth it. The experimenters don't blame the
rats for fighting each other, or punish the more aggressive ones.
They know that individuals react to pain in different ways.
     Now picture the economic terrain as a different kind of
pain grid.  Instead of electric shocks, the inhabitants experience
job loss, higher prices, less pay, overwork, polluted
neighborhoods and so on.  Controlling the grid are not
psychologists, but CEOs and bankers.  Instead of knowledge,
they are seeking profit. And so they up the pain, but not
because they want to hurt people.  They are really trying to up
their profits, and the pain is a side effect.
     After a while people on the grid do nasty things to
each other, everything from domestic violence to immigrant-bashing
to crime.  Unlike the rats, the people get blamed for their
misbehavior.  We are told to point our fingers at the victims
on the grid, instead of at the economic rulers who keep
increasing the pain.
     You'd think that the CEOs and bankers would ease up on
the pain, but think again.  They continue to demand more
sacrifice from the poor, knowing full well how they'll react.
     Would you call this a big conspiracy?  Or the sum of
many small conspiracies?  Maybe it doesn't matter that much.  I'm
not a mind reader.  The point is, the economic rulers pursue
their profits and they know the consequences.  So to that extent,
they are choosing to inflict pain.

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