Michael.

The source is a left wing UK newspaper.

Collective compassion (whatever that is) is not big in the United States.

Individual compassion is. European countries are fond of criticizing the US
for failing to send large sums overseas. As it happens, Americans give more
than anyone else in the form of private donations.

So, we must compare a European country donation decided by politicians
distributing other people's money with the US, where private giving is
decided by individuals -- and is large.

Harry

********************************
Henry George School of Los Angeles
Box 655
Tujunga  CA  9104
818 352-4141
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-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Michael Gurstein
Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2010 2:02 AM
To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION';
[email protected]
Subject: [Futurework] FW: [CC] America's Deepening Moral Crisis (fwd)

Interesting, particularly given the source.

M

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 5 Oct 2010 21:13:36
From: Portside Moderator <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: America's Deepening Moral Crisis

America's deepening moral crisis

The language of collective compassion has been abandoned in the US, and no
politician dare even mention helping the poor

By Jeffrey Sachs

guardian.co.uk
October 4, 2010

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/belief/2010/oct/04/




President Barack Obama is likely to face difficulty passing progressive
legislation after the November elections.

America's political and economic crisis is set to worsen following the
upcoming November elections. President Barack Obama will lose any hope for
passing progressive legislation aimed at helping the poor or the
environment. Indeed, all major legislation and reforms are likely to be
stalemated until 2013, following a new presidential election. An already bad
situation marked by deadlock and vitriol is likely to worsen, and the world
should not expect much leadership from a bitterly divided United States.

Much of America is in a nasty mood and the language of compassion has more
or less been abandoned. Both political parties serve their rich campaign
contributors, while proclaiming they defend the middle class. Neither party
even mentions the poor - who now officially make up 15% of the population,
but in fact are even more numerous when we count all those households
struggling with healthcare, housing, jobs and other needs.

The Republican party recently issued a "Pledge to America" to explain its
beliefs and campaign promises. The document is filled with nonsense, such as
the fatuous claim high taxes and over-regulation explain America's high
unemployment. It is also filled with propaganda. A quote from President John
F Kennedy states that high tax rates can strangle the economy, but Kennedy
was speaking half a century ago, when the top marginal tax rates were twice
what they are today. Most of all, the Republican platform is devoid of
compassion.

America today presents the paradox of a rich country falling apart because
of the collapse of its core values. American productivity is among the
highest in the world. Average national income per person is about $46,000 -
enough not only to live on, but to prosper. Yet the country is in the throes
of an ugly moral crisis.

Income inequality is at historic highs, but the rich claim they have no
responsibility to the rest of society. They refuse to come to the aid of the
destitute, and defend tax cuts at every opportunity. Almost everybody
complains, almost everybody aggressively defends their own narrow,
short-term interests, and almost everybody abandons any pretense of looking
ahead or addressing the needs of others.

What passes for American political debate is a contest between the parties
to give bigger promises to the middle class, mainly in the form of
budget-busting tax cuts at a time when the fiscal deficit is already more
than 10% of GDP. Americans seem to believe that they have a natural right to
government services without paying taxes. In the American political lexicon,
taxes are defined as a denial of liberty.

There was a time, not long ago, when Americans talked of ending poverty at
home and abroad. Lyndon Johnson's "war on poverty" in the mid 1960s
reflected an era of national optimism and the belief that society should
make collective efforts to solve common problems, such as poverty, pollution
and healthcare. America in the 1960s enacted programs to rebuild poor
communities, to fight air and water pollution, and to ensure healthcare for
the elderly. Then the deep divisions over Vietnam and civil rights, combined
with a surge of consumerism and advertising, seemed to end an era of shared
sacrifice for the common good.

For 40 years, compassion in politics receded. Ronald Reagan gained
popularity by cutting social benefits for the poor (claiming the poor
cheated to receive extra payments). Bill Clinton continued those cuts in the
1990's. Today, no politician even dares to mention help for poor people.

The big campaign contributors to both parties pay to ensure their vested
interests dominate political debates. That means both parties increasingly
defend the interests of the rich, though Republicans do so slightly more
than Democrats. Even a modest tax increase on the rich is unlikely to find
support in American politics.

The result of all this is likely to be a long-term decline of US power and
prosperity, because Americans no longer invest collectively in their common
future. America will remain a rich society for a long time to come, but one
that is increasingly divided and unstable. Fear and propaganda may lead to
more US-led international wars, as in the past decade.

And what is happening in America is likely to be repeated elsewhere. America
is vulnerable to social breakdown because it is a highly diverse society.
Racism and anti-immigrant sentiments are an important part of the attack on
the poor ??? or at least the reason why so many are willing to heed the
propaganda against helping the poor. As other societies grapple with their
own increasing diversity, they may follow the US into crisis.

Swedes recently gave enough votes to a rightwing, anti- immigrant party to
give it representation in parliament, reflecting a growing backlash against
the rising number of immigrants in Swedish society. In France, Nicolas
Sarkozy's government has tried to regain popularity with the working class
by deporting Roma migrants, a target of widespread hatred and ethnic
attacks.

Both examples show that Europe, like the US, is vulnerable to the politics
of division, as our societies become more ethnically diverse.

The lesson from America is that economic growth is no guarantee of wellbeing
or political stability. American society has become increasingly harsh,
where the richest Americans buy their way to political power and the poor
are abandoned to their fate. In their private lives, Americans have become
addicted to consumerism, which drains their time, savings, attention and
inclination to engage in acts of collective compassion.

The world should beware. Unless we break the ugly trends of big money in
politics and rampant consumerism, we risk winning economic productivity at
the price of our humanity.

_____________________________________________

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