This morning’s Democracy Now goes deeply into Obama’s budget

and speech, from wide pov’s, including the brilliant 96 yr. old

Grace Lee Boggs.  Look, listen. In LA 9 AM, kpfk – 90.7 fm. 

Ed

 

http://www.thenation.com/article/159547/back-you-glenn-beck

 

Back at You, Glenn Beck 

 

Stephen Lerner

The Nation:  In the April 18, 2011 edition of The Nation.

 

As an organizer, I go to a lot of meetings, panels and discussions and often
leave feeling like I’m caught in the movie Groundhog Day, where I am
reliving the same discussions and debates over and over again, and wondering
if they hold any relevance for anyone else. That’s why I was so surprised
when my secretly taped comments about the need to challenge Wall Street and
corporate power using direct action, delivered on March 19 at the Left Forum
in New York City, set off a right-wing firestorm.

 

A funny thing happened on the way home from the forum. Overnight I was
transformed by Glenn Beck into an all-powerful agent of “economic
terrorism.” Utah Congressman Jason Chaffetz called for a federal
investigation of me, and right-wing blogs claimed that my comments revealed
a vast conspiracy to take over the country and the economy.

 

What did I say that led Beck to spend two nights attacking me and defending
big banks and Wall Street CEOs?

 

I think I may have found part of the answer in what disgraced former Wall
Street stock analyst Henry Blodget admitted when he echoed Beck’s wild
theories on Business Insider. Describing my remarks, he wrote, “Many
Americans will undoubtedly sympathize with and support them.”

 

So that was it: Beck, right-wingers and Wall Street sympathizers went
ballistic because they knew the ideas I talked about are far from being a
secret leftist conspiracy; in fact, they’re in sync with the thinking of
most Americans. In my talk, I raised a very simple yet powerful idea: that
homeowners, students, citizens and workers should make the same practical
decisions Wall Street and corporate CEOs make every day—they should reject
bad financial deals.

 

Beck and Wall Street are terrified that regular Americans will begin to
challenge the double standard that allows one set of rules for the rich and
another for the rest of us. They are petrified of the growing understanding,
among people of diverse political backgrounds, that our country isn’t broke;
that the tiny elite at the top has manipulated the economic crisis it
created to grow even richer and more powerful while the rest of us suffer
the consequences; and that Wall Street and corporations, sitting on record
profits, are holding the country hostage, essentially threatening a capital
strike if they don’t get further tax and regulatory breaks.

 

As long as Wall Street and the superrich feel secure and confident, they
have no reason to negotiate a fair deal with the rest of us. Only by
creating uncertainty and instability for them—by disrupting unfair business
as usual—can we build the strength to challenge their stranglehold on our
economy and our democracy.

 

But I don’t think it was just my theorizing about power relationships and
the economy that set off such a frenzy. It was the prospect that average
Americans could take a series of concrete and practical steps, including
direct action and civil disobedience, to make Wall Street pay for the
trillions it stole from us. Ordinary Americans have the power and the
opportunity to go on offense right now—with the immediate goals of keeping
millions of people in their homes and raising revenue for cities and states
to save jobs and critical services.

 

Here’s how we can start:

 

§ Homeowners and students can stop paying unfair debt. If growing numbers of
homeowners and students organize toward a loan strike—threatening to refuse
to pay their toxic mortgages and student loans unless banks agree to
negotiate lower rates—it could force banks to modify loans and provide
relief to our families.

 

§ Citizens can demand that our governments stop doing business with bandit
banks. Local governments conduct trillions in business with Wall Street
banks. That leverage can be used to force the banks to pay their fair share
in taxes, renegotiate high-cost deals that are bankrupting taxpayers with
astronomical interest rates, and stop foreclosures by reducing mortgage
principals.

 

§ Public employees can use their collective bargaining power to protect
taxpayer dollars. Teachers, nurses and other public employees can go to the
bargaining table armed with solutions that would save billions, like
renegotiating the toxic interest rate swaps that are costing taxpayers at
least $1.8 billion a year nationally. Swaps were supposed to save taxpayers
money, but they backfired when the Federal Reserve cut interest rates after
the financial crash to help the banks. Now, as taxpayers deal with
devastating cuts, the banks are using these swaps to suck millions out of
government coffers. Imagine public employees voting to strike in order to
pressure the city or state to use its power to protect taxpayers and
critical services while also stopping foreclosures and stabilizing the
housing market and tax base.

 

So let’s give Wall Street, Glenn Beck and the right something to be scared
about. It’s time to use our collective power to challenge the economic and
political stranglehold they have on our country.

Join thousands of Americans on April 4 in cities across the country for a
dramatic series of actions to stand up for the middle class. On April 5,
join the national teach-in with Frances Piven and Cornel West. Or start
organizing in your own community to challenge the power of Wall Street and
corporate CEOs.

 

Stephen Lerner 

March 30, 2011  

 

 



 

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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