Paul B. Farrell / March 29, 2011, 12:01 a.m. EDT

Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution

Commentary: A ‘Super-Rich Delusion’ is leading us to ruin

By Paul B. Farrell, MarketWatch

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (MarketWatch) — Yes, tax the Super Rich. Tax
them now. Before the other 99% rise up, trigger a new American
Revolution, a meltdown and the Great Depression 2.

Revolutions build over long periods — to critical mass, a flash point.
Then they ignite suddenly, unpredictably. Like Egypt, started on a
young Google executive’s Facebook page. Then it goes viral, raging
uncontrollably. Can’t be stopped. Here in America the set-up is our
nation’s pervasive “Super-Rich Delusion.”

U.K. workers protest turns violent

A splinter group is blamed for smashing windows and attacking police
vans as tens of thousands march against government cuts.

We know the Super Rich don’t care. Not about you. Nor the American
public. They can’t see. Can’t hear. Stay trapped in their Forbes-400
bubble. An echo chamber that isolates them. They see the public as
faceless workers, customers, taxpayers. See GOP power on the ascent.
Reaganomics is back. Unions on the run. Clueless masses are easily
manipulated.

Even Obama is secretly working with the GOP, will never touch his
Super Rich donors. Yes, the Super-Rich Delusion is that powerful,
infecting all America.

Here’s how one savvy insider who knows described this Super-Rich
Delusion: “The top 1% live privileged lives, aren’t worried about
much. Families vacation at the best resorts. Their big concerns are
finding the best Pilates teacher, best masseuse, best surgeons, best
private schools. They aren’t concerned with the underlying
deterioration of America or the world, except in the abstract, because
they aren’t directly affected by it. That’s not to say they aren’t
sympathetic, aware, or don’t talk about the issues you bring up. They
are largely concerned with protecting and enhancing their
socio-economic positions, ensuring their families live well. And
nothing you write about will change things.”

Warning, in 2011 that attitude is delusional, deadly, yet pervasive in America.

Super Rich replaying “Great Gatsby” age, won’t learn till it’s too late

Our top 1% honestly believe they’re immune, protected from the
unintended consequences of beating down average Americans for three
decades with the free-market, trickle-down Reaganomics doctrines that
made them Super Rich.

They honestly believe those same doctrines will protect them in the
next depression. Why? Because they have megabucks stashed away.
Provisions for the long haul. Live in gated compounds with mercenaries
guarding them.

They believe they’ll continue living just fine in a depression. But
you won’t. Nor will your retirement. Neither will the rest of America.
And still the Super Rich don’t care, “except in the abstract, because
they aren’t directly affected.”

Warning: The Super-Rich Delusion has pushed us to the edge of a great
precipice: Remember the Roaring Twenties? The Crash of 1929? Great
Depression? Just days before the crash one leading economist, Irving
Fisher, predicted that stocks had “reached what looks like a
permanently high plateau.”

Yes, he was trapped in the “Great Gatsby Syndrome,” an earlier version
of today’s Super-Rich Delusion. It was so blinding in 1929 that the
president, Wall Street, all America were sucked in … until the
critical mass hit a mysterious flash point, triggering the crash.

Yes, we’re reliving that past — never learn, can’t hear. And oddly
it’s not just the GOP’s overreach, the endlessly compromising Obama,
too-greedy-to-fail Wall Street banksters, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
billionaires and arrogant Forbes 400. America’s entire political,
financial and economic psyche is infected, as if our DNA has been
rewired.

The Collective American Brain is trapped in this Super-Rich Delusion,
replaying the run-up to the ’29 Crash.

Nobody predicted 2011 revolutions in the oil-rich Arab world either

Warning: Mubarak, Gaddafi, Ali, Assad, even the Saudis also lived in
the Super-Rich Delusion. Have for a long time. Were vulnerable. Ripe
for a revolution. They, too, honestly believed they were divinely
protected, chosen for great earthly wealth, enjoyed great armies.

Then, suddenly, out of the blue, a new “educated, unemployed and
frustrated” generation turned on them, is now rebelling, demanding
their share of economic benefits, opportunities, triggering
revolutions, seeking retribution.

Still, you don’t believe there’s a depression ahead here in America?
The third great market crash of the 21st century? A new economic
revolution about to blow up in our faces? No, you don’t believe, can’t
believe … you, me, we are all infected by the Super-Rich Delusion,
just as Americans were in the Roaring Twenties.

Check the stats folks: The last time America’s wealth gap between the
Super Rich and the other 99% was this big was just before the 1929
Crash and the Great Depression.

You can’t remember? Or you won’t? America is trapped in “terminal
denial,” a setup for failure. Too many still live in the false hope of
this Super-Rich Delusion. Do you believe government stats hyping a
recovery? Believe Wall Street’s nonsense about a new bull market
ahead? Believe Exxon-Mobile’s misleading ads about energy stocks.
Believe Bill Gross’ when he says dump Treasurys, and buy his emerging
country bonds? Dream on.

Start preparing for the third meltdown of the 21st Century, and depression

Denial and lies. Remember, 93% of what you hear about markets, finance
and the economy are guesses, wishful thinking and lies intended to
manipulate you into making decisions that suck money from your pockets
into Wall Street. They get rich telling lies about securities. They
hate any SEC fiduciary rules forcing them to tell the truth.

But the fact is, on an inflation-adjusted basis, Wall Street lost 20%
of your retirement money in the decade from 2000 to 2010, over $10
trillion. And “Irrational Exuberance’s” Robert Shiller warns of a
third meltdown coming. You better start preparing now.

Before you start betting any more at Wall Street’s rigged casinos,
think long and hard about these six megatoxins lurking in America’s
Super-Rich Delusion, a mind-altering pandemic infecting our nation’s
leadership in Washington, Corporate America and Wall Street … but also
“trickling down,” infecting many Americans. Listen:

1. Warning: Super Rich want tax cuts, creating youth unemployment

Bloomberg warns: “The Kids Are Not Alright.” Worldwide, youth
unemployment is fueling the revolution. In a New York Times column,
Matthew Klein, a 24-year-old Council on Foreign Relations researcher,
draws a parallel between the 25% unemployment among Egypt’s young
revolutionaries and the 21% for young American workers: “The young
will bear the brunt of the pain” as governments rebalance budgets.
Taxes on workers will be raised and spending on education will be cut
while mortgage subsidies and entitlements for the elderly are
untouchable,” as will tax cuts for the rich. Opportunities lost. “How
much longer until the rest of the rich world” explodes like Egypt?

2. Warning: rich get richer on commodity prices, poor get angrier

USA Today’s John Waggoner warns: “Soaring food prices send millions
into poverty, hunger: Corn up 52% in 12 months. Sugar 60%. Soybeans
41%. Wheat 24%. For 44 million the “rise in food prices means a
descent into extreme poverty and hunger, warns the World Bank.” Many
causes: Speculators. Soaring oil prices. Trade policies. Population
explosion. But altogether they expose “the underlying inequalities and
issues related to the standard of living that boil beneath the
surface,” says a Pimco manager.

3. Warning: Global poor ticking time bomb targeting Super Rich

A Time special report, “Poor vs. Rich: A New Global Conflict” warned
that a “conflict between two worlds — one rich, one poor — is
developing, and the battlefield is the globe itself.” Just 25
developed nations of 750 million citizens consume most of the world’s
resources, produce most of its manufactured goods and enjoy history’s
highest standard of living.” But they’re now facing 100 underdeveloped
poor nations with 2 billion people with hundreds of millions living in
poverty all demanding “an ever larger share of that wealth.” Think
Egypt. British leader calls this a “time bomb for the human race.”

4. Warning: Next revolution coming across ‘Third World America’

We are ripe for one: In “Third World America” Arianna Huffington
warns: “Washington rushed to the rescue of Wall Street but forgot
about Main Street … One in five Americans unemployed or underemployed.
One in nine families unable to make the minimum payment on their
credit cards. One in eight mortgages in default or foreclosure. One in
eight Americans on food stamps. Upward mobility has always been at the
center of the American Dream … that promise has been broken… The
American Dream is becoming a nightmare.” Soon it will implode. a
meltdown, revolution, depression.

5. Warning: Super Rich must be detoxed of their greed addiction

In “Free Lunch: How the Wealthiest Americans Enrich Themselves at
Government Expense (And Stick You With the Bill),” David Cay Johnston,
warns that the rich are like addicts, and to “the addicted, money is
like cocaine, too much is never enough.” A few years ago an elite
300,000 Americans in “the top tenth of 1% of income had nearly as much
income as all 150 million Americans who make up the economic lower
half of our population.” The Super Rich Delusion is an addiction that
requires a painful detox.

6. Warning: Politicians infected by Super-Rich Delusion, revolution

In “Washington’s Suicide Pact,” Newsweek’s Ezra Klein warns: “Congress
is careening toward the worst of all worlds: massive job losses and an
exploding deficit.” How bad? As many as 700,000 more jobs lost, says
Moody’s chief economist, Mark Zandi. What a twist: Remember vice
president Dick Cheney said “deficits don’t matter.” Today the GOP is
so blinded by its obsession to destroy Obama’s presidency, deficits
are now the only thing they say matters.

Wake up folks. The Super-Rich Delusion is destroying the American
Dream for the rest of us. The Super Rich don’t care about you. They’re
already stockpiling for the economic time bomb dead ahead. Don’t say
you weren’t warned. Time for you to plan ahead for the coming
revolution, for another depression.
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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