TOO MUCH: GREED MONITOR

This Week (11.30.09) [print_link]

clef-du-temps-watch-limited-edition2

La Clef du Temps: Not exactly a Timex.

Need to warm up for that expressing? This week’s Too Much may help. Our lead story looks at a new analysis, released last week, that explores how the ten top execs at Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers — the two biggest Wall Street giants that collapsed last year — have actually fared, financially speaking.

Also this week: We swing into the holiday spirit and contemplate who’s really benefiting — and who’s not — from the charitable donations the wealthiest among us are making.

Greed at a Glance

Mathias ButtetThe world’s hottest new luxury watch doesn’t just tell time. The “La Clef du Temps” imagines it. Plunk down $380,000 for a La Clef and you get a timepiece that lets you choose between “real,” “fast,” and “slow” time. In slow, the hours pass at half their normal pace. In fast time, double. But if you want to pick up a La Clef, fast better be your byword. The Swiss company behind the timepiece — the Confrérie Horlogère, or Watchmakers’ Brotherhood — is only placing 24 La Clefs on the global mar ket. The company already has the sales patter down dead-on. Gushes company founder Mathias Buttet: “True luxury and wealth in this day and age lie in the freedom to manage one’s time as one wishes.”

Marketers to the mega rich — like Mathias Buttet — are seeing plenty of opportunity in the current global recession. With fewer people able to afford luxury, as Reuters recently noted, savvy purveyors of luxury are enhancing that “aura of exclusiveness essential to a high-end retailer” by letting inventory run low and avoiding fire sales. Upscale retailers, says mall developer William Taubman, are working “to train the customer that luxury equals exclusivity and that they cannot assume they can wait” and buy an it em “on sale.” At the Saks flagship store in Manhattan, the strategy seems to be working. The $2,520 Marni shearling vest has sold out, and, the week before Thanksgiving, the store only had one Brioni leather bomber jacket left — at $5,295 . . .

Earlier this fall, Xerox announced plans to pay $63 per share — about 33 percent over market price — to take over the Dallas-based Affiliated Computer Services, an outsourcing company. The Xerox share price has since dived 12 percent, but the chairman of ACS, Darwin Deason, is still smiling. Last week, after a Xerox filing with federal regulators, the reason why became somewhat clearer. Deason will pocket $41.3 million in severance from the takeover deal — and $17.4 million more to cover the taxes on his severance. On top of that, reports footnoted.org, Deason will collect $800 million when the ACS stock sale to Xerox finalizes. De ason, after the initial sale announcement, told reporters he “could not be more optimistic about the future.” Xerox workers have a bit less reason to feel cheery. To make the deal “pay,” Xerox will have to realize “cost savings” of between $300 to $400 million a year. That’s “corporate speak,” notes business journalist Sam Gustin, “for layoffs.”

Timothy Durham, the Indianapolis-based leveraged-buyout king, has made no secret of his life’s ambition. He wants to die as “the richest man on earth.” The FBI last week put a little crimp in Durham’s plans. On Tuesday, agents raided Durham’s majestic offices on the top floor of Indiana’s tallest skyscraper — and also seized documents at his Ohio-based financial services company. The FBI won’t give a reason for the raid. But an investing buddy of Durham’s has already been indicted for scheming to inflate the stock of a Durham takeover target. CNBC last year profiled Durham for a Rise of the Super Rich special. The show spotlighted his collection of 70 classic luxury cars. Durham also owns a manse outside Indianapolis, two other homes in Los Angeles and South Florida, and a private jet that speeds him from one to the other . . .

Higher taxes on the rich, friends of the rich like to argue, always backfire. Rather than pay higher taxes, the argument goes, the rich will merely exit any jurisdiction foolish enough to hike taxes on them. Maryland did up taxes on the rich two years ago, from 5.5 to 6.25 percent on income over $1 million. Earlier this year, preliminary figures indicated that the number of Marylanders reporting million-dollar incomes had fallen, and apologists for the awesomely affluent at the Wall Street Journal immediately claimed that millionaires were exiting the state to avoid the higher tax. Last week, Maryland’s comptroller released final figures for 2008 millionaire filings. They show no mass exodus. In every year this decade, the comptroller notes, at least 5.3 percent of taxpayers who filed million-dollar returns the previous year did not file taxes in Maryland. Last year, after the millionaire tax increase, this total moved to 7.7 percent, not much over the 6.4 percent of year 2000 millionaires who didn’t file in 2001. This tiny increase didn’t stop one state senator, David Brinkley, from insisting that Maryland millionaires were fleeing the state en masse. Brinkley, a financial planner by trade, told the Baltimore Sun he had even “advised one millionaire client to move to Florida.” Brinkley didn’t say whether the client took his advice.

 

Quote of the Week

“In today’s marketplace, the super-rich have become richer in large part by destroying jobs. They amass staggering wealth by gambling, and fraud, and they depend very dearly on government policies (especially very low taxes on so-called ‘capital gains’) to protect what they have and allow them to grab more.”–Edward Ericson Jr., Baltimore City Paper, November 24, 2009

 

New Wisdom

on Wealth

Peter Phillips, The Higher Education Fiscal Crisis Protects the Wealthy, Media Monitors Network, November 24, 2009. A sociologist sees today’s deep budget cuts in postsecondary ed as the end product of tax policies that have handed the nation’s richest billions in tax breaks.

Paul Krugman, Taxing the Speculators, New York Times, November 26, 2009. Why the Obama administration needs to free its mind from Wall Street’s thrall.

Robert Skidelsky, Will we ever have enough wealth? The Straits Times, November 28, 2009. A noted political economist examines why, beyond a certain point, the accumulation of wealth offers only substitute pleasures for the real losses to human relations that it exacts.

In Focus

A Wall Street Meltdown Myth Bites the Dust

Great minds have been searching, ever since last fall’s financial sector meltdown, for an antidote to the wildly excessive Wall Street paydays that made that meltdown inevitable. That search, after over a year, still hasn’t generated anything close to meaningful Wall Street pay reform.

And that has to be puzzling many, if not most, average Americans. The problem on Wall Street, after all, doesn’t seem to be all that complicated. Neither does the solution. Wall Streeters did terrible things — they gutted the pensions and savings of millions — because they were rushing to hit massive pay jackpots. To prevent that greedy rushing in the future, we ought to limit those jackpots.

And Congress could do that — by not letting any banker getting bailout dollars make more than the President of the United States. Or by denying government subsidies or tax deductions to firms that pay their top execs over 25 or 50 or 100 times what their workers make. Or by taxing big bonuses at 90 percent.

Various bills that take these approaches have actually been sitting in Congress, all this year. Why aren’t these bills going anywhere? America’s big banks, predictably enough, oppose them. But so do many of Wall Street’s mainstream critics. Both these camps have been bending over backwards to steer Congress away from the notion that rewards on Wall Street need serious downsizing.

The banks, by and large, simply deny that these rewards have had any significant impact on how the movers and shakers of high finance behave. In the end, they argue, “the market” will always punish power suits who take reckless risks — and the power-suits know it.

And if those power-suits didn’t know it before last year’s financial meltdown, the apologists continue, they know it now, thanks to last year’s nosedives at Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers.

These nosedives left top execs at Bear Stearns and Lehman holding millions of shares of worthless stock. The Lehman collapse wiped nearly a billion dollars — $931 million, to be exact — off the personal net worth of Lehman CEO Richard Fuld. Bear Stearns CEO James Cayne saw the total value of his personal stock holdings drop by $900 million.

In effect, apologists for Wall Street’s compensation status quo argue, the market system worked. The truly reckless paid a price for their recklessness. So leave that system alone.

Wall Street’s mainstream critics don’t want to leave that system alone. They believe “the market,” left to its own devices, does not adequately discipline the reckless. We need reforms, they believe, that tie executive rewards to “performance” that boosts “long-term shareholder value.”

With such reforms in place, their argument goes, Wall Streeters would have no incentive to take reckless risks — and lawmakers would have no reason to mess with capping the rewards that go to Wall Streeters.

Last week, the most eminent among Wall Street’s mainstream critics — Harvard Law’s Lucian Bebchuk — released a report that takes on Wall Street’s hardline defenders and their claim that the reckless, thanks to the market, have truly suffered for their sins.

This new report powerfully demolishes that hardline claim. But the report, read closely, may just as powerfully undermine the mainstream case against caps.

Bebchuk’s new paper revolves around what really happened, on the executive pay front, at Bear Stearns and Lehman. Top execs at these two banks, Bebchuk and his two Harvard co-authors show, did not lose their shirts when the banks crashed. In fact, the top execs at both Bear and Lehman left the crash scene in fine financial fiddle. Spectacularly fine fiddle.

Between 2000 and 2008, the top five executives at Bear Stearns and the top five execs at Lehman together pocketed just under $2.5 billion. About half a billion of that came from annual cash bonuses. They picked up the rest selling off the shares of bank stock they had received as “performance” incentives.

But what about those $900 million “losses” that the CEOs of Bear Stearns and Lehman suffered? Those losses existed only on paper. They represented the difference between the pre- and post-crash value of the Bear and Lehman stock the two CEOs had left in their portfolios when their banks tumbled over the cliff.

In real cash, the two CEOs — despite their epic failures — came out way ahead. For his labors between 2000 and 2008, CEO Cayne of Bear Stearns ended up $388 million to the richer. CEO Fuld of Lehman walked away with $541 million.

So what do mainstream reformers propose, to prevent a repeat of the Bear Stearns and Lehman fiascos? These mainstreamers want execs to get more of their “incentive” pay in stock and less in bonus cash — and have to wait a number of years before they can cash out their stock incentive awards.

If these executives took more pay in stock, the mainstreamers hold, they and their shareholders would share the same self-interest. So “aligned” with shareholders, the executives wouldn’t do anything to jeopardize “long-term shareholder value.” We would all be safe from recklessness.

But these reforms, New York Times analyst Louise Strong points out, had already been put in place at Bear and Lehman — before the two firms crashed.

“Both firms required executives to wait several years before selling their stock,” her report on Bebchuk’s new paper notes. “Both firms paid heavily in stock.”

These requirements, in practical terms, did nothing to discourage short-term recklessness, mainly because Bear Stearns and Lehman awarded massive stock incentives to their executives year in and year out.

Execs at Bear and Lehman did have to wait five years before they could cash out the stock incentives they received in any one year. But after their first five years on the job, they ended up with stock awards they could cash out every year. That gave them plenty of incentive to play risky games that could recklessly jack up their short-term share price.

Bebchuk, in his new paper, acknowledges as much. Having executives wait five years before they cash out, he notes, isn’t go to stop long-serving executives “from placing a significant weight on short-term prices.”

A better approach, Bebchuk suggests, might be the Goldman Sachs policy that requires executives to hold 75 percent of the incentive stock they receive until they retire. But Goldman Sachs execs get the bulk of their windfalls from annual cash bonuses, not stock awards, and annual cash bonuses give execs just as much incentive to think short-term as annual stock awards.

That’s why bolder mainstreamers — like Bebchuk — also want firms to be able to “claw back” bonus awards based on short-term gains that later evaporate.

But clawbacks have their limitations. You can easily, for instance, claw back a single year’s bonus based on a specific accounting fraud. But you can’t so easily claw back the long-term damage that a greedy rush for quick profits — and big bonuses — can do to innocent bystanders.

And top executives can do this damage while appearing to enhance “long-term shareholder value.” The execs at Bear Stearns and Lehman did just that. Year after year, for the better part of a decade, they enhanced shareholder value. Between 2000 and 2007, they quadrupled their bank share prices.

The bottom line: We need more protection from Wall Street greed than the “long-term shareholder value” reform standard can provide us. Americans on Main Street understand that. Why can’t Wall Street’s mainstream reformers?

Bear and Lehman paydays

In Review

Charity, Wealth, and Your Old Underwear

Wendy Gerzog, From the Greedy to the Needy. Oregon Law Review, 2009.

The rich, as we all know, don’t contribute to charity purely out of the goodness of their hearts. They contribute, in many cases, only because they get tax breaks for contributing. Why does the government offer these tax breaks? The tax breaks, holds the standard rationale for them, advance the public good — through the good works that charities go on to perform with the contributions that tax breaks make possible.

But sneaky people, as we also all know, can subvert this noble intent. They can manipulate charitable contributions to advance their own personal gain.

Congress, over the years, has taken notice — and moved to limit these manipulations. But these limits, University of Baltimore law school analyst Wendy Gerzog shows in this sobering new paper, have done far more to curb average-income cheats than rich ones.

Just a few years ago, for instance, a good number of middle-income Americans were regularly exaggerating the value of the non-cash gifts they were making to charity, claiming deductions for donating worthless old property that ranged from junky cars to old socks and underwear.

Legislation enacted three years ago has shut down many of these loopholes.

But many more loopholes remain, and the most substantial of these, Gerzog relates, benefit wealthy taxpayers. In her new paper, she walks us through these loopholes, explaining, along the way, how the affluent can set up charitable transactions where gains for the affluent taxpayer — and revenue losses for the federal government — “far” exceed any benefit to charity.

One example: Current laws against insider corporate stock trading do not apply to charitable deductions. CEOs who know their share price will soon be sinking, once they publicly announce some disappointing piece of corporate news, often “donate” huge chunks of their personal stash of company stock to their own private family foundations, just before that stock sinks drastically in value.

The donations give the CEOs tax deductions worth many times more the real market value of their stock.

Another example: the “charitable lead trust,” a device that helps wealthy donors pass vast sums, free from gift and estate taxes, to family members.

An individual “who deposits $1 million in a 20-year charitable lead trust and stipulates that the charity is to receive $70,000 in income annually, with the remainder going to his sons and daughters” can easily, Gerzog shows, end up passing over $2 million, tax free, to heirs — and deny the government nearly $1.25 million in revenue the IRS would have otherwise collected.

Gerzog proposes a number of reforms that could limit the situations where “the government has sustained a significant revenue loss that cannot be justified by the rationales for the charitable deduction.”

But the grand concentrations of private wealth we see today don’t just confer enormous charitable tax deductions. They confer enormous political power. That’s why you can’t claim a deduction any more for donating your old underwear — and why the rich, with help from their tax lawyers, can still manipulate charitable contributions to help themselves get ever richer.

Stat of the Week

How unequal have the rewards in college sports become? At the college football powerhouses Florida, Alabama, and Louisiana State, notes former Philadelphia Inquirer reporter Gilbert Gaul, “the head coaches all get more than $3.7 million a year in salary and other income.” That total equals more than “the combined value of all the scholarships awarded to their players.”

About

Too Much is published by the Council on International and Public Affairs, a nonprofit research and education group. Office: Suite 3C, 777 UN Plaza, New York, NY 10017. E-mail: editor@toomuchonline.org. Subscribe to Too Much.




BRITAIN: TAKE THE POLITICS OUT OF GOVERNANCE

A CRITIQUE & PROPOSAL

The Royal family reinforces the existence of a rid and unchanging social pyramid with various degrees of privilege.

The Royal family reinforces the existence of a rigid and unchanging social pyramid with various degrees of privilege.

By Eileen Noakes

[print_link]

THE EXISTENCE OF THE MONARCHY, even with symbolic rather than real power, creates  a pyramid , with a huge gap between those at the top and those at the bottom. It also enshrines the notion of superiority by reason of birth rather than character and effort.  It cannot exist alongside a belief that all men are created equal and it is inconsistent with democracy.  The Royal Prerogative, the Whip System and the absence of a Written Constitution and Bill of Rights are all totally undemocratic.

The Royal Prerogative, with prerogative powers originally exercised by the monarch, does not require parliamentary consent and is  now always exercised on the advice of the Prime minister or the Cabinet. It gives the Prime Minister extraordinary powers to act without parliamentary approval , e.g. to declare war,  the appointment of Royal Commissions and officers, the award  of dignities and honours, declaration of an emergency, requisitioning of  ships, the  issue and revocation of passports, the appointment of bishops and archbishops in the Church of England, the expulsion of a foreign national from the United Kingdom –  to name but some. In the case of the Chagos Archipelago islands, the High Court of Justice ruled that the British Indian Ocean Territory exiling the islanders was unlawful, but was overturned by the exercise of the Royal Prerogative.

The Prime Minister has pushed through draconian legislation which constitutes an abuse of civil liberties and human rights under the pretext of security against terrorism.

The Whip System should be abolished or drastically reformed. The Whips  have too much power and too much say over what happens to MPs, from the appointment of members and chairmen of Select Committees,  to MPs’ accommodation. They  can decide which MP gets which room, favouring those who toady to them and punishing troublemakers. Their power inhibits democracy, fosters the herd instinct, and encourages partisan behaviour. They twist the arms of MPs to vote with the party leader, which stifles debate and the exercise of free will and conscience. Should MPs feel strongly enough to rebel, they stand the chance of  being de-selected at the next election. (Chief Whips receive additional salaries from the taxpayer.)

The relative merits of  adversarial and  inquisitorial forms of governance should be considered.  Under our present system, issues are opposed, not on their merits or benefits to the taxpayer, but as a way of scoring points. The level of debate at Prime Minister’s Question Time would shame the fourth form.

House of Commons: Candidates in an election should set out clearly their background experience and their proposed policies on, e.g. Education, the NHS and the Police in their manifestos and also at public meetings (both main parties  instruct their candidates not to attend public meetings, only those  limited to their own  supporters). Serious thought should be given to the abolition of the Party System, since MP’s loyalties are to the Party, to the leader (with their own careers in mind) and only last, if at all, to the people who elect them and pay their salaries. If this were done, all candidates would be independents. Since they are employed by the people, if they fail to honour their electoral commitments, they should be held to account by the Citizens’ Assembly, and, if necessary, sacked.

The House of Lords should be replaced by an

 

Elected Second Chamber:

Criteria to be established for election, e.g. experience in law, education, business, social work, charity work.

Citizens’ Assembly: There should also be established a body not appointed by and totally independent of the government, whose task would be to be vigilant about proposed legislation which served the interests of the government or commerce rather than those of the people. However, if the party political system were abolished, the second chamber could fulfil this function. Select Committees should ideally act as overseers, and sometimes do, but at present their appointment by the Whips may inhibit their impartiality.

Electoral Reform:

The first-past-the-post electoral system does not represent the wishes of the public. The number of seats a party holds in Parliament is not proportionate to its share of the vote, and with perhaps only 32 percent of the vote, a Prime Minister can push through changes  for which he does not have a mandate and which may be virtually irreversible. A system of   Proportional Representation – the Single Transferable Vote or AV+ would be much fairer to all parties and would more adequately represent the wishes of the electorate. As the Observer points out, under the current system, governments are formed by parties that have not won a majority of votes and owe victory to fewer than 200,000 people in marginal constituencies. Millions of votes are wasted, and those who cast them are disenfranchised. Under AV, current constituency boundaries would remain, but voters would number candidates in order of preference instead of simply marking a cross by their first choice. A candidate failing to get more than 50% of the vote would be eliminated, and the votes reallocated to the other candidates. This process would continue until there was a winning  candidate. But it still doesn’t allocate parliamentary seats in line with the parties’ national share of the vote.

Under the Single Transferable Vote,  voters also give numerical preferences, but a number of seats are awarded per constituency, say three or five depending on its size. If the first choice candidate does not need their vote, either because he/she is elected without it or has too few to be elected, the vote is transferred to the second choice. That way MPs are still bound to represent a fixed locality, but the final make-up of Parliament is an accurate reflection of national opinion.

A few immediate suggestions:

There should be a set term of office

A reduction in the numbers of MPs

Ministers should be barred from taking jobs with companies they have had dealings with in their former  departments.

The people’s assets have been sold off without their permission.  Much privatisation should be reversed, especially railways, and that of the Post Office Service should be fiercely resisted.

We should use boycotts in purchasing power, to protest against international injustice, e.g. Israel/Palestine

Press for people’s banks, preferably in post offices.

Join Credit Unions  and and Time Banks.

Press for maximum working hours, so that employment can be more widely shared and family life fostered.

Press for employees’ part-ownership of companies,  as in Scott-Bader and John Lewis.

Just as we now have a minimum wage, there should  also be a maximum amount that any one person can earn.  (This of course will never happen, since all politicians hope to get obscenely well-paid jobs when they leave politics).

Conclusion

Respect for politicians  is at a very low ebb, and many people feel that the system itself allows, and perhaps even encourages, the corruption and self-seeking that have become endemic. Can we claim that we have a right to invade other countries to impose on them our extremely flawed system?

Politicians need to be reminded that democracy is “government of the people by the people for the people”. Politicians are our servants, not our masters.  Every penny they spend is ours. We have every right to expect from them what all employers demand from their employees efficiency and honesty. If they make mistakes, and everybody does, they should be prepared to admit them.

But somewhere along the way they have become totally alienated from the people they serve they live in a little bubble of their own creation. The system has allowed this, so the system needs changing.

 

Dennis Kucinich: Why I voted No

We cannot fault the insurance companies for being what they are. But we can fault legislation in which the government incentivizes the perpetuation, indeed the strengthening, of the for-profit health insurance industry, the very source of the problem.

By Rep. Dennis Kucinich [print_link]

kucinichWe have been led to believe that we must make our health care choices only within the current structure of a predatory, for-profit insurance system which makes money not providing health care. We cannot fault the insurance companies for being what they are. But we can fault legislation in which the government incentivizes the perpetuation, indeed the strengthening, of the for-profit health insurance industry, the very source of the problem. When health insurance companies deny care or raise premiums, co-pays and deductibles they are simply trying to make a profit. That is our system.

Clearly, the insurance companies are the problem, not the solution. They are driving up the cost of health care. Because their massive bureaucracy avoids paying bills so effectively, they force hospitals and doctors to hire their own bureaucracy to fight the insurance companies to avoid getting stuck with an unfair share of the bills. The result is that since 1970, the number of physicians has increased by less than 200% while the number of administrators has increased by 3000%. It is no wonder that 31 cents of every health care dollar goes to administrative costs, not toward providing care. Even those with insurance are at risk. The single biggest cause of bankruptcies in the U.S. is health insurance policies that do not cover you when you get sick.

But instead of working toward the elimination of for-profit insurance, H.R. 3962 would put the government in the role of accelerating the privatization of health care. In H.R. 3962, the government is requiring at least 21 million Americans to buy private health insurance from the very industry that causes costs to be so high, which will result in at least $70 billion in new annual revenue, much of which is coming from taxpayers. This inevitably will lead to even more costs, more subsidies, and higher profits for insurance companies—a bailout under a blue cross.

By incurring only a new requirement to cover pre-existing conditions, a weakened public option, and a few other important but limited concessions, the health insurance companies are getting quite a deal. The Center for American Progress’ blog, Think Progress, states, “since the President signaled that he is backing away from the public option, health insurance stocks have been on the rise.” Similarly, healthcare stocks rallied when Senator Max Baucus introduced a bill without a public option. Bloomberg reports that Curtis Lane, a prominent health industry investor, predicted a few weeks ago that “money will start flowing in again” to health insurance stocks after passage of the legislation. Investors.com last month reported that pharmacy benefit managers share prices are hitting all-time highs, with the only industry worry that the Administration would reverse its decision not to negotiate Medicare Part D drug prices, leaving in place a Bush Administration policy.

During the debate, when the interests of insurance companies would have been effectively challenged, that challenge was turned back. The “robust public option” which would have offered a modicum of competition to a monopolistic industry was whittled down from an initial potential enrollment of 129 million Americans to 6 million. An amendment which would have protected the rights of states to pursue single-payer health care was stripped from the bill at the request of the Administration. Looking ahead, we cringe at the prospect of even greater favors for insurance companies.

Recent rises in unemployment indicate a widening separation between the finance economy and the real economy. The finance economy considers the health of Wall Street, rising corporate profits, and banks’ hoarding of cash, much of it from taxpayers, as sign of an economic recovery. However in the real economy—in which most Americans live—the recession is not over. Rising unemployment, business failures, bankruptcies and foreclosures are still hammering Main Street.

This health care bill continues the redistribution of wealth to Wall Street at the expense of America’s manufacturing and service economies which suffer from costs other countries do not have to bear, especially the cost of health care. America continues to stand out among all industrialized nations for its privatized health care system. As a result, we are less competitive in steel, automotive, aerospace and shipping while other countries subsidize their exports in these areas through socializing the cost of health care.

Notwithstanding the fate of H.R. 3962, America will someday come to recognize the broad social and economic benefits of a not-for-profit, single-payer health care system, which is good for the American people and good for America’s businesses, with of course the notable exceptions being insurance and pharmaceuticals.




Michael Moore's Action Plan: 15 Things Every American Can Do Right Now

Moore: A bit softheaded about Obama's true nature. A case of cynical calculation or terminal naiveté?Moore: A bit softheaded about Obama’s true nature. A case of cynical calculation or terminal naiveté?

You’ve Seen the Movie — Now It’s Time to ACT!

Editor’s Note: We fully appreciate and support Michael Moore’s social change efforts via mass education, but we also categorically disagree with his misguided confidence in the Democratic party as a tool for progress, and, especially, Barack Obama. We also have quite a few doubts about the notion that activists might take over the Party, a “boring from within strategy” that has often proven illusory.

Thursday, October 22, 2009  [print_link]

Friends,

It’s the #1 question I’m constantly asked after people see my movie: “OK — so NOW what can I DO?!”

You want something to do? Well, you’ve come to the right place! ‘Cause I got 15 things you and I can do right now to fight back and try to fix this very broken system.

Here they are:

FIVE THINGS WE DEMAND THE PRESIDENT AND CONGRESS DO IMMEDIATELY:

1. Declare a moratorium on all home evictions. Not one more family should be thrown out of their home. The banks must adjust their monthly mortgage payments to be in line with what people’s homes are now truly worth — and what they can afford. Also, it must be stated by law: If you lose your job, you cannot be tossed out of your home.

2. Congress must join the civilized world and expand Medicare For All Americans. A single, nonprofit source must run a universal health care system that covers everyone. Medical bills are now the #1 cause of bankruptcies and evictions in this country. Medicare For All will end this misery. The bill to make this happen is called H.R. 3200. You must call AND write your members of Congress and demand its passage, no compromises allowed.

3. Demand publicly-funded elections and a prohibition on elected officials leaving office and becoming lobbyists. Yes, those very members of Congress who solicit and receive millions of dollars from wealthy interests must vote to remove ALL money from our electoral and legislative process. Tell your members of Congress they must support campaign finance bill H.R.1826.

4. Each of the 50 states must create a state-owned public bank like they have in North Dakota. Then congress MUST reinstate all the strict pre-Reagan regulations on all commercial banks, investment firms, insurance companies — and all the other industries that have been savaged by deregulation: Airlines, the food industry, pharmaceutical companies — you name it. If a company’s primary motive to exist is to make a profit, then it needs a set of stringent rules to live by — and the first rule is “Do no harm.” The second rule: The question must always be asked — “Is this for the common good?” (Click here for some info about the state-owned Bank of North Dakota.)

5. Save this fragile planet and declare that all the energy resources above and beneath the ground are owned collectively by all of us. Just like they do it in Sarah Palin’s socialist Alaska. We only have a few decades of oil left. The public must be the owners and landlords of the natural resources and energy that exists within our borders or we will descend further into corporate anarchy. And when it comes to burning fossil fuels to transport ourselves, we must cease using the internal combustion engine and instruct our auto/transportation companies to rehire our skilled workforce and build mass transit (clean buses, light rail, subways, bullet trains, etc.) and new cars that don’t contribute to climate change. (For more on this, here’s a proposal I wrote in December.) Demand that General Motors’ de facto chairman, Barack Obama, issue a JFK man-on-the-moon-style challenge to turn our country into a nation of trains and buses and subways. For Pete’s sake, people, we were the ones who invented (or perfected) these damn things in the first place!!

FIVE THINGS WE CAN DO TO MAKE CONGRESS AND THE PRESIDENT LISTEN TO US:

1. Each of us must get into the daily habit of taking 5 minutes to make four brief calls: One to the President (202-456-1414), one to your Congressperson (202-224-3121) and one to each of your two Senators (202-224-3121). To find out who represents you, click here. Take just one minute on each of these calls to let them know how you expect them to vote on a particular issue. Let them know you will have no hesitation voting for a primary opponent — or even a candidate from another party — if they don’t do our bidding. Trust me, they will listen. If you have another five minutes, click here to send them each an email. And if you really want to drop an anvil on them, send them a snail mail letter!

2. Take over your local Democratic Party. Remember how much fun you had with all those friends and neighbors working together to get Barack Obama elected? YOU DID THE IMPOSSIBLE. It’s time to re-up! Get everyone back together and go to the monthly meeting of your town or county Democratic Party — and become the majority that runs it! There will not be many in attendance and they will either be happy or in shock that you and the Obama Revolution have entered the room looking like you mean business. President Obama’s agenda will never happen without mass grass roots action — and he won’t feel encouraged to do the right thing if no one has his back, whether it’s to stand with him, or push him in the right direction. When you all become the local Democratic Party, send me a photo of the group and I’ll post it on my website.

3. Recruit someone to run for office who can win in your local elections next year — or, better yet, consider running for office yourself! You don’t have to settle for the incumbent who always expects to win. You can be our next representative! Don’t believe it can happen? Check out these examples of regular citizens who got elected: State Senator Deb Simpson, California State Assemblyman Isadore Hall, Tempe, Arizona City Councilman Corey Woods, Wisconsin State Assemblyman Chris Danou, and Washington State Representative Larry Seaquist. The list goes on and on — and you should be on it!

4. Show up. Picket the local branch of a big bank that took the bailout money. Hold vigils and marches. Consider civil disobedience. Those town hall meetings are open to you, too (and there’s more of us than there are of them!). Make some noise, have some fun, get on the local news. Place “Capitalism Did This” signs on empty foreclosed homes, closed down businesses, crumbling schools and infrastructure. (You can download them from my website.)

5. Start your own media. You. Just you (or you and a couple friends). The mainstream media is owned by corporate America and, with few exceptions, it will never tell the whole truth — so you have to do it! Start a blog! Start a website of real local news (here’s an example: The Michigan Messenger). Tweet your friends and use Facebook to let them know what they need to do politically. The daily papers are dying. If you don’t fill that void, who will?

FIVE THINGS WE SHOULD DO TO PROTECT OURSELVES AND OUR LOVED ONES UNTIL WE GET THROUGH THIS MESS:

1. Take your money out of your bank if it took bailout money and place it in a locally-owned bank or, preferably, a credit union.

2. Get rid of all your credit cards but one — the kind where you have to pay up at the end of the month or you lose your card.

3. Do not invest in the stock market. If you have any extra cash, put it away in a savings account or, if you can, pay down on your mortgage so you can own your home as soon as possible. You can also buy very safe government savings bonds or T-bills. Or just buy your mother some flowers.

4. Unionize your workplace so that you and your coworkers have a say in how your business is run. Here’s how to do it (more info here). Nothing is more American than democracy, and democracy shouldn’t be checked at the door when you enter your workplace. Another way to Americanize your workplace is to turn your business into a worker-owned cooperative. You are not a wage slave. You are a free person, and you giving up eight hours of your life every day to someone else is to be properly compensated and respected.

5. Take care of yourself and your family. Sorry to go all Oprah on you, but she’s right: Find a place of peace in your life and make the choice to be around people who are not full of negativity and cynicism. Look for those who nurture and love. Turn off the TV and the Blackberry and go for a 30-minute walk every day. Eat fruits and vegetables and cut down on anything that has sugar, high fructose corn syrup, white flour or too much sodium (salt) in it (and, as Michael Pollan says, “Eat (real) food, not too much, mostly plants”). Get seven hours of sleep each night and take the time to read a book a month. I know this sounds like I’ve turned into your grandma, but, dammit, take a good hard look at Granny — she’s fit, she’s rested and she knows the names of both of her U.S. Senators without having to Google them. We might do well to listen to her. If we don’t put our own “oxygen mask” on first (as they say on the airplane), we will be of no use to the rest of the nation in enacting any of this action plan!

I’m sure there are many other ideas you can come up with on how we can build this movement. Get creative. Think outside the politics-as-usual box. BE SUBVERSIVE! Think of that local action no one else has tried. Behave as if your life depended on it. Be bold! Try doing something with reckless abandon. It may just liberate you and your community and your nation.

And when you act, send me your stories, your photos and your video — and be sure to post your ideas in the comments beneath this letter on my site so they can be shared with millions.

C’mon people — we can do this! I expect nothing less of all of you, my true and trusted fellow travelers!

Yours,

Michael Moore

MMFlint@aol.com

MichaelMoore.com




When the FBI is after you

Hoover-JEdgar-LOCSeptember 25th, 2009  [print_link]

Dear CCR Supporter:

At this very moment, the fundamental right to dissent is being restricted, threatened and perilously criminalized. CCR is on the front lines defending the right to dissent and has also re-issued an important resource for all those likely to be targeted for their actions.

Right now, thousands of activists who have gathered in Pittsburgh to protest at the G20 summit have been met with what we have come to expect: overreaction by authorities and illegal preventive tactics by law enforcement officials at all levels. A secret communications hub with “electronic eyes” has been established by the Secret Service, working with over 40 other agencies to infiltrate, spy on, and disrupt all forms of opposition. Raids and arrests are mounting, and the aggressive and well-planned system of cracking down on dissenting voices and reducing media coverage is strongly in effect.

For a copy of the pamphlet, If AN AGENT KNOCKS, click here.

CCR has responded to the increasing threat to dissent in a number of ways. For months now a CCR board member and cooperating attorney, Jules Lobel, has worked with on the ground organizations to secure permits and challenge restrictions to protests. Last week, in collaboration with the ACLU, he successfully represented several organizations in court and secured the right to demonstrate in a city park during the G20 gathering. And in a filing on Monday, we charged the local police with illegal searches, vehicle seizures, raids and detentions of Seeds of Peace members aimed at preventing them from providing food to protestors. CCR’s legal director, Bill Quigley, is in Pittsburgh advocating on behalf of the protestors, and CCR will continue its support. On the topic of dissent, Bill Quigley wrote an article on the protests at the G20 Summit in Pittsburgh, PA; you can read the article here (http://www.alternet.org/rights/142828/our_right_to_dissent_is_under_siege:_

why_the_protests_in_pittsburgh_are_a_victory_for_free_speechOn).

The Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) is re-issuing our pamphlet, “If an Agent Knocks,” to provide advice to activists likely to be targeted by FBI agents or other federal investigators, in Pittsburgh and beyond. This booklet is a resource to protect activists from government investigation. We also want to support the power you show when you exercise this fundamental right of dissent.

Since its original release in 1989, CCR’s “If an Agent Knocks” has been widely circulated in progressive activist communities across the country. This guide includes both the timeless advice included in the original version and extensive updates to reflect the current state of the law and law enforcement tools. It also includes a comprehensive discussion of today’s technology, including cell phones, e-mail and Web browsing.

“If An Agent Knocks” is an invaluable tool for activists in a time when efforts to repress expressions of opposition are intensified. We want to get this publication into as many hands as possible. To obtain a free copy, please email iaak [at] ccrjustice.org . You can also download it in pdf form. Tell your friends and fellow activists about “If An Agent Knocks,” and urge them to place an order too. We are giving away a special edition of “If An Agent Knocks” posters to the first 500 people who order the booklet.

Sincerely,

Annette Warren Dickerson

Director of Education & Outreach

http://www.ccrjustice.org/

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