There are days when I am so disgusted with politics that I can’t watch the news. While Rob sits in our family room, switching between Countdown and MSNBC, I sit in front of my computer, half-listening, trying to concentrate on what I’m doing. And then I hear that Michael Moore is on The Last Word and I’m lured out into the family room to watch him do his thing from the middle of the protest on Wall Street.
As of tonight, September 29, the protest is in its twelfth day. Until Keith Olberman started talking about this story, the mainstream media had stayed clear of it – even the venerable New York Times wouldn’t touch it, and it was happening in their back yard, sullying up the streets, you know. The Wall Street. The political donors.
So tonight we watched Michael Moore from the midst of this protest. And as usual, Moore summarized the protest, the struggle: the icons of Wall Street, the hedge fund masters, the brokers who make the deals, are paying perhaps 15% of their income to taxes, and those of us in the middle class are paying about double.
We know a few of the people in the privileged income bracket, the ones who have been benefiting from the Bush tax cuts for the last decade. For the most part, they’re nice people who recognize the inequality in the tax system and know it wouldn’t hurt their bottom line to pay more in taxes. But they’re almost peripheral to this protest in NY. This protest has all the earmarks of the sixties, when the draft united people across the spectrum because we all knew that war was amoral, a travesty that only fed the Pentagon war machine. Now those protestors are entering retirement, and their kids and grandkids are the ones protesting on Wall Street. And since there’s no draft, this protest isn’t about just war.
It’s about…well, everything that has gone wrong in the last ten or eleven years.
Why was this protest ignored by the mainstream media until the cable news folks grabbed it? For the same reason that CNN, back in 2003, ignored the fact that ten million people protested the invasion of Iraq: it didn’t serve the corporate interests. War =big business.
Here are the facts:
Not a single person responsible for the financial meltdown in 2008 has gone to jail or even stood trial. Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, the banker boys on Wall Street: they’re all still free men, doing whatever these guys do once they’re no longer in the pubic eye.
It’s not just Republicans, either. Democrats in power are part of the problem. Obama appointed some of Bush’s Wall Street maestros to his team- Bernanke, Timothy Geithner, the guys who, under W gave away the farm, the homestead, the present and the future and everything else in between. Also, as Michael Moore pointed out, Obama’s largest contributor in the 2008 election was Goldman-Sachs.
The bottom line is that all the politicians are bought and paid for. It’s corporate-democracy, the best government money can buy.
To date, the wars on three fronts – Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya – have cost us nearly three trillion bucks. That’s a lot of zeros. We could have every person in America fed and housed and with health care for that price. Instead, we have more than 9 % unemployment nationally, more than 16% among Afro-Americans, and around 50 million without health insurance. The housing market in many states remains so flat that according to a recent study, nearly 25% of Americans are underwater in their mortgages – i.e., they owe more than their homes are worth.
So what’s the answer?
I don’t know. But tonight I said to Rob that it may be time to put on our protest shoes again, and take to the streets, to Wall Street. Let’s occupy Wall Street, wherever we live. As Moore said tonight, we, the people, far outnumber the boys on Wall Street. The time of this inequality is done, over, history. This is how the silly Tea Party was born, funded by the Koch brothers. Let’s show these guys that the only funding we need is that of conscience.

















