Where is my bail out?
It is everywhere. The talk of the bail out. And now the talk of the extra $140 billion they bribed the politicians to pass it. Meanwhile tens of millions of American workers are watching their savings, pensions, homes and jobs vanish before their eyes. The anger about the bail out prevented it being passed the first time. There has been a fundamental shift in consciousness in the US working class. It will not go back to having the same trust in the Republicans and the Democrats and the system. However a much greater shift could have taken place if the union leaders instead of trailing with their heads down after the Democrats and the bail out had taken an independent stand.
In a recent Wall Street Journal/NBC poll only 10% of Americans say they have a "great deal" or "quite a bit" of confidence in the financial industry compared with 36% in the year 2000. Only 11% say they have a "great deal" or "quite a bit" of confidence in large corporations. As the financial meltdown worsens by the day the social and political base of US capitalism is being undermined. On top of this there are the wars and occupations in the Middle East which are opposed by the majority. The crisis that is deepening by the day means that the US capitalist class has forfeited all right to rule. They and their system have to be replaced.
The financial crisis is a watershed in US working class consciousness. It offers enormous opportunities for those who understand that capitalism does not work.
There are however two unfortunate aspects of the present crisis. While the mood of anger and for action has been great amongst rank and file workers, the leaders of the unions, that is of the working class organizations have been dumb. The bosses organizations, the Business Roundtable, which is made up of the CEO's of the top 150 companies and the American Bankers Association, have been mobilizing all their resources, so too have the capitalists' political parties the Republicans and Democrats. That is the capitalist class has mobilized around its program, "Give us the $700 billion bail out," but the working class leaders have offered no alternative.
The trade union leaders should have organized their millions of members in workplace meetings and mass demonstrations. Their program should have been, not a single foreclosure or eviction, not a single job loss. No bail out for Bush and his criminal swindlers in Wall Street and the financial sector, instead nationalize all financial institutions under workers control and management so we can have the finance of the country used to build houses, provide health care and education, rebuild the infrastructure and provide a decent life for all. Instead of providing this lead the union leaders have cowered before the capitalist system. Their inaction means that the working class have not played a conscious independent role in this crisis, it means that while the working class consciousness will not go back to where it was it has not taken the leap forward that it could have and it has not led to a mass political organization of its own, a mass workers party. By their refusal to lead in this crisis the trade union leaders have forfeited all right to lead the trade unions, to lead the working class movement. They must be replaced.
The left too has to look at our role.. We have to get over our left sectarianism. We have to mobilize as suggested above and build a new movement of mass direct action. At the same time we have to explain that we are advocating Democratic socialism. Never in the past decades has there been such an opportunity to get a hearing for socialist ideas.
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Jump To Comment: 1 2Info from Dvorak's blog:
ABC: Less than a week after the federal government committed $85 billion to bail out AIG, executives of the giant AIG insurance company headed for a week-long retreat at a luxury resort and spa, the St. Regis Resort in Monarch Beach, California, Congressional investigators revealed today. …AIG documents obtained by Waxman’s investigators show the company paid more than $440,000 for the retreat, including nearly $200,000 for rooms, $150,000 for meals and $23,000 in spa charges.
Bail out?
Continues fluctuation of the economy give an indication that people needs support from the government. If the government cannot provide their needs, it's wiser to choose another option to survive. Payday loans I know can help you, people who get payday loans when they need emergency cash have to pay them back – they are accountable for them. Banks that got massive amounts of bailout funds seem to think that the rules don’t apply to them. There are an increasing number of reports and articles about bank executives that refuse to disclose any details on where exactly the bailout money they received from the Federal Government, in other words the American People, was put, or spent. Hundreds of billions of the taxpayer’s money has been spent to keep these companies afloat after the mismanagement of their holdings – there should be a modicum of transparency, and an effort to pay it back. If a person gets themselves a payday loan, they have to – why shouldn’t JP Morgan? Maybe in the future the government should look to companies as a guideline for how to hand out emergency cash.
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