Many historians and sociologists trace the end of the middle ages and the rise of our present era to the Black Death, The Bubonic Plague, which wiped out 2/3 of the population of Europe, as well as the known world in the 13th and 14th century.
The Black Death radically changed the way that common man viewed religion, the state and his fixed role on Earth. Many of the laws that were used to supress the formation and existence of the Union movement in the 19th and 20th centuries were formulated in England and France in an attempt to supress the rights of workers who had new found leverage because of the demand for laborers well out stripped the supply.
The Black Death also effectively redistributed wealth and the rise of humanism in religion and philosophy. The discrediting of the ideas of the feudal world and the church fomented the Renaissance and then culminated in the Reformation.
I would say that at this time we also saw the birth of the humanist impulses we now file under the trademarkl of Socialism.
It is within this consideration of the historical background of the Human organism and its reaction to the stress of disease and plague, that I would like to consider the ideas of the British Epidemiologists, Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett.
Wilkinson and Pickett seem to have discovered the modern, insidious and hidden plague of our present captalistic society built on greed.
Wilkinson and Pickett both work as epidemiologists. They study the health of populations, and, over recent decades, pioneering work by Wilkinson has helped reveal the most reliable foundation for good health and long life. Want to live long and prosper? Go live in a relatively equal society.
Over 200 studies since the early 1980s have now documented that people living in societies where wealth has concentrated at the top of the economic ladder live significantly shorter, less healthy lives than people who live in societies that spread their wealth more evenly.
And we’re not talking just poor folks here. All people in unequal societies do worse. Middle-income people in the United States, the world’s most unequal developed nation, have shorter lifespans than middle-income people in Japan, Sweden and a host of other more equal nations.
This same dynamic, Wilkinson and Pickett show in their new book, The Spirit Level: Why Greater Equality Makes Societies Stronger, is operating on all our most basic yardsticks of social decency. On everything from homicides and teen pregnancies to drug addiction and levels of trust, people living in more equal nations do better — from three to 10 times better — than people in societies where treasure tilts to the top.
And that treasure, in the United States, is tilting top-bound as rapidly as ever. The latest Wall Street bank bonus totals may have no precedent in American history. Seldom — if ever — have so few profited so profusely in the midst of a general economic collapse.
The 32,500 souls fortunate enough to work at Wall Street banking giant Goldman Sachs will pocket an average $498,153 for their labors in 2009. Their total compensation for the year, $16.2 billion, runs $3.3 billion more than the pay that went the year before to the 207,315 teachers who staff New York state’s public schools.
We see this same top-heavy distribution of income throughout the U.S. economy.
Two weeks ago, the congressional Joint Committee on Taxation estimated that just a tad over a million U.S. taxpayers will take home over $500,000 in 2010. These one million top-earners will collect $200 billion more in income this year than the 80 million taxpayers who make $40,000 or less.
The data from epidemiologists Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett remind us that gaps like these have consequences: they translate into ever-higher levels of stress and insecurity in nearly every corner of our daily lives. This economic insecurity assaults more than just our household finances. Over time, the chronic stress it causes actually wears down our immune systems. Our epic inequality, in essence, is quite literally killing us.
Last week, on the last day of the Wilkinson and Pickett U.S. speaking tour, Nickel and Dimed author Barbara Ehrenreich joined the two British scientists at an Economic Policy Institute forum in Washington, DC.
Democratic Party politicos, Ehrenreich charged, “have failed to speak to the resentment out there on inequality."
Average Americans will rage, and rightfully so, until they do.
6 comments:
This is a well-researched and nicely presented expose', Microdot.
I must, however, suggest a revision of your line, Average Americans will rage, and rightfully so, until they do.
Perhaps the truth is much closer to this: Average Americans, if they were aware of the truth about the American health care system, will rage, and rightfully so, until they do.
It is the ignorance and the propaganda, clear and simple. The lazy American who does no research, seeks no details behind so-called news stories, is easily propagandized by slick advertisements and distracting talk by politicians who are on the dole.
Way too many Americans have fallen victim. How do I know this? Because in surveys, a wide majority of people said that they are happy with their present health care plan.
Unimaginably ignorant statement. Thus the general ignorance and the opening for propaganda.
Thanks for writing this. I wish that [and do not expect that] many Americans would bother reading such an article and never would I expect them to read an entire book on the topic.
Insecurity and uncertainty help push people to extremes. They seek simple answers from leaders who will give them.
Rather than rail at who may be causing their grief, they identify with those who are oppressing them.
The reason that no one has spoken out is that that means challenging the status quo. The news piece I have and my post pretty much sums up the problem:
that the policies needed to address inequality "will always be controversial since they mean neutralising the advantages of wealth. A prospect that those with money and influence will fight hard against."
Laci, when you wrote your comment 2 days ago on Mudrakes blog...I thought we were about to write the same piece, but looking at what you wrote, I think we have a few different points of view from which we both can profit. Thanks for your input.
The NYC skyline is from my little sketchbook from this last November..
I knew I could use it somewhere.
Mudrake and Laci, your point about those who are suffering the most identify with the oppressors has a lot to do with one of my main focuses...the control of and the manipulation of media as a political tool.
Microdot, we have a lot in common. That is another of my themes. Control of information is one of the tools for brainwashing people.
While somewhat simplistic, the following website does have some very potent information:
http://www.cracked.com/article_16656_6-brainwashing-techniques-theyre-using-on-you-right-now.html
As I said, I've been skirting that topic, but it is one of the themes of my blog. I don't know enough to make serious comments.
one of my main focuses...the control of and the manipulation of media as a political tool.
Bingo!
And with the new SCOTUS ruling, the voices of the common man will be drowned out completely.
Bill Moyer's Journal had an excellent report on that terrible decision and the conclusion was that American politics has been forever changed and skewed to the corporate world.
So ends our 230 year experiment.
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