By Saswat Pattanayak
“The Czar of all the Russias is not
more absolute upon his own soil than the New York
landlord in his dealings with colored tenants. Where
he permits them to live, they go; where he shuts the
door, they stay out. By his grace they exist at all
in certain localities; his ukase banishes them from
others. He accepts the responsibility, when laid at
his door, with unruffled complacency. It is business,
he will tell you. And it is. He makes the prejudice
in which he traffics pay him well, and that, as he
thinks it quite superfluous to tell you, is what he
is there for.”
(Riis, How the Other Half
Lives, 1890)
“One of the most distinctive things about most
American cities is that it is not easy to distinguish
social class on the streets. Clothes are cheap and
increasingly standardized. The old “proletarian”
dress—the cloth hat, the work clothes—either
disappeared or else was locked up at the shop…… The
ironic dialectic that threads its way through the
culture of poverty is at work. The industry that
comes to these places (rural America) is not
concerned with moral or social uplift. It seeks out
rural poverty because it provides a docile cheap
labor market. There is income supplementing as a
result, but what basically happens is that people who
have been living in the depressed areas of
agriculture now live part-time in the depressed areas
of industry. They get the worst of two worlds.”
(Harrington, The Other America,
1962)
“In the aftermath of the election of 1980, the Reagan
administration and its big-business allies declared a
new class war on the unemployed, the unemployable,
and the working poor. By the summer of 1981,
congressional approval had been obtained to slash
$140 billion from the social programs over the years
1982-1984, more than half of it from the
income-maintenance programs that provide low-income
people with cash, food, health care, and low-cost
housing. At the same time, the Reagan administration
announced that additional social program reductions
of $45 billion and $30 billion would be proposed in
1983 and 1984…”
(Pive & Cloward, The New
Class War, 1982)
“In the United States, the federal government
defines poverty very simply: an annual income, for a
family with one adult and three children, of less
that $18,392 in the year 2003. That works out to
$8.89 an hour, or $3.74 above the federal minimum
wage, assuming that someone can get a full forty
hours of work a week for all fifty-two weeks of the
year or 2,080 working hours annually. With incomes
rising through the economic expansion of the 1990s,
the incidence of official poverty declined, beginning
the new decade at 11.3 percent of the population,
down from 15.1 percent in 1993. Then it rose slightly
in the ensuing recession, to 12.5 percent by 2003.
But the figures are misleading. The federal poverty
line cuts far below the amount needed for a decent
living, because the Census Bureau still uses the
basic formula designed in 1964 by the Social Security
Administration, with four modest revisions in
subsequent years. That sets the poverty level at
approximately three times the cost of a “thrifty food
basket.” The calculation was derived from spending
patterns in 1955, when the average family used about
one-third of its income for food. It is no longer
valid today, when the average family spends only
about one-sixth of its budget for food, but the
government continues to multiply the cost of a
“thrifty food basket” by three, adjusting for
inflation only and overlooking nearly half a century
of dramatically changing lifestyles.”
(Shipler, The Working Poor,
2004)
Even going by the thrifty food basket standards that
clearly undermine needs of people to go beyond food
(free time, luxury to spend those times, staying fit,
watching movies, traveling, learning technical
skills, reading books etc., to realize human
potentials), poverty in America is on an alarming
rise.
There are 37 million Americans living below the
poverty line today. This not only indicates an
increase by five million since President George W.
Bush came to power, it also should remind us that
more than one in 10 citizens are below poverty line.
The number is actually higher when we calculate the
needs of people for education, employment and
necessities in life other than just cheap, junk,
fatty foods.
In the meantime,
Congress has endorsed NASA’s mission to Mars which
will cost $500 billion. (Of course, during the
60’s, American poor children sang, ‘Who wants to go
to the Moon, Ma? I want to go to school’.) But even
before that plan materializes, the Congress has
already let more than $250 billion to be spent in the
war in Iraq alone (not to mention the consequential
costs for civilians, or the dozens of other wars,
where no investment ever reaps returns).
And we need just $24 billion a year to fully fund
every anti-hunger effort in the world.
If for some reason, any reasonable person has doubt
about capitalism’s contribution to world poverty, one
just needs to look at the storehouses of illicit
wealth that fosters the disparity between the haves
and have-nots: the billionaires of the world, quite
naturally, the highest number of them in the planet,
269, live in the United States. As a traditional
bastion of ill-gotten wealth, the billionaire club
has amassed such wealth in exclusionary lines. Not
just through colonial weapons have certain western
countries monopolized over world resources, even
within them, certain groups of people have held the
power of money so far. As a result, in the United
States, whereas almost a quarter of all black
Americans live below the poverty line; and 22 per
cent of Hispanics fall below it, the figure for the
whites is just 8.6 per cent.
The statistics can be pretty informative, but for
those who need to seek the solutions, the same
statistics can also be used quite effectively. In
case of world hunger, if we know the disproportion,
we also are aware that only a small minority actually
controls the huge majority of the world resources,
and in them or lack of them, lies the solution.
Long gone are the days when half of the people in the
world did not know how the other half lived because
they did not care. With advent of capitalism, only a
few people do not appear to care how the rest of the
world lives. And if this is not opportunity enough
for people to realize that the apathetic few
arrogantly immersed with undeserved wealth are not
exactly the ones who deserve tax-cuts, then nothing
is.
Fortunately, nothing can be said with as much clarity
as the class issues. There is no ambiguity, there is
no pretension. There is a clear demarcation between
those in command, and those in state of despair.
Maybe this is the reason why there is no talk around
economic class, in a country where every ninth person
is unsure of where the next meal is coming from. For,
if the real issues come to surface and people ‘come
gather round’ and talk it out, there is surely going
to be a change in the times.
Till then, the elite minority that anyway controls
the mental means of productions, creates a cultural
vacuum that drifts away from the issues into the
world of sit-coms, fantasies and comedy shows. If
that doesn’t suffice, then it reinforces the law and
order to silence the potential resistance from
protesting the existing structures of inequities of a
massive class society.
This should not come as a surprise that the real
issue with America today—conflicts of interests
between its two economic classes—is thwarted
constantly by the media, since there is an attempt at
manufacturing both content and consent to draw
people’s mind away by the owners of media houses—who
are again, from the club. But what should come
alarming is that even as the conflicts of interests
take place every passing day among these classes,
their interpretations are encouraged to be done in an
individualistic, religious, and meritocratic way,
instead of being prompted to act on the grounds of
social justice—organized and agitated, to stake
claim, and challenge. Its not poverty of wealth in
the world that should matter at this point when we
know only too well that this world can spend $500
billion in Mars; rather its the poverty of mass
directions that’s grappling today’s age which fails
to help the world rise up to the demands of the day.
For revolutions do not take place in a historical
battlefield. Revolutions must occur in our
politicized minds first.
Tags: Saswat, USA, Economics, Capitalism