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Reply #22: But... But... if everybody had equal access to quality goods and services... [View All]

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warren pease (1000+ posts)  Journal Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list Click to add this author to your Ignore list Wed Jul-08-09 03:05 PM
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22. But... But... if everybody had equal access to quality goods and services...
But... But... if everybody had equal access to quality goods and services...

... what fun would it be to be rich? How would they keep score? How would we all know our betters from the peasant classes?

None of that nonsense in our utopian meritocracy, where anybody can grow up to be a CEO or some other kind of corporate titan.

Or even a US president, if they have off-the-charts levels of megalomania combined with lack of self-esteem necessary to subject themselves to months and even years of the classic American political campaign for national office.

So they're helping you defend your right to sink or swim on your own merits, and since they created the game and made up all the rules, amazingly they nearly always win.

It's an easy game to win, apparently. Victory simply involves keeping another big lie under wraps for another few dozen generations – this one being the grand secret that the rich nearly always manage to avoid the forces that shape and often destroy the "less fortunate" among us. They've created their own impenetrable white boy closed circuit affirmative action societies serve as the greatest set of social promotion programs of all time.

So, despite their apparent unconcern about wingnut gun violence, even in churches (many are in the gun-manufacturing business, so why lobby against their own revenue stream?) the rich then tell you your sacred right to choose is on the line here. And if you don't insist on keeping the role of choice alive in all aspects of American society, you'd be sacrificing traditional American values like ...

... your right to choose which feces-stained, urine-soaked mattress on the fourth floor of which cold water walk-up where you’ll go to die because your so-called "health care" policy exceeded its lifetime benefits cap and your family couldn’t afford a hospital bed where you might get treatment, or even a hospice where you could at least die with dignity.

... or which of our prestigious, world-class universities you're locked out of not because the "less fortunate" are all idiots, but because eliminating nearly all federal subsidies -- whether directly to students or to the schools -- have put the Stanfords and Princetons and Yales and MITs and Hahh-vahhds out-of-reach of all but the filthiest of the filthy rich, thereby keeping the most prestigious degrees in the hands of those who've run the show down the generations.

All this based solely on the ability to pay, and so the system turns out cretins like our previous alleged president who slid through academic life with the usual "gentleman's C" as it's called when the idiot scions of the ruling class ride daddy's donations to a sham diploma.

... or waving good-bye to which old-grove redwood grove the Maxxams and Chuckie Hurwiches of the world would have had to keep their slimy hands off rather than taking Saint Raygun's maxim at face value – the one that goes "if you've seen one redwood tree, you've seen 'em all" – and shoving another few hundred million into various off-shore, tax-free accounts.

... or wasting countless hours sucking exhaust fumes in this planetary destruction derby called "the Commute." Urban sprawl and its hideous downsides were wired into American culture in part because of an old conspiracy suit won by the plaintiffs but which various federal courts decided was only worth a few bucks from the losers.

Consider the outcome of what's generally called The General Motors Conspiracy, which ran from 1927 to 1955, in which, Standard Oil, Phillips Petroleum, Firestone Rubber, Mack Manufacturing (trucks) and Greyhound Lines pooled money and set up front businesses to destroy the urban rail system of 100 American Cities.

Their punishment? They each had to pay $5,000 in fines and additional court costs of $4,220.78. Damn good investment in the American way of making a buck. They realized hundreds of billions of them that time round and may well be positioning themselves now for the big coup of the early 21st century: another few generations of building sprawl and car addiction (hybrids and electrics this time around) and ironically championed under the banner of solving the global warming problem.


It's not a tragedy; it's a script.


sf




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  The US has/had the resources to truly be a modern Utopia Phoebe Loosinhouse  Jul-08-09 10:12 AM   #0 
   What are you giving to get all that?  The2ndWheel   Jul-08-09 10:20 AM   #1 
   I'm giving the taxes that I and other Americans have always and already paid into the system  Phoebe Loosinhouse   Jul-08-09 10:30 AM   #2 
      I strongly concur....too much incompetence in our Society...mostly in the GOP  opihimoimoi   Jul-08-09 10:35 AM   #3 
      Not incompetence, misdirection. Opportunity costs.  glitch   Jul-08-09 11:00 AM   #4 
         We had another chance for "change" in 1992.  bvar22   Jul-08-09 12:49 PM   #11 
            I dunno.  glitch   Jul-08-09 01:29 PM   #18 
      That's not giving  The2ndWheel   Jul-08-09 11:00 AM   #5 
         LOL. It's time for the Generals and Oligarchs to give a little.  Romulox   Jul-08-09 11:03 AM   #6 
            You'll get them to give a little how, exactly?  The2ndWheel   Jul-08-09 11:30 AM   #8 
               Supposedly, we live in a representative democracy.  Romulox   Jul-08-09 11:45 AM   #9 
                  "Now we want to decide how they will be spent."  The2ndWheel   Jul-08-09 01:27 PM   #17 
                     Governance is an ongoing process. That means we can change courses.  Romulox   Jul-08-09 01:50 PM   #20 
                        "That means we can change courses."  The2ndWheel   Jul-08-09 02:18 PM   #21 
   I imagine the kind of nation we could have  marions ghost   Jul-08-09 11:07 AM   #7 
   Well duh, but we let the rich parasites feed on us.  JVS   Jul-08-09 11:46 AM   #10 
   "We let" being the operative aspect n/t  Echo In Light   Jul-08-09 12:52 PM   #12 
   Or, at least, 10 trillion less in debt  n2doc   Jul-08-09 12:59 PM   #13 
   No Uptopia for you. We still have to fill our Sachs full of Gold Man. n/t  JTFrog   Jul-08-09 01:06 PM   #14 
   What our government did instead was blow Middle America's tax dollars  Lydia Leftcoast   Jul-08-09 01:15 PM   #15 
   I am not that concerned about taxes since . . . .  abumbyanyothername   Jul-08-09 01:19 PM   #16 
   The *world* has the resources to be utopia. we live in the garden, blind as bats.  Hannah Bell   Jul-08-09 01:34 PM   #19 
   But... But... if everybody had equal access to quality goods and services...  warren pease   Jul-08-09 03:05 PM   #22 
 

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