T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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385.1 | It's been tried before | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Fri Jul 10 1987 13:04 | 41 |
| > Why middle class, he didn't say
Listening to the interview, I got the funny feeling that "middle class"
equalled "white" (but not, of course, in so many words).
Wattenberg's approach ("the whole feminist agenda") seems similar to
Sweden's social democratic approach: make it convenient for the
middle class to have kids (parental leave, day care, work adaptation)
and the middle class will have more kids. This is a far cry from
"keep 'em pregnant and uneducated." This was proposed in Sweden in
the late 1930's by Gunnar and Alva Myrdal, who answered the question
"why aren't people having kids" by pointing out that couples couldn't
get decent apartments in the cities. Sweden then build large apartment
blocks, called "Myrdalen" (anthills), and instituted a number of social
reforms which, over the years, have come to include:
-- parental leave: now 1 year for each child (with pay) that may be
split between the parents. (Includes adoption.) If the parent
wishes to stay at home longer, "an equivalent job" is guaranteed
for several years longer.
-- a parent may take up to (I think) 60 sick days per year to care for
an ill child (who can't be placed in daycare that day). (If you're
sick, you don't get paid by your employeer, but receive an income-
dependent amount from national health.)
-- day care is generally available, the cost is income-dependent.
-- rent subsidies are available. My ex-brother-in-law, his girlfriend,
and their two kids had a nice two-bedroom apartment for which they
were paying $80/month (half of what I paid for a one-bedroom).
(They were both students with only part-time income.)
-- five week's paid vacation per year.
-- "barnbidrag:" a grant of about $200/child/year paid to the parents "to
be used for the child." Payments were made quarterly: just before
Christmas, spring holidays, summer holidays, and school start.
Martin.
|
385.2 | Scary stuff | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Jul 10 1987 14:15 | 18 |
| I heard it too! (I think we both heard the same thing this time,
Wit :-))
When he said he was in favor of the feminist agenda, a little voice
inside me said "HA!" What he verbalized backed up the statement,
but I have the funny feeling there's a hidden agenda.
Then, the racist bent to the whole thing really turned me off. He's
worried about the "industrial" countries having low birth-rates.
He's backing his argument with some (seemed vague to me) "facts"
about decline in world economy ?!?!?!?!?!?
There' a little voice in my head whispering "racist".
I thought the whole thing was scary.
Dawn
|
385.3 | old memories | TWEED::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Fri Jul 10 1987 15:07 | 3 |
| I remember something similar to this that I read about 20 years
ago that the educated American middle class was 'breeding itself
out of existance'. As I recall it was a kind of intellectual racism.
|
385.4 | Which part of the agenda | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Delta Long = -d(sin A/cos Lat) | Fri Jul 10 1987 16:07 | 23 |
| Re: .1
He claimed that *adjusted for income* black women have lower
fertility rates than white women. In response to a question
he said that he wasn't racist, but was concerned about class.
His later worries about the fraction of people of European
decreasing certainly sounded racist to me.
I certainly agree with making parental leave and child care
more prevalent, but remember other people at the AEI as
strong opponents of abortion and even contraception. I am not
in favor of forcing women to have children in this way, hence
my beleif that he's trying to force women out of the
workforce.
Re: .2 What's wrong Dawn, we never agree about anything? :-)
Note that the "entire femminist agenda" that he mentions
leaves out such things as equal pay for equal work, equality
of opportunity, and reproductive freedom. Sounds like some
part of the femminist agenda to me.
--David
|
385.5 | but get this... | BANDIT::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Fri Jul 10 1987 17:03 | 22 |
|
One of his proposals is to bribe people (white middle-class americans,
the last bastion of western civilization [I am sure he is a racist])
to have children. He proposes paying people $2000 per child per year
for 18 years. And where will all this money come from? Why...Social
Security! You see, with all the Baby-Boomers out there, and so few
retirees to support, SS will soon be amassing an enormous surplus.
.....Phooey.....
I read an article by him in a recent Newsweek (or Business Week,
or one of those type) And came away convinced that he is an out
and out racist, who manipulates statistics, and makes wild, unfounded
conclusions. Perfect example of Mark Twain's (or was it Will Rogers?)
classification of lies: lies, damn lies, and statistics.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
385.6 | the high point was... | ULTRA::GUGEL | Spring is for rock-climbing | Fri Jul 10 1987 18:39 | 7 |
| I heard him on NPR this morning. He claims to not be a racist,
but seems real worried about "what some people (=other racists)
think" (not his exact words). At that, the interviewer asked him
right out "why worry about those people?" which seemed like a brilliant
question because Mr. Cretin couldn't answer it.
-Ellen
|
385.7 | small things considered | 38082::CHABOT | May these events not involve Thy servant | Mon Jul 13 1987 17:07 | 23 |
| re .0: The three words were (and I undoubtably have the wrong order):
Kinder, Kuche, Kirche
(the three K's)
[Which just goes to show how I can no longer spell in German.]
meaning
Kids, Kitchen, Church
[at least, that's what I meant to write]
Not quite the same thing as "barefoot, pregnant, in the kitchen".
However, the proper position for women in church was in the pews, not
in the pulpit (and of course wearing shoes :-) ).
re .*: Don't look for feminism on NPR.
Poor, overworked middle class: not only do they have to support
the tax burden of the US, but now they're expected to have
lots of babies too! :-)
|
385.8 | AND NOW FOR A TOTALLY DIFFERENT POINT OF VIEW. | 50463::CLINCH | The beautiful MUNICH cluster | Mon Jul 20 1987 09:31 | 99 |
| re .3
Chalk me up as an "intellectual racist" if that is what you mean.
I don't know if it's the same in the U.S., but in parts of
Britain it seems to have become "fashionable" to speak badly,
and support socialist policies for the simple reason that there exists
an anti-middle class prejudice. The British person of yester-year
who spoke well and wanted to get on in life seems only to have been
preserved in a rather artificial form by certain elite sectors
of the community - and this hardly makes for a well-integrated
society and so in fact they do not succeed. I went to various
different schools and learnt to get on with people of all backgrounds.
But I seem to fit the middle class profile whether I like it or not.
I happen to like who I am. I once met a punk group on a train to
London who were intimidating a girl, so I decided to keep a close watch
on the situation and worked myself into the conversation - in order
to protect the girl if I could. Realising that I was an
inhibiting factor on the fun and games they planned with this
girl (who was surrounded in her seat), the leader of the group decided
to have a go at me. (I won't mention the name of the pop group in case
I am sued for libel.) This person chose to announce that he ought to
knife me because I was middle class. This is by no means
the only incident where I have been at risk because of being label-
classified as middle class.
In my home town it seems that nearly all of my contemporaries
chose to conform. In their teens most of these did
not work at school (part of the conformity "requirement") and many
did not get good jobs. Those who did not conform tended to have
fewer friends and some are almost withdrawn from society to this day.
I was one of the lucky ones.
It is easy to see that the dwindling process is continuing. All
the while the socialists blame the middle classes for everything.
Soon there may be no-one left to blame.
You see, most originally middle class children I grew up with
changed their manner and appearance just to escape intimidation
from other children. But I was always a fighter for my identity
from an early age and learnt how to stand up to the majority if
necessary and survive.
Now please note that this labelling and so forth was not my doing.
Many kids would "conform" rather than be bullied. I happen
to be proud of myself that I didn't. Of course I was a tall
and strong child, but I once had to stand up to as
many as 12 kids and more than once. But I was determined that
people should accept me basically as I was and went to lengths
to preserve myself as I was.
I consider it ***survival*** of to want to promote that which
is labelled by many people as middle class if that is what I am
going to be labelled. Such promotion is ethical and necessary.
The reason for the dwindling of this class is...
FEAR
because of intimidation at an early age by what I will have to call
the working classes I suppose. Before the 70s pupils were
segregated by and large according to ability while the very wealthy
could afford private education. From the seventies integration
of the majority was forced in the form of comprehensive schools.
But this of course meant that the person with "middle class"
parents was then faced with "fight or conform" by those of less
fortunate backgrounds. I know one young woman who speaks
with the most appalling voice, works as a hairdresser and failed
badly at school. Her parents are upper middle class, and her father
owns a multinational hi-tech CAD/CAM manufacturing company. You would
not believe they were her parents to compare their voice and
manner. This young lady went to a comprehensive school I attended
before I got out via a scholarship. It is easy to see what
happened to her.
In my case, such intimidation first happened to me at
the age of five when I went to school in Tetbury, Glos., where there
was a small affluent community and a large very poor one and all shared
the same infant and junior school, unless the parents were
exceptionally wealthy. I suffered bullying at first but I don't
regret those days because this equipped me for the more serious
stuff that was to come. Of course I was in the first generation
to suffer. In Britain the second generation is at hand and now
the teachers who are my age are largely of the type that conformed
to the "working class" mode of behaviour. I strongly pity any
middle class child who has to go through it today.
I am strongly in favour of the survival of the ethics, good manners
and desire to succeed in life of the so-called middle class and am
in no doubt that it is ethical and proper to have the motive for
survival of ones group.
I am resentful of any attempt to suggest that it is racism.
re .6
> Why worry about these people?
But then, why worry about any other human being and his ability to succeed
in life?
Simon.
|
385.9 | Astute Observation | RETORT::UMINA | | Mon Jul 20 1987 11:56 | 14 |
| re .8
I agree with you. There is no good in lowering standards to the
lowest common denominator.
The US is becoming a two class society also, and primarily for the
same reasons.
This is a big country though, and there are many many places where
you can get away from all this crap. I'd invite you to emigrate
but you're obviously white and they won't let you in unless you
have AIDS.
/L.
|
385.10 | Hunhh??? | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Mon Jul 20 1987 13:52 | 14 |
| re -1: WHOA!!!
[this _is_ womannotes, right? This is not the file where one would
expect to find such racist, heterosexist horse hockey as the following:
< Note 385.9 by RETORT::UMINA >
> ...I'd invite you to emigrate
> but you're obviously white and they won't let you in unless you
> have AIDS.
I must have misunderstood. Could you clarify please?
Lee
|
385.12 | I agree with LeeT | ULTRA::GUGEL | Spring is for rock-climbing | Mon Jul 20 1987 18:10 | 5 |
| re .10:
I agree, it is heterosexist and racist, and therefore OFFENSIVE.
-Ellen
|
385.13 | ????? | HULK::DJPL | Do you believe in magic? | Mon Jul 20 1987 19:17 | 3 |
| I'm still waiting for an explanation. I can't believe that I read
something like that for it's face value. There _has_ to be something else
to it. _Please_?
|
385.14 | Hold it, clarification needed | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Mon Jul 20 1987 20:16 | 12 |
| I am not particularly comfortable with the original remark...
asking someone to emigrate because of their opinion but then
stating that the person wouldn't be let into some unspecified
place because the person is white and does not have AIDS implies
that the orginal author feels the thought in question is appropriate
only to blacks or homosexuals .....which to me is - on its face value -
both racist and heterosexist..... I would like the author of
the original remark to contact me and explain what was meant....
Bonnie J
moderator
|
385.15 | Easy folks. It's spelled HUMOR. | RETORT::UMINA | | Mon Jul 20 1987 21:15 | 25 |
| Sorry gang, but you can delete the note if you want to (moderator),
or you can take yourselves a little less seriously and reread the
previous note and then read a little sarcasm into what I wrote.
Then you'll get the explanation. And maby a chuckl.
On the other hand, now I do have a real comment, not meant to generate
laughs. I was really surprised how quickly people who seemed to
be anti-label were so quick to assign labels. It would seem to
me that in this day and age one might be a little more cautious
about tossing around labels that are offensive. Arguing the points
is far more appropriate.
Of course one could be more direct with one's humor too. But I
really thought at the time from the dialog that goes across this
file that it would be "understood". Perhaps I should master typing
those little faces.
So if you got a chuckl have another. If not, then please do. Perhaps
it's not Bill Cosby, but if we can't laugh at ourselves, our hangups,
our frustrations, our indulgences, and even our mistakes, then this
is going to be a pretty dull world.
/Len
|
385.16 | think of the audience | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Mon Jul 20 1987 22:06 | 15 |
| Len,
Thankyou for explaining your remark. Humor is always welcome in
this file....but it is wise when writing in a public forum which
is read by a wide variety of people not to make jokes that rely
on ethnic or other group related steryotypes....you are bound
to give offense no matter how innocuous you felt your remarks.
I am all in favor of the quick quip or the humerous aside...
just try and remember what who may read your words and craft
them with skill....
peace
Bonnie J
|
385.17 | Sticking my neck out | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Tue Jul 21 1987 00:22 | 22 |
| Back to the digression at hand. I, too, will risk the label of
"classist", by saying that I'm quite contented with being in the
upper-middle class and in touch with my middle-class WASP roots.
I also will admit that I think that it is an unwise move for the
inteligencia and those of us with resources to restrict our
reproduction in the face of an expanding lower class. It can
only lead to a concentration of wealth and power towards the top
and an expansion of poverty at the bottom.
The lower class is growing due to immigration, loss of mid-level
jobs to foreign competition, the expansion of automation, and
the effects of high tech, and economic difficulties such as
inflation. Adding to that a difference in birth rates across
classes is not, to my mind, a good thing.
I don't think that this is the most important factor in the
deepening gap between the upper and lower classes and the spread
of poverty, but it does seem to me to be one of the many factors
involved. I think the denial of the class structure and the
disrepute into which the middle class has fallen are factors
which have contributed more to the worsening of the social
environment rather than to its advance.
|
385.18 | the lower class speaks | WEBSTR::RANDALL | I'm no lady | Tue Jul 21 1987 01:36 | 30 |
| I don't know if I'm being smiley-faced here, or downright vicious. I
feel insulted by the underlying assumption that because of the social
conditions in which I was raised, I am inherently incapable of ever
being of value to society, of ever being anything but lower class.
You assume that there is no social mobility.
I was born poor and raised poor; my father, a mechanic, worked hard
all his life, was always employed, and still only recently managed
to earn a salary that put him above the offical poverty level.
I'm amazed at what an easy solution you've found to deep-rooted social
problems -- you have the babies and we won't.
I think you'd find most of us would be glad to have far fewer babies,
if we had access to decent birth control at reasonable prices. If we
even knew about birth control in the first place, if we learned it
before it was too late. Then we don't get the education we need to
raise ourselves out of the gutters (you think we like it here?),
even if we manage to get a good job housing costs so much we can
barely keep ourselves and our families out of poverty.
No wonder we're hostile when we hear people smugly proclaiming that
yes, they went to Dartmouth, but there's no old boy's network, it
really wasn't any advantage at all.
And all we have to do is let you have the babies.
I'm all for it!
--bonnie
|
385.19 | Sorry | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Tue Jul 21 1987 02:13 | 40 |
| I have, I guess, again been unclear. I believe quite strongly in
social mobility. Without it my middle calss ancestors would
never have been middle classed. The large majority would have
remained peasants, some lower still as slaves, and the very few
would have remained in the upper classes.
I in no way claim that being from or in the working class is
incapacitaing or in any way shameful. I do feel that it can be a
very real challenge to move up through the classes. I also feel
that anything that adds to the number of people in the lower
classes, adds to that difficulty. As the gulf between the upper
and lower classes broadens due to many many forces, the effort
to cross it becomes greater.
Further, it is not my intent by the pride in my heritage and my
class to diminish or devalue the other classes or cultures. I
feel that we all have a lot to be proud of and that we should
not denegrate the contibutions of any group or raise ourselves
by lowering others. Just as I am proud to be a WASP, I expect
and hope my black friends will be proud of their heritage and
the CHinese of theirs and so on and so on. Black pride should
not have to threaten whites nor vice versa.
I thought I had said that I don't think this (any disparity in
birth rates) is an important factor, and had hoped to illustrate
that there were many many factors involved. I do feel that
denial of the existence of class, of the dynamics of class
interaction and social mobility, and the disparaging of the
middle class (and of each of the classes) leads to at least as
many problems as are caused by class itself.
I did recognize that there was a potential for misunderstanding
here, and for accusations of classism. I honestly did not put
forth my thoughts here to belittle or to hurt anyone but to be
candid as to how I felt about the subject, in hopes that there
could be an increase in understanding amongst us.
If I caused any pain or ill-ease, I am sorry. That was far
from my intention.
|
385.20 | The lower middle class agrees | TOPDOC::STANTON | I got a gal in Kalamazoo | Tue Jul 21 1987 02:20 | 4 |
|
If the middle class is too bored or selfish to recreate then let them
die off.
|
385.21 | RAH | ARMORY::CHARBONND | Noto, Ergo Sum | Tue Jul 21 1987 06:47 | 2 |
| Any species which limits its' population will be overrun
by one that doesn't. Lazarus Long
|
385.22 | Does available contraception help? | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Delta Long = -d(sin A/cos Lat) | Tue Jul 21 1987 09:39 | 25 |
| < Note 385.18 by WEBSTR::RANDALL "I'm no lady" >
-< the lower class speaks >-
> I think you'd find most of us would be glad to have far fewer babies,
> if we had access to decent birth control at reasonable prices. If we
> even knew about birth control in the first place, if we learned it
> before it was too late. Then we don't get the education we need to
> raise ourselves out of the gutters (you think we like it here?),
> even if we manage to get a good job housing costs so much we can
> barely keep ourselves and our families out of poverty.
This may have been true when you were growing up, but according to
a midwife (and erstwhile housemate) who practiced in a poor area
of New Haven, it was a status symbol for the boys to father a
child, and the girls didn't really care. At least partially
because of pressure from their boyfriends, the girls were
uninterested in contraception, even after they'd had a baby or
two. In some cases the group made IUDs a standard part of the 6
week post-partum exam, which raises all sorts of interesting
questions about informed consent, which they ignored on the
grounds that what they were doing was right. For what it's worth
the median age at first pregnancy in her practice was 14.
--David
|
385.23 | 'available' means more than physically present | WEBSTR::RANDALL | I'm no lady | Tue Jul 21 1987 10:08 | 21 |
| re: .22 --
I think what we have here is at least partly a difference between city
poverty and rural poverty. The rural poor tend to get married young
and have lots of kids. They *tend* not to have as many kids outside
of wedlock.
Your friend's experience does, however, illustrate what I meant by
learning some other way of doing things.
Access to birth control is usually take to mean "it's there if you want
it," (and I admit I wasn't very clear here), but that's far too simple
a view. By the time you're fourteen and have figured out that the deck
of life is stacked against you, it's too late to come in and say that
you shouldn't have babies when a baby is the only thing you've ever
learned how to do. As you point out, by then it doesn't matter if the
pill is dispensed in candy machines. The *idea* of controlling one's
reproduction has to be emotionally and psychologically accessible
first.
--bonnie
|
385.24 | here come the elitists! | ULTRA::LARU | it's not pretty being easy | Tue Jul 21 1987 10:38 | 6 |
| I think it is ridiculous to have children in order to prevent society
being overrun by different social class... Children who come from from the
so-called 'advantaged' classes but are still unloved generally turn
out to be just as socially deficient and socially destructive as
children from any other class. They just (sometimes) do it with
more elegance.
|
385.25 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Tue Jul 21 1987 11:43 | 22 |
| There are powerful social and economic interests that have a real
stake, albeit a short-sighted one, in maintaining population growth at
the bottom of the social pyramid. It is expensive to have and raise
children; those who do so from marginally adequate resources will tend
to be very docile and obedient in order to protect themselves and their
children from loss of those resources. Those at the top of the pyramid
benefit from that docility on the part of the labor force.
Therefore, so long as the socioeconomic membranes between classes are
perceived as at least somewhat permeable by individual effort ("Work
hard and you too can succeed"), the only people who would benefit in
the short term from decreased lower-class birthrates are the members of
the lower classes themselves. Thus the right way to maintain
upper-class advantages, over the short term, is to discourage or
prevent that reduction by social mystification and/or elimination of
options. And that is exactly what we see happening.
What I wonder is whether the technology of social control will be
adequate to prevent revolution when the bill for our current
"prosperity" is finally presented.
=maggie
|
385.26 | don't overlook the emotions | WEBSTR::RANDALL | I'm no lady | Tue Jul 21 1987 12:48 | 44 |
| Rereading what I wrote last night, I find that I didn't make clear one
underlying reality about poor people "having babies": economic and
social analysis doesn't touch on the emotional life of real people,
and children are an emotional issue.
The support and warmth of the family unit is one of the few strengths a
poor family has; the pleasures of family living are about the only
pleasures you get. This is true whether we're talking about a
traditional family or a single mother of three or a matriarch of
a loosely-related clan.
It's tremendously comforting to know that there is a cohesive unit
supporting you, to have partners in the struggle against a cruel,
indifferent, and often unjust world. Yes, poverty can destroy the
family structure (but so can middle-class drinking), and a strong
family can turn the poorest life into a rich and rewarding one. I grew
up broke but I didn't grow up impoverished.
When a poor child gets old enough to start thinking of herself as an
adult, and starts to realize she could work hard at an honest job done
exceptionally well for the rest of her life and still not make enough
to live on, it's natural to turn to each other, to try to make a new
family and a new nest of warmth to hold off the storms. It's not so
easy to see that you've actually lowered your chances of making things
better. When you don't see a way to make things better, you don't even
care. A fourteen-year-old mother cuddling a smiling, wriggling infant
might be enjoying the only love she's ever going to get.
It's easy, as maggie pointed out, for those at the top of the pyramid
to exploit this desire in order to keep us docile and keep us from
taking control of our lives.
I don't know what all this proves. It indicates that conventional
birth-control education isn't going to be effective, because it (quite
by accident) tells people in desperate need of love and success that
they can't have the only thing they might be good at.
It also indicates that the birth rate is only incidentally connected to
the causes of the social problems we face. Lowering the birth rate
among the lower classes might spread scarce resources less thin, but it
does nothing to address the reasons why those resources are so scarce
in the first place.
--bonnie
|
385.27 | follow the leaders | AKOV04::WILLIAMS | | Tue Jul 21 1987 13:03 | 14 |
| .25 was quite interesting, as were a number of other notes which
attempted to explain the birth rate of the current middle class.
I offer no explaination but do make a prediction, if a younger couple
win the White House and they have children then the middle class
birth rate will increase. The lemmings of the 60's begat the lemmings
of the 80's. Jack and Jackie (the Kennedy White House) made children
fashionable, for a time. The fashion will again be in vogue if
we see a happy (superficialy at least) couple with very young children
in the White House.
Fo those who take offense quite easily, not all couples who expanded
their families in the 60's were lemmings.
Douglas
|
385.28 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Tue Jul 21 1987 13:20 | 7 |
| Maybe, Douglas (your reasoning is always impressive!), but I suspect
that if we do see such an increase it will be a short-term one the
major result of which will be to hasten the socioeconomic polarisation
of the country (i.e., make the "bill" to which I referred bigger,
and the demands for "payment" more pressing).
=maggie
|
385.29 | I've got it solved | VINO::EVANS | | Tue Jul 21 1987 14:32 | 17 |
| NO, NO, NO, You guys just DON't understand.
Look.
WE (the middle class) (you know, the Good Guys) let THEM (YOU know
who I mean) have as many kids as they can.
THEN, we continue to limit access to health care!
Simple, eh?
N-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o Problem!
:-} :-} :-} :-}
Dawn
|
385.30 | | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Tue Jul 21 1987 15:07 | 15 |
| I think it was Lillian Breslow Rubin who did an interesting study in
the 60s of urban black poverty. She addressed many problems social
workers saw in the welfare family, such as exorbitant spending with no
saving of any windfalls, such as high birth rate and huge families.
Her conclusions (explosive at the time, but taken almost for granted
these days I think) were that 1) the spending was a way of saving:
all $$ would go somewhere, and if huge gifts were given to others,
those others "owed" a favor which could be called in when times
got rough again as they inevitably would. and 2) making a big family
not only gets higher welfare payments, but provided an extended
family to function as support network.
Interesting book, I wish I could remember the name...
Lee
|
385.31 | Enslavement is Widespread ! | RETORT::UMINA | | Wed Jul 22 1987 12:05 | 82 |
| re .25
Maggie,
I couldn't agree with you more. In fact, the greater the lower
class population burden the more the upper class benefits. Consider:
The middle class is strapped by taxes to support/feed and cloth
them, therefore unable to make the break from middle to upper, offering
little competition at the high end.
The banking system profits from the masses voting more and more
social programs that there isn't money enough to pay for. To wit:
You probably think that our deficits are financed by the sale of
treasury bonds. To some extent you are right, a small portion of
the deficit is financed that way. The majority of the deficit is
financed by borrowing money from the Federal Reserve Bank.
The Federal Reserve Bank is NOT part of the Federal Government.
It is a privately held corporation that was allowed by Congress
to use the name and given control over our currency and economy
early this century to "control the dynamic swings in economic activity
to provide a stable environment for financial and economic growth".
What you may not know is that the Federal Reserve AUTHORIZES the
treasury to inflate the currency by the shortfall in federal finances
(because the treasury bill sales are never enough) and that this
inflation is credit to our Fed account as money "borrowed" from
the Fed.
OF course we pay interest on the money at the going rate.
Even though the Fed really never loaned it to us. They merely said
we could create it, then they charge us interest on what we created.
No wonder 1/3 of our Federal budget goes to pay interest on this
debt. Now if you're a megabanker (ps the Fed is owned by 6 families,
only 1 of which is American, and these same 6 empires own the Federal
reserve bank in all western countries), the best way to make money
is to foster lower class expansion, creating high debt burdens and
high tax rates for those who are productive.
You see, most of us are so busy keeping ahead of our tax burden
we don't have time to figure out what's really happening to us.
In fact, the social environment is being engineered to keep us
"enslaved" and until some well united and fairly intelligent group
that can take on the system begins to emerge, I think we are all
at their mercy.
Two more points.. first the State of Washington is attempting to
call the question on the Federal Reserve Bank with legislation thanks
primarily to the efforst of Senator MetCalf. About 6 other states
had joined in the effort to abolish the Fed's control of our money
supply and to prevent them from charging us interest on our own
inflation.
Second, you might now realize that it is not the people who elect
our representatives, but the Fed. Think about it. Did you really
want Carter to stay in when interest rates were 23% and unemployment
as a result was heading for double digits. Of course not. You
blamed him, yet Carter was probably doing his job - and therefore
a problem for the Fed - so they got rid of him.
Mr. Reagan on the other hand is playing along. Hence low rates,
economic growth etc.... Notice how much money we are "borrowing"
(remember most of it is created out of thin air, not borrowed, but
we pay interest on it anyway) these days. That keeps the flow of
cash and resources coming in.
Perhaps the womens movement in this country can yet aspire to a
higher goal. After freeing women, they can work on freeing all
of mankind. You are probably the only group in the country with
the intelligence, perserverence, and altruistic motives to do it.
I will post Senator MetCalfs address here for those who might be
interested in finding out more about this. He is much more articulate
than I am on this subject, and has a lot of reference material you
can go look up.
/Len
|
385.32 | CONDITIONING ETC. | 50463::CLINCH | The beautiful MUNICH cluster | Wed Jul 22 1987 14:00 | 34 |
| re .20
> If the middle class is too bored or selfish to recreate then let them
> die off.
My point was that children who are brought up in a way which
causes them to be labelled as middle class are bullied into
conforming to the standards of the children who do this labelling.
re .25
In my experience one becomes socially disadvantaged if
one is conditioned to become so, and many kids
accepted this conditioning rather than stand up for themselves
or any attempt to get on in life. I am not saying
this is absolute, but the fact that there is more
pressure on a child to conform "downwards" (bullying
is itself a downward form of behaviour) results
in a dwindling of those who want to improve their lot.
And "live and let live" is itself a standard of behaviour.
The fact that you have to be poor to have your children
paid for under socialism is entirely a different matter
and in my opinion has less of an impact than what happens
to those children afterwards.
Also the relationship between "class" and wealth is more imagined
than real: At least in Britain, the government statistics dividing
people into categories of affluence
took no account whatever of how people acquired their identity,
with or without pressure from peer groups.
Note that conditioning by peer groups has more impact than
who your parents were in a state school system, where people
come from different backgrounds.
Simon.
|
385.33 | :-) :-) :-) :-} | VISA::MONAHAN | | Sun Aug 02 1987 01:14 | 22 |
| I don't see too much problem with encouraging the "upper classes"
to breed more.
Consider a mathematical model. If each couple produces about
two offspring, then you have a stable population. Split the population
into two groups that do not interbreed too much, and it is still
stable.
Now consider that one of the groups is distinguished by having
inherited wealth (group A). If the other group (B) increases in
size, then group A becomes collectively and individually richer,
since their ownership of resources allows them to buy more labour.
On the other hand, if it is group A that is increasing in size,
then in the next generation the inherited wealth is spread more
thinly.
If you were to pass a law that said that families with inherited
wealth *must* have children in proportion to that wealth, you would
eliminate the upper class within a generation.
And the 6 families referred to earlier would be too busy in
the bedroom to influence U.S. presidents.
|