Susan's Place Logo

News:

Based on internal web log processing I show 3,417,511 Users made 5,324,115 Visits Accounting for 199,729,420 pageviews and 8.954.49 TB of data transfer for 2017, all on a little over $2,000 per month.

Help support this website by Donating or Subscribing! (Updated)

Main Menu

Will "Occupy Wall Street" Stick?

Started by Julie Marie, October 07, 2011, 04:48:34 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Amazon D

http://www.truth-out.org/time-economic-bill-rights/1320938466

http://economics.arawakcity.org/node/674


Now Is the Time for an Economic Bill of Rights
Friday 11 November 2011
by: Ellen Brown, Truthout | News Analysis

We are beginning to understand that our money is not created by the federal government, but by banks.


Henry Ford said, "It is well enough that the people of the nation do not understand our banking and monetary system, for if they did, I believe there would be a revolution before tomorrow morning."

We are beginning to understand, and Occupy Wall Street looks like the beginning of the revolution.

We are beginning to understand that our money is created, not by the government, but by banks. Many authorities have confirmed this, including the Federal Reserve itself. The only money the government creates today are coins, which compose less than one ten-thousandth of the money supply. Federal Reserve Notes, or dollar bills, are issued by Federal Reserve banks, all 12 of which are owned by the private banks in their district. Most of our money comes into circulation as bank loans, and it comes with an interest charge attached.

According to Margrit Kennedy, a German researcher who has studied this issue extensively, interest now composes 40 percent of the cost of everything we buy. We don't see it on the sales slips, but interest is exacted at every stage of production. Suppliers need to take out loans to pay for labor and materials before they have a product to sell.

For government projects, Kennedy found that the average cost of interest is 50 percent. If the government owned the banks, it could keep the interest and get these projects at half price. That means governments - state and federal - could double the number of projects they could afford, without costing the taxpayers a single penny more than we are paying now.

This opens up exciting possibilities. Federal and state governments could fund all sorts of things we think we can't afford now, simply by owning their own banks. They could fund something Franklin D. Roosevelt and Martin Luther King dreamt of - an Economic Bill of Rights.

A Vision for Tomorrow

In his first inaugural address in 1933, Roosevelt criticized the sort of near-sighted Wall Street greed that precipitated the Great Depression. He said, "They only know the rules of a generation of self-seekers. They have no vision, and where there is no vision the people perish."

Roosevelt's own vision reached its sharpest focus in 1944, when he called for a Second Bill of Rights. He said:

This Republic had its beginning, and grew to its present strength, under the protection of certain inalienable political rights.... They were our rights to life and liberty.

As our nation has grown in size and stature, however - as our industrial economy expanded - these political rights proved inadequate to assure us equality in the pursuit of happiness.

He then enumerated the economic rights he thought needed to be added to the Bill of Rights. They included:

The right to a job;

The right to earn enough to pay for food and clothing;

The right of businessmen to be free of unfair competition and domination by monopolies;

The right to a decent home;

The right to adequate medical care and the opportunity to enjoy good health;

The right to adequate protection from the economic fears of old age, sickness, accident, and unemployment;

The right to a good education.

Times have changed since the first Bill of Rights was added to the Constitution in 1791. When the country was founded, people could stake out some land, build a house on it, farm it and be self-sufficient. The Great Depression saw people turned out of their homes and living in the streets - a phenomenon we are seeing again today. Few people now own their own homes. Even if you have signed a mortgage, you will be in debt peonage to the bank for 30 years or so before you can claim the home as your own.

Health needs have changed, too. In 1791, foods were natural and nutrient rich, and outdoor exercise was built into the lifestyle. Degenerative diseases such as cancer and heart disease were rare. Today, health insurance for some people can cost as much as rent.

Then there are college loans, which collectively now exceed a trillion dollars, more even than credit card debt. Students are coming out of universities not just without jobs, but carrying a debt of $20,000 or so on their backs. For medical students and other post-graduate students, it can be $100,000 or more. Again, that's as much as a mortgage, with no house to show for it. The justification for incurring these debts was supposed to be that the students would get better jobs when they graduated, but now jobs are scarce.

After World War II, the GI Bill provided returning servicemen with free college tuition, as well as cheap home loans and business loans. It was called "the GI Bill of Rights." Studies have shown that the GI Bill paid for itself seven times over and is one of the most lucrative investments the government ever made.

The government could do that again - without increasing taxes or the federal debt. It could do it by recovering the power to create money from Wall Street and the financial services industry, which now claim a whopping 40 percent of everything we buy.

An Updated Constitution for a New Millennium

Banks acquired the power to create money by default when Congress declined to claim it at the Constitutional Convention in 1787. The Constitution says only that "Congress shall have the power to coin money [and] regulate the power thereof." The founders left out not just paper money, but checkbook money, credit card money, money market funds, and other forms of exchange that make up the money supply today. All of them are created by private financial institutions, and they all come into the economy as loans with interest attached.

Governments - state and federal - could bypass the interest tab by setting up their own publicly owned banks. Banking would become a public utility, a tool for promoting productivity and trade rather than for extracting wealth from the debtor class.

Congress could go further: it could reclaim the power to issue money from the banks and fund its budget directly. It could do this, in fact, without changing any laws. Congress is empowered to "coin money," and the Constitution sets no limit on the face amount of the coins. Congress could issue a few one-trillion dollar coins, deposit them in an account and start writing checks.


The Fed's own figures show that the money supply has shrunk by $3 trillion since 2008. That sum could be spent into the economy without inflating prices. Three trillion dollars could go a long way toward providing the jobs and social services necessary to fulfill an Economic Bill of Rights. Guaranteeing employment to anyone willing and able to work would increase gross domestic product, allowing the money supply to expand even further without inflating prices, since supply and demand would increase together.

Modernizing the Bill of Rights

As Bob Dylan said, "The times they are a-changin'." Revolutionary times call for revolutionary solutions and an updated social contract. Apple and Microsoft update their programs every year. We are trying to fit a highly complex, modern monetary scheme into a constitutional framework that is 200 years old.

After President Roosevelt died in 1945, his vision for an Economic Bill of Rights was kept alive by Martin Luther King. "True compassion," King declared, "is more than flinging a coin to a beggar; it comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring."

King, too, has now passed away, but his vision has been carried on by a variety of money reform groups. The government as "employer of last resort," guaranteeing a living wage to anyone who wants to work, is a basic platform of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). An MMT web site declares that by "[e]nding the enormous unearned profits acquired by the means of the privatization of our sovereign currency ... t is possible to have truly full employment without causing inflation."

What was sufficient for a simple agrarian economy does not provide an adequate framework for freedom and democracy today. We need an Economic Bill of Rights, and we need to end the privatization of the national currency. Only when the privilege of creating the national money supply is returned to the people can we have a government that is truly of the people, by the people and for the people.


I'm an Amazon womyn + very butch + respecting MWMF since 1999 unless invited. + I AM A HIPPIE

  •  

Amazon D

Declaration of Corporate Dissolution

Whereas the incorporation, by Sovereign decree, of private entities proved so successful as a means to expand, by force, the commercial hegemony of European Empires, the US Constitution granted Congress the authority to grant Letters of Marque; and

Whereas Article I, Section 8 of the United States Constitution authorized Congress sole authority to grant Letters of Marque to incorporated private merchants in pursuit of foreign possessions, without specific reference to the capture by unfair financial advantage of domestic property, it is implied that that authority is likewise applicable to all corporations; and

Whereas the several States usurped that implied power to grant their own charters of incorporation for commercial purposes, said Constitutional ambiguity inadvertently created a loophole for the unofficial sanction of unlimited incorporation within the jurisdiction of a limited governmental corporation, as defined by the Constitution itself; and

Whereas the several States failed to exercise responsible sovereign authority over the terms and conditions of said corporations' charters, there has evolved an economic system that is dominated by sovereign corporate entities whose only claim to personhood is that of comprising a human collective; and

Whereas the personhood of thusly incorporated entities had no basis in logic or law, the creation of a fictitious person was instituted as a legal fiction to define their nature; and

Whereas fictitious persons didn't exist when the Constitution was written, they couldn't possibly have been implied by the Constitution as being natural persons; and

Whereas the Constitution applies only to natural persons, the terms and conditions of corporate charters are subject to Congressional authorization under the authority of Article I, Section 8; and

Whereas the unauthorized sovereignty of corporate entities has existed since the ratification of this Constitution and subsequent corporations have unduly profited therefrom, it is incumbent upon the US Treasury to dissolve any corporation deemed unnecessary to the function of a healthy economic system; and

Whereas corporations are as unique as the markets they serve, it is the duty of Congress to apportion such rights and obligations to corporate entities as the common good requires, according to the nature of their diverse enterprises; and

Whereas the re-structuring of a global economic system is at best a daunting task it is hereby demanded that the full resources of the Internal Revenue Service be re-directed to auditing and re-chartering such corporate entities; and

Whereas taxes will need to be collected, it is further demanded that a federal tax at the point of sale be instituted, to free aforementioned IRS personnel for this task; and

Whereas the transformation hereby enacted by this Amendment will take considerable time to implement, the urgency is such that Congress shall consider no other legislation until it is accomplished; now, therefore, be it

Resolved by the legislatures of the 50 States, that We, The People call for an Article Five Constitutional Convention to pass the following Amendments:


Amendment XXVIII
"Only natural persons shall have the rights protected under the U.S. Constitution."

Amendment XXIX
"Incorporated entities shall be forbidden to interfere in any way with the conduct of government unless
specifically chartered to do so by the US Congress."



In support of this declaration I cite the following chronicle of corporate usurpation since the Constitution's ratification:

http://www.theusconstitution.o...


with an introduction by Molly Morgan:

http://www.wilpf.org/docs/ccp/...


If #OWS could put aside its policy demands and focus on this one solitary systemic demand, the critic mass needed for an Article Five Constitutional Convention would appear over-night with the support of a very vocal "silent majority".
I'm an Amazon womyn + very butch + respecting MWMF since 1999 unless invited. + I AM A HIPPIE

  •  

Amazon D

What Are We Capable Of - THIS IS ANONYMOUS!

http://www.whatis-theplan.org/

spread the word wow its so great we have people who actually care and are doing something to stop the 1% / crooked goverment peeps
I'm an Amazon womyn + very butch + respecting MWMF since 1999 unless invited. + I AM A HIPPIE

  •  

Amazon D

Join US . the plan to elect 870 delegates and the national general assembly in Philadelphia july 4th to 8th 2012. www.the99declaration.org
I'm an Amazon womyn + very butch + respecting MWMF since 1999 unless invited. + I AM A HIPPIE

  •  

Julie Marie

At this point I'm not seeing a revolution on the horizon.  The Occupy Movement has been effective in bringing about awareness of the substantial change in the transference of wealth to the already rich, what happens when you let businesses and financial institutions govern themselves and that providing tax deductions for corporations only increases their profit margin and does not create jobs.  And the politicians are listening and reacting (I'm not suggesting they will really do anything).  People don't mind seeing issue flipping from politicians when the flipping is to their side.  All this is having a calming effect.

What I think most people still don't get is that:

- politicians pushed forth measures that resulted in the economic crisis we are presently in 

- those politicians were largely influenced by people with deep pockets who contributed heavily to their political campaigns

- politicians have to pay back the people who helped get them elected and that means passing laws so the big contributors get a return on their investment

- and (and this is the big one that seems to always be missed) the people in this country, rich or poor, have the ability to control the direction this country goes, effect the types of laws passed and generally create a world that can affect their quality of life.  All they have to do is educate themselves about the people they can vote for, choose the one who best fits their ideals and VOTE ACCORDINGLY.

But I just don't see that ever happening.  If there's one thing I have learned during my time on this earth it's that most people don't want to be bothered or simply want someone to tell them how to think and act.  They give up their individuality and their freedom and instead choose to march in lock step with the masses.  I've never understood that and I never will.
When you judge others, you do not define them, you define yourself.
  •  

Amazon D

also there is

http://www.facebook.com/americanselect which is also trying to get candidates at least for president.

http://www.americanselect.org/

I have joined both to be a part of anything better than the two parties we have now..
I'm an Amazon womyn + very butch + respecting MWMF since 1999 unless invited. + I AM A HIPPIE

  •  

gennee

Julie, I believe something will happen within the next year, probably sooner. People are still losing their homes, jobs, pensions, etc. Greece is blowing up and Ireland is ready to.

The one group that is ignored and has no one representing them is the working poor. They armed, ticked off, and are ready.  They are losing their homes and can't feed their families. They are tired of having dirt kicked in their faces by politicians, businesses, and law authorities. I pray that violence doesn't happen. If it does, don't be surprised by it. When people have nothing left to lose, they lose it.
Be who you are.
Make a difference by being a difference.   :)

Blog: www.difecta.blogspot.com
  •  

Amazon D

also the solar burst coming from the sun are expected to be their worst in 2012 and well the internet was just barely started in the 11 yrs ago for most of the world and that is the cycle
I'm an Amazon womyn + very butch + respecting MWMF since 1999 unless invited. + I AM A HIPPIE

  •  

Amazon D

I'm an Amazon womyn + very butch + respecting MWMF since 1999 unless invited. + I AM A HIPPIE

  •  

Julie Marie

Quote from: gennee on November 12, 2011, 01:06:58 PM
When people have nothing left to lose, they lose it.

And when they are busy working a job that pays them what they are worth and provides for them and their families, you won't hear a peep from them.
When you judge others, you do not define them, you define yourself.
  •  

tekla

Historically speaking, when people have nothing to lose lots and lots of other people start to lose what they have.  It's a recipe for social disaster, general chaos, and systemic breakdown.  The Romans understood this well and did the whole panem et circenses (Bread and Circuses, or as we understand it in the US, beer and football) to keep the people understanding that they did, in fact, did have something to lose.
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
  •  

Julie Marie


Rolling Stone recently published an article titled "How the GOP Became the Party of the Rich"  A picture tells a thousand words.


No one I know has seen an increase in their pay with practically no increase in their taxes.  It's always been, the more you earn, the more taxes you pay.  I guess that is unless you contribute heavily to the GOP.

We can't pay our bills, unemployment hangs around 9%, people have lost their homes, their life savings, income can't keep up with inflation....

Okay, so tell me again, why are people pissed?
When you judge others, you do not define them, you define yourself.
  •  

Amazon D

I'm an Amazon womyn + very butch + respecting MWMF since 1999 unless invited. + I AM A HIPPIE

  •  

Amazon D

I'm an Amazon womyn + very butch + respecting MWMF since 1999 unless invited. + I AM A HIPPIE

  •  

gennee

Quote from: Julie Marie on November 12, 2011, 07:05:59 PM
And when they are busy working a job that pays them what they are worth and provides for them and their families, you won't hear a peep from them.


Very true. They are the ones who should be helping others. Unfortunately, that isn't happening.
Be who you are.
Make a difference by being a difference.   :)

Blog: www.difecta.blogspot.com
  •  

gennee

The police came this morning and broke up the camp at Occupy Wall Street here in New York. I will continue to monitor the situation and get back to you.

:)
Be who you are.
Make a difference by being a difference.   :)

Blog: www.difecta.blogspot.com
  •  


Alexmakenoise

  •  

tekla

Best thing I've read on this so far.  Underlining/bold is mine.

Published on Tuesday, November 15, 2011 by TruthDig
This Is What Revolution Looks Like
by Chris Hedges

http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/this_is_what_revolution_looks_like_20111115/?ln

Welcome to the revolution. Our elites have exposed their hand. They have nothing to offer. They can destroy but they cannot build. They can repress but they cannot lead. They can steal but they cannot share. They can talk but they cannot speak. They are as dead and useless to us as the water-soaked books, tents, sleeping bags, suitcases, food boxes and clothes that were tossed by sanitation workers Tuesday morning into garbage trucks in New York City. They have no ideas, no plans and no vision for the future.

Our decaying corporate regime has strutted in Portland, Oakland and New York with their baton-wielding cops into a fool's paradise. They think they can clean up "the mess"—always employing the language of personal hygiene and public security—by making us disappear. They think we will all go home and accept their corporate nation, a nation where crime and government policy have become indistinguishable, where nothing in America, including the ordinary citizen, is deemed by those in power worth protecting or preserving, where corporate oligarchs awash in hundreds of millions of dollars are permitted to loot and pillage the last shreds of collective wealth, human capital and natural resources, a nation where the poor do not eat and workers do not work, a nation where the sick die and children go hungry, a nation where the consent of the governed and the voice of the people is a cruel joke.

Get back into your cages, they are telling us. Return to watching the lies, absurdities, trivia and celebrity gossip we feed you in 24-hour cycles on television.
FIGHT APATHY!, or don't...
  •  

fionabell

I totally support it and i think it's great but the"1%" are well, the richest people. Why will a protest bother them? Unless it snowballs into some kind of Marie Antoinette situation. I don't know if I have the stomach for that.

:angel:
  •