I apologize for not entering anything into this blog, and for probably not entering anything in the near future. You can find my current thinking in the book on
http://www.mediafire.com/?uubn60m1gd1588l
which is entitled "Adam to Obama" or something similar. The odds are that we are going to stumble along using money as the basis of status until the non-monied classes revolt, seriously contest the elections, and tax us into equality. Maybe I'll rewrite the books as one book urging that action, but maybe I won't bother and let things just happen.
In any case I don't think I'll make any more entries in this blog. I'll leave it here in case anybody wants to read it.
Sunday, June 2, 2013
Sunday, April 15, 2012
The Remains Of Occupy Wall Street
Occupy Wall Street has pretty much faded away, with no public activity going on. They will try something on Mayday, but I suspect that it will come to naught. I thought they might be the symptom of the evolution to a return to "Everynody equal" but we aren't accustomed to think in terms of evolutionary politics so it isn't in our expectations.
What we have to do is go for progressive activity in terms of our regular politics, so that the OWS crowd has to take over the regular Democratic Organization the way the Tea Party people have taken over the Republicans.
I'll do some more thinking about this and put it on this blog and the Everybody Equal page on Facebook.
What we have to do is go for progressive activity in terms of our regular politics, so that the OWS crowd has to take over the regular Democratic Organization the way the Tea Party people have taken over the Republicans.
I'll do some more thinking about this and put it on this blog and the Everybody Equal page on Facebook.
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Sorry, I've been writing about Occupy Wall Street, which is pretty much what I was looking for. The following show how OWS fits into my thinking:
http://equal.karleklund.net/ is the description of what I believe is the fate of the Occupy Wall Street movement in the immediate future.
http://rEvolution.karleklund.net/ is my explanation of the evolution whose present expression is the Occupy Wall Street movement.
http://utopia.karleklund.net/ is my guess as to what the present will evolve into in the future. It includes a series of conversations with Jesus.
Feel free to read them. Send any comments to karl@karleklund.net
http://equal.karleklund.net/ is the description of what I believe is the fate of the Occupy Wall Street movement in the immediate future.
http://rEvolution.karleklund.net/ is my explanation of the evolution whose present expression is the Occupy Wall Street movement.
http://utopia.karleklund.net/ is my guess as to what the present will evolve into in the future. It includes a series of conversations with Jesus.
Feel free to read them. Send any comments to karl@karleklund.net
Sunday, October 2, 2011
Late Developments
The pre-History of The Wall Street Occupation
Some 100,000-odd years ago our species, Homo Sapiens Sapiens, worked out a way of communication by abstract mouth-noises. This enabled us to cooperate at a much more sophisticated level than primates that use mouth-noises to express emotions, but it limited group life to a couple of dozen adults, and we developed by fissioning and moving away from one another. We organized ourselves by being equal-on-the-average with a hunting-chief who took more risks facing immediate problems and a shaman who solved chronic problems by facing death. That made them equal-on-the-average.
When we invented agriculture (around 8,000 bce in the mideast) we could grow more than we could eat so we could have larger tribes and, eventually, cities. These infrastructures were run by a secular elite and a religious elite. The agricultural surplus allowed us to develop technology, but because the social structure contained an elite made civilizations unstable.
In the 1500s Calvin invented a way for the middle classes to be upwardly mobile by the accumulation of money. This stimulated the invention of technology that was profitable. After the revolutions in America and France social evolution continued through various groups becoming elite. In the United States the elite was the slave-owning Planters until the Civil War, after which the elite were the northern industrialists. As they became decadent control was taken by the clerks and mechanics, who became the corporate bureaucrats. The government bureaucrats became powerful in World War One and were the ruling elite in the depression and World War Two.
By 1950 the bureaucratic elite realized that if the certification of upward mobility continued to be conspicuous consumption there would be a scarcity of resources, so they had to do something. The easiest way appeared to be to reverse evolution by making the middle class downwardly mobile. That has been the secret policy of both the corporate and governmental bureaucratic elite from the mid-1900s to the present.
The evolutionary pressure toward a new version of global equality-on-the-average has caused the bureaucratic elite to be more desperately open in their desire to make the middle and working classes downwardly mobile, and has made the middle and working classes more willing to participate in public demonstrations of their opposition to the tactics of the elite.
The demonstrations in Wall Street have now spread throughout the United States and followed the "Arab Spring" with an "American Autumn". There may not be an immediate effect, but it will certainly affect the elections of 2012. People are normally afraid to do something out of the ordinary, but they will be much more willing to join an existing activity.
The description of the theory behind social evolution and the history leading up to the current demonstrations can be downloaded from http://mayday.karleklund.net
Karl Eklund
karl@karleklund.net
Sunday, August 14, 2011
400 Own as much as Half of Us
"Just 400 Americans -- 400 -- have more wealth than half of all Americans combined."
Michael Moore on Saturday, March 5th, 2011 in a speech to protesters in Madison, Wisconsin
Michael Moore says 400 Americans have more wealth than half of all Americans combined
Documentary filmmaker Michael Moore so admired the daily demonstrations against Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker that he traveled from New York to Madison for one on March 5, 2011. The liberal firebrand opened his speech by heaping praise on those fighting the Republican governor’s efforts to take collective bargaining powers from state and local government employees. But he put more firepower into bashing the nation’s rich. "Right now, this afternoon, just 400 Americans -- 400 -- have more wealth than half of all Americans combined," Moore avowed to tens of thousands of protesters. "Let me say that again. And please, someone in the mainstream media, just repeat this fact once; we’re not greedy, we’ll be happy to hear it just once. "Four hundred obscenely wealthy individuals, 400 little Mubaraks -- most of whom benefited in some way from the multi-trillion-dollar taxpayer bailout of 2008 -- now have more cash, stock and property than the assets of 155 million Americans combined." OK, we’ve repeated Moore’s declaration (including the reference to Hosni Mubarak, the former Egyptian president). Now let’s see if what he asserts -- that 400 Americans "have more wealth than half of all Americans combined" -- is true. Moore has made other staggering claims about the gap between the nation’s rich and poor. In Capitalism: A Love Story, his 2009 documentary, Moore said "the richest 1 percent have more financial wealth than the bottom 95 percent combined." He was awarded a Mostly True by our colleagues at PolitiFact National for that claim. For his Madison speech, Moore posted a version of the text on his website. It included a link to back up his statement about the 400 wealthiest Americans. The link was to a blog post by Dave Johnson, a fellow at the Commonweal Institute, a California organization that says it promotes a progressive agenda. Johnson wrote that in 2007, the combined net worth of the 400 wealthiest Americans, as measured by Forbes magazine, was $1.5 trillion; and the combined net worth of the poorer 50 percent of American households was $1.6 trillion. Aside from using slightly different terminology than Moore did, Johnson’s numbers present two problems: They’re four years old. And they indicate that the poorer 50 percent of American households had a higher net worth than the 400 richest Americans. That’s the opposite of what Moore said in Madison. We were referred to another item on Moore’s website that was posted two days after the Madison speech. It cites more recent figures, for 2009. So, let’s start again. In that item, Moore correctly quoted Forbes, which said in a September 2009 article that the net worth of the nation’s 400 wealthiest Americans was $1.27 trillion. Forbes generates its list annually, using interviews, financial documents and other methods to tally their figures. Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, with an estimated net worth of $50 billion, topped the 2009 list for the 16th consecutive year The second part of Moore’s claim -- that the net worth of half of all Americans is less than that of the Forbes 400 -- is more complicated. Moore cited a December 2010 Federal Reserve Board report that said the net worth for all U.S. households was $53.1 trillion in September 2009. That was the same month Forbes released its top 400 list. That’s a starting point -- $53.1 trillion is the net worth for everybody. Moore also cited a March 2010 "working paper" by Edward Wolff, an economist at New York University and Bard College. Wolff was a key source in Moore’s claim that was rated Mostly True by PolitiFact National. Wolff’s paper said that as of July 2009, the three lowest quintiles of U.S. households -- in other words, the poorest 60 percent of U.S. households -- possessed 2.3 percent of the nation’s total net worth. Moore then multiplied that 2.3 percent by the nation’s total net worth of $53.1 trillion and got $1.22 trillion. In other words, he was saying the poorest 60 percent of U.S. households had $1.22 trillion in net worth, which is less than the $1.27 trillion in net worth for the Forbes’ 400 wealthiest Americans. Of course, if the net worth of 60 percent of households is less than that of Forbes’ 400 wealthiest, the net worth of 50 percent of the households -- which is what Moore claimed -- would also be less. We contacted Wolff, who said he had reviewed Moore’s calculations. "As far as I can tell, they’re fine," he said. Three economists -- Thomas Piketty of the Paris School of Economics, Emmanuel Saez of the University of California, Berkeley, and Daniel Mitchell of the libertarian Cato Institute -- agreed. We made one more check. Since Moore’s statistics were for 2009, we sought figures for 2010. The 2010 net worth of the Forbes 400 was $1.37 trillion, Forbes reported in September 2010. That same month, the total U.S. net worth was $54.9 trillion, according to the Federal Reserve Board report cited by Moore. Wolff hasn’t updated his 2009 figures. So we used his 2.3 percent figure again, multiplied by the 2010 total net worth of $54.9 trillion, and found that the net worth of the poorest 60 percent of U.S. households was $1.26 trillion in 2010. That’s less than the 2010 net worth for the Forbes 400. How could it be that 400 people have more wealth than half of the more than 100 million U.S. households? Think of it this way. Many Americans make a good income, have some savings and investments, and own a nice home; they also have debt, for a mortgage, credit cards and other bills. Some people would still have a pretty healthy bottom line. But many -- including those who lost a job and their home in the recession -- have a negative net worth. So that drags down the total net worth for the poorer half of U.S. households that Moore cited. We also want to add one cautionary note, from Mitchell of the Cato Institute, about Moore’s methodology: The Federal Reserve uses hard numbers to calculate the net worth of all households, but Forbes uses assumptions and interviews along with hard numbers in estimating the net worth of the Forbes 400. There’s no way to know how the differences between the two affect the net worth numbers, but Moore used the data that are available and there’s no indication he "cherry-picked" figures for a desired result, Mitchell said. With that caveat, our assessment indicates that as of 2009, the net worth of the nation’s 400 wealthiest individuals exceeds the net worth of half of all American households. We rate Moore’s statement True.
http://www.politifact.com/wisconsin/statements/2011/mar/10/michael-moore/michael-moore-says-400-americans-have-more-wealth-/
Friday, December 24, 2010
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