Sunday, December 25, 2011

The Occupy Demands List

One of the most frequent complaints about the Occupy movement is that it is unfocused and has no demands, yet NY and Chicago each have a ratified list of demands. Chicago's is my favorite (Chicago Tribune source)

October 16, 2011
1. Pass a bill to reinstate Glass-Steagall, a safeguard separating banks' commercial lending and investment operations. "Its repeal in 1999 is considered the major cause of the global financial meltdown of 2008-09," the group states.
2. Repeal Bush-era tax cuts.
3. Prosecute "the Wall Street criminals who clearly broke the law and helped cause the 2008 financial crisis."
4. Overturn a 2010 Supreme Court decision that allows corporations "to contribute unlimited amounts of money to campaigns."
5. Pass the Warren Buffett rule on fair taxation, close corporate tax loopholes, prohibit hiding funds offshore.
6. Give the Securities and Exchange Commission stricter regulatory power, strengthen the Consumer Protection Bureau and help victims of predatory lending whose home loans have been foreclosed.
7. Take steps to limit the influence of lobbyists and eliminate the practice of lobbyists writing legislation.
8. Eliminate (the) right of former government regulators to work for corporations or industries they once regulated.
9. Eliminate corporate personhood.
10. Insist the Federal Elections Commission "ensure that political candidates are given equal time for free at reasonable intervals during campaign season."
11. Pass the Fair Elections Now Act.
12. Forgive student debt.
Source: Occupy Chicago http://occupychi.org

Campaign finance reform

Are you familiar with Granny D? Well, it is time for the rest of us to follow in her footsteps. There will always be corruption. But when the bartender starts skimming so much the restaurant goes under, it's time to fire 'em. When corporations count more than people, hiring lobbyists to defame Occupy protestors, we have to reform the system.

Here is a non-partisan group working on legislation to free our representatives to represent us instead of special interests and the 1%.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Three steps to start fixing America

Feel like America's in a mess? Join the crowd. But instead of moaning or watching the campaign circus, let's fix it. Here are three steps to start: 

1. Calm down and gain some perspective.
  • Take a deep breath. China's 1.3 billion people are on track to produce as much GDP as the US's 300 million people. Soon. Very soon. In fact, our per capita income has dropped to only six times that of China's. Gosh. 
  • Weep. The 9/11 terrorists killed 3,000 people in the first major attack on mainland US since the British and Mexicans back in the 1800's. This was a tragedy. However, we killed over 600,000 of our own people during the Civil War.

  • Mourn. Approximately 4,400 Americans died in Iraq. However, over 320,000 Americans died in traffic accidents during the same eight years. 
  • Think. The gross discretionary budget for the Department of Homeland Security was $47 billion in 2011, not to mention the millions of hours spent fiddling with our belts and shoes. The budget for Transportation Safety was $2 billion. 
2. Face facts: we're wealthy wimps.  
  • Yes, we lost an estimated 3 million manufacturing jobs over the last decade and a half. 
  • But the tide has slowed and our kids are still unemployed. Why? Because they do not want blue collar jobs! 
  • Vocational programs report a lack of applicants for apprenticeships as plumbers, electricians or other "dirty jobs." Our kids flick a mean computer mouse, but don't know how to use a hammer, screw driver or soldering iron.
  • Well-paid CNC operators are in short supply. There are few applicants and many who do apply lack the mechanical aptitude and moderate mathematical skills required. 
  • When the Alabama legislature scared away agricultural workers with strict immigration enforcement laws, tomatoes rotted in the field. American workers could not be found to pick them.
  • There is a shortage of computer and electronics engineers that cannot be filled by all the American graduates of all the relevant engineering programs.
  • Bottom line: Our labor force is soft. Most of our youngsters do not know the meaning of hunger. We have taught them to follow their dreams of being video artists and game designers rather than to make a living. That may not be a bad thing, but it does have consequences for them and for our nation.
3. Turn immigration into a bonanza

  
             Comparison of immigration with the DJIA appears less than random.
  • Immigrants mean money. Rick Perry's Texas is one of the few states in the US where employment has increased recently. Why? Because immigrants are flowing into the country bringing with them market demand for goods. The reason China is on the rise is because populations who are working their way out of poverty spend their money quickly. When money moves faster from laborer to shopkeeper to manufacturer and back, every dollar touches more hands, which means more wealth.
  • Sneaking illegals into America is big business. An estimated 6-7 million people pay an average of $10,000 each, or $60-70 billion per year. This makes the illegal immigration business about the size as the US videogame industry. Why don't we just charge them $5,000 each, put it toward their education and skip the "coyotes" who secret them in?
  • Immigrants bring important technologies to us. Sebastian Thrun, developer of Google's autonomous car, is an immigrant. Albert Einstein, Arnold Schwarzenegger, I.M. Pei, Irving Berlin, Madeline Albright were all immigrants. Most of the inventors of new technologies in this country are immigrants or offspring of immigrants. Why not build the American "team" by soliciting exceptional people we want to come to America, in addiiton to just accepting those who apply?
  • Many states subsidize the university education of engineers from other countries. Then the INS sends them home, after we have paid for their learning! Why not hand every high-achieving international scholar in a desired field citizenship papers along with their diploma?