Sunday, March 18, 2018

Why Thomas Paine would shoot Donald Trump if he were alive today (Part 3 of 3)

Written by Igor Goldkind

Continued from Part 2 of 3

Paine conceived of autonomous democratic nation-states forming alliances of mutual aid. Mikhail Gorbachev has said that we ought to have a balancing of interests, not a balancing of power on the global stage. Internationalization, with the primacy of nation-state alliances, is a major alternative to the trends of corporate economic globalization. In the myth of a "flat" world of economic globalization, where the world is made safe and frictionless for capital expansion, citizens and nations did not vote for the corporate-influenced governmental-military-industrial-media alliances and trade agreements which establish "the rules of the game," subtly conditioning the thinking of the masses. 

These are not ancient words. These are the principles America was founded on and without which we would have early on taken the road to the same form of despotism and autocracy that Donald Trump is trying to lead us into. Trump only wants power. Power to control what is true and what is not. Power to determine the fates and existence of as many people as he can. This is why he loves the idea of a wall, the decoration of undocumented long-term residents and the border checks at airports that targets people of the Muslim faith, as well as people that white people think look like Muslims!

In his own way, from his visionary perspective, Thomas Paine was what the right-wing calls a “globalist” or even more bizarrely a “statist.” Of course the founding fathers were statists, they constructed the blueprint for the United STATES of America.

Bernie Sanders was right. Trump isn't conservative or moderate, much less liberal; he's an autocrat who has no respect for the Constitution and has failed as commander-in-chief to protect this country from a foreign antagonist.

Back to the curb where Paine is holding Trump hostage to the imperatives of history and the gentle squeezing of Thomas’s trigger finger, because Donald Trump is a traitor to his state. He has been under the influence of a foreign antagonist, Vladimir Putin, since at least 2014, shortly after he first announced his attempts at the presidency. He needed money to run a campaign for President and he didn’t have any.  No bank would loan him money because Trump always welched on his debts. So he had to turn to Deutsche Bank, the same bank that Putin and his oligarchy use to make money disappear and reappear wherever is most expedient. In this case it was the presidential campaign of Donald J. Trump. This will all become very shortly apparent as soon as the next wave of indictments are issued by the DOJ. Trump is in a jam that he can’t get out of. Mueller’s investigation on behalf of the federal Department of Justice is very far from being a witch hunt. Read the indictments, all the evidence is published there, enough to hold up in federal court. Mueller, if you recall, is a conservative Republican of impeccable integrity.

By the way, I don't detest conservatives; some are my best friends. But Trump isn't really a conservative, he's a conman playing the GOP for whatever he can get away with. I don't hate conservatives, I hate liars who shamelessly lie every day they open their mouths. I hate incompetents who can't even keep one national security advisor on board during his first year and whose family and campaign advisors were meeting with Russian intelligence during the 2016 campaign.

At this point in the event, Donald Trump moves his head slightly. Thomas steadies his hand. Testing Thomas, Trump slowly turns his head enough to glimpse Thomas’s steely stare. As unflinching as Mueller’s investigation. Once again Trump pleads, begs for his life. “What do you want Mr. Paine?  I’ve got money tons of money. What about women? I can get you the most beautiful models in the world. What about an audience with the Queen of England, she’s easy.” Thomas pauses and for the first time speaks to Donald J. Trump:

“I want my country back. I want the nation myself and my brothers built out of reason, compassion and equality back. I want what this nation is meant to be, not what you have defiled it as.”

Trump knows his goose is cooked. He can’t repair the damage he’s caused. It will take others, long after he’s gone to rebuild our country. Others who are younger than a 70-year-old patriarch. Others who have grown accustomed to being one nation in a physically interconnected  world. Others who aspire to rise above the fumes of spiritual superstition to the level of what Paine called “our living awareness of the Infinite Presence” by means of reason, science, the arts, the cooperative nature of our fellow hairless apes.  The high school students who have stood up and proclaimed “enough is enough.” The women who no longer cover their mouths and stifle their words when being subject to interpersonal tyranny. These are the children of Thomas Paine. These are the people he fought for and wrote for.

As a species we survived and dominated this planet by virtue of our complex means of cooperation, not competition. That complex is what we refer to as a society and those who reject the notion are, well, just antisocial.

Donald Trump speaks to Thomas Paine one last time.

“Please Thomas, I promise to be better, I promise to live up to your virtues, I swear I’m a changed man.  Look in your heart Thomas, look in your heart, Please!….”

Thomas speaks his last four words:

“I have, you traitor,” and pulls the trigger.

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Thursday, March 8, 2018

Why Thomas Paine would shoot Donald Trump if he were alive today (Part 2 of 3)

Written by Igor Goldkind

Continued from Part 1 of 3

But going back to the pistol Thomas Paine is holding against Donald Trump’s head; no, I didn’t forget my premise. Imagine it with me. There’s Thomas Paine, his hand steadily holding the cocked pistol, fully powdered and loaded with a small lead ball. Tiny, but big enough to leave a good sized hole at such close range. And there’s Donald Trump on his knees, shaking. He’s already wet the pants of his suit. He tries very hard to hold back his urging defecation and finally fails.

Now Donald Trump is soiled. Soiled with the same feces he’s been feeding to the American voters for years. Soiled by his indifference, his empathy deficit, his reckless, unfeeling impulses, his sociopathic disconnect from the human race. Remember, Donald, to say “I hear you.” It fools them every time and leaves plenty of time for self-gratification at the expense of others. Trump is soiled by his own inhumanity, his unbridled carnal greed to accumulate wealth, power and women. He assaults women not because he can get it up anymore but because they have power he wants to dominate.

Look at his wife. I haven’t seen such a blank dead look of a hostage to circumstance since Patty Hearst. It was the money that bought her and like some particularly gruesome episode of “Black Mirror,” she got exactly what she paid for, with her integrity, her self-respect and herself. Imagine the morning she awoke to the dawning denouement. Sure she could leave any time, with her child. But where would she go? What would she do? In the afterlife of existence everyone writes a book and sells it. When things go badly; when the world seems to be against me; when I lose; I always remind myself - it could always get worse and at least I don’t have to fuck Donald Trump.

The thought makes me feel better but my heart tears up when I think of her suffering. It is the suffering of the affluent. The ones who have accommodated everything they were told they needed to be happy. Everything they worked hard to acquire in lieu of happiness only to find that very object eluding them. That’s the horror of the denouement, you reach the summit of your life’s ambition and now the only thing left to do is jump off. Because happiness is not an object or an objective. It flits effortlessly in and out of our lives like a butterfly, briefly lingering on a flower and moving on. Ever try to chase a butterfly? Exactly.

Back to Donald Trump having shit and pissed himself while one of the fathers of our country held a pistol to his head. Perhaps at this point Donald would beg for his life like the scene in “Miller’s Crossing,” “Please, Thomas, Please. Look in your heart, look in your heart. You don’t want to do this. You’re not that kind of man. Look in your heart, for god's sake !”

God is a natural place to go. After all, the divisions we are now facing in our country are by no means recent. They’ve been brewing for decades. The divisions are not entirely geographic although the three states that assured Donald of his electoral victory do have a concentration of post-Calvinist evangelicals. Nor are they solely cultural; after all, Donald Trump is the epitome of the urban gangster. A smooth talking, wheeling dealing property developer soaking in the comfort of Manhattan luxury. He should be anathema to his base of supporters. But he’s not, instead he speaks their language; the language of PT Barnum and Charlie Chan both as fake as a wooden nickel but master showman to a 'T' (Only white actors played Charlie Chan which ironically was invented by Earl Derr Biggers as an alternative to Yellow Peril stereotypes and villains like Fu Manchu).

And Trump talks about God. He doesn’t so much talk about his beliefs (if he has any), but about the threat that nonbelievers and other religions pose for Christian evangelists, particularly targeting Islam. Trump runs his own circus of fear and the punters are more than happy to pay to be scared or at least have their irrational fears affirmed. Donald Trump should be played by the late Robert Mitchum (if he were still alive. Hey, we brought Thomas Paine from two centuries ago; a zombie Robert Mitchum should not pose too many difficulties). To be exact, Robert Mitchum in his role as the greed-laden preacher in the classic American Gothic “The Night of the Hunter” in which he plays a psychopathic man of the cloth bent on money and murder (in that order). He pursues two children who hold the secret to a hidden fortune down a river in the south, riding a donkey and singing hymns. A fake, a demon, a creature of merciless malice.

So is Thomas going to shoot Trump in the head for using religion to accumulate power? Of course not. Thomas was a believer but not in God, in reason. “It is by the exercise of reason that man can discover God. Take away that reason, and he would be incapable of understanding anything.” The reason Thomas Paine is holding a cocked pistol against the back of Donald Trump’s head is not God; Trump hasn’t blasphemed against faith; he’s blasphemed against reason. Trump has spent his entire career disseminating the appearance of things, not the truth. Truth is the enemy of Donald Trump, because in truth, he is an insignificant man in the scheme of things just as we are all beholden to the significance we manufacture and some of us have made peace with that. Donald Trump has not. Like a “hungry ghost” in Chinese Buddhism, Donald is compelled by desire, call it lust, a lust for significance. This is why he builds towers, not to house offices or hotel rooms, but to prop up as high as he can his name: Trump.

At the start of this year we had a crisis in authority due to the steady lies being pumped from the White House by Trump. The first rule of autocracy is to shake people’s belief in authority, so that they only can believe in you. Donald Trump is attempting to destroy the pillars of the Fourth Estate. Now we’ve entered a period of crisis in competence. When the very ability to address real world problems by Trump and his stooges is dubious at best. 

Remember that the balance of powers in the Constitution is all beholden to having a free press in which people can report the truth and express their opinions of their government. That’s what Thomas Paine counted on in drafting our rights. Each right has a corresponding duty. Paine said our first duty is to be kind to others. Paine also said that a person's corresponding duty is to allow the same rights to others as we allow ourselves. From this basis we can use our abilities to promote mutual understanding. These expanding circles of reciprocal duties and rights weave a tapestry, built on democratic norms, of liberty in the context of societal interdependence. It’s called a society based on equality.

Did you know that Thomas Paine was the very first American abolitionist? In 1775 he wrote, "To Americans: That some desperate wretches should be willing to steal and enslave men by violence and murder for gain, is rather lamentable than strange. But that many civilized, nay, Christianized people should approve, and be concerned in the savage practice, is surprising; and still persist, though it has been so often proved contrary to the light of nature, to every principle of justice and humanity, and even good policy, by a succession of eminent men, and several late publications.

Our traders in MEN (an unnatural commodity!) must know the wickedness of that SLAVE-TRADE, if they attend to reasoning, or the dictates of their own hearts; and such as shun and stifle all these willfully sacrifice conscience, and the character of integrity to that golden idol."

Thomas Paine was like the first white citizen member of Black Lives Matter. He and his pal Thomas Jefferson originally included an amendment to the Constitution ending slavery. They wanted to create a revolutionary society in which ALL men are created equal. As usual, women would have to wait. Of course this amendment was vetoed by the southern slave owning states. The same states suspiciously from which Trump derives the concentration of his base support. But the point being that the Founding Fathers, if not all, enough, wanted to establish an egalitarian society in all respects. Paine referred to this, as did the other Framers, as ‘the common good,’ something the alt-right abhors because they understand it as: control by somebody that isn’t them. Nonetheless, contrary to Constitution literalists the "common good" involves a mental posture taken by citizens in their deliberations where they account for, yet transcend partial interests to look at the good for each and all in their decisions.

Even in business, Trump’s claimed turf, the right of commerce was seen as transforming the mindset of feudal, dependent relations between men and their government. It helped transform subjects into confident citizens. Trade was viewed not as laissez-faire, but in a web of social interdependence. It was seen as a major modality for individuals to use their reason (not faith), to develop better mutual understanding of others' interests in society. While aware that too much indulgence in commerce could lead to the decline of spirit and patriotism, making reason subservient to commercial interests, Paine felt that man would use his religion of reason to place commerce within a broader quest for lifelong education in the arts, sciences, engineering and philosophy in order to progress to a universal society and universal happiness.

Paine believed that man's highest spirit of reason is its motives and applications such that it does not have to be concentrated solely in pursuit of commercial interests. Art, science, and commercial enterprise can be placed in service to humanity and universal happiness. Moreover, each individual deserves minimal dignity and a minimal economic base to pursue their natural rights. Like Paine and Edward Bellamy advocated two hundred years ago, some form of guaranteed minimal annual income ought to be adopted for each citizen, regardless of wealth or other distinctions. Imagine what Thomas Paine would make of the modern day commercialized medical establishment!

Sounds like a socialist that Thomas Paine, don’t he? Not at all really, just your average post-Enlightenment philosopher and thinker. Or perhaps he's a socialist only as far as socialism is dedicated to the fairer distribution of resources so that everyone might enjoy life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness more equally. Paine wrote, “Some men and women, through greed or disproportionate natural or social advantages, will contribute to others being systematically impoverished in the imperfections of man-made civilization:

The earth is the common property of the human race; thus each human being is equally entitled to have dignity and minimal share of the earth's bounty, including clean water, air, and access or rents from land. Thus, men and women must discover those laws operating in society which will create a greater harmony of overall interests. Democratic communities will have to choose to redistribute some minimal baseline of societal resources to those at least most vulnerable not as charity, but as a right in the name of social harmony.”

Continued at Part 3 of 3

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Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Why Thomas Paine would shoot Donald Trump if he were alive today (Part 1 of 3)

Written by Igor Goldkind

Yes, indeed that’s a provocative title; but this ain’t click-bait my friends. This is the real deal. If Thomas Paine was alive today, he’d be in the nation’s capital with a pistol waiting for the #FakePresident. Of course, he’d be waiting a long time considering as far as he knew the capital of these United States was in Philadelphia. I have a vision of old globalist Thomas standing outside Ben Franklin’s door, knocking as hard as he could, shouting “Benjamin!  Benjamin! Come out, our nation’s in trouble and it's much worse than the British.” Kind of like the scene in “Street Car Named Desire” where Marlon Brando is standing outside Stella’s window in the pouring rain in his soaked white T-Shirt.

Marlon Brando would have made a good Thomas Paine in the film, the graphic novel and the computer game but this doesn't answer the question embedded in the title of this diatribe. Why would Thomas Paine if he were alive today, track down Donald Trump and put a bullet in the back of his head? In principle this would require Donald to be on his knees, facing away from Thomas with his tiny hands wrapped around the back of his head. I suppose you, dear reader, are ‘en-titled’ to an answer as to the why and the wherefore; but stay with me as we savor the moment. The ultimate retribution of history: to be shot in the back of  the head by one of the Founders of this revolutionary nation, ironically with a pistol no less. One that Thomas didn’t have to register or submit to a background check to acquire from the antique pistols and muskets booth at the gun show a couple blocks away.

So before Thomas pulls the trigger and the tiny lead ball propels from the pistol’s mouth through his dense skull and lodges somewhere in the soft tissue that Donald referred to as his “brain,” let’s pause and assess the situation. Let’s skip over the time travel details as to how Thomas Paine got from the late 18th century to the early 21st. We’ll leave it to the graphic novel to explain that bit; him jumping a little over two centuries in time. Although we really don’t have to figure out anything at all. Thomas Paine’s words, his ideas and his rebel spirit not only jumped but survived intact for more than two centuries within the soul of our national sovereignty. So if Thomas Paine were brought back from the dead by some mysterious force, it could only be due to his words, his ideas and the nation he fought for being under threat.

And that, my reader, is precisely the point being made by my title and the words you are reading now.  Today, not even two decades into the 21st century, the essential values that built this nation, this American experiment by a motley crew of post-enlightenment landowners, orators, tradesmen and inventors is at risk of being destroyed. Not by Trump himself, you realize. But by Us, by We the People in our impotent complacency to stop him. We are not revolutionaries, we are the revolution Thomas and his friends dreamt, drew the blueprints for, and built on top of the hot blood that soaked the green countryside of Virginia, Pennsylvania, Carolina, whose names are only possible because of the stubborn bravery of these idealists, these socialists, these men of vision that had the hubris to build a nation founded not by the right of kings or church or even the wealthy, but by the enlightenment values of liberty, justice and freedom. 

These values of course aren’t just American, although they are the foundation stones of our democracy.  Thomas Paine author of “Common Sense,” “The Age of Reason” and “The Rights of Man” whose titles alone reveal the nature of his philosophy: to build a nation on reason not religious superstition. It’s not that Thomas Paine didn’t believe in the divine, he just believed in reason more: “It is by the exercise of reason that man can discover God. Take away that reason, and he would be incapable of understanding anything.”

Later, as a member of the French Senate, Paine would lend his hand to writing the Jean-Jacques Rousseau version of the Declaration of the Rights of Man in 1789, along with Thomas Jefferson. Rousseau’s Rights of Man became the basis of the UN Human Rights Charter as well as the EU Human Rights initiative. So next time you hear some jackass complaining about liberals going on and on about Human Rights you might want to mention that they’re disrespecting the  Founding Fathers, two of whom (Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine) contributed to the declaration.

In fact, Universal Human Rights is the soul not only of our Constitution, but the Declaration of Independence, the UN Charter and the adopted law of all members of the European Union. Human Rights is the one thing that Donald Trump can’t abide because he has dedicated his life to the accruement of power for its own sake. Trump really isn’t that bothered by actual money in spite of his public persona. What he is dedicated to is what money buys: people, power and governance; and this is exactly where we have gone astray from the origins of our nation. We have handed our own governance over to banks, corporate interests and the uber-affluent who can afford to buy a congressman or a president.   

Mueller’s investigation will very shortly reveal the origins of the money that bought Trump his presidency. We know already that the NRA contributed 30 million dollars early in his campaign. Do you remember that lie about how Trump said he was incorruptible because he could afford to fund his own campaign? I know, I know, it’s hard to remember all the lies Trump has spouted.

Do you know why the Truth is better than a lie?

Because it’s easier to remember.

Continue reading:  Part 2 of 3.

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Friday, December 29, 2017

Trump tax scam thwarts long-term U.S. economic growth for self-serving, short-term political gains


Donald Trump would have the American people believe that the recent GOP tax bill will provide a spark to the U.S. economy while benefiting mostly the middle-class. This would obviously be all well and good, except for the inconvenient detail of it being an outright lie. In reality the GOP tax bill is a duplicitous scam that will limit the potential of the American economy at the cost of everyday people in the United States.

Tax cuts for everyday Americans will disappear, corporate tax looting permanent

Trump and the GOP are banking on the positive effects of the tax bill to be felt in the pocketbooks of the average American voter in time to help Republicans in the upcoming elections in 2018 and 2020. Although most Americans will receive a tax cut, those benefits are only short-term and transitory and will also come at a steep price. Meanwhile the massive tax cuts corporate donors receive from the tax bill will remain permanent, leaving future generations to deal with a more than $1 trillion deficit increase as a result.

Corporate donors carry water for Trump and GOP

Upon passage of the GOP tax bill some corporations who stand to profit handsomely from the new policy attempted to assuage the public's strong disapproval of the tax scheme by literally throwing money at them. Wells Fargo and AT&T were the first corporations to rush to announce bonuses and wage increases which they claim are a result of the tax bill. However, it is likely their intentions are more self-serving than anything else.

These two corporations just happen to be facing scrutiny from the Trump administration over various regulatory issues. Trump targeted Wells Fargo in a recent Twitter tantrum, threatening to levy heavy fines against the bank for past wrongdoings. AT&T has also been under recent scrutiny regarding its proposed merger with Time-Warner. In falling over themselves to announce the worker bonuses these corporations are likely hoping that their strategically timed announcements regarding worker bonuses will stroke Trump's pathetic and fragile ego. Additionally, with a tight labor market and unemployment at historic lows, it would make sense for corporations to already be thinking of raising wages due to increased competition to attract qualified workers, regardless of the GOP tax scam.

Missed opportunity for real economic growth in renewable energy

If Republicans really wanted to revamp the U.S. economy there are numerous better options than to gift loads of tax giveaways to corporate donors. One thing the GOP and Trump could do is drop their regressive energy polices aimed at propping up a dying coal industry while at the same time attacking the renewable energy sector. The solar and wind energy industry are among the fastest growing industries in the world today. Renewable energy has the potential to create millions of new jobs, however, instead, the Trump administration is aggressively looking to take actions which would dampen this potential growth.

Coal is a losing bet for America

Propping up the coal industry at the expense of renewable energy is a losing economic strategy for the long-term. It is obvious that the future trajectory of coal energy is downwards towards obsolescence, making the potential for job growth from coal quite limited. If anything there will be limited job gains in coal in 2018, which Trump will try to use as a political talking point when stumping for GOP candidates in the 2018 midterms. However, in the long-term, coal is a losing bet for the American economy and will cede the booming global renewable energy market to rivals such as China.

Trump immigration stance leaves money on the table

Another way which Trump is dampening future U.S. economic power is through his immigration policies. The administration's xenophobic and racist anti-immigration stance is depriving America of the necessary labor, skills and entrepreneurship which could release the untapped potential of the U.S. economy.

Threats of deportation and harassment of immigrant communities, particularly those from Mexico and Central America, has resulted in the worsening of an already-existent labor shortage for home builders. This keeps real estate supply too low to meet demand, which results in skyrocketing housing prices, keeping housing unaffordable for the everyday American consumer. Also, Trump is currently using DACA as a bargaining chip for his promised massive southern border wall. This causes more fear in the immigrant community which in turn keeps many immigrants out of the labor market and discourages others from immigrating to the U.S., further depriving home builders and other employers of much needed cheap labor. Additionally, immigrant entrepreneurs have historically played a critical role in creating jobs in America and therefore policies making it easier for immigrants to come to America should be promoted.

Trump racism will punish the American economy

Instead of breaking up immigrant families, Republicans and Trump could find a way to make America more welcoming for immigrants who will perform the needed work Americans are not willing to do. This increase in economic activity would even go towards funding the more than $1 trillion deficit the GOP tax scam is expected to leave for future generations. However, this would not be politically tenable for Trump who ran his presidential campaign on stoking racism and hatred among his mostly white base.

GOP tax scam reflects Trump narcissism and duplicity

Ultimately, the Trump tax policy is a perfect reflection of Trump as the narcissistic, self-serving liar that he is. The GOP corporate tax giveaway is essentially attempting to bribe the American voters with minimal economic gains which will eventually be paid back in the form of cuts to important social safety nets such as social security or Medicare. Meanwhile, the tax cuts for big corporations will remain permanent at the expense of the American middle class and impoverished communities.

Friday, August 25, 2017

Senate bill holds ground against Trump environment assault

The fossil fuel industry has had serious influence over American politicians for decades. This has not changed with the Trump Administration. In fact, it seems that Trump is even more brazen in his courting of the fossil fuel industry, instead of “draining the swamp” of corporate lobbying as he had promised during his campaign. Trump has been relentlessly undoing every environmental regulation possible, pulled the U.S. out of the Paris climate accord and has invited into his cabinet, with open arms, fossil fuel industry executives and lobbyists. However, Trump's cozying up to the fossil fuel industry and his attacks on the environment have not gone unchallenged.

Bill in Senate challenges fossil fuel industry

Trump's attacks on science and the environment prompted a massive populist response in the form of the March For Science. This worldwide event in April inspired hundreds of thousands to march against Trump's climate science-denying agenda. It also inspired the People's Climate March in late-April which saw more than 150,000 people march on Washington D.C. to protest Trump's attack on Mother Earth. It was during this march on Washington D.C. that Congressman Jared Huffman (D-CA) announced the Keep It in the Ground Act of 2017 (S. 750) which Senator Jeff Merkley (D-OR) introduced in the Senate.

What does the bill propose to do?

The Senate bill, a version of which was originally introduced in the House by Congressman Huffman in February 2016, would seriously slowdown Trump's anti-environment agenda by making it more difficult for the fossil fuel industry to continue exploiting nature for profits. The legislation would immediately ban any new leases of Federal lands for the purposes of extracting coal, oil, gas, oil shale and tar sands. It would also terminate any already-existent non-producing leases for fossil fuel extraction on Federal lands. Additionally, the bill would do the same for offshore drilling in the Pacific Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, the Arctic and the Atlantic.

As of now only a handful of Senators have co-sponsored the Senate bill. Some of those co-sponsors include Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY). Despite current lack of support from lawmakers in the Senate, there is significant grassroots support for the bill, particularly coming from former-Ohio state senator Nina Turner and Our Revolution. However, it will take all of us standing together to protect the environment against Trump. You can join in on the effort by calling your Senators and demanding they take a stand for the planet and support the Keep It In the Ground Act of 2017.

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

The solution to right-wing fake news: college for all

The key to any successful democracy is an informed public. Democracies empower their citizens to influence their government in ways other types of societies, such as dictatorships, do not. However, with this power comes great responsibility. It is imperative that America makes education as accessible as possible to as many people as possible to ensure the public cannot be fooled by conspiracy theories and fake news which played a significant role in the election of Donald Trump.

Conspiracy theories and fake news duped Trump voters

One of the first things one learns in college is how to form logical arguments based upon facts and evidence. Another thing college teaches a person is how to discern credible sources from suspect ones. Unfortunately, the lack of these two abilities allowed many people to fall for far-fetched right-wing conspiracy theories about Hillary Clinton. It also allowed for Trump to spew his nonsense assertions without any evidence, all the while his followers believed every word he said. The problem is so serious and unprecedented that the FBI has decided to investigate possible links between far-right fake news websites, such as Breitbart, and the Trump presidential campaign.

Stop the problem at the root

Although investigating the role of fake news and disinformation in the recent election is essential, it is also important to tackle the root of the problem, which is a lack of knowledge. One bill currently in the the House and Senate aims to address the root of the problem by making sure every American has the right to attend college. The College for All Act of 2017 was first introduced by Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT) in the Senate and then by fellow progressive Representative Jayapal Pramila (D-WA) in the House.

College for everybody

The bill aims to make community colleges tuition free for everybody. It would also make four-year universities free for those students who are from families earning $125,000 or less annually. Also, those who are still living with student debt would be given the ability to refinance their student loans.

How would free college be funded?

Paying for college for all sounds like a challenging task financially, however it is quite doable. The bill would raise funds for the program by charging an investment tax on Wall Street which is already making record profits while everyday Americans are facing stagnant wages and an unaffordable housing market

Who supports college for all?

The only thing left to make college for all a reality is the political will to do so. The proposed legislation has been co-sponsored by seven Democratic Senators, including Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris. The bill has been co-sponsored by 32 Democrats in Congress including Tulsi Gabbard, Ro Khanna and Raul Grijalva. Currently no Republicans have co-sponsored.

If you want to fight against the GOP war on knowledge and right-wing fake news, then you should contact your representatives in Congress and the Senate and demand they support the College for All Act of 2017. This bill could save the American democracy experiment.




Friday, August 18, 2017

Trump immigration policy worsens U.S. housing crisis

Part of the American dream has always been to be able to leave the cycle of constantly paying rent every month through home ownership. However, lately Americans have found this increasingly more difficult to achieve due to the severe housing shortage in the U.S. which is causing real estate prices to skyrocket to price points not affordable for everyday Americans. Unfortunately, President Trump's immigration policies are making the problem worse.

Supply does not meet demand

Currently, there is strong demand for purchasing homes however the supply of homes on the market have been woefully short of meeting this demand. In July, new housing construction starts decreased by 4.8 percent to approximately 1.16 million units which is down from 1.21 million units from the month prior, according to a report released by the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. June had marked 25 consecutive months that inventory had fallen annually, according to HousingWire. There is a shortage of more than 3.2 million homes in the U.S., according to statistics from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) which had been reported by Huffington Post.

As a result, in accordance with simple supply and demand economics, the lack of adequate supply to meet demand is keeping would-be home buyers from being able to own homes. Affordable homes are now routinely sold after just a few days on the market in many regions of the country, according to Huffington Post.

Trump immigration policy causes labor shortage for home builders

One main factor which home builders have cited as significantly contributing to the inability to create more housing supply is the shortage of labor required for construction projects. In a recent NAHB survey home builders cited significant labor shortages in various occupations related to home construction, according to BuilderOnline.com. Many home builders claim Trump's anti-immigration policies are keeping them from being able to obtain the necessary labor which had been previously filled by foreign immigrant workers, according to Nasdaq.com. Ric Campo, the Chairman and CEO of Camden Property Trust, one of the largest real estate investment trusts in the country, recently said in a call with investors that there is a shortage of labor in every market which is causing the cost of land to rise.

This is bad news for the everyday American who is not seeing their wages rise at the rate of overall inflation and definitely not at the rate of skyrocketing home prices. Trump's crackdown on immigration and increased deportation efforts is not only tearing apart immigrant families, but is also making the American dream of owning a home much less attainable for average people in the United States.