Monday, September 17, 2012

It Doesn't Trickle Down

18 September 2012

As more and more Americans
  lose their homes, their livelihoods,
  the ability to feed, cloth and protect their children,
  we are starting
  to understand something
  the poor among us
  have long known...

It Doesn't Trickle Down.

If we, the 99%, are to stop the war
  the wealthy have waged against us,
  we must understand our own
  contribution to their war chest.

We must disarm
  the wealthy
  of the weapons
  we give them.

One important strategy
  of disarmament
  is to understand
  the lies we have accepted
  as reality,
  and to understand how those lies
  were embedded
  into our psyches.

I want to tell a story,
  but first I want to pose
  some questions for us all
  to ponder.

Why are unemployed poor people perceived as reprehensible even though national economic policies that sustain involuntary unemployment are not seen as blameworthy?

Why are the unemployed poor held in disdain while the unemployed wealthy are celebrated?  To help answer this question, you might survey the number of TV shows that exult Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.

Why are the poor who receive welfare accused of dependency and deviancy while those not labeled as such enjoy welfare free from public disclosure and judgment, e.g., students who receive public financial aide, homeowners who receive tax breaks, corporations that don't pay taxes and do receive subsidies, civil servants who receive pay for unproductive work and workers employed by military bases kept open exclusively for employment purposes?

I assert that these beliefs were

  intentionally created
  by those who
  were called 'Robber Barons'

  to divert our attention
  while they plundered
  our lives and our nation.

These beliefs are now sustained
  by modern day Robber Barons
  and we who continue to believe,
  and hence, perpetuate the story.

So, here is the story,
  only know this...
  It is not a parable or an invention of my mind.
  It is a rendering of our own history
  in these United States.

It is the story of the
  social construction of what we believe to be reality.

Even as our unwitting belief in this story
  reinforces the endeavors of the wealthy
  to continue, unabated, in their destruction
  of our economy,

so, our considered understanding
  of this story,
  and our commitment to NOT
  play a part in its continuance,
  will take back two very powerful
  weapons the wealthy use against us...

namely, our ability to think for ourselves,
  and to create our own reality.

The Past Unveils the Present

This story is one wherein the destinies of two disparate groups, i.e., capitalists and poor, are interwoven into a robust and resilient fabric.  The fabric’s strength is realized through a reiterative and self-reinforcing process dating back to antiquity.  This cycle includes attitudes and biases, the appropriation of those attitudes for purpose, the institutionalization of both, and the expansion of the attitudes.  Herein, the cycle is first observed at a critical juncture in its American evolution, i.e., the advent of Social Darwinism, and secondly in its contemporary form.  The juxtaposition illustrates the force and seeming intractability of the cycle and demonstrates the challenges faced by policies that run contrary to it.

Ingram and Schneider (1993) identify various socially constructed groups, characteristics accorded them and consequent implications for them as recipients of public welfare.  One group, “advantaged”, is perceived as “…deserving, virtuous, respectable, attractive or likeable” (p. 73).  Another, “dependents”, is construed as deficient in capacity, e.g., skills and knowledge, or character, e.g., discipline and will.  Yet another, “deviants”, is portrayed as immoral, debauched and undeserving.  Accordingly, the advantaged are the primary beneficiaries of public welfare, followed at a marked distance by the dependents.  Deviants, on the other hand, are routinely excluded from public benefits, sanctioned and punished.  History has bestowed advantaged status on capitalists and relegated dependent and deviant status to the poor.

Dropping in now on the chapter entitled Social Darwinism in America, i.e., the early 1800’s, income disparities were widening, a handful of capitalists were becoming exceedingly rich while many lived in destitution.  Darwin’s precepts regarding natural order were correlated to the human condition by such men as Herbert Spencer and William Sumner, James Hill, John Rockefeller and Andrew Carnegie (Hofstadter, R., 1992).  Having established the basis that humans were variously endowed, social Darwinists then saw fit to apply the notions to the economic situation.

They created the story that competition of the market place was the setting for a human enactment of the survival of the fittest.  The struggle to survive was won through the accumulation of capital.  Where strength ensured survival in nature, human virtue ensured survival in the market.

This association proved highly fortuitous for capitalists, whose extraordinary wealth was becoming difficult to defend in a country defined by equal opportunity and democracy.  Not only did they declare that they were the fittest, they claimed they had “…superior ability, foresight and adaptability…” which enabled their remarkable success (Hofstadter, p. 45).  These self-made men were, in the truest sense, self-made.

But what of the destitute?  This story becomes complete only through the elucidation of its entire cast, and the poor are critical, if not active, actors.  On the conundrum of poverty amid growing wealth, Social Darwinism came to the rescue.  Social Darwinism claimed that business competition was natural law, and as such was inviolate.  If individuals were disadvantaged as the market’s natural process unfolded, it was a necessary and allowable, if not saddening, consequence.   In fact, they asserted, all individuals, through diligence and thrift, could achieve pecuniary success.  So, they encouraged patience, hard work and persistence.

Some, however, were not quite so magnanimous in their evaluation of the poor.  Survival of the fittest required inequalities and as such negated equality and natural rights.  These people asserted that there was a reason for the natural selection of the poor out of the market, i.e., deviant individual characteristics.  “They, the poor, are unfit and should be eliminated.  The whole effort of nature is to get rid of such, to clear the world of them, and make room for better.  If they are sufficiently complete to live, they do live, and it is well that they should live.  If they are not sufficiently complete to live, they die, and it is best that they should die.” (Spencer, 1850, cited in Hofstadter, 1992).

Ingram and Schneider (1993) claim that the social constructs of advantaged and deviants have reified in American society.  Certainly, this assertion bears out in the case of capitalists and poor.  A mantra embedded into the public psyche is that investing in the rich is paramount for achieving national objectives.  Hence, their interests, being synonymous with the public interest, are endowed with noble repute.  Their motives are beyond doubt, their advantages undisputed, their acceptance of public welfare necessary.
Other mantras are reserved for American poor (Gans, 1995).  They are morally deficient.  They are lazy, freeloaders and contemptuous of society.  They are the underclass, under all other classes, and as such, outside society.  They, therefore, are undeserving.  “…indigence is produced not by the social or economic system, but by the deviance of the poor.  The necessary punishment for deviance is poverty” (Backer, 1993).

A whole discourse of illogic has been developed around the poor.  The characteristics, so long reinforced, have reified and transformed into the casual mechanisms of poverty, i.e., the victims have morphed into the perpetrators (Gans, 1995).  Now, the mantras proclaimed by many are that moral deficiency generates poverty, laziness causes unemployment, welfare recipients create poverty. 

In this way, the social constructs have obfuscated the true causes of poverty, and worse, created a political climate in which the poor can safely be punished for the ills others perceive them to bear upon society.  Examples of anti-poor sentiment encased in public policy discourse include desexing and segregation recommendations in 1912; sterilization, unabated in some states till the 1970s; and Spiro Agnew’s strategy of isolating the poor in rural towns in 1974.  To these are added those policies that capitalized on the plight of the poor for the advantage of others, namely the 1949 U.S. Housing Act, and those that aim to end welfare by systematically moving people out of the system, i.e., The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996.

It is not surprising then that such oxymorons as these exist: 1) unemployed poor people are perceived as reprehensible, even though involuntary unemployment sustained by economic policies are not seen as blameworthy; 2) the unemployed poor are held in disdain while the unemployed wealthy are celebrated; 3) the poor receiving welfare are accused of dependency and deviancy while those not labeled as such enjoy welfare free from public disclosure and judgment, e.g., students receiving public financial aide, homeowners receiving tax breaks, corporations receiving tax breaks and subsidies, civil servants receiving pay for unproductive work and workers employed by military bases kept open exclusively for employment purposes.

Friday, September 14, 2012

David & Goliath: The People & Walmart

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EiNwIK9t1Lw&feature=player_embedded&ytsession=rpFduG5sOJ570DcRXYtT8IZD1UnTrgWxeo25VaLOw4MB6h93t9hv-bANHDZrqWR0q_W5NdXZU9V3TOtmrhtc6XSScEabo9XaT2kNg_MqfA_mOxer6zFaX1uffQv6wdLI_nJ7D4R1t7aYQGozH-Y4VIL5lO7GC0eyzk2DEMzLawah7o-gHrjdvsqERwLiKWkYBuhbGTI7PFw8gOM0XTi0ZJ5D4pnJNLAh9ERE09VwCoY

This video is just the tip of the iceberg.
  It describes the horrible working conditions
  of people who work for Walmart, and
  the abusive treatment they endure every day.

When you watch this video, I encourage you -
  don't see the color of their skin or their language
  or the country in which they live.

Focusing on our differences is divisive,
  hurtful to all of us, and worse -
  it gives today's robber barons more power
  to continue stealing from us and
  mutilating our economies and societies.

Please - just focus on what these people -
  our brothers and sisters -
  are sharing about their experience.

And, if you are stirred by their stories,
  take action - sign the letter,
  stop shopping at Walmart,
  tell others,
  learn more about the insidious and deceitful strategies
  Walmart uses to make a profit off of all of us.

There is another video from which you can learn even more.
  It's called, 'Walmart: The High Cost of Low Prices'.
  URL http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3836296181471292925

We are David.
  Monoliths like Walmart are Goliath.
  All of us who know this story
  know that David defeated Goliath.

However, none of us has the money or power
  to fight these marauding giants alone.

We must stand together.
  In our union, we are strong.
  Standing hand in hand, we can win this war
  of the 1% against the rest of us.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

A new blog Kristen Magis Spirit Walk

I have decided to start a new blog.  In this new blog, I will share poetry and prose about my walk in this life as a spirit embodied, and with spirit.  The URL is KristeneMagisSpiritWalk.blogspot.com
Please note the 'e' after my first name.  It's a typo and I'm not tech savy enough to figure out how to fix it/1
I will continue this blog as well.
I hope to see you all in both spaces!
my best
Kristen

Breaking the Chains of Consumerism

Standing in the middle of the square,
I can’t hold it in anymore…

Wake up!  Wake up!’ I shout.

See the marionettes into which we have been made!
See the avarice -
etched in our psyches,
protected in our constitution,
mutated into an insatiable desire for
more!

What is the difference, say you, between
avarice and greed?

And what of want and need?

Can we tell the difference?

Or have our minds been so profoundly shaped
by this structured consumer economy
that we can no longer see
that this economy,
in fact,
is
intentionally structured, engineered?

That we, and our desire to buy,
are the products of the craft and guile
of those who have and want ever more?

Sustenance
an alternative to insatiable desire.

Learning to recognize the difference
between want and need;

Striving to break the chains
of the toxic addiction to buy, to own, to desire.

Endeavoring to feel, once again,
immense gratitude
for having enough
food, clean water, shelter,
love.

Sustenance

Thankfulness for the opportunity
to love, to share, to build community,
to be, simply,
the extraordinary beings we were created to be.

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Maiden in Shining White Armor

She leaned against the window ledge,
  stars dancing in her eyes,
  a slight smile warming her face.

But, she did not see the flowering tree
  at her window.

She was far away
  in a dream induced by the now familiar
  theme of the Disney movie...

She was a beautiful maiden,
  flowers in her hair,
  a sparkling satin gown
  wrapping her flawless body.

A knight stood on her doorstep,
  handsome and tall,
  his countenance exuding a cool
  self-assurance that all enemies
  would quickly be vanquished.

'Hello Anne.'
'Anne?  Uhhh, hello?'

'What is that annoying voice?' she wondered.

Confused, she gazed at her knight
  and slowly realized he wasn't wearing
  shining white armor.
  He wasn't tall and handsome and gallant.
  And the irritating voice was his.

'Uhhh, hi Anne,' he said.
'Is your sister home?'

Relieved that this fake knight
  did not come for her, but for
  her unfortunate sister, Anne
  ushered him forth.

Returning to her windowsill,
  she once again fell into the dream
  of how she would meet her knight
  and he would sweep her away,
  rescuing her from all harm,
  caring for all her needs
  and loving her every day for the rest
  of her life...

'Anne!  Are you listening?'
'You're on the blue team.  Get over there!'

Feeling awkward in her new ugly uniform,
  Anne trotted over to her teammates, such as they were.
  Girls only.
  'Girls can't play sports,' she thought with disdain.
  'What am I doing out here?  I could be trying
  on that new dress.  I bet Micha would notice me then!'

'Can you please tell the class your answer to this math question, Anne?'
'Ummm, I don't get it teacher', she whispered,
  wishing she could sink into her desk,
  never to be seen again.

'Anyone knows girls aren't good at math,' she thought
  in her own defense.
  'Why does he have to pick on me like that?  He could
  just ask one of the boys.  They know the answer.'

The school dances, the football games, lunches,
  parties...
  they all were about finding her knight.
  She knew he was out there.
  She had dreamed of him her entire life.

Now, after 18 years she was realizing
  that he was not at this school, and
  had hopes that he would be found at college.

He would be more mature than these high school boys.
  He'd have a career and be ready to make good money.
  'And, we'll marry...just like it's supposed to be,' she cooed.

And then she found a career path, quite by accident really,
  as her real reason for going to college was to find her man.
  But, she stumbled upon this career path.

She became interested in school, was elated
  to see she could get good grades in difficult subjects,
  could, for the first time in her life, see herself
  doing something important,
  being successful,
  caring for herself.

Such a thought that was...
  that she could actually care for herself?!

'Dad!', she called on her trip home.
  'Dad!  Guess what?!  I am going to have a career!'

'My daughter.  How I love you' her father smiled.
  I am happy you are getting skills in college.
  You may need to use them if something ever happens
  to your husband.'

Stunned by her father's words,
  and his complete lack of faith in her,
  Anne's newfound sense of self and confidence
  faltered.  If her own father didn't believe in her,
  who would?

'I'm just fooling myself,' she thought.
  'I can't do it.  He's right.  I need help.'

A lifetime later,
marriage, children...

Anne leaned against the windowsill.
  There never was a Knight in Shining White Armor.
  She knew that now.

And despite caring for her children and her self
  for so many years,
  she still felt the chilling fear
  of not being able to care for herself.

She found herself,
  still, waiting to be rescued,
  still, not believing in her self,
  still, frightened about her uncertain future...

And then one day,
  she looked around.
  Seeing no one but herself,
  she finally, finally after all these years,
  realized that it was she who must wear the armor,
  she who must rescue herself,
  and she who must create a future for herself.

The story had been told all wrong.
  It was not the story of the Knight in Shining White Armor
  saving the beautiful Maiden.

It was the story of the Maiden earning the Shining White Armor
  by courageously facing life
  with whatever she had at her command,
  despite her fears and her self-doubt
  and her falllibilities.

The story was about her finding forgiveness
  for all those who taught her that she
  was incapable and insufficient and forever needy.

It was about trying to instill in her own daughter
  a sense of self-worth and self-love and self-belief
  that could fortify her during all her life's pursuits.

It was about assuring her sons
  that they did not have to single-handedly bear the burden
  of providing in life;
  that they could lay down the oppressive armor;
  that the women in their lives (including their daughters)
  didn't need rescuing,
  could be valuable partners,
  could help make a life.

And, it was about suggesting to her children that
  they might even bury the Shining White Armor,
  and just allow themselves and their own children
  to blossom into the beings
  they were supposed to be.