Ramonas Voices

Ramonas Voices
Location
Upper Peninsula, Michigan, USA
Birthday
September 17
Title
Writer
Company
Ramona's Voices
Bio
I'm a liberal woman from Michigan's Upper Peninsula, old enough to remember where I was when FDR died. My website, Ramona's Voices, was first published on the afternoon of Barack Obama's Inaugural after hearing his call to service. I include many voices much more eloquent than mine, because one voice isn't enough. Liberal-leaning with humor, except when the days are too dark and the enemy is too strong. Then it's war.

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OCTOBER 10, 2011 2:03PM

It all comes down to this, America: Don't be Cruel

Rate: 9 Flag

 

Another 2.6 million people slipped into poverty in the United States last year, the Census Bureau reported Tuesday, and the number of Americans living below the official poverty line, 46.2 million people, was the highest number in the 52 years the bureau has been publishing figures on it.
And in new signs of distress among the middle class, median household incomes fell last year to levels last seen in 1997. 
 Economists pointed to a telling statistic: It was the first time since the Great Depression that median household income, adjusted for inflation, had not risen over such a long period, said Lawrence Katz, an economics professor at Harvard.
''This is truly a lost decade,'' Mr. Katz said. ''We think of America as a place where every generation is doing better, but we're looking at a period when the median family is in worse shape than it was in the late 1990s.'' 
 The bureau's findings were worse than many economists expected, and brought into sharp relief the toll the past decade -- including the painful declines of the financial crisis and recession --had taken on Americans at the middle and lower parts of the income ladder. It is also fresh evidence that the disappointing economic recovery has done nothing for the country's poorest citizens.
 The report said the percentage of Americans living below the poverty line last year, 15.1 percent, was the highest level since 1993. (The poverty line in 2010 for a family of four was $22,314.)

Sabrina Tavernise, New York Times, September 14, 2011


 When all is said and done, if we can ever get beyond the grand-standing, the bloviating, the harumphing and the chest-pumping, the awful truth is that millions and millions of American citizens are now among the chronically hurt because of the current no-fault-of-their-own economic crisis, exacerbated by the current we'll blame them anyway political climate.

Families are hurting.  Our elders are hurting. Children are hurting.  Future generations will be hurting.  We've let yesterday slip by and tomorrow shows no great promise.  The time to do something is now.

Everybody knows that something must be done, but what keeps the wheels from turning, from moving us forward, is an ongoing, time-wasting argument about how best to appear to be saving the country while saving face, saving precious personal skins, saving the privileged elite.

There is no point wasting time talking about past history -- a couple of centuries worth of the same mistakes, the same indulgences at the top, the same misery at the bottom -- when nobody is in the mood to learn from it.


 We have now become one of those countries known throughout the world for deliberate cruelty to its own citizens -- the kind of despised country whose citizens we ourselves would have taken pity on not so long ago.

It's cruel to pretend that, while it may be true that unprecedented numbers of America's children have experienced hunger or homelessness, or a desperate, unrequited need for health care, no single sweet child of ours is affected.  We're masters at shutting our eyes to real, live, scared and suffering kids.

It's cruel to play games with needed unemployment benefits by pretending they're one more example of undeserved governmental handouts to the lazy or misbehaving.

It's cruel to humiliate the jobless even more by pretending that anyone without a job isn't looking hard enough.

It's cruel to pretend that outsourcing and off-shoring have nothing to do with the loss of millions of life-sustaining jobs.

It's cruel to pretend that workers don't need or deserve representation when the need is so much greater now.

It's cruel for the richest country in the world to give private insurance companies the power to deny anyone health care and pretend that people aren't dying because of it.

It's cruel to allow profiteers to attempt to kill off one major historic source of national pride -- public education for every child without regard to race, creed, or income level -- and pretend that a) the public schools did it to themselves and b) no child is being left behind because of our negligence.

It's cruel to divert our national treasure, including and especially our young men and women, to foreign wars that don't concern us or affect us nearly as much as our own at-home social and economic wars.

 But the cruelest reminder is that we almost had it in our grasp -- a fair and prosperous country we could be proud of -- and we let it slip away.



 There's no pretending it didn't happen.  There are enough of us still around who remember a different country, where it looked as if the American Dream would actually become a major possibility.  It was taken away from us, not by happenstance but by the mean and deliberate actions of politicians and power brokers.

You can say it a million different ways, but what it comes down to is cruelty by a thousand cuts. There was a time when we all would have fought against that sort of thing. 

I'll say it again: This is some strange new century...

(Cross-posted at Ramona's Voices and at Dagblog)

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Our gvt and our corporate elite is absolutely, 100 percent, undeniably, DELIBERATELY CRUEL to our citizens. Indeed. They don't even seem to like us. It seems, at times, that our financial and political elite actually despise the common people of our country. WTF
Yet we elect those people. Politicians can even campaign on a "destroy the government" platform and win. How is that possible? If they're elected, aren't they then "the government"? Do we pay them to do the government's business or to kill "common good" programs?
Some voters' priorities are so skewed you have to wonder if they understand what it means to be a citizen of our country.
the constitution bars cruel and unusual punishment, but bush succesfully overruled that. Torture. so, its not so different in the economic realm. in fact its exactly parallel.


"It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it!"
--sinclair louis

"One withstands the invasion of armies; one does not withstand the invasion of ideas."
--victor hugo

occupy wall street, my speech to the masses
Thanks for commenting, vzn. I went to your blog and read your post to the Occupy crowd. Very good, and the links you've shared are invaluable. Thank you for that, too!
Thank you, reinvented. (Love that name!)
Yes. Love every word. The 1% are bullies.
Well said. Check out my blog on the GOP that wants your votes but not for your benefit. I'm a little strident in that post, to be sure, but I was feeling pretty depressed and angry when I wrote it.
Amen! The often-jeering cruelty is alarming, but it goes way back in American history. It's an old strain of "you get exactly what you deserve." I suspect it has its oriigins in the Calvinist belief in splitting the human race into two groups: the saved and the damned. "Worldly success is the sign of Inner Grace," and it proves you are one of the Elect. Rated.
Thank you all. I've thought for a long time that what's happening in this country is just plain meanness, but at the same time I tried to make some sense out of it that went beyond that. I didn't want to believe that we were electing politicians who so misunderstood their role in Washington they couldn't see the misery they were causing.

Now I think if we throw the charge of cruelty in their faces, it may just wake a few of them up. Or not. We'll see how the Occupy rallies affect them. I'm hoping the protests will grow so huge and extend so far, they just can't be ignored.
It seems that despite so many advancements and such political correctness, our country is cruel and getting crueler. I guess I see that cruelty due to having acess to the internet and seeing others reactions to the poor and out of luck. The apathy in response is depressing. Great article.
Brilliant piece, and painful to acknowledge the truth of what our country has become. I do remember better times. Rated.
This is brilliant and well-written. I haven't seen anything lately that says it better. And your links are great too.