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A Dog Named Buff (This is not a musing about a general topic like the others)

A Dog Named Buff (This is not a musing about a general topic like the others) The article about the dog who waited by the highway mont...

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

The Near Term Employment Situation in the U.S.


The Near Term Employment Situation in the U.S.


Employment and the health care situation in the U.S. are ticking time bombs for our society. Politicians, by nature, are seldom honest about the economic status of the poor. Employment figures have never matched the reality of nation-wide  prosperity. They don’t even count those people who have given up trying to get a job. Common sense dictates they are unemployed.

I measure the success of any government based on how successful that government is to enable the maximum number of its citizens to achieve the maximum degree of contentment with their lives. The form of government is irrelevant, although I favor capitalism with adequate regulation and limits. The economic welfare of all citizens comes before the self serving interests of those for whom enough money is never enough. It would be hard to convince me that any form of government should actually permit 3 individuals to own as much of the nation’s wealth as the bottom half of all its citizens. That is irresponsible government.

If full employment is the proper measure of economic prosperity then the blacks in the south, before the Civil War, were drowning in the prosperity of full employment. The only employment figure that really counts is what percentage of people holding full time jobs are being paid a living wage.  The purpose of inventing machines which can do the labor people used to do, is to reduce the number of hours people need work. Before the industrial revolution even kids often worked 60-70 hours of labor/wk. The industrial revolution worked well at first. It became illegal to work kids like that, and adults themselves found their work hours heading south. It was no longer necessary for citizens to work so many hours to get the needed work done. Machines of some sort were a blessed relief. So full time work hours kept getting reduced and the pay for less hours of work was a livable wage. When I was young even the poor, working a full time job, could earn a living wage. They didn’t need to work two jobs or go on welfare for the most part. 

Today, unemployment figures are down and this is supposed to demonstrate a better economic status for the poor.  It does no such thing. Unemployment figures tell us little about the economic situation of the 43% (and rising) of our adult population who don’t even make enough money to be eligible to pay any federal income tax. At the other end, even Amazon is not required to pay any income tax, nor apparently is our President. Here is how some states now deal with their poor:  For them to collect any welfare they must often work full time at a job which does not pay a living wage. Then, the govt will give them limited welfare so they can survive, but of course still make so little they are not required to pay federal income taxes. Politicians can then boast that they have brought about prosperity for almost everybody via full employment. Few, if any, of these ‘prosperous’ workers, are remotely satisfied with their lives.  It’s a scam. 

The last election demonstrated just how dissatisfied with their lives so many Americans were with their lives. With all the things machines of various sorts can now do, why is the work week frozen at 40hrs a week for a full time job? Why do so many countries manage to provide all workers with living wages, sometimes guaranteed 6 weeks vacation for all, good health care for all (at least better than the health care for the poor in the U.S.), good schools. good teachers, and job opportunities for far more people than in the U.S.? These are the 26 countries whose ‘happiness index’ is better than the happiness index for United States citizens.  

When most everyone can find work paying living wages, and these jobs are full-time at let’s say 30 hrs per week, then more jobs are available, practically everyone earns enough to pay federal income taxes,  millions of workers can now spend money to buy more ‘things’, and with good health care, health care costs go down as people need less medical intervention, the existence of our rural, urban, and suburban ‘ghettoes’  will begin to shrink as more and people flee these ghettoes, while the happiness index in the United States would not be way down in 26th place. 

The contentment level of our citizens is not measured accurately by current unemployment numbers. The average young person today is expected to have over 30 different jobs in their life time. This is due in no small part by the bottom line. A new employee might do a great job and get decent pay raises but after a few years it is cheaper to bring in a new person at an entry level salary. This economic insecurity is one reason marriage numbers are down. Many young people can afford right now to raise a family but they are nervous what their situation will be a few years from now. When most people have jobs which pay a living wage, welfare costs go down at an exponential rate while at the same time income tax collections go up at an exponential rate. That’s a good thing. 

If just a portion of all this is true, why does the United States continue with its current economic policies?  Right now all three parts of our political system are controlled by the 2-5% of citizens who own 90% of our wealth—Congress, the Presidency, and the Supreme Court. Where would members of Congress get the many millions of dollars to run a campaign for office without support from the wealthy? And the members of Congress decide who gets onto the Supreme Court. Both Presidential candidates get lot’s of money to run for office and on paper the 2-5% supporting one candidate would be opposed by the other 95-98% of the citizens. But at most, only 60% vote. Then the 2-5% prey on the prejudices of common citizens combined with agreeing to the right wing religious fundamentalists to support laws which would attempt to force everyone to follow certain religious beliefs of the fundamentalists. The fundamentalists could not be more firm in their own religious beliefs—to the extent they would actually vote for someone whose words, behaviors, and willingness to stiff others in order to amass great material wealth is actually tolerated as long as that person promises to support some of their religious beliefs becoming law of the land. No one ever mistakes the words, behavior, lifestyle, and values of our current President with Jesus Christ or any of the other prophets from that era. 

When Teddy Roosevelt put a 90% tax rate on the wealthy along with a hefty inheritance tax with few loopholes, the rich didn’t disappear at all, just their absurd wealth was reduced to more sane levels. And what followed was an extended period of time in which all economic levels in American society improved. The rich still had their millions, and all other people had more prosperous lives with more money to spend. I don’t know what the happiness index was back then but I would bet we were probably in first place. 

We have managed to turn a good thing (machines doing a lot of the work humans once had to do)—which enabled shorter work weeks, longer vacation periods, and maximized the number of citizens who were obtaining more contentment in their lives than ever before—into a bad thing by letting the  full time work week stay frozen at 40 hrs/wk. Americans still can’t accept that capitalism only works if there are required regulations and limits. There is no reason to do away with capitalism but every reason for any government, regardless of form, to prevent too much of a nation’s wealth to accumulate at the very top, and ensure all citizens have good health care, good schools, good teachers, a safe environment is which to spend their formative years, good job opportunities for all citizens, including teenagers. 

If any country wants to measure just how contented their citizens, as a whole, are—that country simply needs to pay attention to heroin addiction levels. People only use heroin when they suffer from a lot of physical, emotional, or mental pain. When their lives improve their heroin habit disappears.  Science knows this, but improving people’s lives is a tough task, so we still blame the heroin addicts for their need to take heroin. Our drugs wars, carried out by politicians and police have still got us all seeing the problem in the wrong light. It is outrageous that lab synthesized drugs which are chemically different than heroin, are included as heroin drugs even though they are medically dangerous and have different chemical make-ups. The only way to kill ourselves with legitimate heroin is to combine heroin in the body at the same time as alcohol or other depressants. The government politicians and police still delight in calling such a death an heroin overdose death. Nothing could be more disingenuous. At any rate, if any country wants to reduce heroin use they will need find ways to make the lives of their citizens more economically contented. Otherwise ‘heroin deaths’ and use will continue. Just telling people to stop using a drug which makes their lives less stressful, or lying as to what causes overdose deaths (lab synthetic drugs which are not heroin and not referring to these actual heroin drug deaths as heroin/alcohol combination deaths—is no solution at all. 

 No nation can long survive when the distribution of its wealth gets so far out of whack. 

So many things right now just seem hopeless.  And just to complete the circuit of citizen idiocy, the older population refuses to change policies and priorities, yet at the same time acknowledge that things are getting real bad by shrugging their shoulder’s and in a clear self serving way point out that “I will be dead soon so why should I really care?” 

To top it all off, all economic and environmental issues are now global. No country can solve any of these global issues by themselves and yet patriotic national pride blocks any hope of global solutions. Perhaps America citizens should face reality. All our insane expenditures on military matters (including over 800 military bases scattered all over the world, which far exceed the sum total of such expenditures of the other major industrialized nations put together. Yet with all this military strength the United Sates, after World War II, has not won any of the endless (Like over 50) invasions, support for rebels to overthrow their own government, etc since we lost in Vietnam. Unless we are willing to use weapons of mass destruction including atomic bombs, we cannot win battles where the enemy is not in uniforms, and cannot sustain territory captured temporarily by our superior weaponry. Over time with the invading countryside stripped of all it’s infrastructure, local communities become controlled by local thugs, massive unemployment becomes reality, along with disease, and starvation—we then declare victory and repeat the same sequence of events at another place, another time. A high percentage of the 2-4% are deeply invested in our huge military/industrial complex and these endless military adventures are needed to please their endless need for more and more wealth regardless of what this does to the rest of our population or how many of our soldiers or citizens of another nation die.

Worse, we are creating the same sort of conditions in our own country that we have helped create in those countries we have militarily attacked or provided military support for rebels in various nations. It is likely, sooner than later, that the next Vietnamese War will be conducted right within our own country. If we could not beat the Vietnamese poor in their own country how do we really expect to beat the vast majority of our own citizens who own less wealth as a group than 2-5% of the people who own 90% of our wealth? At no time in history have the ‘have-nots’ lost when they rioted against the ‘haves’  when the ‘haves’  have garnered that much of a nation’s national wealth. “I see” said the blind public as they picked up their hammer and saw.”

We cannot afford to provide good care for all our citizens only because we fail to stop the 2-5% of our citizens from owning 90% of  our nation’s wealth. Pitiful is not a strong enough word. 

Employment and the health care situation in the U.S. are ticking time bombs for our society. Politicians, by nature, are seldom honest about the economic status of the poor. Employment figures have never matched the reality of nation-wide  prosperity. They don’t even count those people who have given up trying to get a job. Common sense dictates they are unemployed.

I measure the success of any government based on how successful that government is to enable the maximum number of its citizens to achieve the maximum degree of contentment with their lives. The form of government is irrelevant, although I favor capitalism with adequate regulation and limits. The economic welfare of all citizens comes before the self serving interests of those for whom enough money is never enough. It would be hard to convince me that any form of government should actually permit 3 individuals to own as much of the nation’s wealth as the bottom half of all its citizens. That is irresponsible government.

If full employment is the proper measure of economic prosperity then the blacks in the south, before the Civil War, were drowning in the prosperity of full employment. The only employment figure that really counts is what percentage of people holding full time jobs are being paid a living wage.  The purpose of inventing machines which can do the labor people used to do, is to reduce the number of hours people need work. Before the industrial revolution even kids often worked 60-70 hours of labor/wk. The industrial revolution worked well at first. It became illegal to work kids like that, and adults themselves found their work hours heading south. It was no longer necessary for citizens to work so many hours to get the needed work done. Machines of some sort were a blessed relief. So full time work hours kept getting reduced and the pay for less hours of work was a livable wage. When I was young even the poor, working a full time job, could earn a living wage. They didn’t need to work two jobs or go on welfare for the most part. 

Today, unemployment figures are down and this is supposed to demonstrate a better economic status for the poor.  It does no such thing. Unemployment figures tell us little about the economic situation of the 43% (and rising) of our adult population who don’t even make enough money to be eligible to pay any federal income tax. At the other end, even Amazon is not required to pay any income tax, nor apparently is our President. Here is how some states now deal with their poor:  For them to collect any welfare they must often work full time at a job which does not pay a living wage. Then, the govt will give them limited welfare so they can survive, but of course still make so little they are not required to pay federal income taxes. Politicians can then boast that they have brought about prosperity for almost everybody via full employment. Few, if any, of these ‘prosperous’ workers, are remotely satisfied with their lives.  It’s a scam. 

The last election demonstrated just how dissatisfied with their lives so many Americans were with their lives. With all the things machines of various sorts can now do, why is the work week frozen at 40hrs a week for a full time job? Why do so many countries manage to provide all workers with living wages, sometimes guaranteed 6 weeks vacation for all, good health care for all (at least better than the health care for the poor in the U.S.), good schools. good teachers, and job opportunities for far more people than in the U.S.? These are the 26 countries whose ‘happiness index’ is better than the happiness index for United States citizens.  

When most everyone can find work paying living wages, and these jobs are full-time at let’s say 30 hrs per week, then more jobs are available, practically everyone earns enough to pay federal income taxes,  millions of workers can now spend money to buy more ‘things’, and with good health care, health care costs go down as people need less medical intervention, the existence of our rural, urban, and suburban ‘ghettoes’  will begin to shrink as more and people flee these ghettoes, while the happiness index in the United States would not be way down in 26th place. 

The contentment level of our citizens is not measured accurately by current unemployment numbers. The average young person today is expected to have over 30 different jobs in their life time. This is due in no small part by the bottom line. A new employee might do a great job and get decent pay raises but after a few years it is cheaper to bring in a new person at an entry level salary. This economic insecurity is one reason marriage numbers are down. Many young people can afford right now to raise a family but they are nervous what their situation will be a few years from now. When most people have jobs which pay a living wage, welfare costs go down at an exponential rate while at the same time income tax collections go up at an exponential rate. That’s a good thing. 

If just a portion of all this is true, why does the United States continue with its current economic policies?  Right now all three parts of our political system are controlled by the 2-5% of citizens who own 90% of our wealth—Congress, the Presidency, and the Supreme Court. Where would members of Congress get the many millions of dollars to run a campaign for office without support from the wealthy? And the members of Congress decide who gets onto the Supreme Court. Both Presidential candidates get lot’s of money to run for office and on paper the 2-5% supporting one candidate would be opposed by the other 95-98% of the citizens. But at most, only 60% vote. Then the 2-5% prey on the prejudices of common citizens combined with agreeing to the right wing religious fundamentalists to support laws which would attempt to force everyone to follow certain religious beliefs of the fundamentalists. The fundamentalists could not be more firm in their own religious beliefs—to the extent they would actually vote for someone whose words, behaviors, and willingness to stiff others in order to amass great material wealth is actually tolerated as long as that person promises to support some of their religious beliefs becoming law of the land. No one ever mistakes the words, behavior, lifestyle, and values of our current President with Jesus Christ or any of the other prophets from that era. 

When Teddy Roosevelt put a 90% tax rate on the wealthy along with a hefty inheritance tax with few loopholes, the rich didn’t disappear at all, just their absurd wealth was reduced to more sane levels. And what followed was an extended period of time in which all economic levels in American society improved. The rich still had their millions, and all other people had more prosperous lives with more money to spend. I don’t know what the happiness index was back then but I would bet we were probably in first place. 

We have managed to turn a good thing (machines doing a lot of the work humans once had to do)—which enabled shorter work weeks, longer vacation periods, and maximized the number of citizens who were obtaining more contentment in their lives than ever before—into a bad thing by letting the  full time work week stay frozen at 40 hrs/wk. Americans still can’t accept that capitalism only works if there are required regulations and limits. There is no reason to do away with capitalism but every reason for any government, regardless of form, to prevent too much of a nation’s wealth to accumulate at the very top, and ensure all citizens have good health care, good schools, good teachers, a safe environment is which to spend their formative years, good job opportunities for all citizens, including teenagers. 

If any country wants to measure just how contented their citizens, as a whole, are—that country simply needs to pay attention to heroin addiction levels. People only use heroin when they suffer from a lot of physical, emotional, or mental pain. When their lives improve their heroin habit disappears.  Science knows this, but improving people’s lives is a tough task, so we still blame the heroin addicts for their need to take heroin. Our drugs wars, carried out by politicians and police have still got us all seeing the problem in the wrong light. It is outrageous that lab synthesized drugs which are chemically different than heroin, are included as heroin drugs even though they are medically dangerous and have different chemical make-ups. The only way to kill ourselves with legitimate heroin is to combine heroin in the body at the same time as alcohol or other depressants. The government politicians and police still delight in calling such a death an heroin overdose death. Nothing could be more disingenuous. At any rate, if any country wants to reduce heroin use they will need find ways to make the lives of their citizens more economically contented. Otherwise ‘heroin deaths’ and use will continue. Just telling people to stop using a drug which makes their lives less stressful, or lying as to what causes overdose deaths (lab synthetic drugs which are not heroin and not referring to these actual heroin drug deaths as heroin/alcohol combination deaths—is no solution at all. 

 No nation can long survive when the distribution of its wealth gets so far out of whack. 

So many things right now just seem hopeless.  And just to complete the circuit of citizen idiocy, the older population refuses to change policies and priorities, yet at the same time acknowledge that things are getting real bad by shrugging their shoulder’s and in a clear self serving way point out that “I will be dead soon so why should I really care?” 

To top it all off, all economic and environmental issues are now global. No country can solve any of these global issues by themselves and yet patriotic national pride blocks any hope of global solutions. Perhaps America citizens should face reality. All our insane expenditures on military matters (including over 800 military bases scattered all over the world, which far exceed the sum total of such expenditures of the other major industrialized nations put together. Yet with all this military strength the United Sates, after World War II, has not won any of the endless (Like over 50) invasions, support for rebels to overthrow their own government, etc since we lost in Vietnam. Unless we are willing to use weapons of mass destruction including atomic bombs, we cannot win battles where the enemy is not in uniforms, and cannot sustain territory captured temporarily by our superior weaponry. Over time with the invading countryside stripped of all it’s infrastructure, local communities become controlled by local thugs, massive unemployment becomes reality, along with disease, and starvation—we then declare victory and repeat the same sequence of events at another place, another time. A high percentage of the 2-4% are deeply invested in our huge military/industrial complex and these endless military adventures are needed to please their endless need for more and more wealth regardless of what this does to the rest of our population or how many of our soldiers or citizens of another nation die.

Worse, we are creating the same sort of conditions in our own country that we have helped create in those countries we have militarily attacked or provided military support for rebels in various nations. It is likely, sooner than later, that the next Vietnamese War will be conducted right within our own country. If we could not beat the Vietnamese poor in their own country how do we really expect to beat the vast majority of our own citizens who own less wealth as a group than 2-5% of the people who own 90% of our wealth? At no time in history have the ‘have-nots’ lost when they rioted against the ‘haves’  when the ‘haves’  have garnered that much of a nation’s national wealth. “I see” said the blind public as they picked up their hammer and saw.”

We cannot afford to provide good care for all our citizens only because we fail to stop the 2-5% of our citizens from owning 90% of  our nation’s wealth. Pitiful is not a strong enough word. 

Saturday, April 6, 2019

The Near-term Health Care Situation in the U.S.



The Near-term Health Care Situation in the U.S.

The changing nature of society in the United States is going to make health care even more of a quagmire than in the past. Americans have always thrown words like rights, democracy, socialism, capitalism, equality, etc. around in such ways that differing citizens use the words to fit their own particular need to talk past each other. We are as blind to reality in this health care area today as we are in many other problem areas which are bearing down on us from all directions. Trumpism is not the cause, but the result of a population in which more and more people are now products of formative environments which leave them developmentally stunted, often permanently. Our ghettoes have not been shrinking, but expanding and include urban, suburban, and rural enclaves. Democracy is fatally broken now, needed national values have shifted, the power of organized religions fading fast, and discontentment running rampant. The Golden Rule has globally been marginalized and replaced by feelings as facts, with self serving family or personal needs trumping any greater needs of society as a whole. 

The issue as to which citizens are entitled to good health care is an ethical issue. Good governance is determined by what percentage of the population achieves the greatest degree of contentment—not the form of government. The proper goal of any government is to generate the maximum contentment for the maximum percentage of the population. It is bad government when who gets good health care is determined by certain cabals within the population. On what basis is one child deserving of good health care and another not?  Or, for that matter, to have some adults receive good health care and others not? Some say it depends on if they can afford it. Very well then, so it is ok for 3 citizens to have more of a nation’s wealth than the bottom half of that population—which of course means, while there is enough wealth for that society to provide good health care for everyone, it can’t because that society has allowed too much of it’s wealth to be cornered by the very few. That is a government failure, or at best a good government only for the wealthy few. In the early days of our country it mattered less your financial status. There were no cures for most of the diseases and conditions which killed people back then. Today it is vastly different, those with the money can be helped in most cases. 

While the United States has enough wealth to provide excellent health care for every one, we make no attempt to do so. Modern health care is very expensive since there are amazing treatments and cures for more and more conditions. Good health care for everyone requires more and more doctors, nurses, and health care practitioners of all sorts. Yet we hardly ever build more medical schools. Instead we let other countries train doctors (to varying degrees of proficiency) and then hire them rather than train an adequate number of our own doctors. Why would we want these good jobs to go to foreigners?  We say we want to keep jobs in this country, but good health care for everyone would create vast numbers of jobs for our own citizens, but we can’t bring ourselves to do it since most of those who now own 90% of our wealth control the means to keep all that wealth for themselves.


Right now there is a huge shortage of health professionals and a huge resistance by the public to pay the cost of all the care they personally want. Doctors and other health care personnel are being pushed to treat more and more patients per day, while health care salaries keep slipping lower and lower in terms of the cost of living. The recent trend is to return to good health care for the affluent and poor health care, or no health care, for the poor. More and more doctors are joining practices in which a patient pays thousands of dollars up front for access to good doctors and best treatments. These doctors accept Obama care limits, but make the additional money from the up front yearly fees. As more and more doctors go this route, this leaves fewer and fewer doctors to assist the poor. A hefty percentage of the affluent think this is just fine, and gives them access to the best health care, leaving millions and millions of people right back where they were before Obamacare—poor health care, or essentially none at all. Good health care for all citizens is affordable, would create millions of new jobs nationwide, would pull a lot of people out of poverty, would greatly increase the happiness index in our country, BUT good health care for all is not possible in a capitalistic system without proper regulations and capitalism with no limits.  In this system massive amounts of our wealth simply heads into the hands of the already wealthy.

In the last decade there has been a seismic shift in public attitudes and values. When Obama was first elected most people were on board with his everyone is entitled to fair and just treatment for their needs, as individuals or as a group. While Obama himself seemed never to find a group of citizens he didn’t genuinely like and was willing to help, the general public forgot about their own personal prejudices. Obama started with attempting to get more people health care insurance. Right away some people realized that if more people get health care, health costs will go up. Forget that, those who had good insurance were not interested in paying more for it, period. Then came better schools for the children in our American urban and rural ghettoes. Who is going to pay for that? Not those who lived in affluent communities and already could afford good schools. Then came the right for gays to marry. With each new group to get some assistance, many of those already living an affluent life began to bristle. They had not realized that making the playing field more level for everyone involved the burden being shared collectively. Obama might have  pulled it off if the salaries of the middle class and poor were keeping up with the cost of living. They were not, and vast military expenditures, including around 800 military bases around the world, left little money to spend on the needs of our own citizens. Strangely, we have not won a victory with all our weaponry since the Korean War which really was a tie. Every country we have invaded since then is worse off than before we invaded, with the exception of Vietnam, which won the war. 

The happiness index for the United States is down around 26 now and falling. It is not that many citizens are not content with their lives, but that more and more are falling further and further behind.
When over 40% of adult citizens do not even earn enough to qualify for federal income tax, there is no way they are going to be contented citizens. The issue of health care is but just one of many dilemmas for which, so far, no one has been able to get enough citizens to revolt against this current wealthocracy.