Thursday, November 3, 2011

Occupy Wall Street...Thoughts from Main Street

I normally don't mix politics and Facebook.  I like to keep social networking limited to friendly exchanges of photos and musings on life.  But I have been overwhelmed by the sheer volume of photos of people hiding behind statements regarding whether they choose to be or choose not to be part of the now legendary 99%.  This all hits very close to me now that I have a child.  I want him to inherit a world that encourages his success and a system that acts like soil to the seeds we are planting, not some desert wasteland of joblessness, homelessness and war.  He will have to work for everything he has, which I wouldn't have any other way, but there has to be a point at which his hard work is rewarded- not with handouts, but with increased opportunities. 

To everyone who keeps posting the picture that started it all below, please read something I read recently from an investment banker in response to Dave Ramsay's article about the OWS (Occupy Wall Street) movement and their lack of focus.  I disagree with Ramsay.  I believe the core members of this movement have a very clear focus.  Pile on several thousand more people and the message inevitably gets diluted.  But I do believe the OWS movement needs its Martin Luther King.  They need a clear voice in the crowd to eloquently and succinctly state their grievances- because guess what- they're not all hippie socialists. I don't have the facts or sources for his information, but I'm sure if you dig you can find it if you want to.

The income disparity in this country has only gotten worse. Income for the top has increased by over 200% while the rest of the country's income grew at a fraction of that over the past 30 years. Trickle down economics never happened. It collected at the top and stayed there for many reasons; the tax code being just one of them. Great income disparity is a great danger to any country.  By this measure, our country looks more like a developing country than the largest economy in the world. 

Kids from poor families are largely staying poor. The economic opportunity that this country offered for all has greatly diminished.

Wall Street and other profiteers drove a huge bubble in real estate. When it popped they kept their huge salaries and bonuses, while millions were economically devastated. Very little accountability for this great harm done to our country has occurred. It is past time to work to prevent this from happening again. Wall Street today makes their money on volatility not creating value.

I would agree that protests are not the way to solve these issues, but they are the way to shed light on them and put them in the public conversation.

My family is not asking for a handout, we pay our mortgage, we pay our bills on time, but responsible people like us have been caught in a mire of bureaucracy and red tape even trying to re-finance our mortgage.  For 5 years I have not missed a single payment, my credit is impeccable and in July, I began the process of re-financing, I am still waiting while my bank drags its feet.  It has cost me over $500 in appraisals and fees.  My bank has charged me twice now to pay for documents that come from within its own institution (I bank and have my mortgage through Bank X and yet I have to pay Bank X to retrieve account statements from Bank X).  Where are all of these fees going?  Why are responsible people being squeezed for every dime?  How can anyone expect hard-working middle class people to ever get ahead?  Side note- We are moving everything we possibly can to a credit union as soon as this debacle is over. 

People like me aren't angry and disheartened because there are rich people and poor people, they are angry and disheartened because of the way in which many people connected to the financial institutions in this country have gotten rich while getting away with staggeringly unethical behavior in the name of capitalism (but I'll get to our government and their role later).  If you're reading this and own a home, chances are its worth far less than what you owe on it.  You are underwater and probably don't even realize it.  Are we all supposed to just sit back and say, well, that's capitalism?  That's how things work in America?  Predatory lenders and corrupt banks who preyed upon people's dreams are allowed to get a huge bailout while families are being forcibly removed from their homes?  And please don't talk about personal responsibility.  You and I both know that uneducated, unaware people were sought out by predatory lenders.  TV ads and mailers made it all seem so easy, so attainable. People were sold a bill of goods about how easy it is to own a home.  And when the bubble burst, responsible people like us saw the value of their home plummet while the banks got huge bailouts and the executives got huge bonuses.  Do you begin to see why the 99% movement has emerged?  It's emerged from the kind of horrifying double standards that allow this to happen in the "greatest country on earth".  For me, it's not an attack on capitalism, it's an attack on dirty, thieving, conniving, greedy monsters who pretend that everything they're doing is somehow allowed in a free market because individuals need to take responsibility for their actions.

Unlike this person hiding behind their diatribe, I am not content to give my son an inheritance of this version of the "American Dream" in which his goals are dependent on a government intent on minimizing regulations that tie directly to his ability to create a life for himself.  Where are the bailouts without conditions for the families who have been kicked out of their homes?  Not everyone who has debt is a loser who buys IPads and brand new cars when they can't afford it.  Jobs are lost every day and not always as a result of that employee's bad decisions.  The next time you walk through the doors of your place of work, get down on your knees and thank God that you did because we have gotten to a place where simply having a job that pays you and insures you, puts you in an elite group of people.  Having a job you love?  That probably puts you in a different 1%.

Government is no longer for the people by the people and of the people.  It's not that there is a 1%, it's that we're ruled by them.  They do not represent my family any more than they represent that mystery person hiding behind the poster.  Overall, about 200 members of Congress are millionaires. This doesn't include the value of their homes, their world class health care and five times the vacation time that most of us have.  There are even a handful of lawmakers who are worth tens or hundreds of millions of dollars.  Congress is getting wealthier at a rate nearly twice that of the general population.  "Of the people"?  Unlikely.  But to whom do I assign the blame?  How about the citizens who keep putting these thugs back into office time and time again.  Want a very current, classic example of people we hired playing chicken with our lives and the economy?  Read this: http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2011/11/two-senate-jobs-bills-headed-for-failure-today/

I stand in support of the OWS movement because it is creating a much needed dialogue in this country.  Whether you stand in support or opposition of this movement is not as important to me as the fact that you are talking about it.


News flash: Congress doesn't care about you and these accomplishments. In fact, they're probably thrilled that you're so content to live a menial life while they create even cushier standards for those who make 100 times your annual salary.