Showing posts with label Inequality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inequality. Show all posts

Friday, April 4, 2014

Stephen Colbert Takes Down Bill O"Reilly"s Insane Defense Of Income Inequality


I want to thank Stephen Colbert for taking the time to compile Bill O’Reilly’s nonsensical observations about American society. BillO thinks he’s found a bone to chew on with income equality, but his analogies are unhinged. If he thinks I’m trying to legislate that the federal government adds almost twenty four inches to my height so I’m equal in stature to Shaq, then he’s crazier than I thought.


Colbert rips his arguments to shreds in the only way he knows how: with humor.


O’Reilly: Equality is what is hurting President Obama. the left has seized that word “equality” to push it’s progressive agenda. We now have income equality, marriage equality, gender equality..And on and on and on…


Colbert: Yes, income, marriage, gender on and on and on. And yes those last three don’t mean anything, but they don’t mean anything equally.
And Bill laid out why fighting for equality is pointless.


O’Reilly: Each human being is born with abilities, but they are not equal abilities. I will never have physical equality with my fellow Irishmen Shaquille O’Neal. He’s bigger and stronger than I am by nature. I will never be as smart as Einstein As talented as Mozart as kind as Mother Teresa.



Colbert: Oh, Come on, Bill, that list is too modest. You’ll never be as fast as Usain Bolt or you’ll never be as emotionally mature as a toddler or understand how tides work as a middle schooler. You’ll never be as strong as a silver-back gorilla or win as many Oscars as Titanic.


O’Reilly’s logic is airtight.


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Stephen Colbert Takes Down Bill O"Reilly"s Insane Defense Of Income Inequality

Saturday, March 29, 2014

The "Massive Gift" That Keeps On Giving: How QE Boosted Inequality To Levels Surpassing The Great Depression

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The "Massive Gift" That Keeps On Giving: How QE Boosted Inequality To Levels Surpassing The Great Depression

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

National Consensus On Inequality Deepens Post Occupy Encampments

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National Consensus On Inequality Deepens Post Occupy Encampments

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Democrat Sponsored "Income Inequality"; Law of Bad Ideas, Yet Again

Democrat Sponsored "Income Inequality"; Law of Bad Ideas, Yet Again
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Debate rages over “income inequality”.


CEOs makes hundreds or thousands of times more than workers. That is one aspect of income inequality. And it’s easily explained: The Fed’s inflation policies, bank bailouts, Fractional Reserve Lending, and crony capitalism are to blame.


That blame is nonpartisan.


Rather than attack the problem, “progressive” partisans howl over minimum wages.


Democrat-Sponsored Income Inequality


There is one major aspect of “income inequality” that you never hear president Obama or the Democrats mention, precisely because they are to blame.


Democrat-sponsored “income inequality” is even more insidious because it directly affects middle-class American who pay high taxes so public employees can retire in comfort with gold-plated guaranteed-for-life pensions.


Gold-Plated Retirements


In support of my above thesis, please consider In San Jose, Generous Pensions for City Workers Come at Expense of Nearly All Else.

Here in the wealthy heart of Silicon Valley, the roads are pocked with potholes, the libraries are closed three days a week and a slew of city recreation centers have been handed over to nonprofit groups. Taxes have gone up even as city services are in decline, and Mayor Chuck Reed is worried.

The source of Reed’s troubles: gold-plated pensions that guarantee retired city workers as much as 90 percent of their former salaries. Retirement costs are eating up nearly a quarter of the city’s budget, forcing Reed (D) to skimp on everything else.



Employee costs are growing nearly five times faster than revenues leading to fewer workers and budget deficits.


“This is one of the dichotomies of California: I am cutting services to my low- and moderate-income people . . . to pay really generous benefits for public employees who make a good living and have an even better retirement,” he said in an interview in his office overlooking downtown.


In San Jose and across the nation, state and local officials are increasingly confronting a vision of startling injustice: Poor and middle-class taxpayers — who often have no retirement savings — are paying higher taxes so public employees can retire in relative comfort.


“I got sick and tired of cutting services to my people — 10 years of services cuts — in order to balance the budget,” Reed said. “We got to the point where we were facing service delivery insolvency.”


In California, cities large and small are struggling to pay the growing public-sector retirement tab. Meanwhile, 55 percent of the state’s private-sector workforce — 6.3 million — have no retirement plan on the job.


Other governments are also struggling. In Chicago, Mayor Rahm Emanuel (D) has been pushing to scale back pensions for city workers, warning that without reform, city services will wither. Rhode Island enacted pension reforms in 2011 that trimmed retirement benefits for new workers and for those already on the payroll.


Enter the Law of Bad Ideas


Instead of admitting the system is hopelessly broken, Sacramento lawmakers want to create the nation’s first retirement savings plan for private-sector workers in which the state manages the money and guarantees a minimum rate of return.


Both cities and the State of California are struggling to pay pensions, yet the proposed solution by California lawmakers is to have the state guarantee even more pensions.


Worst yet, this guarantee would come when treasury yields are in the gutter and stocks 50% overvalued and poised for losses in any time period shorter than seven years according to John Hussman (and I happen to agree). For details, please see It Is Informed Optimism To Wait For The Rain


Note: John Hussman is one of many great speakers at Wine Country Conference II. If you haven’t yet signed up, please do. 


For such ideas to be proposed at the worst time is mind-boggling, yet strictly in accordance with “The Law of Bad Ideas“.


A number of corollaries clearly apply.


Corollary Three: Those in positions of political power not only have the worst ideas, they also have the means to see those ideas are implemented.


Corollary Four: The worse the idea, the more likely it is to be embraced by academia and political opportunists.


Corollary Five: No politically acceptable idea is so bad it cannot be made worse.


The reason CEOs make out like bandits is explained in Monetarism, Abenomics, QE, and Minimum Wage Proposals: One Bad Idea Leads to Another, and Another 


Brief History


  • Monetarists act on the theory falling prices are a bad idea

  • The Fed prints money and holds rates too low

  • Housing bubble builds

  • Medical and education prices soar

  • Student loans soar to “help” the students

  • Because housing is not affordable numerous affordable housing programs appear causing still more unwarranted housing demand. Few see the bubble because housing is not in the CPI

  • Housing crashes

  • The affordable housing advocates are abhorred by falling prices

  • Fed bails out banks and steps in to support housing prices

  • Income inequality soars

  • Students remain stuck with debt

Because of one idiotic notion, that “falling prices are a bad thing”, the Fed has generally managed to keep the CPI rising, with some prices rising much faster than others.


That leads to corollary number six, mentioned in the above link:


Law of Bad Ideas Corollary Six: Bad ideas lead to more bad ideas to fix problems caused by previous bad ideas.


And so here we are. To bail out the absurd idea that public pension promises are supportable, complete with 7.5 to 8.0 percent annual returns, when 10-year treasuries yield 2.67%, California proposes insuring private pensions as well.


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis




Read more about Democrat Sponsored "Income Inequality"; Law of Bad Ideas, Yet Again and other interesting subjects concerning Economy at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

O"Reilly: "I"m Not Buying This Inequality Business"


Bill O’Reilly dismissed the significance of the gender wage gap, saying he isn’t “buying this inequality business,” and claiming that women can overcome wage…



O"Reilly: "I"m Not Buying This Inequality Business"

Friday, January 24, 2014

Priceless! Jon Stewart Ridicules the Richest of the Rich for Pretending to be Concerned About Economic Inequality



At the Davos World Economic Forum, billionaires discuss inequality over champagne and cigars.








Last night on the Daily Show, Jon Stewart skewered the hypocrisy of a bunch of white rich men getting together to worry about economic inequality — as they enjoyed the luxury of the salons of the Swiss Alps. “Inequality!” Stewart cried. “They’re talking about it in the cigar lounges and the champagne pavilions! In the cocaine-atoriums! They’re talking about it inside the same shared escorts.” As for the extent of this inequality, how"s this for a shocking statistic: The poorer half of the world — all 3.5 billion of them — have the same amount of money as the richest 85 people. Don"t miss his scathing satire:





 

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Priceless! Jon Stewart Ridicules the Richest of the Rich for Pretending to be Concerned About Economic Inequality

Friday, December 20, 2013

Interesting Income Inequality Photos

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Interesting Income Inequality Photos

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Pick of the week: The teenage face of inequality

Pick of the week: The teenage face of inequality
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Barnard’s real relationship with those two boys becomes the basis for her fictional portrayal of a pair of Bradford teens called Arbor and Swifty, played respectively by Conner Chapman and Shaun Thomas, two remarkable nonprofessional actors she recruited from Bradford’s council estates. (The name Arbor specifically recalls both the title of Barnard’s previous film, and Andrea Dunbar’s best-known play.) From the perspective of middle-class adult officialdom, Arbor and Swifty are delinquents and misfits: They do poorly in school, get in fights and commit petty crimes, and have evidently dysfunctional family lives. Arbor’s older brother is a drug addict in debt to serious criminals; Swifty’s dad, whose universal nickname appears to be “Price Drop,” survives by way of a low-end scam in which he rents furniture from discount retailers and then sells it for cash.


But we largely see the world through the lens of the ferociously loyal friendship between hotheaded, precocious Arbor and gentle, introverted Swifty, who in spite of everything are devoted to their families and determined to seize the opportunities life presents them. As Barnard has put it, this is a story of profound love and friendship played out against “an adult world where something has gone horribly wrong.” That something could certainly be described, from my perspective, as the profound inequality engineered into the capitalist societies on both sides of the Atlantic since the era of Thatcher and Reagan, which has left poor kids from Bradford to the Bronx permanently excluded from so-called prosperity. On the other hand, I’d love to read an intelligent conservative take on “The Selfish Giant,” which could also be understood as a fable about the risks of entrepreneurship. (If Arbor and Swifty believe in anything, they believe in never relying on anyone or anything beyond themselves.)


Arbor is delighted that he has finally been expelled from school and can spend his days roaming the urban-rural fringe of Bradford — so memorably captured in Mike Eley’s digital cinematography — in an ever more dangerous quest for contraband metals. (Apparently stripping the copper from overhead train wires and electrical pylons is a significant aspect of Britain’s underground economy.) Swifty has only been suspended from school, and more or less intends to go back, but in the meantime he can pick up a few bob caring for Diesel, a racehorse owned by a nefarious scrap-yard proprietor called Kitten (Sean Gilder, of the British TV series “Shameless”). Kitten is a powerful and ambiguous character, part surrogate parent and part shameless exploiter, and on both sides of the equation he can tell himself he’s teaching these two lost boys how the adult world actually works.


Kitten plans to run Diesel in an illegal “road race,” driven by a rider in a sulky or small cart and run on an empty highway just after dawn. (This is yet another piece of genuine sociology: The road races of rural Britain and Ireland, long associated with the “traveling people,” have made a comeback in the era of YouTube.) Meanwhile Arbor has begun to contemplate braving a high-voltage power line in search of its arm-thick strands of copper wire, and perhaps because the accomplished adult thieves around Kitten’s scrap yard insist it’s an insane and desperate endeavor. Barnard mixes scenes of Swifty and Arbor alone against the impressive Yorkshire countryside with buzzing, chaotic, claustrophobic scenes of family and pub life. (One of the locations she uses is the pub where Andrea Dunbar suffered her fatal hemorrhage.)


The two young boys in the lead roles are amazingly strong, so convincing and absorbing that they almost overwhelm accomplished adult actors like Gilder, Siobhan Finneran and Rebecca Manley. (The latter two are Swifty and Arbor’s mothers, respectively.) While the British media have understandably drawn a comparison to Loach’s groundbreaking 1969 British film “Kes,” Barnard is just as much following in the footsteps of François Truffaut’s “The 400 Blows,” Vittorio De Sica’s “Bicycle Thieves” and Ramin Bahrani’s strikingly similar 2007 New York indie “Chop Shop.” I advise you to brace yourself; like those films, “The Selfish Giant” may tear your heart out. But the passion and possibility Barnard shows us among forgotten people in a forgotten place are fully worth it.


“The Selfish Giant” is now playing at the IFC Center and the Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center in New York, with wider release to follow. It’s also available on demand from cable, satellite and digital providers.




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Read more about Pick of the week: The teenage face of inequality and other interesting subjects concerning Top Stories at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, December 13, 2013

Wealth Inequality Robust in U.S.

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Wealth Inequality Robust in U.S.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Obama: Income inequality a defining challenge

Obama: Income inequality a defining challenge

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama turned his focus Wednesday to the pocketbook issues that Americans consistently rank as a top concern, arguing that the dream of upward economic mobility is breaking down and the growing income gap is a “defining challenge of our time.”
Business Headlines



Read more about Obama: Income inequality a defining challenge and other interesting subjects concerning Economy at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

INEQUALITY FOR ALL now playing. Check your local listings. Great...

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

INEQUALITY FOR ALL now playing. Check your local listings. Great reviews (91% on “rotten tomatoes”). And given what the radical Republicans are doing to our democracy and our economy, more important than ever.



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Robert Reich



INEQUALITY FOR ALL now playing. Check your local listings. Great...

INEQUALITY FOR ALL now playing. Check your local listings. Great...

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

INEQUALITY FOR ALL now playing. Check your local listings. Great reviews (91% on “rotten tomatoes”). And given what the radical Republicans are doing to our democracy and our economy, more important than ever.



Share



Robert Reich



INEQUALITY FOR ALL now playing. Check your local listings. Great...

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Great, Harvard Business School finally cares about inequality. Will they do anything about it? | Sadhbh Walshe


There has always been a divide between the haves and the have nots, but it’s never been this extreme – on campus or in the world


Congratulations, you get into Harvard Business School (HBS), arguably the most elite graduate school in the world. Your journey there likely involved sacrifices and lots of hard work, especially if you had to scrape together the tuition fees ($ 50,000 a year is the going rate) by yourself, but you made it into the cool club. Now you get to rub shoulders with top scholars, not to mention many future business and political leaders. But did the university forget to mention that you will likely be made to feel like a second-class citizen?


This, apparently, is the experience for many students who make it into Ivy League institutions without the assistance of a trust fund or contributions from the bank of mom and dad. Responding to a recent New York Times story that focused on the school’s efforts to achieve gender equity, many students and alumni pointed out that class divisions are the bigger problem.


It can’t be much fun for students who earned their place in a top school on merit to find themselves excluded from the power players like those who get to join the “Section X” society where only the ultra privileged are welcome. This brush with inequality could be the best thing that ever happened for future HBS graduates, however, should they choose to put their experience to good use.


The inequality that is a “thing now” in the business school at Harvard (among other top institutions) is also a major thing in the real world. A follow up New York Times story quoted a reader, who identified himself as Ken H, as saying that in the 1970s when he attended HBS the tone at the school was “downright egalitarian” and that flashing money around was considered to be in bad taste. He went on to make the important point that “maybe what has changed isn’t so much HBS, but America”. There has always been (and probably always will be) a divide between the haves and the have nots, but it’s never been as extreme as it is today, nor have the consequences of the division been so widely felt.


Who better to address this inequality, however, than the future business and political leaders who get a taste of what social exclusion is like while they are studying at elite colleges.


Much has been written about how income inequality has increased exponentially in the United States since the 1970s, but just to illustrate how much worse things have gotten, here are a few choice statistics: in 1965, a typical CEO was paid around 20 times what an average employee earned. Today they are paid nearly 273 times the average employee. Meanwhile during the same period, wage rates for almost everyone else out the very top stagnated or declined, and the bottom 20% (whose incomes decreased by a whopping 30%) were hit the hardest.


So now we have a situation where the top 1% of Americans control 43% of the country’s financial wealth while the bottom 80% control a meagre 7%. Put simply, the rich have gotten a lot richer at the expense of everyone else. No wonder then that this staggering inequality has crept into the most elite of institutions where members of an exclusive “Section X” get to jet off to Iceland for the weekend and throw lavish parties that only members of their own social class are invited to, leaving many of their less well off class mates to feel like they are missing out on important networking opportunities.


But here’s the thing, even though some students at HBS and other elite colleges may feel (with good reason) that they will not enjoy the same easy route to becoming a master of the universe as “Section X” types, they are still extremely well positioned to become the business and political leaders of the future. Very few HBS graduates are likely to end up living on food stamps, but they could do a lot, if they so choose, to help those who earn so little that they need food stamps to survive.


There is a growing movement to address wage inequality in America, as evidenced by the wave of strikes by fast food workers and Walmart employees, but it’s mostly a bottom up effort. How great would it be if future HBS graduates were to exploit their own brush with injustice to tackle the systemic injustice that prevents so many Americans from getting ahead?


Corporate boards and many of the top jobs at Fortune 500 companies tend to be occupied by the alumni of elite universities. Many sitting members of congress also graduated from top colleges such as Harvard, Stanford or Yale. This means that many of the HBS students of today, even those who feel that their opportunities are being compromised by elitism, are likely to end up in positions of power.


Imagine if they used that power to level the playing field – by promoting efforts to close the wage gap, helping improve education opportunities for everyone and mandating that the minimum wage be a living wage – instead of maintaining the status quo. That would be a far better way for students who are genuinely offended by class differences to exact revenge on the ultra-wealthy than moaning about not getting invited to the all the best parties.





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Great, Harvard Business School finally cares about inequality. Will they do anything about it? | Sadhbh Walshe

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Income Inequality Takes Manhattan—in 3-D!

It’s no surprise that income inequality in America is on the rise. Eighty percent of Americans have seen their incomes stagnate or fall since 1979. Meanwhile, the top 1 percent of earners is taking in more than ever before. We’ve made numerous charts to illustrate these disparities. But what if you could actually see the split between the superwealthy and everyone else?


Artist and researcher Nickolay Lamm‘s images of income in New York do just that. Using 2012 data from the mapping site ArcGIS, Lamm superimposed 3-D bars over photos of the cityscape to show the median net worth of census block groups. For example, “if one section had a net worth of $ 500,000, the height of the 3-D bar shape for that section was 5 cm. If one section had a net worth of $ 112,000, the height for that section was 1.12 cm.” The resulting images clearly illustrate New York’s status as one of the cities with the highest levels of income inequality.


Below, you can interact with the cityscape and the 3-D images for various neighborhoods.



Central Park. The Upper West Side is on the left.


 



The Financial District and the southern tip of Manhattan. (Note: Statue of Liberty has been added.)


 



Harlem


 



Looking south over Manhattan from Englewood, New Jersey. Washington Heights is on the left. Central Park and Midtown are in the distance.


 



Midtown near the Trump Tower.


 



Above Brooklyn. The Financial District is on the left. Midtown is on the right.


 



Looking south toward the Upper West Side.


 



Above Central Park. The Upper East Side is on the left.


 



Above Yankee Stadium in the Bronx.



Political Mojo | Mother Jones



Income Inequality Takes Manhattan—in 3-D!

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Jim Crow After Roe? How States Are Regulating Abortion Out of Existence & Widening Health Inequality



The new book, “Crow After Roe: How ‘Separate But Equal’ Has Become the New Standard in Women’s Health and How We Can Change That,” tackles the new landscape of restrictions on reproductive healthcare in the United States. On Tuesday, a House panel voted to advance a bill banning abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy nationwide. Similar bans are already in place in states across the country, part of an unprecedented tide of state abortion restrictions enacted in the past few years with the goal of challenging Roe v. Wade at the Supreme Court and making abortion inaccessible and unaffordable on the ground. The laws have created a new reality in women’s healthcare: a two-tiered system where poor women, women of color and women in rural areas cannot access basic healthcare services. We’re joined by co-authors Robin Marty and Jessica Mason Pieklo, both writers for the reproductive news website RH Reality Check.




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Jim Crow After Roe? How States Are Regulating Abortion Out of Existence & Widening Health Inequality