Help us out by throwing some cash in the bucket:
Click here to read Hightower's personal message about
REAL CHANGE
(not small change)
Help us out by throwing some cash in the bucket:
Click here to read Hightower's personal message about
REAL CHANGE
(not small change)
We're being told by today's High Priests of Conventional Wisdom that everyone and everything in our economic cosmos necessarily revolves around one dazzling star: the corporation. This heavenly institution, the HPCW explain, has such financial and political mass that it is the optimal force for organizing and directing our society's economic affairs, including the terms of employment and production.
Sign up for email alerts, from breaking news to weekly commentary:
Also in this issue:
Find more content in these topics: Labor
Have a gander at the whole store here...
Home | Contact | RSS | Privacy policy | Copyright Public Intelligence, Inc., all rights reserved 1999-2011
Rigging the system
“I’ll poke you in the eye with a sharp stick, but then I’ll give you a Band-Aid.”
That’s the essence of the deal that Congress and the White House just gave to American workers. At issue was legislation to give the president “fast track” authority to negotiate job-destroying trade scams like NAFTA, then ram them through Congress with practically no debate and no possibility for lawmakers to make amendments. Under this antidemocratic process, Congress surrenders its responsibility to review and improve presidential trade deals.
Why would Congress vote to give up its own authority? Cold cash. Fast-track legislation has long been the top priority of corporate CEOs who don’t want their global deals mucked up with concerns about jobs, sweatshops, worker safety, human rights, and such. They’ve delivered loads of campaign money to members of both parties, greasing the skids for Congress’s capitulation.
Putting the political Band-Aid on this wound, lawmakers also approved a new tax credit to subsidize the purchase of private health insurance. Americans who lose their jobs as a result of new trade scams will be eligible for the credit. Thoughtful, except that few displaced workers will be able to afford to buy insurance since, hey—their jobs are gone!