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Don't believe the hype: Expand public sector pensions to all workers.

Reject their view of the world. Pensions are sustainable. It depends on what we do with the wealth we create.

The Wall Street Journal, the major journal of the US capitalist class, is a bit perturbed that the ongoing assault on public sector workers' pensions isn't producing the necessary results. The cuts, we are told, are necessary so that the country can "dig out from under the economic downturn."  In fact, they have,  "fallen well short" of the amount necessary to significantly reduce deficits that will encourage the coupon clipper's to invest in the economy. 


The problem is that despite the propaganda, workers, pensions didn't cause the economic crisis, the internal contradictions of capitalism did.  The attacks on public services and workers, our pensions, wages and benefits, are intended to hide the fact that capitalism is a system of never ending and worsening crisis.  The crash is being used as an excuse to reduce the unionization rate in the US and eliminate gains made over the last 60 years.  They have been very successful in this endeavor in the private sector with the help of organized Labor's officialdom. As we have explained many times on this blog, they intend to put US workers and the middle class on rations and return us to the days before the great movements that built the CIO and broke the back of the Apartheid system in the US South.

"Economic forces are reshaping traditional rivalries...." says the Journal, "...convincing lawmakers and Labor leaders that past public pension plans are unsustainable." But they are not unsustainable. It is simply a matter of how we allocate the resources of society and the wealth we create. Private ownership of the energy, health care, transportation and other crucial industries and production for profit and not social needs is unsustainable but they have no problem with that. There is plenty of money in society that could ensure everyone a decent retirement; it is a matter of allocation.

The fear of social unrest has meant that most of the already implemented cuts will affect future hires, our young people.  The Union hierarchy basically accepts this propaganda from big business and its media about sustainability and go along with it as potential Union members can't vote in contracts.  So far only $100 billion of the $900 billion gap between what states owe in benefits and what they have has been raised. 

The main thing though is that this economic crisis is a wonderful opportunity for the strategists of capital and their political representatives in the Democratic and Republican parties to accomplish what under "normal" times would take much longer.  By most estimates, real savings will only be realized in 30 years or so after the better plans have expired and the new ones kick in reducing pension cost by about 25% over that period.  So younger people today will be working more hours and certainly more years, perhaps in to their seventies and eighties; seventies will certainly be the norm as people will be unable to receive a pension until then---a pension that will barely pay the rent anyway.

California's Democratic governor, Jerry Brown, the former left demagogue who used to have his own show on the left/liberal KPFA here in the Bay Area, has proudly introduced pension "reform" that he says is the "biggest rollback to public pension benefits in the history of California pensions.".  You would think a party that some claim is the party of Labor here would expel a guy that savages workers in this way but the 1% see Obama and the Democrats as their best bet, Romney and some of the nuts in the Republican Party are too unstable for the more sober bourgeois who want to return to a good profit-making climate.

Leaving aside the horrific destruction and slaughter they cause, the cost to the taxpayer of these predatory wars abroad is staggering. By some estimates over the next decade or so we could be looking at 6 or 7 trillion dollars.  This figure will no doubt rise as more regional wars and military expenditures occur as the struggle for markets continues. The US has troops and bases throughout the world and wants to build more increasing tensions from Australia to the China and the Central Asian Republics. Global capitalism cannot create peace in any part of the world

If we choose to accept that a decent living and retirement, health care and education, in short, a secure and productive existence is not possible in a capitalist economy then we should just offer to halve our incomes and living standards and get it over with.  But there is clearly no reason whatsoever for not reducing the workweek, having full employment, pensions that people can live on etc. The only obstacle is that it is "unsustainable" for the Warren Buffets, Bill Gates, Larry Ellisons of this world.  They won't be able to buy their $200 million yachts and skate through life without working.

I have raised many times before the comments of the English historian Christopher Hill and I shall mention them again. In his wonderful book, The Century of Revolution, about the English revolution that reduced the power of the King and the feudal aristocracy opening the historical gateway to the rule of capital, Hill talked of one of the major obstacle to the rising capitalist class and their colleagues in the religious sphere. He said that they could not overcome the "Stop in the mind". What this stop in the mind was was their acceptance of the dominant ideology that existed throughout English society at the time, this was the "Divine Right of Kings", the belief that the king was god's representative on earth, was king by god's will.  If you accept that, how can you remove this force? You can only go so far.  But Cromwell challenged this notion and suggested we cut off his head and see what happens. Voila! a new day is born.

The concept of the king's "Divine Right" never sprang from the head of the exploited, of the peasant. The king thought it up.  It is the same today. The idea that society cannot provide education for all, health care, food, water etc, not on a US scale but globally, is propaganda that has its origins in the class that governs, in capitalism's case it is the capitalists, the owners of the means of producing, distributing, and exchanging the necessities of human society.

So we must reject in our own minds this nonsense about sustainability of pensions and demand an expansion of such pensions for all workers.  The productive forces, not just on a national scale but a global one have attained such a level that every human being on this planet can live a productive and secure existence.  But capitalists do not set this productive process in motion to produce what we need, they set it in to motion if production is profitable for them. If you can't pay for food, you starve.  If developing infrastructure to provide water is not profitable, you die of thirst.  The millions of people that die from hunger and disease throughout the world die not because society doesn't have the ability or resources to feed or care for them, they die because they can't pay for it. And the capitalist's propaganda will tell us it's their own fault.

And returning to the local level and the elections here in the US, not just nationally but in our communities. Every candidate I know of starts from a position of accepting this unsustainable argument, or more concisely, the argument that we are in difficult economic times. No we are not. Every candidate in my community, including the candidates of the Union bureaucracy  make it clear that times are difficult and that they have to be "fiscally responsible." They are the "damage control". candidates.  They can wax eloquent about the need to protect social services and build better schools etc etc. but always make it clear that they are realistic and will be "fiscally responsible". This is to assure the coupon clippers, the owners of capital, that they will not step beyond the bounds of business as usual and the opportunity for profits are assured.. This is why they end up betraying us, it's not simply a personal character flaw, it's a theoretical and political question.

Despite the massive accumulation of wealth at the top that has taken place in US society and the growing inequality, (the inequality gap is greater in the US than China) even the heads of organized Labor at the highest levels accept that the American worker's living standards are too high. They accept that the market is god and that we have to compete with other workers both at home and abroad in order to help the rich get richer. The leadership of the AFL-CIO organized  a successful campaign in Ohio to drive back attempts by the governor to eliminate collective bargaining rights for public employees but a year on, "Many of the state's public employee Unions supported the pension cuts..." writes the WSJ.  "Many of the state Labor leaders agreed that their members' retirement benefits need to be trimmed." the Journal adds.

This view is the dominant view of the heads of organized Labor who see the Unions they head as employment agencies with themselves as the CEO's. They force concessionary contracts on their members that they don't have to work under. They too buy the propaganda that society would collapse without the private sector.  The mobilize to maintain collective bargaining rights only because it guarantees their role as spokespersons for Labor so they can negotiate concessions. In the case of Wisconsin, the entire Labor officialdom supported the cuts but opposed the two proposals that affected them, bargaining rights and dues checkoff where the employer collects the member's Union dues through the payroll system.

So the first step for any individual or any candidate for political office or for a Union position is to reject completely in our own consciousness the idea that a decent life for all is not possible.  All the prerequisites are there for the opposite.  The reality is that the capitalist mode of production and the political and economic structure that arises from it cannot provide a decent life for the vast majority of the world's inhabitants.  It never has provided security for anything but a minority.

Once we reject the propaganda the obvious next step is trying to figure out how to proceed.  The money is there, the resources are there, we just have to fight a war to get them.  We have the advantage, we outnumber the coupon clippers.  We do the work and can shut down their economic system and we have many times in our history.  They use race, religion and gender to divide and weaken us.  They blame unions and immigrants and the poor for the failure of their system.  We must not fall for this. We have what we have through collective struggle and the heroic sacrifice of workers in the past.  This is what we have to accept and what we should demand form any Union official, political candidate or anyone else that claims to speak for working people.

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
california girl May 18, 2013 at 08:05 pm
I loved the green tea!
anthony May 17, 2013 at 01:01 pm
go nuts, or one of each... for later of course. would go scone myself, old habits die hard.
Leah Hall May 19, 2013 at 01:59 pm
Young man! The stormtroopers get into the act.... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MuJXaVrvpXE
Justin Agrella May 19, 2013 at 09:43 am
http://youtu.be/78LAgl90UyM
Leah Hall May 16, 2013 at 05:04 pm
Youth development, healthy living & social responsibility... ...in San Leandro! For the firstRead More time ever! Thanks to everyone who brought the YMCA "Move-A-Thon" to San Leandro and all the families that participated! -Leah Hall SL Human Services Commissioner & Volunteer YMCA Youth & Government advisor (for our San Leandro delegation comprised of San Leandro high school students)
anthony May 18, 2013 at 04:31 pm
remembered reading this here, maybe ther's a forward in thereRead More somewhere...http://sanleandro.patch.com/groups/politics-and-elections/p/local-hungry-families-helped-by-urban-farmer. Don't hold me to this one, but I thought Tim at Zocalo Coffee was a keeper.
Richard Mellor May 15, 2013 at 06:38 pm
I have a friend who has just had a hive put in her garden If you would like me to put u in touchRead More with her contact me at aactivist@igc.org
Analisa Harangozo (Editor) May 15, 2013 at 12:02 am
Thanks for posting in our Announcements Board, Christa! I shared this on our Facebook page. I hopeRead More this helps you in your hunt for honey bees :)
RHG May 17, 2013 at 03:46 pm
First let me say sorry for the loss of one of your family. Ive been keeping my eyes pealed incase IRead More see him. But I'd recomend since he is going blind, it might be easyer for someone to catch him if we knew his name. Just a thought. Hope for his safe return.
Carol Parker May 14, 2013 at 08:45 pm
I'm happy to report Buster found a forever home on Mother's Day. There are other bassets availableRead More for adoption on Golden Gate Basset Rescue's website, however. Adoptable dogs will be on hand June 9 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Pet Food Express on Blanding Avenue (in the shopping center of Nob Hill Foods) in Alameda. Come down and see some hounds up close and personal.
Stefanie Pruegel January 29, 2013 at 05:11 pm
I would speculate that more durable, reusable bags still score a lot better than disposables, evenRead More if a small fraction of those are "dual use" as in the cases you point out (dog poop, trash can liner). BTW, for those concerned about a dwindling supply of free poop bags as a result of the ban, here are still plenty of plastic bags available for that purpose e.g. those that people's newspaper comes in. The bottom line is that most people would agree that reusable bags are the better solution than to continue choking our waterways with disposable plastic bags.
David January 21, 2013 at 10:12 pm
There are plenty of competing studies that disagree. I perused that, and one huge faulty assumptionRead More that they have is that "single use" means single use when as we see above, people use them for dogs, garbage etc.
Stefanie Pruegel January 21, 2013 at 09:47 pm
Funny you should bring up cost/benefit analysis of disposable plastic bags vs reusable bags, David.Read More This is exactly what was done in 2010 by a coalition of several California cities and organizations, to help communities in the state gauge the impact of any ordinance they consider passing in regards to disposable bags. The upshot is that reusable bags (particularly non-woven plastic reusable bags) have significantly lower environmental impacts on a per-use basis than single-use plastic bags. Find the full study here: http://bit.ly/VWdEn9
Sarah Nash May 10, 2013 at 02:18 pm
Just had a chance to read this story. Loved it! While I believe that conscientious students wouldRead More try their best at the test, as I did when I took state aptitude tests in school, I can hardly imagine staying up nights worrying about it! There is nothing at stake except perhaps personal satisfaction so the test itself shouldn't impose stress. A high-strung parent, on the other hand, might.
David April 27, 2013 at 03:09 pm
Oh come on, Rob. You talk about me cherry picking stuff? 10/10? Sure. And as I've shown you canRead More pull out Maxwell Park, North Oakland, parts of SF (Glen Park, for example), parts of El Cerrito and other locations to show that API scores aren't well-correlated with property values. Again, why do homes sell for the same $/sq foot in Maxwell Park as Estudillo Estates? San Lorenzo's API is about the same or better than most of SLUSD. Property values there are lower. The clearest example of what effect API scores have on property values was mentioned below, about a 10% difference depending on which side of the tracks, er, 580 you live on in Castro Valley. 10%? whoopdedo, that kind of variation is washed out when you factor in commute times, crime, amenities, etc. In fact, API scores are likely to continue to shrink as a factor in RE values as more and more parents flee the public schools, no matter what the API (witness SLUSD, the 30% drop in OUSD enrollment in just the past decade, etc). In another generation, we'll be accused by our children of child abuse by having sent them to public schools.
Rob Rich April 27, 2013 at 12:38 pm
If you accept the premise that API scores are poorly correlated with real estate vualues, then is itRead More coincidental that the top school districts are in areas with high real estate values? http://www.greatschools.org/find-a-school/7046-ten-california-school-districts-highest-test-scores-2012.gs. In the old days, 10 for 10 was considered pretty good correlation.
David April 15, 2013 at 09:58 am
To my point. Fred, we can agree to disagree, but here's my point: Leah, you have repeatedly sungRead More the praises of BUSD. More than a few of your neighbors and those in the other upper middle/lower upper class areas of SL think similarly. BUSD, as I have also pointed out, does a *worse* job, relative to SLUSD, of educating what I presume you'd call "stressed" kids--those in poor socioeconomic strata, blacks and Hispanics of whatever color. Yet, you hold BUSD up as a great system. It's not. The only reason you and your fellow travelers in the Broadmoor/Estates/Bay-O think it is, is due to the presence of "enough" upper class white/Asian kids who perform well enough to drag up the overall scores. This has a beneficial effect on property values, demographics etc in places like Berkeley and certain neighborhoods in Oakland. How to quickly achieve that in SLUSD? Re-organize the schools so that they're K-8. We'd automatically get better scoring K-8 schools in the Roosevelt/Bancroft districts, and with those high performing schools in the Manor. With a stroke, you'd get 40-50% of K-8 kids in SLUSD in "high performing" API 800+ schools. And Fred, we'd just have to disagree here. Schools of reasonable size like Hillcrest (K-8, upper class area) do just fine, I think a similar dynamic would work here in the Estates etc.
David April 15, 2013 at 09:54 am
Leah, I *highly* doubt the kids' poor outcomes result form "everyday stress." As I'veRead More repeatedly pointed out, 7/8 of my great-grandparents never progressed passed 8th or 9th grade, yet they all achieved higher levels of literacy and numeracy than those demonstrated repeatedly by Mr. Heverly's high school students. As for everyday stresses, need we go into life in the 1880's/1890's and how easy people have it today? You want to compare today's "stresses" to those of being a black girl in Mobile Alabama in 1890, or a black guy in Beaumont Texas in 1890? Moving on to today's world, and your ridiculous comments. As Fred points out, kids today get food paid for by us taxpayers, classes under 30 students (not that class size has *EVER* been demonstrated to do anything for students, but it does increase the numbers of teacher union members...). Cont..
Fred Eiger April 15, 2013 at 02:23 am
I doubt it David, times have gotten worse. With billions of money wasted on welfare, rentRead More subsidies, free school breakfasts and lunches all we have to show are fat, lazy ignoramus' sloths who only want more welfare and continue to produce idiots. Leah, your educational views are abject failures. It's times for you and your ilk to just go away and leave the educational system to the adults who know what works.