Leftist investors seeking to burrow from within and profit in the
process, please note:
.
The richest fifth of America owns 83% of all shares in the stock
market. But that's a bit misleading because most of that, 53% of all
the stock, is owned by just one percent of American households.
.
You are known by the company you keep, and they ain't proles...


"It's a crude indicator, but let's take a peek at the Class War body
count."...


TODAY'S PIG IS TOMORROW'S BACON (a Labor Day recipe)

By Greg Palast
September, 3 2006

Some years from now, in an economic refugee relocation "Enterprise
Zone," your kids will ask you, "What did you do in the Class War, Daddy?"

The trick of class war is not to let the victims know they're under
attack. That's how, little by little, the owners of the planet take away
what little we have.

This week, Dupont, the chemical giant, slashed employee pension benefits
by two-thirds. Furthermore, new Dupont workers won't get a guaranteed
pension at all -- and no health care after retirement. It's part of
Dupont's new "Die Young" program, I hear. Dupont is not in financial
straits. Rather, the slash attack on its workers' pensions was aimed at
adding a crucial three cents a share to company earnings, from $3.11 per
share to $3.14.

So Happy Labor Day.

And this week, the government made it official: For the first time since
the Labor Department began measuring how the American pie is sliced,
those in the top fifth of the wealth scale are now gobbling up over half
(50.4%) of our nation's annual income.

So Happy Labor Day.

We don't even get to lick the plates. While 15.9% of us don't have
health insurance (a record, Mr. President!), even those of us who have
it, don't have it: we're spending 36% more per family out of pocket on
medical costs since the new regime took power in Washington. If you've
actually tried to collect from your insurance company, you know what I mean.

So Happy Labor Day.

But if you think I have nothing nice to say about George W. Bush, let me
report that the USA now has more millionaires than ever -- 7.4 million!
And over the past decade, the number of billionaires has more than
tripled, 341 of them!

If that doesn't make you feel like you're missing out, this should: You,
Mr. Median, are earning, after inflation, a little less than you earned
when Richard Nixon reigned. Median household income -- and most of us
are "median" -- is down. Way down.

Since the Bush Putsch in 2000, median income has fallen 5.9%.

Mr. Bush and friends are offering us an "ownership" society. But he
didn't mention who already owns it. The richest fifth of America owns
83% of all shares in the stock market. But that's a bit misleading
because most of that, 53% of all the stock, is owned by just one percent
of American households.

And what does the Wealthy One Percent want? Answer: more wealth. Where
will they get it? As with a tube of toothpaste, they're squeezing it
from the bottom. Median paychecks have gone down by 5.9% during the
current regime, but Americans in the bottom fifth have seen their
incomes sliced by 20%.

At the other end, CEO pay at the Fortune 500 has bloated by 51% during
the first four years of the Bush regime to an average of $8.1 million
per annum.

So who's winning? It's a crude indicator, but let's take a peek at the
Class War body count.

When Reagan took power in 1980, the One Percent possessed 33% of
America's wealth as measured by capital income. By 2006, the One Percent
has swallowed over half of all America's assets, from sea to shining
sea. One hundred fifty million Americans altogether own less than 3% of
all private assets.

Yes, American middle-class house values are up, but we're blowing that
gain to stay alive. Edward Wolff, the New York University expert on
income, explained to me that, "The middle class is mortgaging itself to
death." As a result of mortgaging our new equity, 60% of all households
have seen a decline in net worth.

Is America getting poorer? No, just its people, We the Median. In fact,
we are producing an astonishing amount of new wealth in the USA. We are
a lean, mean production machine. Output per worker in BushAmerica zoomed
by 15% over four years through 2004. Problem is, although worker
productivity keeps rising, the producers are getting less and less of it.

The gap between what we produce and what we get is widening like an
alligator's jaw. The more you work, the less you get. It used to be that
as the economic pie got bigger, everyone's slice got bigger too. No more.

The One Percent have swallowed your share before you can get your fork in.

The loot Dupont sucked from its employees' retirement funds will be put
to good use. It will more than cover the cost of the company directors'
decision to hike the pension set aside for CEO Charles Holliday to $2.1
million a year. And that's fair, I suppose: Holliday's a winning general
in the class war. And shouldn't the winners of war get the spoils?

Of course, there are killjoys who cling to that Calvinist-Marxist belief
that a system forever fattening the richest cannot continue without end.
Professor Michael Zweig, Director of the State University of New York's
Center for Study of Working Class Life, put it in culinary terms:
"Today's pig is tomorrow's bacon."

******

Greg Palast is the author of the New York Times bestseller, "ARMED
MADHOUSE: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the Class War," just
released from Penguin/Dutton, from which this is adapted.

And go to www.GregPalast.com for a special Labor Day treat: an excerpt
from Air America Radio's Thom Hartmann's new book, "Screwed: The
Undeclared War Against the Middle Class -- and What We Can Do About It."

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