Here is a part of my travel blog (www.cheapmotelsandahotplate.org.  Click on
"blog.").  I read the discussion on inequality on pen-l.  I have been
banging on this issue at every stop on my book tour (this week in Texas
barnstorming with the California Nurses Association).  How can we have any
kind of democracy with such a skewed wealth and income distribution?  And
recent research shows that, other things equal, growing inequality gives
rise to poorer health, more people uneducated, more people in prison, etc.
These arguments resonate with all audiences so far.  There was pen-l
discussion on the labor movement.  May I humbly recommend my book Why Unions
Matter?

Michael Yates

The drive from Denver to Santa Fe seemed interminable, but the beauty of the
New Mexican landscape, from the Raton Pass just across the border with
Colorado to the open cattle country after that—helped make up for the long
distance.  You know you are in a Latin land as you hit more and more Spanish
language radio stations.  As we approached the state’s capitol city, we
listened to the Art Bell show.  Art Bell is all over the radio dial,
especially late and night and has attracted a huge audience, most of whom
are obsessed with space aliens, alien abductions, “shadow” people,
conspiracies of all kinds, and all other “para” phenomena.  Most leftists
have never heard of Art Bell, but they should know him (and all the other
large-audience talk show hosts) because the many callers give important
insights into what all too many people in the United States think is
important.  This is a land tailor-made for conspiracy theories and strange
beliefs.  These serve as a a substitute for thinking clearly, yet give their
adherents the feeling that they have an inside track on things.  Karen and I
have concluded that we live in a nation of “bar talk;” everyone is an expert
on everything, like the guy who won’t shut up on the barstool next to yours.
 There is no respect for real learning or an appreciation of the effort it
takes to understand things.  No doubt diehard fundamentalist religious
beliefs function in a similar manner.  As substitutes for thinking.  I know
from my many years of teaching undergraduates that the typical U.S. college
graduate must certainly be the least knowledgeable in the world.  The
right-wingers rail against all the left-wingers on campus, but they have
little to worry about.  In the United States thoughtlessness rules, and bar
talk is king.  And in the meantime, the rich keep getting rich, with wealth
that would have put john D. Rockefeller to shame.  They flaunt their riches
like the robber barons of yore.  We met a man at my book talk in Santa Fe
(at Garcia Street Books, where we drew a good crowd, thanks to the good pr
done by owner Ed Borins—a real gentleman—and Monthly Review intern Scott
Borchert) from Johnstown.  He knew all the old streets, bars, and names I
knew so well from my thirty-two years at the college there.  He had been a
teacher, but he eventually got into financial planning.  He and a friend
generously took us to dinner, and he told us some interesting things about
money.  He travels to Washington DC each year and stays in a hotel there.
He has noticed over the past couple of years that hotel prices have
skyrocketed throughout the city.  He began to ask hotel managers why.  He
was told that the huge sums of money being devoted to anti-terrorism are the
main culprit.  National security firms and consultants are on the public
dole, scamming the government, no doubt in collusion with public officials
who will probably soon be on their payrolls, and they go about their thefts,
staying in fine hotel accommodations in such numbers that hotels, wanting to
get in on the action, jack up their prices.  Then the contractors submit a
cost plus 20 percent bill to the taxpayers.  Makes you feel more secure,
doesn’t it?  Our new friend also told us about some of the extravagances of
the rich he had discovered.  It is very difficult to buy the most luxurious
automobiles (Certain models of Ferrari and Mercedes Benz, for example)
unless you are prepared for a two or more year wait.  Their order books are
overflowing.  The super-rich are buying enormous private jets, and their
less wealthy class-mates are leasing planes, often in club-like
arrangements, with yearly fees just to belong running into the hundreds of
thousands of dollars.  I suppose the jets are badly needed, since I read
recently that the rich now send their kids to summer camp in them; bus rides
are just too traumatic.  There is a growing market for truly gigantic ships
as well, sometimes complete with “shadow” boats, refitted tugs in which the
larger ships crew can bunk down.  You can’t have the help sleep in the same
boat as the hired hands.  Meanwhile the U.S. labor movement won’t get out
front in a campaign for national healthcare.  And parents keep saying that
their kids who died in Iraq were “doing what they loved.”  I’ll bet the
contractors staying in hotel penthouses cry themselves to sleep every night.
 Let’s all just work our crappy jobs, come home, flip on the TV, drink and
medicate ourselves to sleep, and tune in the bedside radio to Art Bell.

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