Well said!

Now see if you could rewind time and try to explain THIS to Pam Brown when she 
was making 80K USD and living on a SIX bedroom house (may be she should have 
lived in a three bedroom house and save some for harsher times, I know, 
hindsight is 20/20).

Americans (US) have an aversion for anything to do with social-anything and 
telling them that they need to pay more taxes is just not a political option. 
It will have to be a “revolution” if you want to call it, in order for the 
majority to start to see THIS and then who knows what will happen. But there 
are a few people making a lot of money and they like to be making that kind of 
money......

Since I went to the USA in 1989 I always though the Americans lived very good 
for a long time (at that time a pizza delivery boy would make the same kind of 
money as my engineering dad) . Now I do not think they live that good and their 
future is much more grimmer. And I know how difficult is to have to do with 
less.

Difficult, worrisome times ahead, but... try to have a happy New Year,

Ivan


-----Original Message----- 
From: Keith Addison 
Sent: Monday, December 27, 2010 11:28 PM 
To: biofuel@sustainablelists.org 
Subject: Re: [Biofuel] Alabama Town's Failed Pension is a Warning (NYT-article) 

<http://www.alternet.org/story/149324/america_in_decline%3A_why_germans_think_we%27re_insane?page=entire>

America in Decline: Why Germans Think We're Insane

A look at our empire in decline through the eyes of the European media.

December 26, 2010
By Democrats Ramshield

As an American expat living in the European Union, I've started to 
see America from a different perspective.

The European Union has a larger economy and more people than America 
does. Though it spends less -- right around 9 percent of GNP on 
medical, whereas we in the U.S. spend close to between 15 to 16 
percent of GNP on medical -- the EU pretty much insures 100 percent 
of its population.

The U.S. has 59 million people medically uninsured; 132 million 
without dental insurance; 60 million without paid sick leave; 40 
million on food stamps. Everybody in the European Union has 
cradle-to-grave access to universal medical and a dental plan by law. 
The law also requires paid sick leave; paid annual leave; paid 
maternity leave. When you realize all of that, it becomes easy to 
understand why many Europeans think America has gone insane.

Der Spiegel has run an interesting feature called "A Superpower in 
Decline," which attempts to explain to a German audience such odd 
phenomena as the rise of the Tea Party, without the hedging or 
attempts at "balance" found in mainstream U.S. media. On the Tea 
Parties:

Full of Hatred: "The Tea Party, that group of white, older voters who 
claim that they want their country back, is angry. Fox News host 
Glenn Beck, a recovering alcoholic who likens Obama to Adolf Hitler, 
is angry. Beck doesn't quite know what he wants to be -- maybe a 
politician, maybe president, maybe a preacher -- and he doesn't know 
what he wants to do, either, or least he hasn't come up with any 
specific ideas or plans. But he is full of hatred."

The piece continues with the sobering assessment that America's 
actual unemployment rate isn't really 10 percent, but close to 20 
percent when we factor in the number of people who have stopped 
looking for work.

Some social scientists think that making sure large-scale crime or 
fascism never takes root in Europe again requires a taxpayer 
investment in a strong social safety net. Can we learn from Europe? 
Isn't it better to invest in a social safety net than in a large 
criminal justice system? (In America over 2 million people are 
incarcerated.)

Jobless Benefits That Never Run Out

Unlike here, in Germany jobless benefits never run out. Not only that 
-- as part of their social safety net, all job seekers continue to be 
medically insured, as are their families.

In the German jobless benefit system, when "jobless benefit 1" runs 
out, "jobless benefit 2," also known as HartzIV, kicks in. That one 
never gets cut off. The jobless also have contributions made for 
their pensions. They receive other types of insurance coverage from 
the state. As you can imagine, the estimated 2 million unemployed 
Americans who almost had no benefits this Christmas seems a 
particular horror show to Europeans, made worse by the fact that the 
U.S. government does not provide any medical insurance to American 
unemployment recipients. Europeans routinely recoil at that in 
disbelief and disgust.

In another piece the Spiegel magazine steps away from statistics and 
tells the story of Pam Brown, who personifies what is coming to be 
known as the Nouveau American poor. Pam Brown was a former executive 
assistant on Wall Street, and her shocking decline has become part of 
the American story:

>American society is breaking apart. Millions of people have lost 
>their jobs and fallen into poverty. Among them, for the first time, 
>are many middle-class families. Meet Pam Brown from New York, whose 
>life changed overnight. The crisis caught her unprepared. "It was 
>horrible," Pam Brown remembers. "Overnight I found myself on the 
>wrong side of the fence. It never occurred to me that something like 
>this could happen to me. I got very depressed." Brown sits in a 
>cheap diner on West 14th Street in Manhattan, stirring her $1.35 
>coffee. That's all she orders -- it's too late for breakfast and too 
>early for lunch. She also needs to save money. Until early 2009, 
>Brown worked as an executive assistant on Wall Street, earning more 
>than $80,000 a year, living in a six-bedroom house with her three 
>sons. Today, she's long-term unemployed and has to make do with a 
>tiny one-bedroom in the Bronx.

It's important to note that no country in the European Union uses 
food stamps in order to humiliate its disadvantaged citizens in the 
grocery checkout line. Even worse is the fact that even the humbling 
food stamp allotment may not provide enough food for America's 
jobless families. So it is on a reoccurring basis that some of these 
families report eating out of garbage cans to the European media. 

>For Pam Brown, last winter was the worst. One day she ran out of 
>food completely and had to go through trash cans. She fell into a 
>deep depression ... For many, like Brown, the downfall is a 
>Kafkaesque odyssey, a humiliation hard to comprehend. Help is not in 
>sight: their government and their society have abandoned them.

Pam Brown and her children were disturbingly, indeed 
incomprehensibly, allowed to fall straight to the bottom. The richest 
country in the world becomes morally bankrupt when someone like Pam 
Brown and her children have to pick through trash to eat, abandoned 
with a callous disregard by the American government. People like 
Brown have found themselves dispossessed due to the robber baron 
actions of the Wall Street elite.

Hunger in the Land of the Big Mac

A shocking headline from a Swiss newspaper reads (Berner Zeitung) 
"Hunger in the Land of the Big Mac." Though the article is in German, 
the pictures are worth 1,000 words and need no translation. Given the 
fact that the Swiss virtually eliminated hunger, how do we as 
Americans think they will view these pictures, to which the American 
population has apparently been desensitized.

This appears to be a picture of two mothers collecting food boxes 
from the charity Feed the Children.

Perhaps the only way for us to remember what we really look like in 
America is to see ourselves through the eyes of others. While it is 
true that we can all be proud Americans, surely we don't have to be 
proud of the broken American social safety net. Surely we can do 
better than that. Can a European-style social safety net rescue the 
American working and middle classes from GOP and Tea Party warfare?


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