Jobless and Clueless
by Joel S. Hirschhorn l delusionaldemocracy.com
When Americans who are the most
victimized by our cruel economy still believe in something that is demonstrably
no longer true, they are deeply delusional. They desperately want to believe in
something once great about American society.
The reality is that upward economic
mobility has been destroyed, replaced by widely observable downward
mobility. Some of the mostly
younger jobless that have embraced the Occupy Wall Street and related Occupy
efforts know the truth.
Consider the results of a new
survey of unemployed adults this month:
“More than half of those polled
said that they had experienced emotional or mental health problems like anxiety
or depression because of their lack of work, and nearly half said that they had
felt embarrassed or ashamed not to have jobs.”
“More than a third said that they
had had more conflicts or arguments with family and friends because of being
jobless.”
“Threats of foreclosure or
eviction were reported by a fifth of the unemployed, and one in eight said that
they had moved in with relatives or friends.”
“More than half said that they
lacked health insurance.”
“A fifth said that they had
received food from a nonprofit organization.”
“Nearly two-thirds said they
would probably not have enough money to live comfortably during retirement. More than half said that they had taken
money out of savings or retirement accounts.”
“7 in 10 of those receiving
unemployment benefits said that they feared their benefits would run out before
they could find new jobs.”
So far, all those results paint
an unsurprising profile of unemployed, suffering Americans.
Now, consider the result that
blew my mind, the reason I am writing this, because more people need to
understand something critical about delusional thinking that ultimately makes
getting deep, sorely needed reforms of our government and political system
extremely difficult. Without that
our economy will stay awful, unfair, promoting even more economic
inequality.
“Two-thirds of those surveyed
said that they still believed it was possible to start out poor in this country,
work hard and become rich — only a little lower than the three-quarters of all
Americans” not in the unemployed category who held the same view and were
surveyed at the same time. In fact,
considerable research in recent years has consistently found that upward
mobility in the US is no longer
a hallmark of the society. Indeed,
there is more upward mobility in Canada
and a number of European countries than in the US. Moreover, the jobless more than most
should be able to comprehend the ugly reality that downward economic mobility is
now a large part of American society.
No surprise that the cover story
on the new Time magazine is What Ever Happened To Upward Mobility? The basic theme of the article is that
the US is no longer an “opportunity
society.” In other words, our country is no longer a place where everyone, if he or she
works hard enough, can get ahead.
But despite this reality, conservatives and Republicans love to publicly
proclaim that the US still offers everyone upward
economic mobility.
Those two-thirds of the unemployed will probably
pay a steep price for their false optimism about their country. They are likely to fall prey to the
political propaganda of either Democrats or Republicans. If they are delusional about the
American Dream, are they also delusional about other things that may stand in
the way of them getting a job?
Rather than feel ashamed or embarrassed about being jobless they should
get some feedback from others so they can fix their thinking.
As Ezra
Klein noted: “Americans are in the odd position of fervently believing in
upward mobility while not actually having very much of it. Europeans, conversely, don't really
believe in economic mobility but have plenty of it.”
Those jobless with this
delusional thinking, refusing to think critically, judge the facts and come to a
hurtful conclusion, are not the ones I expect to be participating in or
supporting the Occupy Wall Street protesters, about three-quarters of whom now
disapprove of Mr. Obama’s performance as president. Though the Occupy protesters speak of
the rich 1 percent, that is a big underestimate. As Anne
Applebaum correctly noted “Despite all the loud talk of the ‘1 per cent’ of
Americans who, according to a recent study, receive about 17 per cent of the
income, a percentage which has more than doubled since 1979, the existence of a
very small group of very rich people has never bothered Americans. But the fact
that some 20 per cent of Americans now receive some 53 per cent of the income is
devastating.” Becoming part of even
that larger group of rich Americans is now more difficult than ever.
Do unemployed have the right kind
of jobs to aspire to the top one percent of income earners? Consider the jobs
that account for the top one percent; the top four categories account for
nearly 70 percent: corporate and business management not in the financial
sector, medical, financial industry executives, and lawyers. This also shows how
difficult it is to somehow negatively impact the one percent by protests by the
Occupy movement.
In our delusional democracy with
its delusional prosperity thinking that hard work, great ideas and superior
performance will get you into the top one percent is self-delusion, even getting
into the top 20 percent is a long shot.
The economic system is too rigged against economic justice. Sure, every once in awhile someone
starting out poor or average becomes superrich, but that is like winning a super
lottery. Best to stop believing in
the rags-to-riches myth, unless the system is reformed.
A new
report by a German foundation examined the nation members of the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, essentially the world’s
democracies. The
US ranked terribly low for poverty
and poverty prevention as well as income inequality. Only Chile, Mexico and Turkey were ranked lower than the
US. What a story.
The US two-party
plutocracy has allowed the rich and powerful to buy the political system. Except for the rich, the results are
dreadful. This is why 89 percent do
not trust that government will do the right thing. The best solution is what you find at
the getmoneyout.com website, a constitutional amendment to get money out of
politics.
Contact Joel S. Hirschhorn
through delusionaldemocracy.com.