The rich are getting richer. The poor are getting poorer.

U.S. household wealth passed $100 trillion in the 1st Quarter for the first time ever. $1 trillion was added in the 1s Quarter alone, mostly through a rising stock market.
Never has a nation been more wealthy than the United States in 2018.

That is true if you look at it in a very narrow frame.
What is also true is that living conditions for the working poor are bad and getting worse fast.
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How is this possible in such a wealthy country.
For starters, consider how few people are participating in that casino known as the stock market.
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Most people are so disconnected from what is happening on Wall Street that they are unaware that a bull market is even happening.

79% of those who were at least 18 in 2008 admit they don’t fully understand what caused or happened during the financial crisis; 25% said they don’t understand at all.

While a lot of working class people lost their homes during the crash, the ones that didn't now have some equity to borrow against in order to pay the bills.

“These people are living paycheck to paycheck with little or no emergency savings—and they’re scraping up money any way that they can,” said John Hope Bryant, chief executive officer and founder of Promise Homes Co., a property asset manager that offers affordable housing and financial support services to families.

Almost 1 in 4 Americans have no such savings, according to a June Bankrate.com study. But even cash-strapped homeowners are more fortunate than many, Bryant said, since U.S. homeownership has fallen to the lowest rate in more than 50 years.

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What is scary is just how bad the retirement crash is going to be.
Old people living in comfort and security are going to be a very small and elite group.
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dance you monster's picture

Specifically your title.

You present this the way everyone does: the rich getting richer, the poor getting poorer. And that argument has gotten us nowhere in terms of policy changes, which in recent decades have only increased the disparity. It's gotten us nowhere in terms of mass communication, which follows the bidding of its filthy-rich owners. It's gotten us nowhere in politics, when the "solution" that working Americans or Europeans choose is Donald Trump or Emmanuel Macron. It's a framing that says this is happening to someone else, not us. That it's something wrong, but not immediately, viscerally urgent.

The thing is, it's not just the poor getting poorer but almost everyone, all but a teensy handful of oligarchs and their tippy-top paid professional lackeys.

At a time when Social Security is destined for the chopping block, reducing or outright eliminating any reliable common safety net for seniors, . . . when we're advised that any other secure annual retirement income should only draw down 5% of the total savings one has (meaning you need twenty times annual income saved up), . . . the realization that "Four out of five working age individuals have retirement savings less than one times annual income" means that at a minimum 80-plus percent of Americans will starve in their first year of retirement. Not suffer from inadequate health coverage (though that'll happen, too), but starve. They won't reach a second year. And that's if you assume the one-fifth that's better off have saved up much more than four times their annual needs. They haven't. So that last graph shows that well more than 90% or 95% of Americans are getting poorer, much poorer, life-threateningly poorer, the second they step into retirement.

So, the rich are getting richer, the poor are getting poorer, the moderately comfortable are getting poorer, and even the near-rich are getting poorer. Occupy had it right: the 99% are screwed. And that's the framing, the metric, that changed the conversation. It's the metric that everyone knows in their heart is correct. Frame it as anything less than that genocide and you will die.

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divineorder's picture

@dance you monster
https://deadlyclear.wordpress.com/2012/09/12/chapter-8-foaming-the-runwa...

Neil Barofsky gave up his job in 2008 as a prosecutor in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in New York City where he had convicted drug kingpins, Wall Street executives, and perpetrators of mortgage fraud, to become the special inspector general in charge of oversight of the spending of the bailout money… TARP – the program American homeowners thought Congress and President Obama had constructed for their rescue. Wrong.

The New York Times book review describes Mr. Barofsky as “the idealistic alien sent in an emergency to Planet Washington, where he does battle with the self-important, self-serving powers entrenched there or simply taking a spin through its revolving door to Wall Street. He is SIGTARP (in Washington-speak, the Special Inspector General for TARP). But ultimately he is outmatched, and evil triumphs over good.

Mr. Barofsky writes early on that “I had no idea that the U.S. government had been captured by the banks,” and at another point describes his strategy to use the press to get the attention of Congress, and by extension an obstreperous Treasury: “Our message was simple: Treasury’s desperate attempt to bail out Wall Street was setting the country up for potentially catastrophic losses.”

It’s hard to put the book down – it is definitely a page turner and mind burner. Certainly, Chapter 8 – “Foaming the Runway” vindicates every homeowner and foreclosure defense attorney and we should all shove this book at the foreclosure judges and tell them to read it first and THEN we’ll discuss the modification abuses, emotional distress and damages! Right after we closely examine their Financial Disclosure statements.

We knew there was an intended systemic abuse with the modification programs. Too many people told the same stories. However, we didn’t know why the government and our President and Congress would allow such abuses but after you read Chapter 8 – it becomes quite clear. Geithner was saving the banks – not America

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

@divineorder

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I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

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I've seen lots of changes. What doesn't change is people. Same old hairless apes.

ggersh's picture

@The Voice In the Wilderness https://corruptionpedia.org/dick-durbin-banks-frankly-own-the-place/

“And the banks – hard to believe in a time when we’re facing a banking crisis that many of the banks created – are still the most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. And they frankly own the place,” Durbin said.

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I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish

"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"

Heard from Margaret Kimberley

Centaurea's picture

@dance you monster

The thing is, it's not just the poor getting poorer but almost everyone, all but a teensy handful of oligarchs and their tippy-top paid professional lackeys.

I wince every time I hear someone talk about how the current system is harming "the poor". I can almost hear people tuning out and not listening further. (I don't mean people here at C99, but in general.)

It's accurate, but it doesn't go far enough. It's usually is said within the context of an attempt to wake up the 99% to the awful situation we're in. But putting it in terms of the "poor" is not the best way to reach the majority of people, because it excludes (at least for now) the majority of people.

First of all, how many people think of themselves as "poor"? I know many, many people who are struggling, but the vast majority do not (and do not want to) think of themselves in that way. They want to believe that if they put in enough effort, pinch pennies and work 3 jobs, things will eventually be OK for them. So when they hear "the poor are getting poorer", they think, "Yes, that's sad, but what does that have to do with me?"

Secondly, as you said, the damage being done is not limited to those people whose income is below poverty level. We are all being harmed, every darned one of us in the lower 90%. If things don't change, the damage is going to increase exponentially for all of us. So I agree; we need to word our message to make that clear right up front: the message is for all of us.

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"Don't go back to sleep ... Don't go back to sleep ... Don't go back to sleep."
~Rumi

"If you want revolution, be it."
~Caitlin Johnstone

@Centaurea

And if they do, they don't admit it, let alone broadcast it. Johnson waged a war on poverty and stayed so long, he created the Reagan Democrats. The working/middle class is where the majority identify. Afterall, it does describe 99% of us. The rest inherit it or clip coupons from their yachts for their money.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

Welcome to my world.
I've been working my ass off my whole life, and even at 52, I have little to show for it. Still just renting and living paycheck to paycheck. I've been working in the Carpenters Union solid for the last 6 months, so things are getting better...

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