Dear
millennials: back in the 1980s a lot of us worked like hell to try to stop the
Reagan revolution. We failed. This may be our last chance to save American
democracy and the American middle-class.
When
my boomer generation was the same average age as your millennial generation is
today, back in 1990, our generation held
21.3% of the nation’s wealth. Louise and I shared in that
wealth; although we were still in our 30s, in 1990 we owned a profitable small
business (our fourth) and a nice home in suburban Atlanta.
That
was, in fact, the “American dream.” It was normal then. My dad (born 1928), who
worked in a tool-and-die shop, was able to buy a house, a new car every two
years, and take a two-week vacation every year because the middle class in
America before Reagan had a pretty damn good life. He retired in the 1990s with
a full pension that let him and my mom travel the world.
Your
generation today, in contrast, is about the same number of people but holds
only 4.6% of the nation’s wealth and, if you’re the
same age I was in 1990, you’re most likely struggling to own a home, are deeply
in debt, and find it nearly impossible to start a small business. Yes, you read
that right. Boomers in their 30s owned 21.3 of the nation’s wealth; Millennials
in their 30s today own 4.6% of the nation’s wealth.
What
happened? In a word, Republicans.
George
HW Bush was president that year, and you were probably just born around then:
the millennial generation spans those born between 1981 and 1996. But we
Boomers remember it well.
First,
GOP fat-cats came for your wages.
Those
first two decades of the Reagan Revolution saw the first major attack on
workers’ wages since Democratic President Franklin D. Roosevelt passed
the National Labor Relations Act, giving union members legal protection from
physical and economic violence, way back in 1935.
In
1990, Republicans were still just getting started: 56% of workers who applied
for union representation got
their union. That wasn’t as good as during my dad’s generation — 80% of
workers got
a union when they petitioned for one in the 1940s — but it was still a
far cry from what you’re facing today as giant trillion-dollar corporations
employ the billion-dollar union-busting industry (that largely didn’t exist in
1990) to keep you from having democracy in the workplace.
In
large part this is because “right to work for less” laws — that allow employers
to gut their unions — began spreading in a big way in the 1990s. The notorious
Taft-Hartley law that gave states the legal ability to destroy union rights was
passed over President Harry Truman’s veto in 1947, but the National
Right To Work Committee wasn’t formed until 1995.
In
every single case, anti-worker right-to-work-for-less laws have been passed in
states controlled by Republicans at the time of passage; Democrats have fought
these anti-worker laws from the beginning and continue to do so.
Nonetheless,
employers have big bucks and can buy a lot of elections and politicians: what
started as a trickle in the 1950s has turned into a flood since the
1990s. Today right-to-work-for-less states include Arizona,
Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Idaho, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Iowa, Kentucky,
Michigan, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nebraska, Missouri, Nevada, North Dakota,
North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Dakota, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah,
Virginia, Texas, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
Then
they came for your right to an education.
Before
Reagan became governor of California, the entire University of California
system was free. Reagan did away with that as governor, and then, as
president, began the methodical process of eliminating
federal and state support for tuition, saying he didn’t want to “sponsor
the intellectual curiosity” of “brats” who “protest my policies.”
I
went to college — briefly — in the late 1960s and the only person I knew who
had college debt was a friend working on his graduate degree at MSU. I paid my
tuition working part-time jobs as a dishwasher at Bob’s Big Boy on Trowbridge
Road in East Lansing and changing tires and pumping gas at the Esso station
across the street.
My
mom paid her own way through 4 years of MSU in the 1940s with the money she
made as a summer lifeguard up in her home town of Charlevoix, Michigan. My dad,
like most men of his generation, was paid to
go to college by the GI Bill.
Now,
Republicans have not only changed the bankruptcy laws so that you are no longer
“cleared“ after seven years like it was when I was coming up, but you can’t
even discharge student loans in bankruptcy. This was arguably one of the
largest gifts the GOP ever gave the banking industry.
After
that, they went after entrepreneurs and local businesses.
I
dropped out of college in part because the small business Louise and I had
started in 1969 — an electronics repair shop across the street from MSU — had
grown to five employees and I was making as much money as my dad.
Back
then pretty much every business in East Lansing was locally owned, from the restaurants
and hotels to the furniture and clothing stores and appliance shops. The only
chain store I remember was the Sears that anchored the local mall; almost all
of the rest of the stores in that mall were locally owned.
But
then, in 1983, President Reagan ordered the federal government to stop
enforcing the anti-trust laws that had been on the books for almost 100 years;
the resulting “merger mania” consumed the American economy, with “M&A
Artists” (Mergers & Acquisitions) and speculative banksters like the one
Michael Douglas played in Wall Street, were ascendant.
Buying
up small businesses and crushing them together into giant conglomerates,
shedding “excess employees” and employing “economies of scale” were the main
way to make money, instead of serving customers and local communities.
Now
their absolute market dominance and greed are driving out-of-control inflation,
as the normal competitive pressures that keep such behavior in check are dead.
And they enthusiastically squash new, upstart businesses — from tech to retail
to consumer goods — like bugs.
Thus,
your chances of being able to successfully start a business like we did are
tiny compared to what they were before the Reagan Revolution when literally
tens of millions of Americans owned small enterprises that they would often
hand down from generation to generation.
Then
they started squeezing you for cash when you got sick or injured.
Medical
debt is another burden that came out of the Reagan Revolution that destroys
millions of American families a year: for half-a-million families every year
since the 1990s it’s so severe they have to give up their homes and possessions
to declare bankruptcy. America is the only country in the world that
experiences medical bankruptcies like this.
When
Louise and I started that electronics shop (as teenagers!), we were able to
provide all of our employees with full medical insurance because, at that time,
both insurance companies and hospitals were required by law (in
Michigan and most other states) to be non-profits.
Drug
companies weren’t monopolistic monoliths and pharmaceutical prices were
reasonable, too. The country wouldn’t have tolerated asses like “Pharma Bro”
back in the 1960s and 1970s.
But
the neoliberal Reagan Revolution did away with all that, encouraging states to
change their laws to bring “free market principles” to healthcare, ending
nonprofit requirements. There was, after all, big money to be made, and when
somebody is sick and you hold the cure, you have the ultimate power to extract
every last penny they have.
As The
New York Times noted in an article titled Medical
Mystery: Something Happened to U.S. Health Spending After 1980:
“America was in the realm of
other countries in per-capita health spending through about 1980. Then it
diverged.
“It’s
the same
story with health spending as a fraction of gross domestic product.
Likewise, life expectancy. In 1980, the U.S. was right in the middle of the
pack of peer nations in life expectancy at birth. But by the mid-2000s, we were
at the bottom of the pack.”
Yep,
not only did the parasites get rich, but our nation’s life expectancy actually
went down, relative to other wealthy nations.
Now,
as the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) reports:
“We
find that 23 million people (nearly 1 in 10 adults) owe significant medical
debt. The SIPP survey suggests people in the United States owe at least $195 billion
in medical debt.”
And
if the GOP didn’t nail you millennials on any of the above, they figured out
how to go after your need for a roof over your head.
In
the 1990s, as part of Newt Gingrich’s notorious “Contract On America,” Congress
“deregulated” the financial industry to the point that it’s become a giant
blood-sucking leech attached to your back.
Thus,
millennials are struggling with housing costs today, and for good reason.
Trillion-dollar hedge funds and investment groups are purchasing as many as
half (in some towns more) of the available-for-sale housing, so they can turn
them into rentals and then, when they’ve cornered the market, jack up the
prices.
When my dad bought his home in the 1950s the median price of a single-family house was around 2.2 times the median American family income. Today, the Fed says, the median house sells for $374,900 while the median American income is $35,805 — a ratio of more than ten-to-one between housing costs and annual income. Louise and I bought our first home in our mid-twenties, as did many of our friends. Banks were locally owned and worked with you; finding fixer-uppers was easy.
No
more.
As
noted in a Wall Street Journal article titled “Meet
Your New Landlord: Wall Street,” in just one suburb (Spring Hill) of
Nashville:
“In
all of Spring Hill, four firms … own nearly 700 houses … [which] amounts to
about 5% of all the houses in town.”
This
is the tiniest tip of the iceberg.
“On
the first Tuesday of each month,” notes the Journal
article about a similar phenomenon in Atlanta, investors “toted
duffels stuffed with millions of dollars in cashier’s checks made out in
various denominations so they wouldn’t have to interrupt their buying spree
with trips to the bank…”
The
same thing is happening in cities and suburbs all across America; the
investment goliaths use fine-tuned computer algorithms to sniff out houses they
can turn into rental properties, making over-market and unbeatable cash
bids often within minutes of a house hitting the market.
After
stripping neighborhoods of homes families can buy, they then begin raising
rents to extract as much cash as they can from local working class communities.
In
the Nashville suburb of Spring Hill, the vice-mayor, Bruce Hull, told the Journal you
used to be able to rent “a three bedroom, two bath house for $1,000 a month.”
Today, the Journal notes,
“The average rent for 148 single-family homes in Spring Hill owned by the big
four [Wall Street investor] landlords was about $1,773 a month…”
As
the Bank of International Settlements summarized in a 2014
retrospective study of the years since the Reagan/Gingrich changes in banking
and finance:
“We
describe a Pareto frontier along which different levels of risk-taking map into
different levels of welfare for the two parties, pitting Main Street against
Wall Street. … We also show that financial innovation, asymmetric compensation
schemes, concentration in the banking system, and bailout expectations enable
or encourage greater risk-taking and allocate greater surplus to Wall Street at
the expense of Main Street.”
It’s
a fancy way of saying, “Big banks and hedge funds are now worth trillions while
you and your community are destitute.” And forget about getting a loan to start
a small business in this big-bank environment of today.
When Louise and I started our first business, we did it with a $3000 loan from a small local Michigan bank. Back then bankers were part of the local community and eager to do what they could to help the community grow and prosper. Nowadays they just want to extract every penny they can from you so their CEO can buy another mega-yacht.
And
then Republicans came for your wealth, in a huge way.
Finally,
perhaps the most important reason millennials are so badly screwed these days
is the various changes in our tax code that began in the 1980s. Reagan dropped
the top income tax rate on the morbidly rich from 74% down to 27%, and cut
corporate tax rates from 50% to functionally nothing. America’s richest
millennial, Mark Zuckerberg, owns fully
2 percent or 1/50th of ALL the wealth of ALL millennials in the
country.
The
average billionaire pays an income tax rate of under 3%, and the majority of
our nation’s largest corporations not only pay nothing in annual income taxes
but most have so gamed the system that they get money back.
And
where does that money come from? It’s taken out of the taxes the
government collected from you and me.
This
42-year-long process, with Reagan’s original massive tax cuts amplified by
trillions more in tax cuts for the morbidly rich from the George W. Bush and
Donald Trump administrations, has produced a $50 trillion transfer of real
wealth from the middle class to the top 1%.
You
read that right: they’ve taken $50
friggin trillion dollars out of our pockets over the past 40 years
and stashed it in their money bins.
When Reagan was elected there wasn’t a single billionaire in America; now they’re appearing like popcorn, while all around us homelessness spreads like a relentless fungus, destroying the lives of millions of Americans — particularly millennials.
The
bottom line, my dear millennial friends, is that you’ve been had by the GOP.
And
now that Republicans have handed all that money over to the top 1% — and five
Republicans on the Supreme Court ruled in Citizens United that
billionaires and corporations owning politicians isn’t corruption or bribery
but “free speech” — its getting harder and harder to do anything about it.
Every
time any sort of reform — even modest, reasonable reforms — come before
Congress, a united block of Republicans in the Senate haul in another billion
dollars in campaign contributions and Mitch McConnell and his friends kill it
in the Senate.
And
don’t get me started on climate change, which Republicans, right
across-the-board, continue to deny, in deference to the fossil fuel industry
and its billionaires that funds their elections. They’ve put money and power
above the fate and future of your and your children’s planet.
They
even tried to end our 240-year experiment in democratic self governance, and
are now actively embracing neo-fascist autocracy, openly trying to emulate the
rightwing strongman governments that have taken over Russia and Hungary.
Like
Russia and Hungary, they’ve even succeeded in overturning the right to abortion
and are openly embracing homophobia and misogyny.
And
did I mention 400 million guns drenching our country in blood, and Republican
Senator John Cornyn just today saying that Republicans are unified
across-the-board to prevent any further action to stop gun violence in America?
I’m
so embarrassed to have to say this, but my generation let this happen. Back in
the 1980s, huge numbers of Boomers voted for the Reagan Revolution that kicked
off this whole political and economic death spiral. The guilt is largely ours.
And
now, these Republicans are trying to marinate your children in their white
supremacy and racism by forcing teachers to push a false narrative about
American history — all while they try to rig our elections by purging millions
of minority, Boomer, and Millennial voters from the rolls.
The
good news, however, is that, increasingly, our two generation are working
together to throw Republicans out of office and elect progressive Democrats who
understand these issues and know how to do something about it.
From
the 80-year-old Senator Bernie Sanders to 19-year-old progressive candidate for
the Ohio House Sam Lawrence (now
endorsed by Sherrod Brown and me!), progressives are growing in political power
at the same time America is waking up from the fog of bullshit Republicans have
been crop-dusting over us since 1981.
All is not lost; change is in the air. Get out there. Get active. Tag, we’re it!
-Thom Hartmann
https://hartmannreport.com/p/dear-millennials-im-sorry-we-didnt
Great article, Glen!
ReplyDeleteIf data like this gets read by Millennials, you would believe they would get out to VOTE!