Hillary just gave a speech that looks like a clone from Bernie Sanders. But she's throwing in neoliberal code language, reassuring her real backers-- finance and bank people. Here's an excerpt from her speech at the New School (the whole speech is transcribed at
Dailykos.com)
""So today I am proposing an agenda to raise incomes for hard-working Americans. An agenda for strong growth, fair growth, and long-term growth."Let me begin with strong growth.
"More growth means more jobs and more new businesses. More jobs give people choices about where to work. And employers have to offer higher wages and better benefits in order to compete with each other to hire new workers and keep the productive ones. That's why economists tell us that getting closer to full employment is crucial for raising incomes."
Growth. Then more growth. Growth is how to help American workers. Strong growth. That's how more people will get better paying jobs.
The problem with the kind of capitalism we live with now-- predatory capitalism, disaster capitalism, as Naomi Klein calls it, capitalism that strip-mines the commons, the 99%-- whatever the name, this kind of capitalism is built on growth. That growth doesn't happen for the sake of jobs. The growth is for corporate profits. The growth is for increased market share. The growth is so the corporation can invest profits in share buy-backs, rather than research or sharing with employees.
Growth is the code-word Hillary uses to tell her banker backers to ignore the progressive, take care of main street message she is putting out, that she's really sticking with the bankers, sticking to sticking it to we the people.
Growth is not the answer. Growth as an economic philosophy is, beyond over-rated. In recent years, growth has not helped workers. Growth has helped robot and automation and software manufacturers and developers. Growth helps finance companies taking businesses public and lawyers who make millions shepherding mergers and acquisitions.
Growth is part of the gospel of twenty first century capitalism. But it will be a part of the eulogy too, because unlimited growth is unsustainable. We need to start thinking about economics from the bottom-up, with a connection consciousness-- an awareness that we are all connected to all things-- all people to each other and to all of the earth's ecosystems.
In nature, there is no unlimited growth. Genes regulate growth, setting limits. And if growth goes too far, other bio-system elements kick and say no, no no-- bones break, kidneys fail to function, hearts become over-worked. Blood chemistry goes out of whack.
Growth in an economy is no different. The problem is, most economists are blind, miserable failures when it comes to including all the key factors-- including externality costs, like environmental pollution, social factors and exploitation of commons resources.
Rob Kall is an award winning journalist, inventor, software architect,
connector and visionary. His work and his writing have been featured in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, CNN, ABC, the HuffingtonPost, Success, Discover and other media.
Check out his platform at RobKall.com
He is the author of The Bottom-up Revolution; Mastering the Emerging World of Connectivity
He's given talks and workshops to Fortune
500 execs and national medical and psychological organizations, and pioneered
first-of-their-kind conferences in Positive Psychology, Brain Science and
Story. He hosts some of the world's smartest, most interesting and powerful
people on his Bottom Up Radio Show,
and founded and publishes one of the top Google- ranked progressive news and
opinion sites, OpEdNews.com
more detailed bio:
Rob Kall has spent his adult life as an awakener and empowerer-- first in the field of biofeedback, inventing products, developing software and a music recording label, MuPsych, within the company he founded in 1978-- Futurehealth, and founding, organizing and running 3 conferences: Winter Brain, on Neurofeedback and consciousness, Optimal Functioning and Positive Psychology (a pioneer in the field of Positive Psychology, first presenting workshops on it in 1985) and Storycon Summit Meeting on the Art Science and Application of Story-- each the first of their kind. Then, when he found the process of raising people's consciousness (more...)