Thing that really causes class warfare
By MOLLY IVINS
SAN FRANCISCO - A complete stranger stopped me on the street
the other day. He said he used to work on Capitol Hill, and he
thinks what is happening there is that the Republicans are making
this big stink about some kind of Chinese-Democratic money connection
because they know the big money in the future will be Asian, see?
And they want to fix it so Asian money going to Democrats in
the future will be politically suspect, see, because they know
otherwise the Democrats could make up for the big-money edge the
Republicans always have, and the Republicans could never win again,
see?
You may wonder why I am bothering to report a conversation
with a source of unknown reliability encountered on Castro Street,
but I have been reading the Washington press closely and the guy's
theory sounds just as thoroughly researched as anything else I've
read lately.
So, I just thought I'd throw it out there as though it might
be true - plop, a great big juicy conspiracy theory with no evidence
or attribution - because it's clearly the In Thing for those in
the press corps to do these days. I want to be just like Bill
Safire when I grow up.
According to a March 19 headline in the New York Times, "U.S.
Says Mental Impairment Might Be a Bar to Citizenship." I
doubt that, and as evidence, I offer the Washington press corps.
Meanwhile, in case anyone is still interested in the real world
and how it's going, I heard an interesting story from Don Bartlett,
half of the famous investigative team of Bartlett-and-Steele.
Bartlett was in lower Manhattan not long ago, moling through some
archive near Wall Street, and he emerges at 5 p.m. to try to catch
a cab. At last, he spots an empty cab and waves frantically, but
the guy goes flying by. But then the cabbie brakes, pulls over
and waits for Bartlett.
"How come you stopped?" inquires Bartlett.
"Because you don't look like a stockbroker." (Bartlett,
being an investigative reporter, naturally has that I-can't-get-my-socks-to-match
fashion statement.)
"So what's wrong with stockbrokers?" he asks.
"Two things. I come down here this time of day, I always
get stockbrokers," says the cabbie. "Two or three of
them together. And it's not that they always act like I'm invisible,
it's that they always talk about how much money they made that
day. And then they talk about how hard they worked.
"I been drivin' this cab 20 years, I got three kids, after
I finish my eight hours in the cab, I go to my other job and do
eight hours there. I don't like to hear stockbrokers talk about
how hard they work."
Class differences in America are hard to write about. The country
is run by people who haven't had to take a bus, let alone at 1
a.m., for at least 20 years - if ever. Consequently, they're completely
clueless about the bus-taking populace. In other words, they're
clueless about the one-half of Americans who live on less than
the median income of $30,800 a year, according to the Federal
Reserve.
Shall I ever forget the glorious Sunday morning on David Brinkley's
chat show when all the usual suspects agreed the average middle-class
family makes $80,000 a year? Of course, one of the oddities of
American life is that families that do make $80,000 a year consider
themselves to be perfectly average, middle-class Americans.
When populists are being tacky, we always bring up people like
Mikey Eisner of the Walt Disney Co. (I work for Mr. Eisner and
call him Mikey because I like to think of my employers affectionately.)
The company just gave Mikey $196 million worth of stock options.
Pointing out this sort of thing causes conservatives to humph
about how we populists foment "class warfare." However,
it wasn't us populists who decided to pay Mikey another $196 million.
After the "class warfare" charge comes the dreaded
"redistributionist" accusation - as in, "You people
(that's us people who have noticed that Mikey got another $196
million worth of stock options) believe in redistributionist politics;
you want to redistribute wealth in this country."
I don't know that I do, actually. If we could take a lot of
money from rich people and give it to a lot of poor people, it
might not be a bad thing, but it would probably be better just
to pay poor people more to start with.
My problem with redistribution of wealth comes with the policies
that take money from poor people and redistribute it upward to
rich people. Personally, I think that's the kind of thing that
causes class warfare.
Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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Abilene Reporter-News / Texnews / E.W. Scripps Publications
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