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Michael Shank

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Republican Reasoning: Why 2008 Was the Year for Occupying and Protesting Wall Street

Posted: 10/12/11 03:36 PM ET

The Occupy Wall Street (and Washington DC and Boston and San Francisco and other) protests should come as no surprise. Frankly, I am surprised that they did not happen in 2008 at the height of the financial collapse. We've known the root of this discontent for years, if not decades. It has to do with America's growing poverty and income inequality rates.

Three years ago, I coauthored an article with then-US Congressman Wayne Gilchrest, a Republican from Maryland, who unfortunately got ousted by the Wall Street-friendly Club for Growth for challenging his party vis-a-vis their policies. The article was published by The Hill newspaper, titled "We Lead Developed World in Poverty and Inequality".

Rereading the article again today, I found it profoundly relevant three years later. Take a look:

Late last month, buried beneath the noise of last-minute presidential campaigning, a 2008 report released by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) cited rising inequality and poverty among member states. Press-released in Paris, this newsworthy point hardly made it into American press.

Noticeably, among developed OECD nations the United States ranked highest in both categories: inequality level and poverty rate. This may surprise few but the import of this information must no longer elude leaders -- including President-elect Barack Obama.

As America aims to further realign its recessing economy, and with unemployment peaking at 6.5 percent, our highest since 1994, the bailouts brokered must not only bear in mind the "haves" but also the "have-nots" -- and in America there are many in the latter category.

In its report, the OECD noted that a key driver of income inequality was, unsurprisingly, unemployment, a status which often stems from lack of skills and poor education. Going further, the report asserted that increasing employment is the best way of reducing poverty -- again, hardly news for anyone immersed in the essentials of economic development.

What continues to confound the conscience, however, is the difficulty in drumming up determination in the world's most developed democracy to change this detrimental dynamic.

From Baltimore and Buffalo to Long Beach and El Paso -- a sampling of America's poorest cities -- this country's economic woes are worsening and Washington must posthaste seek quick remedy. And in ameliorating America's economic blight, there will come with it a concurrent quelling of violence on the very impoverished streets we aim to employ.

Take Baltimore, for example. While the city maintains on average 4 percent unemployment -- roughly 2.5 percentage points lower than the national average -- school dropout rates are approaching near-pandemic levels. With one of the lowest secondary school graduation rates in the country, at 34 percent among the urban population, cities like Baltimore are the open wounds on which OECD data operates.

Why worry about Baltimore in particular? Because we know that a 1 percent increase in unemployment is accompanied by a 6 percent increase in homicides. Because the higher the percentage living in relative poverty, the higher the number of violent offenses. Because a 10 percent drop in male enrollment in secondary school increases the risk of violent conflict by roughly 4 percent.

Given Baltimore's unemployment, poverty and education rates, is it any wonder then that the city tops the charts on violent crime with five times the national murder rate, three times the national robbery rate, and nearly three times the national aggravated assault and arson rates?

This relationship is not coincidental; it is entirely correlational. (Interestingly, the same goes for U.S. security quagmires like the tribal regions between Pakistan and Afghanistan where unemployment rates are as high as 80 percent, educational enrollment as low as 25 percent, and average income rates as dastardly as $15 per month. The violence there too is not coincidental.) The key is to ferret out a financial fix to inequality and poverty that simultaneously recognizes the savings of violence prevented on American streets. That is also how you make it palatable to the public.

Maryland's own Sargent Shriver recognized this when spearheading this nation's first War on Poverty. Headquartered in the U.S. government's Office of Economic Opportunity -- an office no longer in existence -- the war-room mentality was ever-present. Shriver foresaw the looming security threat facing America. In creating the Peace Corps, Head Start, Job Corps, VISTA, Community Action Program, and Legal Services to the Poor, the farsighted Shriver understood that poverty was inextricably linked to the security of the nation and that nothing short of a war was needed.

Now is no different, and given OECD's findings perhaps a second waging of the war on poverty is warranted. President-elect Obama is potentially poised to do this but he cannot do it single-handedly. As President John F. Kennedy's advisers formed the necessary foundation for President Lyndon Johnson to subsequently advance the first war on poverty, so too would a second war need all hands on deck. But hopefully Obama, who has often been compared to Kennedy, does not have to wait until his successor arrives to see the fruits of his labor.

The real change we need in this country is to take serious the "growing unequal," as the OECD calls it. The U.S. as a global beacon of inequality and poverty rates is not what our founding fathers were thinking, nor is it conscionable. We need a modern-day Shriver to once again take the helm in Round Two of this war on poverty, eliminating once and for all the festering wound which, left unaddressed, will only foster more, not less, violence in the coming years.

We need to bridge our growing gap of inequality -- and quickly.

Gilchrest is serving his 9th term in Maryland's 1st district. Shank is communications director at George Mason University's Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution in Arlington, Va.


Three years later and the message is still relevant. The gap is only growing.

Michael Shank is a doctoral candidate at George Mason University's School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, an Associate at the Global Partnership for the Prevention of Armed Conflict in The Hague and a board member for the National Peace Academy.

 

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08:13 AM on 10/13/2011
In 20008, most Occupy folks still thought there was a government that would work for them. The Republicans have convinced the mass that Republicans do not care at all. No Republican will vote for anything that helps Obama by helping the economy. Paul Ryan is still a Republican favorite? And Cain is on top with a plan that kills Social Security and Medicare. States, Churches etc have to be relied upon in old age. (See pre SS and cry) What if you move out of state? What if your small community has small churches with small budgets? And the “media” and debaters do not even ask about those two elements of the effect of “999”.
The Republican runners can not even spell "middle class". Maybe they can talk around the reality with some undefined "Jobs" blab, but never admit reality. The Supremes got the mass attention. The attack on the unemployed and the Big Lie denials were thick in Republican debates and speeches. "Corporations are people" just summarized what many, many people already knew. And they just moved to Wall Street because that is the seat of the Un-American problem.
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everysome
muddy boots on white carpet
11:05 PM on 10/12/2011
now is only time we exist to do something about it
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aacme
My micro-bio is on a strict need-to-know basis.
10:44 PM on 10/12/2011
In 2008 we thought the answer was electing Obama. We have now seen that there is no answer within the 2 party system as it stands, totally and irretrievably corrupted by money. In 2008 we thought it was the Republicans. Now we know it is the Republican Revolution, which has triumphed by, forcibly at first (Citizens United, etc), but increasingly enthusiastically, enlisting the Democrats in the mad scramble for money and more money, the contest between the 2 parties having devolved from making the voters happy, to competing to be the one to sell out this particular principle or constituency first, with the paymasters sitting back and being courted like potentates by hypocrite hucksters of both parties.
So having figured that out, the only option was to abandon politics and hit the streets. The object being a political system without money and with 2 different parties, a return to the rule of law, and the return of sanity, as represented by regulation, to the financial world. That's the minimum. But it's not a demand. Who would we demand it of?
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WI Patriot
Defending the Constitution.
10:39 PM on 10/12/2011
It is beacuse govt employees are only now realizing there was a recession.

We're catching them up.
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demisfine
Often correct, NEVER right.
09:59 PM on 10/12/2011
"The gap is only growing".
We have more unemployed and worse income inequality.
The GOP is asking the poor to sacrifice more to set things straight, but the top 2% are the only ones gaining ground during this recession.
Now is the perfect time for OWS.
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kemstone
Traveler, thinker, writer.
07:05 PM on 10/12/2011
The reason why it didn't happen in 2008 is completely obvious: all of the political energy on the left was behind the Obama campaign, and getting him elected was Priority 1. The fact that the movement died down after that is both our own fault for expecting Obama to actually fix the problem, and Obama's fault for not calling on our support to pressure the other side into letting him fix it.
12:08 AM on 10/13/2011
Spot on!
05:51 PM on 10/12/2011
Michael, no one needed to spend the money to start this because the polls were ok in 2008. Today this is the only chance Obama has so the usual suspects pony up the dough and there ya go. Rent-a-mob!
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demisfine
Often correct, NEVER right.
10:00 PM on 10/12/2011
As if.
The Kochs funded the grassroot Tea Party and bought the governors they could get on sale.
You are projecting the GOP MO onto the progressives.
03:10 PM on 10/12/2011
Surprised that it did not happen in 2008? How quickly one forgets what one chose to ignore at the time when the tea party had its beginnings (before they were co-opted). They just chose to go after the government to prevent the bailouts in the first place so Wall Street wouldn't get even more power.