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How This Country Fails Its Most Vulnerable: A Field Guide to Our Threadbare Social Safety Net Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=49146"><span class="small">Rajan Menon, TomDispatch</span></a>   
Tuesday, 23 February 2021 13:46

Menon writes: "Economic crises shine a spotlight on a society's inequities and hierarchies, as well as its commitment to support those who are most vulnerable in such grievous moments. The calamity created by Covid-19 is no exception."

Children in Mississippi. (photo: WJTV 12)
Children in Mississippi. (photo: WJTV 12)


How This Country Fails Its Most Vulnerable: A Field Guide to Our Threadbare Social Safety Net

By Rajan Menon, TomDispatch

23 February 21

 


Imagine that, as January 2020 began, I had whispered in your ear that a pandemic would soon sweep the planet and, of any country on Earth, the wealthiest and most powerful, the United States of America, would be hit hardest. If I had then told you that there would be by far more cases and more deaths here than in even poor countries, I doubt you’d have believed me. If I had told you then that, over the next year-plus, this country, with all its resources, would botch both the testing and the tracking of the disease, would make a fiercely political nightmare out of taking the most basic steps to prevent its spread, and would turn the purchase and distribution of successful vaccines into a horror story of the first order, you would have thought me mad.

If I had told you that the president of the United States would get a truly bad case of that virus, and on partially recovering and returning to the White House, would promptly step out onto a balcony before the watching eyes of the world, while still infectious, and oh-so-proudly rip off the mask he was wearing in a show of macho who-knows-what, you would have considered me the worst prophet imaginable. What if I had then assured you that the White House itself would become a contagion hot spot for the disease, so much so that both the administration’s aging but crucial scientific expert on it and the aging majority leader of the Republican Senate would do their best to avoid going there lest they contract it? What if I had added that, when the vaccines finally did arrive, a significant part of the population would be so vaccinated against the idea of them, including front-line workers, that they would refuse to get the shots? You would have undoubtedly thought me crazy.

Let me repeat that again: we’re talking about the wealthiest, most powerful country on Planet Earth. And no, you wouldn’t have believed it. You would have thought that I was some kind of a nut. And yes, when Covid-19 arrived on our shores, all of that would indeed turn out to be part of our ongoing history in a country that, as TomDispatch regular Rajan Menon explains today, was only the “wealthiest” country on the planet for its wealthiest citizens. For so many of the rest, it would prove a hell on Earth. Tom

-Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch


How This Country Fails Its Most Vulnerable
A Field Guide to Our Threadbare Social Safety Net

conomic crises shine a spotlight on a society’s inequities and hierarchies, as well as its commitment to support those who are most vulnerable in such grievous moments. The calamity created by Covid-19 is no exception. The economic fallout from that pandemic has tested the nation’s social safety net as never before.

Between February and May 2020, the number of unemployed workers soared more than threefold — from 6.2 million to 20.5 million. The jobless rate spiked in a similar fashion from 3.8% to 13.0%. In late March, weekly unemployment claims reached 6.9 million, obliterating the previous record of 695,000, set in October 1982. Within three months, the pandemic-produced slump proved far worse than the three-year Great Recession of 2007-2009.

Things have since improved. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) announced in December that unemployment had fallen to 6.7%. Yet, that same month, weekly unemployment filings still reached a staggering 853,000 and though they fell to just under 800,000 last month, even that far surpassed the 1982 number.

And keep in mind that grim statistics like these can actually obscure, rather than illuminate, the depths of our current misery. After all, they exclude the 6.2 million Americans whose work hours had been slashed in December or the 7.3 million who had simply stopped looking for jobs because they were demoralized, feared being infected by the virus, had schoolchildren at home, or some of the above and more. The BLS’s rationale for not counting them is that they are no longer part of what it terms the “active labor force.” If they had been included, that jobless rate would have spiraled to nearly 24% in April and 11.6% in December.

Degrees of Pain

To see just how unevenly the economic pain has been distributed in America, however, you have to dig far deeper. A recent analysis by the St. Louis Federal Reserve did just that by dividing workers into five separate quintiles based on their range of incomes and the occupations typically associated with each.

The first and lowest-paid group, including janitors, cooks, and housecleaners, made less than $35,000 annually; the second (construction workers, security guards, and clerks, among others) earned $35,000-$48,000; the third (including primary- and middle-school teachers, as well as retail and postal workers), $48,000-$60,000; the fourth (including nurses, paralegals, and computer technicians), $60,000-$83,000; while employees in the highest-paid quintile like doctors, lawyers, and financial managers earned a minimum of $84,000.

More than 33% of those in the lowest paid group lost their jobs during the pandemic, and a similar proportion were forced to work fewer hours. By contrast, in the top quintile 5.6% were out of work and 5.4% had their hours cut. For the next highest quintile, the corresponding figures were 11.4% and 11.7%.

Workers in the bottom 20% of national income distribution have been especially vulnerable for another reason. Their median liquid savings (readily available cash) averages less than $600 compared to $31,300 for those in the top 20%.

Twelve percent of working Americans can’t even handle a $400 emergency; 27% say they could, but only if they borrowed, used credit cards, or sold their personal possessions.

Under the circumstances, it should scarcely be surprising that the number of hungry people increased from 35 million in 2019 to 50 million in 2020, overwhelming food banks nationwide. Meanwhile, rent and mortgage arrears continued to pile up. By last December, 12 million people already owed nearly $6,000 each on average in past-due rent and utility bills and will be on the hook to their landlords for those sums once federal and state moratoriums on evictions and foreclosures eventually end.

Meanwhile, low-income workers struggled to arrange child-care as schools closed to curtail coronavirus infections. Women have borne the brunt of the resulting burden. By last summer, 13% of workers, unable to afford childcare, had already quit their jobs or reduced their hours, and most held low-wage jobs to begin with. Forty-six percent of women have jobs with a median hourly wage of $10.93 an hour, or less than $23,000 a year, far below the national average, now just shy of $36,000. In some low-wage professions, like servers in restaurants and bars, women are (or at least were) 70% of the workforce. A disproportionate number of them were also Black or Hispanic.

Before the pandemic, 57% of women in low-wage occupations worked full-time and 15% of them were single parents. Close to one-fifth had children under four years old and contend with full-time care that, on average, costs $9,598 yearly. If that weren’t enough, at least 25% of such low-wage jobs involved shifting or unpredictable schedules.

Much has been made recently of the wonders of “telecommuting” to work. But here again there’s a social divide. People with at least a college degree, who are more likely to possess the skills needed for higher-paying jobs, have been “six times more likely” to telecommute than other workers. Even before the pandemic, 47% of those with college degrees occasionally worked from home, versus 9% of those who had completed high school and a mere 3% of those who hadn’t.

Now, add to the economic inequities highlighted by the pandemic slump those rooted in race. Black and Hispanic low-income workers have been doubly disadvantaged. In 2016, the median household wealth of whites was already 10 times that of Blacks and more than eight times that of Hispanics, a gap that has generally been on the increase since the 1960s. And because those two groups have been overrepresented among low-wage occupations most affected by unemployment in the last year, their jobless rate during the pandemic has been much higher.

Unsurprisingly, an August Pew Research Center survey revealed that significantly more of them than whites were struggling to cover utility bills and rent or mortgage payments. After Covid-19 hammered the economy, a much higher proportion of them were also hungry and had to turn to food pantries, many for the first time.

In these months Americans who are less educated, hold low-income jobs, and are minorities — Asians excepted, since they, like whites, are underrepresented in low-wage professions — have been in an economic Covid-19 hell on Earth. But isn’t the American social safety net supposed to help the vulnerable in times of economic distress? As it happens, at least compared to those of other wealthy countries, it’s been remarkably ineffective.

Sizing Up the Social Safety Net

In a Democratic presidential debate in October 2015, Bernie Sanders observed that Scandinavian governments protect workers better thanks to their stronger social safety nets. Hillary Clinton promptly shot back, “We are not Denmark. We are the United States of America.” Indeed we are.

This country certainly does have a panoply of social welfare programs that the federal government spends vast sums on — around 56% of the 2019 budget, or nearly $2.5 trillion. So, you might think that we were ready and able to assist workers hurt most by the Covid-19 recession. Think again.

Social Security consumes about 23% of the federal budget. Medicare, Medicaid, and the Children’s Health Insurance Program together claim another 25% (with Medicare taking the lion’s share).

Social Security and Medicare, however, generally only serve those 65 or older, not the jobless. With them excluded, two critical areas for most workers in such an economic crisis are healthcare and unemployment insurance.

About half of American workers rely on employer-provided health insurance. So, by last June, as Covid-19 caused joblessness to skyrocket, nearly eight million working adults and nearly seven million of their dependents lost their coverage once they became unemployed.

Medicaid, administered by states and funded in partnership with the federal government, does provide healthcare to certain low-income people and the 2010 Affordable Care Act (ACA) also required states to use federal funds to cover all adults whose incomes are no more than 30% above the official poverty line. In 2012, though, the Supreme Court ruled that states couldn’t be compelled to comply and, as of now, 12 states, eight of them southern, don’t. (Two more, Missouri and Oklahoma, have opted to expand Medicaid coverage per the ACA, but haven’t yet implemented the change.) People residing in non-ACA locales face draconian income requirements to qualify for Medicaid and, in almost all of them, childless individuals aren’t eligible, no matter how meager their earnings.

While Medicaid enrollment does increase with rising unemployment, not all jobless workers qualify, even in states that have expanded coverage. So unemployed workers may find that they earn too much to qualify for subsidies but not enough to purchase private insurance, which averages $456 a month for an individual and $1,152 for a family. Then there are steeply rising out-of-pocket expenses — deductibles, copayments, and extra charges for services provided by out-of-network doctors. Deductibles alone have, on average, gone up by 111% since 2010, far outpacing average wages, which increased by only 27%.

The American health care system remains a far cry from the variants of universal health care that exist in Australia, Canada, most European countries, Japan, New Zealand, and South Korea. The barrier to providing such care in the U.S. isn’t affordability, but the formidable political power of a juggernaut healthcare industry (including insurance and drug companies) that opposes it fiercely.

As for unemployment insurance, the American version — funded by state and federal payroll taxes and supplemented by federal money — remains, at best, a bare-bones arrangement. Coverage used to last a uniform 26 weeks, but since 2011, 13 states have reduced it, some more than once, while also paring down benefits (especially as claims soared during the Great Recession).

So if you lose your job, where you live matters a lot. Many states provide benefits for more than half a year, Massachusetts for up to 30 weeks. Michigan, South Carolina, and Missouri, however, set the limit at 20 weeks, Arkansas at 16, Alabama at 14. The weekly payout also varies. Although the pre-pandemic national average was about $387, the maximum can run from $213 to $823, with most states providing an average of between $300 and $500.

Except in unusual times like these, when the federal government provides emergency supplements, unemployment benefits replace only about a third to a half of lost wages. As for the millions of people who work in the gig economy or are self-employed, they are seldom entitled to any help at all.

The proportion of jobless workers receiving unemployment benefits has also been declining since the 1980s. It’s now hit 27% nationally and, in 17 states, 20% or less. There are multiple reasons for this, but arguably the biggest one is that the system has been woefully underfunded. Taxes on wages provide the revenue needed to cover unemployment benefits, but in 16 states, the maximum taxable annual amount is less than $10,000 a year. The federal equivalent has remained $7,000 — not adjusted for inflation — since 1983. That comes to $42 per worker.

The $2-trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act and the subsequent $900-billion Pandemic Relief Bill did provide federal funds to extend unemployment benefits well beyond the number of weeks set by individual states. They also covered gig workers and the self-employed. However, such exceptional and temporary rescue measures — including the one President Joe Biden has proposed, which includes a weekly supplement of $400 to unemployment benefits and seems likely to materialize soon — only highlight the inadequacies of the regular unemployment insurance system.

Other parts of the social safety net include housing subsidies, the Supplementary Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly the Food Stamp Program), Temporary Aid to Needy Families, and childcare subsidies. After surveying them, a recent National Bureau of Economic Research study concluded that they amounted to an ill-funded labyrinthine system rife with arcane eligibility criteria that — the elderly or the disabled aside — actually aids fewer than less half of low-income families and only a quarter of those without children.

This isn’t an unfair assessment. The Government Accountability Office reports that, of the 8.5 million children eligible for child-care subsidies, only 1.5 million (just under 18%) actually receive any. Even 40% of the kids from households below the poverty line were left out.

Similarly, fewer than a quarter of qualified low-income renters, those most vulnerable to eviction, receive any Department of Housing and Urban Development subsidies. Because median rent increased 13% between 2001 and 2017 while the median income of renters (adjusted for inflation) didn’t budge, 47% of them were already “rent burdened” in the pre-pandemic moment. In other words, rent ate up 30% or more of their annual income. Twenty-four percent were “severely burdened” (that is, half or more of their income). Little wonder that a typical family whose earnings are in the bottom 20% had only $500 left over after paying the monthly rent, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, even before Covid-19 hit.

SNAP does better on food, covering 84% of those eligible, but the average benefit in 2019, as the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities noted, was $217, “about $4.17 a day, $1.39 per meal.” Mind you, in about one-third of recipient households, at least two people were working; in 75%, at least one. Not for nothing has the term “working poor” become part of our political vocabulary.

Is Change in the Air?

During crises like the present one, our moth-eaten safety net has to be patched up with stopgap legislation that invariably produces protracted partisan jousting. The latest episode is, of course, the battle over President Joe Biden’s plan to provide an additional $1.9 trillion in relief to a desperate country.

Can’t we do better? In principle, yes. After all, many countries have far stronger safety nets that were created without fostering indolence or stifling innovation and, in most instances, with a public debt substantially smaller relative to gross domestic product than ours. (So much for the perennial claims from the American political right that attempting anything similar here would have terrible consequences.)

We certainly ought to do better. The United States places second in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s overall poverty index, which includes all 27 European Union countries plus the United Kingdom and Canada, as well as in its child-poverty-rate ranking.

But doing better won’t be easy — or perhaps even possible. American views on the government’s appropriate economic role differ substantially from those of Canadians and Europeans. Moreover, corporate money and that of the truly wealthy already massively influence our politics, a phenomenon intensified by recent Supreme Court decisions. Proposals to fortify the safety net will, therefore, provoke formidable resistance from armies of special interests, lobbyists, and plutocrats with the means to influence politicians. So if you’re impatient for a better safety net, don’t hold your breath.

And yet many landmark changes that created greater equity in the United States (including the 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery, the 19th Amendment, which guaranteed women voting rights, the New Deal, the creation of Medicaid, and the civil rights legislation of the 1960s) once seemed inconceivable. Perhaps this pandemic’s devastation will promote a debate on the failures of our ragged social safety net.

Here’s hoping.



Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Books, John Feffer’s new dystopian novel Frostlands (the second in the Splinterlands series), Beverly Gologorsky’s novel Every Body Has a Story, and Tom Engelhardt’s A Nation Unmade by War, as well as Alfred McCoy’s In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power and John Dower’s The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World War II.

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RSN: Last Dance at Oak Flat Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=27921"><span class="small">Mort Rosenblum, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Tuesday, 23 February 2021 13:03

Rosenblum writes: "Arizona - Big Copper's Last Stand is imminent at Oak Flat. Unlike Custer's, the Indians seem likely to lose. A parting shot by Donald Trump is about to destroy the San Carlos Apaches' equivalent of Mount Sinai, revered for millennia by earlier tribes."

Signs posted at Oak Flat campground protest the possibility of the federal government clearing the way for a copper mine on the land held sacred by the Apache and other Arizona tribes. (photo: Cheryl Evans/The Republic)
Signs posted at Oak Flat campground protest the possibility of the federal government clearing the way for a copper mine on the land held sacred by the Apache and other Arizona tribes. (photo: Cheryl Evans/The Republic)


Last Dance at Oak Flat

By Mort Rosenblum, Reader Supported News

23 February 21

 

UPERIOR, Arizona – Big Copper’s Last Stand is imminent at Oak Flat. Unlike Custer’s, the Indians seem likely to lose. A parting shot by Donald Trump is about to destroy the San Carlos Apaches’ equivalent of Mount Sinai, revered for millennia by earlier tribes.

The battle at the foot of Apache Leap escarpment is a telling microcosm of Trump’s headlong rush to open protected Native American land to mining and fossil fuel companies across much of the United States, from the Mexican border to Alaska.

Unless the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court orders a temporary halt by mid-March, Oak Flat is destined to be a gaping hole in the ground near a 60-story waste-rock mountain, property of a giant Anglo-Australian company that will pay a pittance in taxes, royalties and local wages.

“This will be our last dance,” Sherlyn Joyce Victor Honda said as her 10-year-old granddaughter, Taylor, shuffled to thumping drums and chants, midway through an 18-hour coming of age ceremony watched by a hundred family members, friends and sympathizers.

“I don’t know what we’ll do, where we’ll go,” she said. Dozens of Apaches echoed that thought among the old oaks where for generations they have stockpiled food for winter, taught their young and prayed to their spirits. Their common message was clear: We don’t matter.

Resolution Copper has tried to acquire the land since 2008. Republican senators slipped a midnight rider into the 2015 National Defense Authorization Act, forcing Barack Obama to start the process, pending a final review during 2021. Trump abruptly advanced the date.

Nizhoni Pike, 20, who studies nutrition on the San Carlos Reservation, 41 miles to the east, worries that the invasion of tribal lands is a death knell for ancient ways that survived despite massacres, forced marches and broken promises since settlers moved west in the 1800s.

“We are going to lose a part of ourselves that can’t be replaced,” she said. “And it’s more than us. If this can be allowed to happen, no religion is safe.” All cultures have their holy rituals, she added, and nearly all are rooted in a sacred place.

She has a point. Eyes closed, hearing rhythmic chanting in a strange tongue, I could imagine the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem or the Great Mosque in Mecca. Looking around, Temple Emanuel in Tucson seemed a better fit. This was an Apache bas mitzvah.

During solemn moments, young Taylor intoned prayers, laid prone on the ground for purification and joined dancers for a circuit around eagle feathers tied to a stake. In between, it was a celebration that any Jewish kid with cheek-pinching aunts would recognize.

Two long rows of gifts were lined up on the sand: two-quart bottles of Dr. Pepper, Huggies, bright pink or green plastic pails and such. They weren’t for Taylor; Apaches share among themselves. At one point, kids swooped in to carry them off like party favors.

Wendsler Nosie Sr., former San Carlos tribal chairman, has fought Resolution Copper for years. His coalition, Apache Stronghold, filed a last-ditch lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in Phoenix. Judge Steven Logan ruled on Feb. 13 that the group, not a “sovereign nation,” had no standing.

Logan’s decision sent grim echoes throughout Indian country. “The exclusive right of the United States to extinguish Indian title has never been doubted,” he wrote. “And whether it be done by treaty, by sword, by purchase, by the exercise of complete dominion adverse to the right of occupancy, or otherwise, its justness is not open to inquiry in the courts.”

Last year, Naelyn Pike, Nosie’s granddaughter and Nizhoni’s older sister, testified to a House committee with convincing detail, reading without emotion from a prepared text. It wouldn’t have mattered if she had belted out “Hamilton.” Few congressmen paid attention.

But in court, she fought back tears, describing the significance of gathering acorns to pound into flour from gnarled ancient oaks imbued with the Creator’s spirit. Following the audio, I could only imagine her face when a lawyer remarked that she could find oak trees in Phoenix.

If the Ninth Circuit Court in San Francisco upholds the decision, Oak Flat, protected as a national heritage site since the Eisenhower administration, will belong to British and Australian shareholders, who will destroy yet more treasured recreational wild country.

Stepping back, the Apaches’ last stand reflects devastating loss across the West, particularly in the twisted Trump Republican politics of Arizona. Mining contributes little to the economy, but it funds politicians who spare scant thought to protecting the people and the land it impacts.

As I drove up at dawn through Oro Valley north of Tucson, NPR reported fresh news linking its state representative, Mark Finchem, to Oath Keepers who stormed the Capitol. In 2019, he sponsored a bill to give Arizona control of federal lands, making them easier to despoil.

I passed San Manuel, where BHP-Billiton of Australia paid $3.2 billion in 1996 to buy a thriving mine from Magma Copper, dubbed Mother Magma for generosity to local communities. It suspended operations three years later when copper prices dipped, then abandoned the mine, leaving fenced-in devastation and a nearby ghost town. BHP is a co-owner of Resolution.

At Hayden, I turned left past the Mexican-owned ASARCO smelter, notorious for stiffing non-union labor and poisoning the air, and then up through once spectacular scenery on Route 177 to Superior. It’s now the Highway of Horror: open pit gashes and raw mounds of “overburden.”

Mining executives say America needs copper more than ever in a wired world moving toward electric vehicles. And, they insist, it is essential to national security. Opposing new mines, the argument goes, is simply the old NIMBY complaint: not in my backyard.

Up to a point. Copper is abundant in South America, Africa and Indonesia, where governments need revenue and jobs. As a strategic material, it is best kept in reserve underground for future needs. But companies prefer America, with infrastructure, friendly officials and no royalties.

With few smelters in the United States, foreign operators ship ore concentrate to Asia, where its value increases as finished copper. Profits go elsewhere, and Americans are left with the mess.

Just this week, The New York Times splashed a stunning example. At independence in 1960, the Congo nationalized rich Belgian-owned copper mines, and profits vanished into corrupt politicians’ bank accounts. Laurent Kabila financed his onslaught against Mobutu Sese Seko by selling concessions to foreigners, including Israeli billionaire Dan Gertler.

U.S. authorities slapped sanctions on Gertler in 2017 for gross corruption, blocking his access to banks and freezing his assets in America. He fought the measures hard, hiring Alan Dershowitz, a Trump favorite, to represent him. Days before Joe Biden took office, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin quietly released Gertler’s assets and gave him a year to deal with banks.

The San Carlos Apaches’ suit, backed by other tribes, is not about money or the environment. Other faiths have multiple churches, mosques or temples. They have Chi’chil Bilagoteel. Oak Flat.

After speaking with Nizhoni Pike, I met Curtis Pemberton, her boyfriend, who took the conflict to a broader plane. Like two-thirds of American Indians, he grew up off the reservation and moves seamlessly between two cultures.

Had American settlers worked out peaceful coexistence with Indians who understood the land they lived on, he said, both could have cooperated to thrive sustainably. At the very least, they would not have fragmented tribes into squalid pockets, bitter at serial injustices.

In a hoodie, barely bronzed in the Arizona winter, Curt might be of any melting-pot mix. But he is Chiricahua Apache, with bloodlines to Cochise and Geronimo, whose tribe was forced from its dramatic mountain redoubts to end up at San Carlos, barren flatlands far from any town.

Curt laughs off the old Jean-Jacques Rousseau fantasy of noble savages. Like all human cohorts, some Indians are bigoted, corrupt and hostile. Most are not. As divisions deepen in an America facing crises that cross ethnic lines, he said, it is time to coexist as equals for everyone’s benefit.

He moved to the reservation to be with Nizhoni, and, at 22, he is studying diesel mechanics. Fascinated with France, he beamed at an invitation to come see the clunky old engines that power the boat I live on in Paris. He probably won’t make the trip.

With few jobs on the reservation, Curt and Nizhoni may have to work elsewhere and, as tradition demands, help extended families make it through hard times. But both are deeply rooted to the new tribal homeland, which someone long ago dubbed “Hell’s 40 Acres.”

“Whatever happens,” Nizhoni told me, “when I’m an old lady I want to bring my grandkids to Oak Flat to gather acorns and say prayers to the Creator the way my grandmother did with me.” She glanced wistfully at the tepees and campfires, likely to be off-limits within weeks.

Just then, the drums began beating again. With practiced dance steps, she and Curt moved off arm-in-arm back to the 19th century for a last dance at Oak Flat.



Mort Rosenblum has reported from seven continents as Associated Press special correspondent, edited the International Herald Tribune in Paris, and written 14 books on subjects ranging from global geopolitics to chocolate. He now runs MortReport.org.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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FOCUS: Donald Trump Is Extremely Mad Prosecutors Will See His Tax Returns Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=10204"><span class="small">Jonathan Chait, New York Magazine</span></a>   
Tuesday, 23 February 2021 12:15

Chait writes: "Trump did not take the defeat in stride. Instead, the former president released a statement that, even by Trumpian standards, brims with anger."

Donald Trump. (photo: Andrew Harrer/Getty Images)
Donald Trump. (photo: Andrew Harrer/Getty Images)


Donald Trump Is Extremely Mad Prosecutors Will See His Tax Returns

By Jonathan Chait, New York Magazine

23 February 21

 

onald Trump’s yearslong quest to prevent the public, Congress, or law-enforcement officials from seeing his tax statements came to a resounding end with a unanimous Supreme Court ruling. He did not take the defeat in stride. Instead, the former president released a statement that, even by Trumpian standards, brims with anger.

Trump’s response bears every hallmark of an authentically Trump-authored text, as opposed to the knockoff versions produced by his aides. It is meandering, filled with run-on sentences, gratuitous insults, and exclamation points. Trump’s position on the tax returns rests on a series of assertions, ranging from his false claim that Robert Mueller found “No Collusion” to his insistence that he actually won the 2020 election to his extremely ironic complaint that prosecutors targeting their political opponents is “fascism, not justice.” (Trump, of course, spent his presidency publicly demanding his Attorneys General investigate his political rivals.)

The statement does contain one unambiguously true point: “This is something which has never happened to a president before.” That’s correct, because every president for the past several decades has voluntarily released his financial information. Only Trump refused.

The most conspicuous absence from Trump’s statement is any explanation as to why he has fought so hard to conceal this information, which all his predecessors willingly disclosed. He goes on at great length about the prosecutors’ motives for obtaining it without even gesturing at his own for withholding it.

Journalists have pieced together enough about various Trump financial dealings to demonstrate the high likelihood that he has committed a series of financial crimes. There is probably enough to charge him even without the tax forms. Giving Vance still more information certainly can’t help Trump.

His outpouring of rage that Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance will finally have access to his financial documents suggests the only plausible reason for Trump’s evident dismay: He is very scared of being charged with crimes.

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Texas Freeze Shows a Chilling Truth - How the Rich Use Climate Change to Divide Us Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9643"><span class="small">Robert Reich, Guardian UK</span></a>   
Tuesday, 23 February 2021 09:12

Reich writes: "The state's prevailing social Darwinism was expressed most succinctly by the mayor of Colorado City, who accused his constituents - trapped in near sub-zero temperatures and complaining about lack of heat, electricity and drinkable water - of being the 'lazy' products of a 'socialist government.'"

Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich. (photo: Steve Russell/Toronto Star)
Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich. (photo: Steve Russell/Toronto Star)


Texas Freeze Shows a Chilling Truth - How the Rich Use Climate Change to Divide Us

By Robert Reich, Guardian UK

23 February 21


The Lone Star State is aptly named. If you’re not part of the Republican oil elite with Cruz and Abbott, you’re on your own

exas has long represented a wild west individualism that elevates personal freedom – this week, the freedom to freeze – above all else.

The state’s prevailing social Darwinism was expressed most succinctly by the mayor of Colorado City, who accused his constituents – trapped in near sub-zero temperatures and complaining about lack of heat, electricity and drinkable water – of being the “lazy” products of a “socialist government”, adding “I’m sick and tired of people looking for a damn handout!” and predicting “only the strong will survive and the weak will perish”.

Texas has the third-highest number of billionaires in America, most of them oil tycoons. Last week, the laissez-faire state energy market delivered a bonanza to oil and gas producers that managed to keep production going during the freeze. It was “like hitting the jackpot”, boasted the president of Comstock Resources on an earnings call. Jerry Jones, billionaire owner of the Dallas Cowboys, holds a majority of Comstock’s shares.

But most other Texans were marooned. Some did perish.

The Electric Reliability Council of Texas, which manages the flow of electric power, exempted affluent downtowns from outages, leaving thriving parts of Austin, Dallas and Houston brightly lit while pushing less affluent precincts into the dark and cold.

Like the poor across America and much of the world, poor Texans are getting hammered by climate change. Many inhabit substandard homes, lacking proper insulation. The very poor occupy trailers or tents, or camp out in their cars. Lower-income communities are located close to refineries and other industrial sites that release added pollutants when they shut or restart.

In Texas, for-profit energy companies have no incentive to prepare for extreme weather or maintain spare capacity. Even if they’re able to handle surges in demand, prices go through the roof and poorer households are hit hard. If they can’t pay, they’re cut off.

Rich Texans take spikes in energy prices in their stride. If the electric grid goes down, private generators kick in. In a pinch – as last week – they check into hotels or leave town. On Wednesday night, as millions of his constituents remained without power and heat, Senator Ted Cruz flew to Cancún, Mexico for a family vacation. Their Houston home was “FREEZING” – as his wife put it.

Climate change, Covid-19 and jobs are together splitting Americans by class more profoundly than Americans are split by politics. The white working class is taking as much of a beating as most Black and Latino people.

Yet the white working class has been seduced by conservative Republicans and Trump cultists, of which Texas has an abundance, into believing that what’s good for Black and Latino people is bad for them, and that whites are, or should be, on the winning side of the social Darwinian contest.

White grievance helps keep Republicans in power, protecting their rich patrons from a majority that might otherwise join to demand what they need – such as heat, electricity, water and reliable sources of power.

Lower-income Texans, white as well as Black and Latino, are taking it on the chin in many other ways. Texas is one of the few states that hasn’t expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, leaving the share of Texans without health insurance twice the national average, the largest uninsured population of any state. Texas has double the national average of children in poverty and a higher rate of unemployment than the nation’s average.

And although Texans have suffered multiple natural disasters stemming from climate change, Texas Republicans are dead set against a Green New Deal that would help reduce the horrific impacts.

Last Wednesday, Texas’s governor, Greg Abbott, went on Fox News to proclaim, absurdly, that what happened to his state “shows how the Green New Deal would be a deadly deal for the United States”. Abbott blamed the power failure on the fact that “wind and solar got shut down”.

Rubbish. The loss of power from frozen coal-fired and natural gas plants was six times larger than the dent caused by frozen wind turbines. Texans froze because deregulation and a profit-driven free market created an electric grid utterly unprepared for climate change.

In Texas, oil tycoons are the only winners from climate change. Everyone else is losing badly. Adapting to extreme weather is necessary but it’s no substitute for cutting emissions, which Texas is loath to do. Not even the Lone Star state should protect the freedom to freeze.

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Trump's Tax Returns Aren't the Only Crucial Records Prosecutors Will Get Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=58434"><span class="small">Mike McIntire, The New York Times</span></a>   
Tuesday, 23 February 2021 09:12

McIntire writes: "When New York prosecutors finally get to examine the federal tax returns of former President Donald J. Trump, they will discover a veritable how-to guide for getting rich while losing millions of dollars and paying little to no income taxes."

Donald Trump. (photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Donald Trump. (photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images)


Trump's Tax Returns Aren't the Only Crucial Records Prosecutors Will Get

By Mike McIntire, The New York Times

23 February 21


For all that they reveal, tax returns have limitations. Other records from the former president’s accountants may help give a fuller picture of his finances.

hen New York prosecutors finally get to examine the federal tax returns of former President Donald J. Trump, they will discover a veritable how-to guide for getting rich while losing millions of dollars and paying little to no income taxes.

Whether they find evidence of crimes, however, will also depend on other information not found in the actual returns.

The United States Supreme Court on Monday cleared the way for the Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., to obtain eight years of Mr. Trump’s federal income tax returns and other records from his accountants. The decision capped a long-running legal battle over prosecutors’ access to the information.

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