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Thursday, 4 December 2014

Who benefits from the American food stamp program?

food stamps

© Associated Press



More than one in seven people.

That's how many people are on food stamps in America these days. More than one in seven people.

In fact, the number of recipients of federal food assistance rose a whopping 171% between 2000 and 2011 alone, to an all-time record of more than 47 million Americans across the country now on the food stamp dole.


That means more U.S. citizens are receiving food stamp benefits now than in the entire history of the food stamp program ever.


One-sixth of the country is now receiving food stamps and the number just continues to climb.


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Most argue this increase simply has to do with the terrible recession and resultant unemployment; but the food stamp program, now known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP, is yet another crony capitalist scheme (surprise, surprise).

Here are a few more crony facts most people might not realize about our nation's food stamp program.


food stamp participation

1. Congress Changed the Rules to Get Even More People on the Dole

Congress relaxed the food stamp program standards in 2008 regarding who could receive benefits, then gave the program a temporary boost in 2009 that allowed people to receive even more money every month.


2.The Biggest Food Stamp Lobbyists are Mega Banks and Mega Corporations


Some 76 billion in food stamps were handed out just last year alone. But the biggest recipients aren't the people on food stamps.


In fact, the biggest lobbyists for the food stamp program aren't poor people or organizations who represent low-income families, but big Wall Street banks and mega corporations. Two quick examples: J.P. Morgan Chase raked in $209 million for just two contracts agreeing to administer EBT card benefits in Florida and New York; and Walmart made half a billion in food stamps just off Oklahoma residents and in just a two-year period.


SNAP

3. Mega Food Companies Have Fought Against Any Healthy Improvements to the Program

While studies have found that socioeconomic factors are linked to food-related health issues like obesity and diabetes, attempts to enforce healthier standards in America's food stamp program have been fought every step of the way by the powerful lobbyists behind those mega corporations.


So even though advertisements talk about SNAP like it's a way to "eat healthy" and all that propaganda, companies that make products like junk food and soda spend big bucks to make sure the food stamp dollars keep on rolling in.


Here are a few highlights on that found in a report via Eat Drink Politics:



  • Powerful food industry lobbying groups teamed up to oppose health-oriented improvements to SNAP. The food industry also joined forces with anti-hunger groups to lobby against SNAP improvements.

  • Companies such as Cargill, PepsiCo, and Kroger lobbied Congress on SNAP, while also donating money to America's top anti-hunger organizations.

  • At least nine states have proposed bills to make health-oriented improvements to SNAP, but none have passed, in part due to opposition from the food industry.

  • Coca-Cola, the Corn Refiners of America, and Kraft Foods all lobbied against a Florida bill that aimed to disallow SNAP purchases for soda and junk food.


4. Most of These Mega Food Retailers Making Bank off Food Stamps Don't Even Pay Their Employees Enough to Get by Without Food Stamps

Food stamps are a sick, sad cycle.


Did you know that Walmart ends up with 18% of all food stamps spent in the U.S., or nearly 14 billion dollars?


As Marketplace's Krissy Clark wrote, "In order to be authorized by the government to participate in SNAP, a store must meet certain standards and fulfill certain responsibilities," but, "Nowhere does the government require that for a store to be part of the food stamp program, it must pay its workers enough that they don't need to use food stamps themselves."


So...let's say hypothetically you are a giant corporation that takes in a huge profit off the food stamp program (*cough* Walmart *cough*) and you pay your employees so poorly that many of them are eligible for food stamps. You are basically giving yourself a rather fat kickback that wouldn't exactly motivate you to ever raise wages because you'd lose the money paid out in higher wages and the lost food stamp revenue from paying those people enough so that they can't get food stamps any longer.


(On another aside, the food stamp poverty cycle continues with rules limiting SNAP recipients' ability to save money toward their own independence. Anyone with savings of $2,000 or more will automatically get all of their food stamp benefits cut...but if the benefits are cut, the person would have to spend the savings on food and therefore cannot save, you see? So saving money to try and get off food stamps and become independent when you are low-income? Not really possible unless you suddenly inherent a fat estate or win the lottery or something.)


5. SNAP Is Being Openly Advertised to People Like It's a Party, Including Door-to-Door Food Stamp "Outreach" to Get More Americans Signed Up


As a result of all these powerful lobbyists and the vested interests they represent who make billions off the program, food stamp benefits are now being ENTHUSIASTICALLY PROMOTED in this country. They are advertised in everything from mailers to spots on the radio, and in some low-income neighborhoods, there are workers who even go door-to-door to try and get more people signed up. And food stamp applications are so easy these days, in some states you can fill one out online. There are even free food stamp calculator apps available for people's smart phones (who could make that one up?)


For just one example, the description of the "SNAP Education and Outreach" program in Texas reads, "SNAP Education and Outreach provides food benefits information, assistance with SNAP applications and referrals to other benefit programs and community services. Information about SNAP is shared through community and media events and door-to-door outreach."


They even have community and media events, too. As I've reported before, part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's SNAP community outreach toolkit includes "a series of flyers that suggest 'fresh ideas' to garner local offices more aid recipients, such as throwing food stamp 'parties,' complete with entertainment and food stamp info-themed BINGO games."


Wow. American serfdom sure sounds fun, doesn't it? Why aren't we all on the dole?


But ultimately, as more people lose their jobs or are forced to take low-paying jobs and more of those people get on food stamps, this system (like so many others in this country) is not even remotely sustainable.


If things continue this way, we are definitely set to see a Cloward-Piven style collapse in America. And even our congressmen have admitted that's what they believe our current president is trying to do.


For more on that, read the description on Webster Tarpley's unauthorized Obama biography published in 2008 and see if any of it (actually, all of it) sounds familiar in regard to what's happening in America's headlines today.


As YouTuber Warriorwoman noted in the comments on our video above, "It's to further collapse our economy. I mean if the tax payers are unemployed and having to get help then there isn't that many people paying in anymore. So how long can the US keep this up?"


Exactly.


Silicon Valley: One of the largest U.S. homeless encampments dismantled by city


© Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP

San Jose police and city officials hand out notices warning residents of the homeless encampment known as the Jungle that they must vacate the premises. The city has spent $4 million over 18 months to relocate some of the inhabitants.



Veiled by the yellow willows and brush along a forgotten creek bed in San Jose, hundreds of people jerry-built a treehouse and constructed underground bunkers and ramshackle lean-tos to form one of the nation's largest homeless encampments.

The 68-acre shantytown is just minutes away from downtown and the high-tech giants that made Silicon Valley one of the world's most opulent locations. For years, the city turned a blind eye to "the Jungle." But the camp along the muddy bank of Coyote Creek has become more crowded in recent years and is awash in rotting trash, rats and human waste - so bad that the endangered steelhead trout have essentially disappeared.


After years of halfhearted cleanups, city officials on Thursday plan to begin shutting down the Jungle for good.



The sprawling camp has become a major embarrassment, and a potent emblem of Silicon Valley's homeless crisis. In 2013, San Jose and the surrounding Santa Clara County estimated almost 7,600 homeless people, more than in San Francisco. And 75% of them were sleeping outside, on sidewalks, in parks and under freeway embankments - a percentage greater than in any other major U.S. metropolitan area.

Officials have blamed soaring housing costs for the displacement. As Silicon Valley rocketed out of the recession, workers streamed in, driving the average apartment rent within 10 miles of San Jose up to $2,633 in September, from $1,761 two years earlier, according to the rental website RentJungle.com.


The median home price is nearly $700,000.


"It's a perfect storm of extreme wealth, a booming tech community and people priced out of the market," said Jennifer Loving, executive director of Destination Home, a public-private partnership to end homelessness in the county.



© Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP

Carlos Tovar, a contractor in charge of cleaning up the Jungle, hands a warning notice to a resident of the homeless encampment.



Since deciding to close the Jungle, San Jose has spent $4 million over 18 months to relocate the camp's inhabitants and connect them to services.

"The city really made a good-faith effort," said Claire Wagner, communications director for HomeFirst, which runs a homeless shelter and services agency in San Jose.


But while 144 inhabitants have found housing, more than 50 have rent subsidies in hand but nowhere to go.


In 2011, the state ended special redevelopment assessments, which essentially brought affordable housing construction to a halt, said Ray Bramson, San Jose's homelessness response manager. "Encampments are not the problem, homelessness is the problem," Bramson said.


"If you have 10 applications to choose from, nine with stable rental histories and work, and you have somebody living in a creek; what are you going to do?" Loving added.


On Wednesday, some inhabitants of the Jungle were packing up to leave while others said they planned to remain as long as possible.


In heavy rain, Tiffany Curtis, 35, wearing a camouflage-colored jacket, hauled a shopping cart of her belongings - stuffed in garbage bags, a plastic crate and a Hello Kitty bag - to a waiting minivan.


The city is setting her up with a studio or one-bedroom unit that it has said would be paid for as long as she is working.


"It's kind of good that they are closing this place down, because then people will have to find something to do," Curtis said. "You can't just sit or lay or smoke anywhere. The world doesn't work like that."



© Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP

Robert Aguirre, a former engineering consultant who once had a middle-class lifestyle, has been living with his wife at the Jungle since January. Here, he holds a notice ordering him to leave the premises.



But Doug Wynne, 60, said he and his six cats intended to stay put as long as they could in his cozy complex of tents, sewn together with tarps, blankets and sleeping bags. During the four years he's lived in the Jungle, he's created a pathway of old bricks that lead to his front porch. His tent home is furnished with a rug, couch and beds.

"You can see, it's much nicer than the dirt out there," he said.


Wynne, a refugee from Florida's foreclosure crisis, came to San Jose hoping to sell software, but ended up panhandling on the median of a busy roadway in the Little Saigon neighborhood.


"I'd sleep at the college, they'd bus me here.... Anywhere I went, [police] would harass me," he said. "Once I came here, they stopped harassing me."


Other homeless residents at the Jungle are working - doing manual labor, carpentry, catering. They return to the creek bed each night, unable to afford a better place, Bramson said.


Some have mental health or medical problems, criminal records or bad credit histories that are barriers to finding homes, he added.


Even without the Jungle, the city is veined by a network of at least 200 other outdoor encampments, Bramson said.



"If you accept the city has done great things to help a lot of people get housed, it's a drop in the bucket," said Matt King of Sacred Heart Community Service, a community organizing and poverty service group. "There is no margin of error in the Silicon Valley.

"If you don't have nonstop good income, it's a very fast fall from a two-bedroom apartment to a tent in the Jungle."


Robert Aguirre's path to the camp illustrates how tough it can be to maintain a middle-class toehold in the overheated economy.


A former engineering consultant, Aguirre, 56, advised high-tech companies on meeting international safety standards. When the first tech bubble burst in the late 1990s, his business began to slip. His job functions were largely outsourced to China, and he and his wife lost their house, he said.


Because of his wife's health problems, including osteoarthritis, they gave up an upper-story apartment for a ground-floor unit. But after they gave notice, their new landlord told them he had changed his mind and planned to move in family members downstairs. Their old place already had been snapped up.


Sleeping sitting up in their car left his wife with edema, Aguirre said. On a doctor's advice, they got a tent and moved to the Jungle in January.


Still, the couple says, they have it easy: Aguirre's wife works as a medical clerk, and he picks up day-laborer jobs. They have a propane heater and stove and sleep on a platform mattress.


Aguirre said he had found a place to move into but planned to remain active with the Jungle community - whatever that becomes.


He estimated that 200 people remained in the creek bed camp as of late Tuesday.


"The fence links are so tight you can't put bolt cutters to it," Aguirre said, explaining that the city planned regular patrols by park rangers and police in order to prevent "re-encampment."


"The majority of the people have said they don't know what they're going to do," he said. "There is no way to get out of there other than to fend for themselves."


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'On the Side of the Road': New film exposes Israel's dirty, little secret

nakba

Here in Virginia, U.S.A., I'm aware that the native people were murdered, driven out, and moved westward. But my personal connection to that crime is weak, and frankly I'm too busy trying to rein in my government's current abuses to focus on the distant past. Pocahontas is a cartoon, the Redskins a football team, and remaining Native Americans almost invisible. Protests of the European occupation of Virginia are virtually unheard of.

But what if it had just happened a moment ago, historically speaking? What if my parents had been children or teenagers? What if my grandparents and their generation had conceived and executed the genocide? What if a large population of survivors and refugees were still here and just outside? What if they were protesting, nonviolently and violently - including with suicide bombings and homemade rockets launched out of West Virginia? What if they marked the Fourth of July as the Great Catastrophe and made it a day of mourning? What if they were organizing nations and institutions all over the world to boycott, divest, and sanction the United States and seek its prosecution in court? What if, before being driven out, the Native Americans had built hundreds of towns with buildings of masonry, hard to make simply disappear?


In that case, it would be more difficult for those unwilling to face the injustice not to notice. We would have to notice, but tell ourselves something comforting, if we refused to deal with the truth. The lies we tell ourselves would need to be much stronger than they are. A rich mythology would be necessary. Everyone would have to be taught from childhood onward that the native people didn't exist, left voluntarily, attempted vicious crimes justifying their punishment, and were not really people at all but irrational killers still trying to kill us for no reason. I'm aware that some of those excuses conflict with others, but propaganda generally works better with multiple claims, even when they can't all be true at the same time. Our government might even have to make questioning the official story of the creation of the United States an act of treason.


Israel that imagined United States, just formed in our grandparents' day, two-thirds of the people driven out or killed, one-third remaining but treated as sub-human. Israel is that place that must tell forceful lies to erase a past that is never really past. Kids grow up in Israel not knowing. We in the United States, whose government gives Israel billions of dollars worth of free weapons every year with which to continue the killing (weapons with names like Apache and Black Hawk), grow up not knowing. We all look at the "peace process," this endless charade of decades, and deem it inscrutable, because we've been educated to be incapable of knowing what the Palestinians want even as they shout it and sing it and chant it: they want to return to their homes.


But the people who did the deed are, in many cases, still alive. Men and women who, in 1948, massacred and evicted Palestinians from their villages can be put on camera recounting what they did. Photographs of what was done and accounts of what life was like before the Nakba (the Catastrophe) exist in great volume. Towns that were taken over still stand. Families know that they live in stolen houses. Palestinians still have keys to those houses. Villages that were destroyed still remain visible in outline on Google Earth, the trees still standing, the stones of demolished houses still nearby.


nakba_black_baloons

Lia Tarachansky is an Israeli-Canadian journalist who covers Israel and Palestine for the Real News Network. She was born in Kiev, Ukraine, the Soviet Union. When she was a child, her family moved to a settlement in the West Bank, part of the ongoing continuation of the process begun in 1948. She had a good childhood with a real sense of community in that "settlement," or what we would call a housing subdivision built on native farm land in violation of a treaty made with savages. She grew up not knowing. People pretended nothing had been there before. Then she found out. Then she made a movie to tell the world.

The film is called On the Side of the Road and it tells the story of the founding of Israel in 1948 through the memories of those who killed and expelled the people of Palestine, through the memories of survivors, and through the perspectives of those who have grown up since. 1948 was a 1984 year, a year of doublespeak. Israel was created in blood. Two-thirds of the people of that land were made refugees. Most of them and their descendants are refugees still. Those who remained in Israel were made second-class citizens and forbidden to mourn the dead. But the crime is referred to as liberation and independence. Israel celebrates its Independence Day while Palestinians mourn the Nakba.


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The film takes us to the sites of vanished villages destroyed in 1948 and in 1967. In some cases, villages have been replaced with woods and made into national parks. The imagery is suggestive of what the earth might do if humanity departed. But this is the work of part of humanity attempting to erase another human group. If you put up a sign commemorating the village, the government removes it quickly.

The film shows us those who participated in the Nakba. They recall shooting the people they called Arabs and whom they'd been told were primitive and worthless, but who they knew had a modern literate society with some 20 newspapers in Jaffa, with feminist groups, with everything then thought of as modern. "Go to Gaza!" they told the people whose homes and land they were stealing and destroying. One man recalling what he did begins with an attitude almost bordering on the carefree heartlessness one sees in former killers in the Indonesian film , but eventually he's explaining that what he's done has been eating away at him for decades.


In On the Side of the Road we meet a young Palestinian man from a permanent refugee camp who calls a place his home although he's never been there, and who says that his children and grandchildren will do likewise. We see him obtain a 12-hour pass to visit the place his grandparents lived. He spends half the 12 hours getting through check points. The place he visits is a National Park. He sits and talks about what he wants. He wants nothing related to revenge. He wants no harm done to Jews. He wants no people evicted from anywhere. He says that, according to his grandparents, Jews and Muslims lived together amicably before 1948. That, he says, is what he wants - that and to return home.


Israelis concerned by their nation's open secret take some inspiration in the film from an art project in Berlin. There people posted signs with images on one side and words on the other. For example: a cat on one side, and this on the other: "Jews are no longer allowed to own pets." So, in Israel, they made signs of a similar nature. For example: a man with a key on one side, and on the other, : "It is forbidden to mourn on the Day of Independence." The signs are greeted by vandalism and angry, racist threats. The police accuse those who posted the signs of "disturbing law and order," and forbid them in the future.


At Tel Aviv University we see students, Palestinian and Jewish, hold an event to read out the names of villages that were destroyed. Nationalists waving flags come to try to shout them down. These properly educated Israelis describe cities as having been "liberated." They advocate expelling all Arabs. A member of the Israeli parliament tells the camera that Arabs want to exterminate Jews and rape their daughters, that the Arabs threaten a "holocaust."


The filmmaker asks an angry Israeli woman, "If you were an Arab, would you celebrate the state of Israel?" She refuses to allow the possibility of seeing things from someone else's point of view to enter her head. She replies, "I'm not an Arab, thank God!"


A Palestinian challenges a nationalist very politely and civilly, asking him to explain his views, and he swiftly walks away. I was reminded of a talk I gave last month at a university in New York at which I criticized the Israeli government, and a professor angrily walked out - a professor who'd been eager to debate other topics on which we disagreed.


A woman who participated in the Nakba says in the film, in an effort to excuse her past actions, "We didn't know it was a society." She clearly believes that killing and evicting people who seem "modern" or "civilized" is unacceptable. Then she goes on to explain that pre-1948 Palestine was just what she says mustn't be destroyed. "But you lived here," says the filmmaker. "How could you not know?" The woman replies simply, "We knew. We knew."


A man who took part in killing Palestinians in 1948 excuses himself as having been only 19. And "there will always be new 19-year-olds," he says. Of course there are also 50-year-olds who will follow evil orders. Happily, there are also 19-year-olds who will not.


Catch a screening of


Dec 3, 2014 NYU, NY

Dec 4, 2014 Philadelphia, PA

Dec 5, 2014 Baltimore, MD

Dec 7, 2014 Baltimore, MD

Dec 9, 2014 Washington DC

Dec 10, 2014 Washington DC

Dec 10, 2014 American University

Dec 13, 2014 Washington DC

Dec 15, 2014 Washington DC


Facilitating serfdom: Corporations decimate the middle-class via unpaid overtime

middle class worker

Editor's Note: When's the last time you worked overtime? How about the last time you worked overtime and got paid for it? If you're in the middle class, probably not recently.

Only Americans who make less than $23,660 a year are automatically eligible for time-and-a-half pay after working 40 hours a week. Today, that's only 11 percent of salaried workers. It didn't used to be this way, and it doesn't have to stay this way, argues venture capitalist Nick Hanauer.


Just like President Obama has taken executive action on immigration, Hanauer believes the president can and should take executive action to raise the salary threshold for overtime eligibility.


Hanauer's a billionaire who made his fortune as one of the original investors in Amazon. The current rules are written to benefit wealthy capitalists like him, he admits. So, you might ask, why does Hanauer care about overtime pay for people who make less, much less, than he does?


"Ironically," he writes, when "you earn less, and unemployment is high, it even hurts capitalists like me." That won't surprise Making Sen$e readers who've heard his brand of "middle-out economics." Closing the income gap wouldn't just benefit the middle class; a stronger middle class is the source of economic prosperity for everyone, he thinks. Watch him make that argument to Paul Solman below.


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Making Sen$e first caught up with Hanauer in Seattle last spring, where he was pushing for the city to pass a higher minimum wage. Just as the minimum wage is crucial to improving the economic outlook of low-wage workers, overtime pay is essential to the middle class's prosperity - and everyone else's. Hanauer explains why that matters to him, as a venture capitalist, in the following essay which first appeared in Politico Magazine.


- Simone Pathe, Making Sen$e Editor



If you're in the American middle class - or what's left of it - here's how you probably feel. You feel like you're struggling harder than your parents did, working longer hours than ever before, and yet falling further and further behind. The reason you feel this way is because most of you are - falling further behind, that is. Adjusted for inflation, average salaries have actually dropped since the early 1970s, while hours for full-time workers have steadily climbed.

Meanwhile, a handful of wealthy capitalists like me are growing wealthy beyond our parents' wildest dreams, in large part because we're able to take advantage of your misfortune.

So what's changed since the 1960s and 1970s? Overtime pay, in part. Your parents got a lot of it, and you don't. And it turns out that fair overtime standards are to the middle class what the minimum wage is to low-income workers: not everything, but an indispensable labor protection that is absolutely essential to creating a broad and thriving middle class.


In 1975, more than 65 percent of salaried American workers earned time-and-a-half pay for every hour worked over 40 hours a week. Not because capitalists back then were more generous, but because it was the law. It still is the law, except that the value of the threshold for overtime pay - the salary level at which employers are required to pay overtime - has been allowed to erode to less than the poverty line for a family of four today. Only workers earning an annual income of under $23,660 qualify for mandatory overtime. You know many people like that? Probably not. By 2013, just 11 percent of salaried workers qualified for overtime pay, according to a report published by the Economic Policy Institute. And so business owners like me have been able to make the other 89 percent of you work unlimited overtime hours for no additional pay at all.


In my defense, I'm only playing by the rules - rules written by and for wealthy capitalists like me. But the main point is this: These are rules that President Barack Obama has the power to change with the stroke of a pen, and with no prior congressional approval. The president could, on his own, restore federal overtime standards to where they were at their 1975 peak, covering the same 65 percent of salaried workers who were covered 40 years ago. If he did that, about 10.4 million Americans would suddenly be earning a lot more than they are now. Last March, Obama asked the Labor Department to update "outdated" regulations that mean, as the president put it in his memo, "millions of Americans lack the protections of overtime and even the right to the minimum wage." But Obama was not specific about the changes he wanted to see.


So let me be specific. To get the country back to the same equitable standards we had in 1975, the Department of Labor would simply have to raise the overtime threshold to $69,000. In other words, if you earn $69,000 or less, the law would require that you be paid overtime when you worked more than 40 hours a week. That's 10.4 million middle-class Americans with more money in their pockets or more time to spend with friends and family. And if corporate America didn't want to pay you time and a half, it would need to hire hundreds of thousands of additional workers to pick up the slack - slashing the unemployment rate and forcing up wages.


The Obama administration could, on its own, go even further. Many millions of Americans are currently exempt from the overtime rules - teachers, federal employees, doctors, computer professionals, etc. - and corporate leaders are lobbying hard to expand "computer professional" to mean just about anybody who uses a computer. Which is almost everybody. But were the Labor Department instead to narrow these exemptions, millions more Americans would receive the overtime pay they deserve. Why, you might ask, are so many workers exempted from overtime? That's a fair question. To be truthful, I have no earthly idea why. What I can tell you is that these exemptions work out very well for your employers.


Since the Republican Party's takeover of both houses of Congress in the midterm elections, all the talk in Washington has been about what won't get done because of gridlock between the White House and Capitol Hill. And Obama has talked of moving things forward by making unilateral changes to immigration law and climate protections.


But what about the most basic need of all - jump-starting the real economy by giving more middle-class Americans a fair shake? You would think that for a Democratic administration, raising the threshold back to where it once was would be a no-brainer, but I have grave doubts that administration officials are heading in this direction. In fact they are likely to raise the threshold only partly, and the Obama administration has not yet grappled with the broader question of how moves such as this are critical to helping to restore America's middle class. How do I know? Intuition. OK, I admit it, more than intuition. I've had conversations with administration officials about their forthcoming policy changes. And the scuttlebutt out of the Labor Department looks promising - for corporations. Not the middle class.




It is my sense, based on my conversations with government officials, that the administration is buying the line from corporate lobbyists who are arguing that such rule changes would devastate their bottom lines, forcing them to lay off workers. You know, the old trickle-down gambit - if workers earn more money, it would be bad for business, the economy and workers. The Obama team, in other words, is buying into the same discredited theories that were used to erode the threshold in the first place. Officials will very likely raise the overtime threshold just enough to say they're doing something, without actually doing much of anything for the middle class or our demand-starved economy at all.

But here's a little secret from the corner office: The arguments that the corporate lobbyists are making - about how badly business will be hurt - just don't add up. What is adding up instead are the trillions of dollars in corporate profits and stock gains that corporations have made over the same decades that your hours climbed and your wages fell. From 1950 to 1980, during the good old days of U.S. economic might - the era in which the Great American Middle Class was created - corporate profits averaged a healthy 6 percent of GDP. But since then, corporate profits have doubled to more than 12 percent of GDP.


That's about a trillion dollars more a year in profit. And since then, wages as a percentage of GDP have fallen, you guessed it, by about the same 6 percent or 7 percent of GDP. Coincidence? Probably not. What very few Americans seem to understand is that that extra trillion dollars isn't profit because it had to be, or needs to be or should be. That extra trillion dollars is profit because powerful people like me prefer it to be. It could have been spent on your wages. Or it could have gone into discounts to you, the consumer. We capitalists will tell you that our increasing profits are the result of some complex economic force with the immutability and righteousness of divine law. But the truth is, it is simply a result of a difference in negotiating power. As in, we have it. And you don't.




Still, it's hard to blame the administration for doing so little to defend middle-class workers when most middle-class workers aren't even aware that they're being ripped off. But I know. And a lot of other business owners know. We just don't talk about it. You see, we capitalists will never actually ask you to work overtime. I don't even track your hours. I just make it clear that I trust you to get your job done in the time allotted. And then I hand you twice as much work as you can reasonably do in a 40-hour week. But this downward pressure on wages doesn't end there.

In the absence of a law requiring me to pay you overtime if you earn under a certain amount, you end up working harder - and the harder you work, the fewer employees I need. The fewer employees I need, the higher the unemployment rate. The higher the unemployment rate, the more leverage I have to "encourage" you to "do what it takes" to keep your job. And so you work even more hours, pushing unemployment up and wages down. And that, my friends, is one of the little tricks that keeps you poor and me rich.


This is why, in a recent Gallup poll, salaried Americans now report working an average of 47 hours a week, not the allegedly standard 40. And 18 percent of you report working more than 60 hours per week. Yet at the same time, you're taking only about 77 percent of your paid time off. According to a survey commissioned by the U.S. Travel Association, U.S. workers now use an average of only 16 vacation days a year out of the nearly 21 days they earn - the lowest in more than four decades. Why? Often because they're terrified of working fewer hours and falling short of their employers' demands for ever more productivity. And many of these unused vacation days are forfeited: an estimated $52.4 billion worth each year that goes to owners like me.


Now obviously, take away our license to force 10.4 million Americans to work extra hours for nothing, and smart capitalists like me would try to limit overtime as much as possible. I mean, time-and-a-half pay sure adds up fast! So many of you would be unlikely to see much of an immediate bump in take-home pay. Instead, we capitalists would be forced to hire millions more people to do the work you currently do for free. That would drive down unemployment. And a tighter labor market would drive up wages for the first time in 40 years.


So you see, when I say that the overtime threshold is the minimum wage for the middle class, I'm not just playing with words. In the exact same way that the erosion of the federal minimum wage - from an inflation-adjusted peak of about $11 an hour in 1968 to only $7.25 an hour today - has held down wages for low-income Americans, the simultaneous erosion of the overtime threshold has also held down wages for the American middle class. And just like raising the minimum wage would nudge up incomes for those workers earning somewhat above it, restoring the overtime threshold would push up incomes for many workers currently earning above $69,000 too.


What Do Executives Do With All Their Money?


Of course, capitalists like me will tell you that when we cut into profits, the entire economy is damaged. And think of all the investment that corporate profits make possible. What do executives like me do with all that extra money? Why, invest in creating good-paying jobs for middle-class Americans like you, of course.


Unfortunately, that's not exactly true either. Mostly, we use profits to manipulate our stock price for personal gain.


Here's a little history that will explain how: Back in the 1970s, when the share of total U.S. income that the top 0.1 percent of households got was at a 100-year low, corporate executives received most of their compensation in the form of a salary, just like you. But since the late 1980s, the largest component of income for the top 0.1 percent has been stock-based pay. This shift toward compensation via stock options and grants means that CEOs are directly incentivized to increase the share price of their company's stock.


Building better products that lead to higher sales and fatter margins is the traditional way for a CEO to push up the price of his stock. But that's so old-fashioned. So yesterday. Instead, ever since a former Wall Street CEO in charge of the Securities and Exchange Commission back in 1982 loosened the rules that define stock manipulation (beginning to see a historical pattern here?), U.S. corporations have increasingly resorted to stock buybacks to prop up share prices. According to a report in the Harvard Business Review by professor William Lazonkick - "Profits Without Prosperity" - over the past 10 years, America's largest companies, those making up the S&P 500, have devoted a staggering 54 percent of their profits to buying back shares, reducing the total number outstanding and thus increasing the value of the remaining shares owned by capitalists like me.


A stock buyback, in case you are wondering, is when a public company buys its own shares. "Why on earth would a company do that?" you ask. To push the stock price higher, of course - which benefits senior managers who are all paid in stock - rather than, say, investing in R&D or in building new factories. Or paying you overtime for all those extra hours you work.


I want to be clear: I've done stock buybacks. We all do it. In order to be a public company today, you practically can't avoid it, despite how obviously corrupt it is. Ever wonder why the stock market is soaring again, while the real economy is just slogging along? Buybacks are a big reason. According to data compiled by Mustafa Erdem Sakinç of The Academic-Industry Research Network, public U.S. corporations of all sizes have spent an astonishing $6.9 trillion on stock buybacks over the past decade alone. $6.9 trillion! That's about enough to run the entire federal government - for two years! Let me tell you how it works. Your institutional investors will call you, maybe after some bad news that drives your stock down a bit, and they'll say, "Hey, your stock is undervalued, don't you think? And if you guys won't support your own stock, then why should we?" Hint, hint. Nudge, nudge. But you will not be able to grasp the size of this, relative to your situation, without some examples.


Take low-wage king Wal-Mart. Over the past 10 years, according to data compiled from its public filings, Wal-Mart has spent more than $65.4 billion on stock buybacks - about 47 percent of its profits. That's an average of more than $6.5 billion a year in stock buybacks, enough to give each of its 1.4 million U.S. workers a $4,670-a-year raise. It is also, coincidentally, an amount roughly equivalent to the estimated $6.2 billion Wal-Mart costs U.S. taxpayers every year in food stamps, Medicaid, subsidized housing and other public assistance to its many impoverished employees.




And further up the wage scale there's IBM. Once an icon of innovation for its proud legacy of investing in basic research, the 21st-century IBM has instead chosen to spend an astounding $117.5 billion on stock buybacks since 2003 - a remarkable 89.4 percent of total profits.

What else might we have done with that $6.9 trillion other than manipulate stock prices? Well, we could have forgiven the $1 trillion in student debt currently crippling the purchasing power of young Americans; funded the looming $3.6 trillion maintenance backlog on our roads, bridges, dams, schools and the rest of our nation's public infrastructure; boosted our nation's annual R&D expenditures by more than 20 percent a year; and still have enough money leftover to buy every man, woman and child in the U.S. a round of drinks. Every Friday night. For the next 15 years.


Or, we could spend the approximately $700 billion in stock buybacks per year putting all 9 million unemployed Americans back to work at more than 2.5 times our nation's pitiful $28,000 median wage.


If this sounds a little bit like a Ponzi scheme, that's because it is. I buy my shares back from investors and speculators, who then use that money to buy more shares. We get richer riding this merry-go-round, but the money never touches the real economy. Perhaps you've wondered how the stock market hit 17,000 while, at the same time, five years after the end of the Great Recession, the real economy that you live in still kind of sucks? Stock buybacks.


So if you're still thinking that higher wages or fewer hours of overtime for you and your coworkers might bankrupt the public company you work for, I encourage you to do this: Send an email to your CFO and ask him or her how much your company has spent on stock buybacks over the past 10 years in both dollars and in percent of pretax profits? Seriously. Do it right now. And while you're waiting for a reply from your CFO, let's have an honest conversation about the way the economy really works.


But Don't Rich People Create Jobs?


Forget everything you've been told about how the rich are job creators - that the more money we have, the more we invest, the more jobs we create, and the better the economy is for everybody. As our epidemic of stock buybacks clearly illustrates, capitalists like me already have more money than we know what to do with. Indeed, smart investors are struggling to cope with what Bain & Co. has termed "capital superabundance," marked by a tripling of global capital since 1990 despite the ongoing stagnation of the underlying economy. Meanwhile, even as this glut of financial capital continues to grow, new technologies are dramatically reducing demand for capital.


It once cost billions to finance a new steel mill, the symbol of the old economy. But the new economy just isn't nearly as capital-intensive - in other words, companies don't need anything like this huge amount of reinvestment in stocks. For example, take Amazon. I was an early investor - it's where I made much of my fortune. How much capital did Jeff Bezos initially raise to start up Amazon? One million dollars. Last year, Amazon reported over $74 billion in sales. It is this "investment supply - demand imbalance," writes Bain, that is decisively shifting power "from owners of capital to owners of good ideas."


In the information economy of the 21st century, it is not capital accumulation that creates growth and prosperity, but, rather, the virtuous cycle of innovation and demand. The more innovators and entrepreneurs we have converting ideas into products and services, the higher our standard of living, and the more people who can afford to consume these products and services, the greater the incentive to innovate. Thus, the key to growth and prosperity is to fully include as many Americans as possible in our economy, both as innovators and consumers.


In plain English, the real economy is you: Raise wages, and one increases demand. Increase demand and one increases jobs, wages and innovation. The real economy is simply the interplay between consumers and businesses. On the other hand, as we've learned from the past 40 years of slow growth and record stock buybacks, not even an infinite supply of capital can persuade a CEO to hire more workers absent demand for the products and services they produce.


The twisted irony is, when you work more hours for less pay, you hurt not only yourself, you hurt the real economy by depressing wages, increasing unemployment and reducing demand and innovation. Ironically, when you earn less, and unemployment is high, it even hurts capitalists like me.


Which brings us back to President Obama. He is hearing daily from corporate executives and lobbyists that raising your wages would be bad. For you. So he won't, unless he hears from you - all of you - demanding the same fair overtime protections for today's middle class that were once enjoyed by your parents.


Contact the White House. Do it for yourself. Or, at the very least, have the courtesy to do it for me. Because honestly, I'm beginning to run out of customers. In the meanwhile, I've got to go buy back more shares ahead of the next earnings report.


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Thousands of mollusks wash ashore in South Africa - event believed to be tied to heavy seas




Black mussels wash ashore on a South African beach. Photo is a screen grab from the video



A stretch of Rodderg Beach in South Africa turned into "mussel beach" recently when hundreds of thousands of black mussels washed ashore in a mystery that has local officials searching for the reason why.

The beach in Plettenberg Bay was covered with the black mussels over a 325-yard section. Some believed it was caused by a red tide, a harmful algal bloom, but marine experts dismissed that possibility.


Dr. Mark Brown of Nature's Valley Trust told of Port Elizabeth, South Africa, that the massive beaching is not linked "to red tide or anything sinister at this stage."


Instead, Brown believes the black mussels were dislodged by heavy seas.


"A similar event happened in November last year in the same spot," Brown told The Herald. "Essentially large swells and currents break beds of mussels off the reef and they wash up."


Earth Touch has a video report showing the massive black mussel beaching:


[embedded content]




Marine ecologist Kyle Smith of SA National Parks told that along with heavy swells, a large amount of sand movement might also have been a contributing factor.

"Most of the mussels were still alive when they washed up, which lowers the possibility that it is related to some form of toxin from either a red algal bloom or other source," Smith said.


As a precautionary measure, officials warned people not to eat the black mussels, tempting as it might be.


Hungary fuming after McCain calls PM Orban ‘neo-fascist dictator’



U.S. Senator John McCain (Reuters/Ruben Sprich)

Hungary’s Foreign Ministry has summoned the US envoy after US Senator John McCain called Prime Minister Viktor Orban a “neo-fascist dictator.” Washington is incensed with Orban for seeking closer ties with Russia.



The US charge d’affaires, Andre Goodfriend, will be asked for an explanation for McCain’s comments.


"The Hungarian government ... rejects the words of Senator John McCain regarding the Hungarian prime minister and the relationship of Hungary and Russia," Levente Magyar, state secretary at the ministry, told national news agency MTI, Reuters reported.


Meanwhile the country’s foreign minister, Peter Szijjarto, said: "Hungarian citizens ... articulated a very clear opinion that everyone ought to respect,” referring to the victory of Orban’s center-right Fidesz party in parliamentary, European and local elections.



McCain’s comments came in a highly charged speech at the US Senate on Tuesday, where he hit out at President Barack Obama’s appointment of Hollywood producer Colleen Bell as the new US ambassador to Budapest.


"I am not against political appointees... I understand how the game is played, but ... [Hungary] ... is on the verge of ceding its sovereignty to a neo-fascist dictator getting in bed with Vladimir Putin, and we're going to send the producer of 'The Bold and The Beautiful' as the ambassador," he told the Senate, Reuters reported.


The US State Department however does not share Sen. McCain's hawkish view.


“I think it’s no surprise that there are a number of views Senator McCain has espoused that we don’t share," Marie Harf, Deputy Spokesperson for the US State Department told reporters. “As an Administration, I would put that in this category, of course.”


Harf went on to defend Washington's choice in appointing a new ambassador to Hungary saying, “we believe she will be a very good ambassador, [and] are happy she’s been confirmed.”


Last month, AFP reported Orban as saying that Hungary's relations with Russia have become “entangled in geopolitical and military and security policy issues.” The PM said that the US was retaliating for Budapest's willingness to endorse the South Stream gas pipeline, as well as a deal that would see Russian firm Rosatom develop Hungary’s nuclear power.


Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban (AFP Photo/Attila Kisennedek) 


Under a deal worth up to €10 billion, Rosatom will build a 2,000 megawatt addition to Hungary's state-owned nuclear power plant, MVM Paksi Atomeromu. Russia is Hungary’s largest trade partner outside of the EU, with exports worth $3.4 billion in 2013. It is highly dependent on Russian energy.


“We don’t want to get close to anyone, and we don’t intend to move away from anybody. We are not pursuing a pro-Russian policy but a pro-Hungarian policy,” Orban said, adding that expansion of the nuclear plant was the “only possible means” to lower dependence on external energy resources.


Orban has been highly critical of US and EU sanctions imposed on Russia for what he says is Moscow’s “perceived role” in the conflict in Ukraine. Speaking in August, he said the measures are like “shooting oneself in the foot.”


“The sanctions policy pursued by the West, that is, ourselves, a necessary consequence of which, has been what the Russians are doing, causes more harm to us than to Russia,” Reuters quoted Orban as saying on the radio.




Bright, exploding fireball streaks across the sky over Northeast U.S.

Fireball

© NASA/Bill Cooke via AMS

An image of the fireball from one of NASA’s fireball monitoring cameras. Mike Hankey from the American Meteor Society has annotated the image to point out the location of the fireball.



A bright fireball lit up the Northeast sky on Wednesday night as it streaked over southern Canada and upstate New York.

The fireball occurred at around 8:30 p.m. on Wednesday. The American Meteor Society estimates that the fireball began over Ontario County in northwest New York and traveled west-northwest over Canada before terminating southwest of Toronto.


"Many witnesses described an increasing intensity before it terminated," writes Mike Hankey of the American Meteor Society, "a common trait of bolide meteors." A bolide is a particularly bright meteor that explodes in a flash near the end of it's path.


Fireball_2

© American Meteor Society

Estimated path of Wednesday night’s fireball.



Nearly 200 sightings have been reported on the society's website, from Detroit to central Massachusetts and south into the Mid-Atlantic.

The fireball was seen as far south as the D.C. region, where many of our followers on Twitter were lucky enough to be outside for the event.



@capitalweather Nice fireball seen from Frederick 8:26 pm falling to the north from high northeast.


- John Cosby (@JohnDCosby) December 4, 2014




@capitalweather Streak was pretty short, skipped a bit, then made one last green flash.


- DaveS (@darsal) December 4, 2014




@JustinWeather @capitalweather Saw a fireball in the sky about 10 min ago in Jessup/Columbia.


- Adam Minakowski (@minakowski) December 4, 2014




@capitalweather saw it from purcellville, VA. Was very bright and light from the tail lasted an extra second or two


- Tim Markey (@vizbridge) December 4, 2014



If you saw the fireball and you haven't yet reported it, you can do so here!