A week ago yesterday we celebrated Independence Day, the American
Revolution, led by wealthy, educated elites in order to wrest control of
government away from a distant despot and take it into their own hands.
This Sunday France will celebrate Bastille Day, their own
revolution against the rich and powerful despots of the late eighteenth
century. Workers in the cities and small farmers in the countryside resented
the privilege and wealth bestowed by the accident of being born in to certain
families. The triggers were the rising prices of bread and other staples
exacerbated by crop failures and government on the brink of bankruptcy driven
by the country’s participation in a war of choice, the American Revolution.
The seeds of revolution in our country have been planted
once again and are growing even now. One famous rallying cry of the American
Revolution was “No taxation without representation”, unfortunately many
Americans, including Texans, once again suffer from it due to partisan gerrymandering.
In some states 60 percent of voters can turn out for the party that ends up
with just 40 percent of legislative seats because the other party had the
opportunity to draw legislative and congressional maps that provide a near
permanent advantage to that party regardless of the will of voters.
In the United States today three white men, Jeff Bezos,
Warren Buffett and Bill Gates, own more wealth than the poorest 50% of the
population combined. The Walton Family and the Koch brothers combined own about
the same amount, while Bezos, Buffett, and Gates started with little and made
billions, the Walton’s and Koch brothers inherited their wealth and use it to
exert political control, gain privilege, and protect and increase their wealth.
Grocery prices have risen noticeably over the last year or
two, other living expenses have as well yet most workers have seen little if
any increase in their wages. Trump’s tax cut put little more in the pockets of
you and me while lining the pockets of the already fabulously wealthy. At the
same time it further exacerbated the national deficit even as the nation still
bears the expense of the unnecessary war of choice in Iraq. Climate change is
bearing down on us like a freight train, last week Anchorage Alaska had a
record high temperature of 90 degrees – that’s 5 degrees above the previous record,
there was massive flooding in the Great Plains last month wrecking crops and
killing livestock, and the Arctic ice cap is showing signs of record shrinkage.
As climate change worsens crop failure and livestock losses will cause further
shortages and price increases. With the vast majority of Americans living paycheck
to paycheck there’s not much room in the budget for increased costs.
There is mounting pressure for change, in the past the
United States has managed that through the electoral process choosing Teddy
Roosevelt, his nephew Franklin D. Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson to manage the necessary
adjustments. Will this nation choose another visionary leader to guide us
through the critical transition or will it take the kind of upheaval seen in
the latter part of the eighteenth century?
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