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      Knights, Squires, Slaves and Elizabeth Warren
	 
	By Ben Tanosborn 
      Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 20, 2010 
	    We can all rest assured that the appointment by President Obama 
	on September 17 of Elizabeth Warren to oversee the establishment of the 
	Consumer Financial Protection Bureau by mid-2011 won’t endanger any shift of 
	power in America for the moment.  But, with a little luck, it might 
	help create the right atmospherics in the nation to enlighten the masses now 
	enslaved by an unmasked predatory capitalism.  And that is a good 
	start.   Our hope does rest, however, on the idea that she will be 
	able to withstand the legions of demons that will be sent to fight her; a 
	fight without quarters from the business world – specifically, the financial 
	industry which now holds true and uncontested hegemony over the distribution 
	of wealth in America.  And that might prove overly optimistic.  
	   Once upon a time, America was considered the land of opportunity; 
	the place where freedom and a good life could be reasonably bridged from 
	possibility to probability.  It did not matter that America’s 
	opportunity had little to do with the magic of its name or other mythical 
	hocus pocus – such as the exceptionalism of its people – and everything to 
	do with the size of its economic marketplace.  In the world of 
	economics, the United States of America had a vigorous, large market with an 
	enormous advantage over other markets in the world; an advantage that little 
	by little was lost, as other large economic markets emerged; the advantage 
	totally disappearing as holders of capital around the world converted to the 
	religion which maximized wealth-accumulation: globalization.   
	Elizabeth Warren, her well-documented consumer advocacy standing in the way 
	of possible confirmation to direct such agency, must now advice on remedies 
	to cure the ills she expounded on ex cathedra from the Ivies, and from the 
	popular forum of TV in programs such as Oprah and Dr. Phil.  Perhaps 
	best known to most of us is the book she coauthored with her daughter, 
	Amelia Warren Tyagi, The Two-Income Trap: Why Middle-Class Mothers and 
	Fathers Are Going Broke.  In it, she basically reiterates what many of 
	us had been saying for a long time: that a fully employed worker today earns 
	much less than one 30 years ago, inflation-adjusted, of course.  And 
	that although Corporate America keeps reminding us how clothing, appliances 
	and other consumption items are less expensive today, the major expenditures 
	in our economic lives (for health care, mortgages, transportation and 
	education) are forcing us out of savings and into debt.  That is but 
	one reality hidden from the middle and lower classes – yes, there is a 
	sizeable, if unacknowledged, lower class in America comprising almost a 
	quarter of the population, more than half of them subsisting at the poverty 
	level.   Time and again Americans populating the middle and lower 
	classes keep hearing from a few progressive voices that wealth in the United 
	States is highly concentrated in a relatively few hands.  And most 
	often, the blame for our economic ills and the disparity in income and 
	wealth is placed on that singularly elusive number, that elite that 
	comprises less than 1 percent of the population.  Even most progressive 
	voices go along in naming the source of all economic ills, that minute 
	elitist few barely comprising between ½ and 1 percent of the population.  
	Capitalism does not seem so onerous, certainly not so dangerous, when the 
	villains are outnumbered 99 to 1.   The reality, however, is quite 
	different.  It isn’t the Knights of Wealth, that 1 percent that owns 35 
	percent of the net worth and 43 percent of the financial wealth, that we 
	need to worry about, but the next 19 percent as well… the Squires who hold 
	50 percent of the net worth and 50 percent of the financial wealth!  
	[Data provided by economist Edward N. Wolff at New York University as of 
	2007.]   The soon-becoming slave population, 80 percent of Americans, 
	barely had 7 percent of the financial wealth and 15 percent of the net 
	worth, much of it in overvalued real estate, in 2007.  Those paltry 
	percentages are likely to be even lower for 2010.     And what’s 
	even worse, the middle and lower classes are not outnumbering the elite 99 
	to 1, but outnumbering the elite and sub-elite by just 4 to 1.  But 
	that minority of 20 percent holds all the positions of power… not most but 
	all.  In such a socio-economic environment, it’s laughable for us to 
	say that our democracy works.   Elizabeth Warren definitely has her 
	work cut out for her not only advising on and remedying corporate abuse, but 
	educating Americans on the reality of their economic lives, offering not 
	just mitigatory remedies, as she has done in the past on television, but 
	this time providing solutions, or cures, to existing problems.   One 
	needs to ask, however… if the person she will be advising, Mr. Obama, has 
	been held in check by the Pentagon and Corporate America, just like any 
	other prior dweller of the White House, how can she be expected to make 
	great strides in consumer protection?  A legitimate and valid point… 
	but if anyone can do it in America, without resorting to armed revolution, I 
	place my bet on this “janitor’s daughter,” as Obama refers to Elizabeth 
	Warren.    Ben Tanosborn          
	 tanosborn@yahoo.com 
	www.tanosborn.com    
       
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