This is
the Fight of Our Lives
By Bill Moyers
Keynote Speech
Inequality Matters Forum
New York University
Thursday
3 June 2004
"The
middle class and working poor are told that what's
happening to them is the consequence of Adam Smith's
'Invisible Hand.' This is a lie. What's happening to them
is the direct consequence of corporate activism,
intellectual propaganda, the rise of a religious
orthodoxy that in its hunger for government subsidies has
made an idol of power, and a string of political
decisions favoring the powerful and the privileged who
bought the political system right out from under
us."
It
is important from time to time to remember that some
things are worth getting mad about.
Here's
one: On March 10 of this year, on page B8, with a
headline that stretched across all six columns, The New
York Times reported that tuition in the city's elite
private schools would hit $26,000 for the coming school
year - for kindergarten as well as high school. On the
same page, under a two-column headline, Michael Wineraub
wrote about a school in nearby Mount Vernon, the first
stop out of the Bronx, with a student body that is 97
percent black. It is the poorest school in the town: nine
out of ten children qualify for free lunches; one out of
10 lives in a homeless shelter. During black history
month this past February, a sixth grader wanted to write
a report on Langston Hughes. There were no books on
Langston Hughes in the library - no books about the great
poet, nor any of his poems. There is only one book in the
library on Frederick Douglass. None on Rosa Parks,
Josephine Baker, Leontyne Price, or other giants like
them in the modern era. In fact, except for a few
Newberry Award books the librarian bought with her own
money, the library is mostly old books - largely from the
1950s and 60s when the school was all white. A 1960
child's primer on work begins with a youngster learning
how to be a telegraph delivery boy. All the workers in
the book - the dry cleaner, the deliveryman, the cleaning
lady - are white. There's a 1967 book about telephones
which says: "when you phone you usually dial the
number. But on some new phones you can push
buttons." The newest encyclopedia dates from l991,
with two volumes - "b" and "r" -
missing. There is no card catalog in the library - no
index cards or computer.
Something
to get mad about.
Here's
something else: Caroline Payne's face and gums are
distorted because her Medicaid-financed dentures don't
fit. Because they don't fit, she is continuously turned
down for jobs on account of her appearance. Caroline
Payne is one of the people in David Shipler's new book,
'The Working Poor: Invisible in America'. She was
born poor, and in spite of having once owned her own home
and having earned a two-year college degree, Caroline
Payne has bounced from one poverty-wage job to another
all her life, equipped with the will to move up, but not
the resources to deal with unexpected and overlapping
problems like a mentally handicapped daughter, a broken
marriage, a sudden layoff crisis that forced her to sell
her few assets, pull up roots and move on. "In the
house of the poor," Shipler writes "...the
walls are thin and fragile and troubles seep into one
another."
Here's
something else to get mad about. Two weeks ago, the House
of Representatives, the body of Congress owned and
operated by the corporate, political, and religious
right, approved new tax credits for children. Not for
poor children, mind you. But for families earning as much
as $309,000 a year - families that already enjoy
significant benefits from earlier tax cuts. The editorial
page of The Washington Post called this "bad social
policy, bad tax policy, and bad fiscal policy. You'd
think they'd be embarrassed," said the Post,
"but they're not."
And
this, too, is something to get mad about. Nothing seems
to embarrass the political class in Washington today. Not
the fact that more children are growing up in poverty in
America than in any other industrial nation; not the fact
that millions of workers are actually making less money
today in real dollars than they did twenty years ago; not
the fact that working people are putting in longer and
longer hours and still falling behind; not the fact that
while we have the most advanced medical care in the
world, nearly 44 million Americans - eight out of ten of
them in working families - are uninsured and cannot get
the basic care they need. |