There is a growing
discontent with the government by the average American, and
a whopping Eighty-Six Percent (86%) believe that our government is
broken. To add to the public's belief that our
government is broken and in dire need of immediate repair, we learn
that:
A majority of Americans believe that the federal government is
"an immediate threat to the rights and freedoms of ordinary
citizens," a new poll suggests.
For OpEdNews: William Cormier - Writer
I attempted to cover this subject but failed
miserably when I wrote "The Second American
Revolution Has Begun; Where Do You Stand On The Issue?" As
I began to link one story to the other, and grasped just how
corrupt our government and Corporate America have become, a
medium-length essay turned out to be a 20,000 word chronicle of
events that have only recently exploded into the political scene.
The real shockers are two damning polls that vividly point out that
the American electorate is losing faith in their government:
No matter how hard the government and Mainstream
News Media attempt to spin the facts of a government in crisis, the
ugly truth still faces us that our democratic republic is in a
political crisis, Congress has been disabled by GOP Obstructionism,
and the hard cold facts are emerging that everyday citizens believe
their government is intent on stripping them of their civil
liberties and people are beginning to fear the government itself.
This does not bode well for any free society, and the chill of
fascism and an authoritarian style of government is scaring a huge
majority of Americans that favor adherence to our Constitution,
Bill of Rights, respecting international treaties, and adhering
strictly to our own rule of law. Despite the ranting of right-wing
talking heads that inhabit Fox News like a cancer that instigate
political infighting and tell a truth that only fits their narrow
concept of reality, the majority of American voters have reached a
point where they have "had enough" and now believe
it's time to bring about change.
The real problem of attempting to fix our crippled
democratic republic is that government has become so bloated and
corrupt that it is now a self-sustaining entity of its own, where
back-room decisions and millions of dollars exchange hands, and
billions of dollars in government appropriations are still being
allocated and spent as if we weren't facing the worst financial
crisis in modern memory. Whose job is it to pull the emergency
break and stop or slow-down a government that has lost the faith of
the American people? We know from the above polls that
American's are angry and frustrated, have little faith or trust
in their government and after it splashed on the news for a day or
two, a complicit MSM has effectively allowed the story to die-down
and removed it from the public discourse. This is not acceptable;
our lives, happiness and ability to survive is being challenged,
and it's time that our government, and the Corporations that
run it either make changes and listen to the people or face the
wrath of millions of downtrodden citizens whose only goal in life
is to feed, house, and provide medical benefits for their
families.
Two night ago I was contemplating this issue and
with nothing to do, watched a movie titled "Swing Vote."
The movie was emotional and entertaining, and the basic plot is as
follows:
"November, 2004, New Mexico. Bud is a slacker
with one good thing in his life, his engaging fifth-grade daughter
Molly. On election day, Bud is supposed to meet her at the polling
place. When he doesn't show, she sneaks a ballot and is about
to vote when the power goes off. It turns out that New Mexico's
electoral votes will decide the contest, and there it's tied
with one vote needing recasting Bud's. The world's media
and both presidential candidates, including the current President,
descend on Bud in anticipation of his re-vote in two weeks. Can the
clueless Bud, even with the help of Molly and a local TV reporter,
handle this responsibility?" LINK
The last ten minutes of the movie was the clincher,
and even though it was just a movie, the final minutes of the show
provided a question that millions of Americans are asking and thus
far, have received no answers for" The movie ended with a
Presidential debate with "Bud" asking the questions; a
day or two prior to the debate, out of curiosity, he began reading
the hundreds of letters he had received from all over the country,
and rather than ask questions of his own, he made the decision to
represent the people and ask questions that he had been sent by
concerned families. He began to read a letter from a father of
three girls and stated that he and his wife were working two jobs
and were barely able to provide for their family; he asked what
where they to do if a sudden illness or disease were to afflict
their family and ended with this question (I'm
paraphrasing):
"If we live in what is supposed to be
the richest country in the world, why is it so hard for most of us
to be able to afford to live here?"
So far I have never heard an acceptable answer to
that question, which was the end of the movie, but the reality of
the storyline represented the hopes and dreams of an entire country
and "we the people" deserve an answer. Unfortunately,
through personal experience, I can answer part of the question, but
the rest of the answer will have to come through public dialogue
and an honest effort to put our country back on course to provide
at least some vestige of what used to be called the American
Dream. The amount of government corruption on state and federal
levels is so ingrained in our political process that I'll pass
on that part of our problem, otherwise I'll wind-up with
another 20,000 word essay that no one will ever read.
The most pressing problem the American public
faces, in my opinion, is that Corporate America has turned against
her own people. Countless millions of our jobs have been outsourced
to other countries, and millions of other have been
"insourced," which is the process of importing
foreigner's with a variety of VISA's that allow them to
work in the United States for far less than what the American
worker usually will accept as a salary. The above two facts
represent why our current jobless rate actually
stands at 11.5%.
Another horrible reality is that American
Corporations, especially those whom are the largest and most
successful, are effectively gouging and cheating the public they
are supposed to serve at a rate that increases each and every day.
You and I, the epitome of the American consumer, enter into
contracts every once in a while that are constructed by an army of
corporate lawyers to ensure that corporate profits increase, even
though it directly conflicts with the public interest. Their
profits are protected at any and all costs even though in the
process it causes great financial hardship and sometimes even
homelessness to the hapless victims that entered into contracts
with banks, automobile companies and even cell phone companies, all
of which have turned into predators whom exercise every dirty trick
in the book to screw the consumer they are supposedly entrusted to
help and represent.
Take T-Mobile
for example; a year and a half ago we had to move and found
ourselves in an area that T-Mobile did not provide coverage in, and
when the bill was due (which was right after we moved), my sister
called and told them that we had been unable to use our cell phones
because T-Mobile did not offer service in that area. There is a
clause in T-Mobile's contract that if you have to move into an
area they do not serve, they will let you out of the contract. But,
there is also a caveat in the contract that is not disclosed and is
not well known even by the employee's that sell this
service.
My sister said fine, she would send in the payment
that was due and would pay the overage on the next bill cycle
because she was on a very stringent budget. T-Mobile refused,
stating there was a clause in the contract that stated the entire
bill had to be paid to terminate the contract, therefore the
contract would remain in force even though we could not use the
phones. They left the service on until thy finally closed it for
non-payment and then billed my sister for over $500.00.
Around the same time frame, my sister was banking
with U.S. Bank
out of Salt Lake City, Utah. She is completely disabled and exists
on less than $500.00 per month that she receives for one of her
"special needs" children that receive SSI. (In addition
to my and one of my son's contribution to everyday bills.) For
reasons I still don't understand, that month Social Security
did not deposit her check on the first of the month, the date that
it had always been deposited to her account. She wound up being
$140.00 in the negative, and by the time that U.S. Bank had
finished adding-up overage charges and penalties, they demanded
$550.00 to satisfy their "fees" which were not
based on NSF fees, but other internal,
"contractual" penalties that U.S. Bank assesses to your
account for every three days that you are overdrawn. My sister had
that account for years and pleaded with them that it wasn't her
fault that Social Security had made a mistake, but as you can
assume, U.S. Bank didn't care and demanded their blood
money.
As a society, we need to ask ourselves why giant
U.S. and multinational corporations are making it almost impossible
for the ordinary consumer to get a fair shake when something
unexpected happens to their family. There was a time in this
country that if you had a viable reason that could be substantiated
for being late on a payment or something of that sort, almost any
company would work with you to bring the event to a conclusion that
satisfied both parties. American companies worked to gain the
public trust and built their reputations on serving the public, a
mode of operating their businesses that made them enormously
successful. Alas, those days are gone forever" If you
experience a death, illness in your family or lose your job, these
days that's the cue for predatory companies to begin suing you
for anything they can get and if you're homeless and on the
streets they could care less!
What has happened to our nation? Why have the very
corporations that we built with our own blood, sweat and tears
turned against the very people that made them successful? In
today's world, it is the corporations that hold the political
power and dictate legislation on almost every bill that passes our
state and federal legislatures. It's accomplished through
questionable campaign contributions and the legalized bribery of
K-Street Lobbyists, all of which benefits corporate America and
drives the average American deeper into poverty. How will the
government, one which is almost completely ineffective, address the
core issues that are driving our nation into Third World status?
How do we, as American citizens, force corporate America to change
course and offer our jobs first to Americans and what's left
over to foreigners? How do we force corporate America to bring back
our jobs and the economic strength that having those jobs at home
includes?
I talk to people everyday and I sense a terrible
undercurrent of discontent in our country. The average citizen has
lost faith in their government, and those that are in the know are
now aware that our corporations present a far greater danger to the
survivability of our nation than the threat of terrorist's who
live across the globe and are driven to their acts many times
because of the unmitigated greed of corporations that start wars to
make profit not protect liberty and freedom.
Maybe it's time to declare war on corporate
America.
about the Author...William Cormier
I am nothing more
than a patriotic American that is doing whatever I can to further
the cause of democracy, the rule of law, and am absolutely outraged
on how the Bush administration is defying our Congress, the
Constitution, and the Bill of Rights! Footnote: I write in a style
that I believe is appropriate in today's world where we
can't trust the Mainstream News Media, and rather than
concentrating on one article alone, which may or may not receive
the exposure and emphasis it should, I prefer to meld several
relevant stories together, that each taken alone may not expose the
entire situation, but when taken-in as a whole, tend to give the
reader a better understanding of the subject. One article or story
alone does not represent the "Big Picture" - but when
several are effectively tied-together it often reveals a trend or
broader view of the subject matter that is important to completely
understand any given situation.
http://justanothercoverup.com/