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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsRegime Change in America: This Land Isn’t Your Land, This Land Is Their Land
https://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/05/02As America's new economy starts to look more like the old economy of the Great Depression, the divide between rich and poor, those who have made it and those who never will, seems to grow ever starker. I know. Ive seen it firsthand.
Once upon a time, I worked as a State Department officer, helping to carry out the occupation of Iraq, where Washingtons goal was regime change. It was there that, in a way, I had my first taste of the life of the 1%. Unlike most Iraqis, I had more food and amenities than I could squander, nearly unlimited funds to spend as I wished (as long as the spending supported us one-percenters), and plenty of U.S. Army muscle around to keep the other 99% at bay. However, my subsequent whistleblowing about State Department waste and mismanagement in Iraq ended my 24-year career abroad and, after a two-decade absence, deposited me back in the homeland.
I returned to America to find another sort of regime change underway, only I wasn't among the 1% for this one. Instead, I ended up working in the new minimum-wage economy and saw firsthand what a life of lousy pay and barely adequate food benefits adds up to. For the version of regime change that found me working in a big box store, no cruise missiles had been deployed and there had been no shock-and-awe demonstrations. Nonetheless, the cumulative effects of years of deindustrialization, declining salaries, absent benefits, and weakened unions, along with a rise in meth and alcohol abuse, a broad-based loss of good jobs, and soaring inequality seemed similar enough to me. The destruction of a way of life in the service of the goals of the 1%, whether in Iraq or at home, was hard to miss. Still, I had the urge to see more. Unlike in Iraq, where my movements were limited, here at home I could hit the road, so I set off for a look at some of America's iconic places as part of the research for my book, Ghosts of Tom Joad.
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Regime Change in America: This Land Isn’t Your Land, This Land Is Their Land (Original Post)
xchrom
May 2014
OP
newfie11
(8,159 posts)1. So very true
Octafish
(55,745 posts)2. Great article! And to think some people wonder who won World War III.
mnhtnbb
(31,382 posts)3. Excellent piece.
ladjf
(17,320 posts)4. There are fundamental flaws in the design of our Government that is allowing this
terrible inequity to happen. We either figure out how to turn it around or ALL will die. There are solutions.