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Showing posts with the label #WealthInequality

6: "What a Pro-Democracy Economy Could Look Like"

Let’s be clear: this isn’t about turning America into something it’s not. It’s about rebuilding what once made it great—and  fixing what’s been stolen from working people  for the last 50 years. A  pro-democracy economy  means  you have a say  in how your country and your workplace run. It means wealth comes  from  work—not from rigging the system. Here’s what that could look like: 1. Jobs that actually pay enough to live on. Not three side hustles. Not relying on credit cards. A single, full-time job should pay for food, rent, health care, and savings. That’s not a radical idea—that’s what your grandparents had. 2. Healthcare tied to your humanity—not your employer. The richest country in the world shouldn’t have people dying because they can’t afford insulin or avoiding checkups because they lost their job. A healthy population is a strong nation. 3. Schools that build futures—not debt. From vocational training to public universities, education ...

5: “What We Can Do Now”

By now, it’s clear: this wasn’t a glitch in the system. This  is  the system. And it’s working exactly as designed—for the top 1%. But that doesn’t mean we’re powerless. In fact, it means the opposite. The good news? We outnumber them. And throughout American history, when regular people came together to demand dignity and fairness,  they won . So what can  you  do? 1. Start local, where your voice still matters. City councils, school boards, sheriffs, DAs—these races are where corporate money has the  least  control. Know your candidates. Vote in every election, not just presidential ones. Ask them: Who funds you? Who do you answer to? 2. Support organized labor—even if you’re not in a union. Unions are still the most powerful way workers push back against corporate greed. Even non-union workers benefit from higher wages and better conditions where union presence is strong. If you can’t join a union,  don’t cross a picket line . If you run a busi...

4: “How Did We Get Here?”

  You didn’t imagine it—America used to work better for regular people. One income could support a household. Wages rose with productivity. Pensions were common. Kids could go to college without lifelong debt. So what happened? Step by step, the rules were changed. And not in your favor. 1. The War on Unions (1970s–present): Unions—once the backbone of the American middle class—were systematically weakened. Why? Because unions meant better pay, safer workplaces, and political power for workers. So corporations lobbied to gut them. Today, union membership is half of what it was in 1983—and so are your workplace protections. 2. Tax Cuts for the Rich (1980s–present): In the 1950s, the top tax rate was over 90%. Under Reagan, it dropped to 28%. Today, billionaires pay a  lower effective tax rate  than many middle-class families. These cuts didn’t “create jobs.” They  concentrated wealth at the top , while public services crumbled. 3. Deregulation of Wall Street (1990s–20...