Screwed: The Undeclared War against the Middle Class-and What We Can Do about It Audiobook (Free) | AudioBooksLoft

Screwed: The Undeclared War against the Middle Class-and What We Can Do about It Audiobook (Free)

Summary:

Our founding fathers worked hard to make sure that a small group of wealthy people could not dominate this nation. They’d had enough of aristocracy. They place government to function to ensure a thriving middle income. When the middle class took a hit, from the post-Civil War Gilded Age and culminating in the Great Depression, democracy-loving market leaders like Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, and Dwight Eisenhower revitalized it through initiatives such as for example antitrust rules, about Screwed: The Undeclared War against the center Class-and What WE ARE ABLE TO Do about any of it fair-labor laws, the minimum wage, social security, and Medicare.

So what occurred? Thom Hartmann demonstrates, during the last few decades, we’ve observed an undeclared battle against the middle class. The so-called conservatives waging this battle are only interested in conserving-and progressively increasing-their own prosperity and power. Hartmann displays how, under the guise of “freeing” the marketplace, they’ve systematically dismantled the programs create by both Republicans and Democrats to protect the middle class and have replaced them with guidelines that favor only the privileged few.

But the middle class is the very thing which makes America great. Thomas Jefferson himself believed that our extremely democracy depends upon our ability to play referee to the game of business, protecting labor and the general public good. It is both our correct and our responsibility, Jefferson wrote, to control “overgrown wealth” from getting “dangerous towards the state.”

We must not stand by while our democracy becomes a corporatocracy, portion an elite band of billionaire CEOs. There is another way. Thomas Jefferson knew developing a middle class. Franklin Roosevelt understood how. We’ve completed it before and we are able to do it again. Following Hartmann’s common-sense proposals, we are able to re-create a prospering middle class that will ensure our public organizations are not converted into personal fiefdoms, meet people’s fundamental needs-for education, health care, a living wage-and keep America strong.