Sunday, October 9, 2011

Steve Jobs and the Adullamites Who Occupy Wall Street


Steve Jobs and the Adullamites Who Occupy Wall Street

By Clarice Feldman
The president and his attorney general, along with a number of other high-ranking administration officials, found themselves in deep trouble this week as their scandalous conduct in Solyndra and Fast and Furious received increased congressional scrutiny and some media attention.  To distract voters from the real cause of their unhappiness, the friends and supporters of the almost-hero of Altgeld Gardens (Obama, the community organizer who almost got the asbestos out of that Chicago slum property but never succeeded) have organized largely astroturf occupations of Wall Street, D.C., and elsewhere which demonize the very forces which could and do improve our lives.
My friend who posts under the pen name "Danube of Thought" calls the people occupying Wall Street and elsewhere Adullamites, after the Biblical description (Samuel 22:1-2) of those who gathered around David when he escaped Saul and went to the cave of Adullam: "everyone who was in distress, everyone who was in debt, and everyone who was discontented."  It seems a perfect fit for these mobs.
Unlike Altgeld Gardens, where there was a defined target -- asbestos removal -- the goal of these folks (besides getting others to give them the wherewithal, like blankets and food, to carry on) is unclear.
It seems to me that today's Adullamites' message is at bottom:
When do we want it?
Now!
What do we want?
???????
On what might -- were this not billed as a totally unstructured movement -- be deemed Occupy Wall Street's "official website," one poster listed these demands:
Demand one: Restoration of the living wage. This demand can only be met by ending "Freetrade" by re-imposing trade tariffs on all imported goods entering the American market to level the playing field for domestic family farming and domestic manufacturing as most nations that are dumping cheap products onto the American market have radical wage and environmental regulation advantages. Another policy that must be instituted is raise the minimum wage to twenty dollars an hr.
Demand two: Institute a universal single payer healthcare system. To do this all private insurers must be banned from the healthcare market as their only effect on the health of patients is to take money away from doctors, nurses and hospitals preventing them from doing their jobs and hand that money to wall st. investors.
Demand three: Guaranteed living wage income regardless of employment.
Demand four: Free college education.
Demand five: Begin a fast track process to bring the fossil fuel economy to an end while at the same bringing the alternative energy economy up to energy demand.
Demand six: One trillion dollars in infrastructure (Water, Sewer, Rail, Roads and Bridges and Electrical Grid) spending now.
Demand seven: One trillion dollars in ecological restoration planting forests, reestablishing wetlands and the natural flow of river systems and decommissioning of all of America's nuclear power plants.
Demand eight: Racial and gender equal rights amendment.
Demand nine: Open borders migration. anyone can travel anywhere to work and live.
Demand ten: Bring American elections up to international standards of a paper ballot precinct counted and recounted in front of an independent and party observers system.
Demand eleven: Immediate across the board debt forgiveness for all. Debt forgiveness of sovereign debt, commercial loans, home mortgages, home equity loans, credit card debt, student loans andpersonal loans now! All debt must be stricken from the "Books." World Bank Loans to all Nations, Bank to Bank Debt and all Bonds and Margin Call Debt in the stock market including all Derivatives or Credit Default Swaps, all 65 trillion dollars of them must also be stricken from the "Books." And I don't mean debt that is in default, I mean all debt on the entire planet period.
Demand twelve: Outlaw all credit reporting agencies.
Demand thirteen: Allow all workers to sign a ballot at any time during a union organizing campaign or at any time that represents their yeah or nay to having a union represent them in collective bargaining or to form a union.
These demands will create so many jobs it will be completely impossible to fill them without an open borders policy.
The administrators of the website, however, indicate that this was not a position adopted by "consensus"; it represents only one supporter's view.  But there is hardly more clarity elsewhere, and this utterly childish list seems to accurately convey the varied naïve and unworkable demands by a powerless group of dopes and dupes.
In D.C., the turnout was paltry.  The legitimate ranks the event turned out were even thinner than they appeared.  The marchers included Hispanics who were paid to carry signs whose meaning they didn't understand.
In Los Angeles, the crowd was also thin and astroturfed byvarious labor unions:
"The marchers also included scores of people bused in by various labor unions, which led observer Andrew Breitbart to smell conspiracy. The conservative blogger was videotaping the march and argued that the union involvement meant the demonstration had been 'astroturfed' -- that is, manufactured to give the false appearance that it was a public groundswell." Well, when even sympathetic media accounts can only report "hundreds" of protesters it's not a very successful false appearance.
But it is clear that whatever these people think they are doing, Nancy Pelosi applauds them and blesses them "for their spontaneity.  It's independent ... it's young, it's spontaneous, and it's focused.  And it's going to be effective."  Like maggots drawn to rotting meat, she's joined by other rich lefties eggingthe demonstrators on.
Hip hop and credit card mogul Russell Simmons (net worth: $340 million), alleged comedian Roseanne Barr (net worth: $80 million), actress Susan Sarandon (net worth: $50 million), and celluloid propagandist Michael Moore (net worth: $50 million) have all dropped by to cheer on the protesters in their quest to redistribute wealth while radically transforming the nation.
Simmons stood beside Frances Fox Piven as the Bolshevik academic unwittingly created an impromptu parody of the "we're all individuals" crowd scene in Monty Python's Life of Brian. "Wall Street is the center of the neo-liberal cancer that has spread across the world," Piven said, pausing every few seconds to allow the mob to repeat her words.
After Piven finished, Simmons stood up and did the same routine like an automaton from a creepy cult. As the mob repeated his words, Simmons condemned the "class warfare being waged on the poor and the middle class" and claimed:
The fact is our problem, at least our number one problem, is the corporations and the other special interest groups that are more important to our politicians than the people. The lobbyists and the money gotta get the f*** out of Washington.
But as Professor Bainbridge and our own Rick Moran note, the claim that the corporations run the government is ridiculous on its face.
This "corporations run the government" meme has been around since the 1970s, and it's no more true now than it was then. As Rick Moran points out, if corporations really ran the government would we have an EPA, OSHA, SEC, the EEOC, the FHA, the Department of Labor, or any of the other number of state and federal agencies regulate corporate behavior? If corporations truly "ran" the government, then why would any of these organizations exist?
Corporations do influence the government, of course. But then so do labor unions, the legal profession, the medical profession, special interest groups based on one form of racial or ethnic grievance or another, and lobbying interests ranging from Iowa corn to Texas oil. The problem isn't corporations, the problem is that we have a government that has its fingers in nearly every aspect of the economy. That means that policy makers have the ability to pick economic winners and losers every day, and it's only natural that those policies would be of concern to the people that they're going to impact most directly, the businesses affected by them. That's lobbying and petitioning the government for redress of grievances, not "running the government." This kind of reflexive anti-business mentality seems to be quite common in some sectors of society, but it has little basis in reality and seems firmly entrenched in resentment and envy rather than an honest examination of the country's political system.
In any event, those who are supporting the Occupiers and marching with them include many who are the very beneficiaries of Obama's stimulus legislation, which bailed out them and their employers.
"Several major labor groups--including the Transport Workers Union, the Service Employees International Union, the United Federation of Teachers and the United Auto Workers--took part in the march," the Times adds, although "some more traditionally conservative ones, like those in the construction trades, stayed away."
One common characteristic of the four unions the Times cites is that they all include members who work for the government or, in the case of the UAW, for corporate welfare cases. As Michael Barone noted in a February 2010 column: "One-third of [2009's] $787 billion stimulus package was aid to state and local governments--an obvious attempt to bolster public-sector unions."
In the interest of truth in advertising, the unions ought to print up signs that read "Project funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act." And now of course President Obama is demanding yet another stimulus, which would subsidize these protests further.
Thus far Occupiers have been carrying around largely hand-lettered signs saying things like "I could lose my job 4 having a voice" or "Bank's got bailed-out We got sold out!!!" to quote verbatim a couple of examples from a recent slide show from London's Daily Mail.
I think it clear that the Occupiers cannot refine or focus their demands.  If they do pick discrete objectives, it will alienate significant portions of their already limited number of supporters.  The mob is not particularly cohesive.  They have a wide range of inconsistent desires.  I doubt that without a goal there can be a victory, just as I doubt that hiring organizers to mobilize tenants instead of engaging asbestos removal teams was the way to go at Altgeld Gardens.  These folks need engineers, entrepreneurs, and people willing to invest again, not rabble-rousers, if they wish to recharge our economy, which has been battered by Obama-generated uncertainty and regulatory overreach.
The untimely death of Steve Jobs last week underscored the vast difference between organizing malcontents and improving the world.  Online, the picture of the occupation that most emphasized the incongruity of it all to me was an anti-corporation protester being taped on an Apple iPad.  And surely, the tweets and texting and e-mailing and reporting on the demonstrations involved the use of millions of Jobs-created Apple products.
Heritage's Edwin Feulner described the divide between the occupiers and Jobs better than I can:
Jobs and innovators like him epitomize that immeasurable quality the left somehow finds most abject -- American exceptionalism.
The meme of the left is that drudgery and mediocrity is not just our future but probably also our just deserts-for being too imperialistic, consumerist, wasteful, patriarchal, or what have you. (For an inexhaustible list of all our ills and sins, please check with the mob gathered at the "Occupy Wall Street" protest.) One should compare this deadened vision with the wonders Jobs wrought.
Apple Computer, the company Jobs founded at the age of 21 along with his friend Steve Wozniak, was valued at the close of business yesterday at $350 billion and some change, more than $100 billion ahead of Microsoft. General Electric, another American giant, weighed in at less than half the price, $161 billion. Ford, GM and Volkswagen? Respectively, $40 billion, $35 billion and $42 billion. That should give some idea of where we are in the 21st century.
That beauty contest, how much a company is worth, is a result of decisions made by millions of investors voting with people's savings (that is, for most of us, the sweat of our brow and our hedge against an uncertain future). Investors voted for Jobs' company because consumers loved its products, and consumers bought Apple products not because they were ordered to do so by central planners but because they saw them as magic.
From computing to music to journalism, Jobs changed the way the world did its business and leisure. ...
All this was the result of the happy coincidence of genius in an individual and a system. Jobs was an individual with special DNA, no question. But this half-Arab boy who was given up for adoption at birth and went on to drop out of college was able to transform the lives of individuals across the world because he lived and worked in this country.
The genius of the American system is comprised of the rule of law, respect for private property and the freedom of the individual to strive to be better than himself and his neighbor and reap the rewards that come from his innate abilities and effort. All of these and many other liberties are safeguarded in our Constitution. It is all part of what makes us an exceptional country.
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COMMENTS ON AMERICANTHINKER

Showing 21 comments

  • StokeyBob Today 02:34 AM
    The root that drives these protest is fiat currency. Maybe this will help you understand why no matter how much money you and your friends can get together to build your world the way you want, others can fire up the fake money presses and print what ever it takes to get their way.

    Imagine you and I are setting across from each other. We create enough money to represent all of the world's wealth. Each one of us has one SUPER DOLLAR in front of him. You own half of everything and so do I. I'm the government though. I get bribed into creating a central bank. Your not doing what I want you to be doing so I print up myself eight more SUPER DOLLARS to manipulate you with. All of a sudden your SUPPER DOLLAR only represents one tenth of the wealth of the world!

    That isn't the only thing though. You need to get busy and get to work because you've been stiffed with the bill for the money I printed up to get you to do what I wanted.That to me represents what has happened to our economy, and us, and why so many of...
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  • Galen Hoover Today 05:24 AM
    As Rick Moran points out, if corporations really ran the government would we have an
    EPA, OSHA, SEC, the EEOC, the FHA, the Department of Labor, or any of the other number of state and federal agencies regulate corporate behavior?


    Let me give you one small example of the naivete of this statement. In order to purchase the cold medicine pseudoephedrine, you now must go to the pharmacy counter and be identified. Before, it was on the shelf as brand name "Sudafed" with cheaper generics stocked next to it. There was fierce competition when the product was on the shelf accessible to all. Now, competition has been crushed. The pharmacy has limited shelf space and many times little time to spend with EACH customer explaining the differences in price of brand and generic. The result? Only brand name is stocked. The maker of "Sudafed" now controls nearly the entire market. Competition is flushed down the commode.

    Government regulations through the myriad departments listed in the quote favors the well establish corporation. New entries face significant, expensive regulatory hurdles to start competing. Automobile manufacturing is a perfect example. What would it cost for an upstart to start making standard...
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  • PatrickofAtlantis Today 06:08 AM
    I was talking to a Wiccan last night and referenced the Books of Samuel on the witch of Endor, so it is fresh on my mind. David was fleeing from Saul, not Solomon, when he went to the cave at Adullam. Solomon wasn't born yet.
  • George S Today 06:26 AM
    Apple is worth 350 billion? Next year the federal government will spend that amount in one month. And yet we can't fix bridges and fill potholes. But the protestors see right through the deception -- corporations are not making enough money. That's why they're evil.
  • HicksvilleKid Today 07:02 AM
    Another example of naivete is the situation with Sudafed. The reason that Sudafed (as well as other brands containing pseudoephedrine hydrochloride) is that it is used by methamphetamine addicts to make methamphetamine. The government wants to control it so that meth addicts don't buy up all the 'generics' and Sudafed to make their brew. I've been taking it for more years than I can remember and the generic works just as well as the brandname. You must sign for it at the counter and the database lets the state know when the same name shows up. If it shows up too many times you can expect to be rejected for the sale. I've never been rejected (it takes months to go through a box) and I always get the generic. And, by the way....the crap out on the shelves without the pseudophedrine hydrochloride doesn't work. Don't be fooled. Just my two cents.
  • Bear1909 Today 08:01 AM
    The government is a corporation.  The President is its CEO.  The Board is Congress.  It's enterprise units are the cabinet level departments which spend the capital provided by units of production- taxpayers.  It is the most unique corporate entity in the world; and, the most foolhardy in how it has squandered its assets with debt.  Other nations are in the same condition.  Fiat currency leads to this ruin.  Banking cartels make their money financing governments and running their funds through the FOREX casino.  In 2007, Bank of America turned a 350 million dollar net profit just by trading currency on the Foreign Exchange-- the largest casino in the world.  It was the insde game played by Daimler Benz that same year so it could turn a profit the same way, not by building and selling cars.  The globe is awash in a sea of dead paper.  At what point the bell will ring and all noteholders (that is what you are when you have a buck in your pocket or have some in a bank) at once call for their debts to be repaid or their markers brought in, that point is anybody's guess.  But it will bring down some...
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  • Terry Gain Today 08:04 AM
    My favourite is demand 3:  "Guaranteed living wage income, regardless of employment." Or more succintly: Bucks For Breathing.
  • I am really surprised at the comments to this site. I work for a computer company and I try to run 2 companies of my own. Farming and cattle. I live in an area that is one of the most prolific in the production of Meth. My area is ALL DemocRAT! Most on Welfare/SS or disablity! Very few are actually productive! I see "fiat currency", "Sudafed" as a symptom not cause. What? The cause is that a lot of folks of this Great country have become pathologially dependent.
    Read "The Liberal Mind: The Physchological Causes of Political Madness" if you can. Start you own company! Read the article again. Again and again. If you think; this article hits home! Now for homework; why do you think that corporations are moving their companies and workforce over seas? Hint: you.
  • Robert Smith Today 08:25 AM
    When I heard that one of the Wall Street protesters' recent demands was a $20 per hour minimum wage I remembered that the UAW workers were also there to support them.  Is it just a coincidence that General Motors just signed a new union contract which provides entry level workers with a $19.28 per hour starting wage?
  • Navyvet Today 08:44 AM
    Steve Jobs was just as much an "evil capitalist" than any of the other Wall Street millionaires that these protestors are demonstrating against. Don't they realize that his "cool products" were the result of his hard-driving stewardship of Apple in which CEO Jobs was just as nasty and tyrannical as any other head of a large corporation. Plus he was using Chinese labor in sweat shops that probably are worse than any factory in America's past. When will the liberals wake up and realize capitalism created their world--and their "cool" products like I-phones and I-pods? And they think we should adopt socialism as a model! They suffer from the worst case of intellectual dissonance that I've ever seen!
  • PattyMor Today 09:14 AM
    This ragtag bunch of protestors is just the warm up for next year.  Why next year?  Its because its an election year and the Prez is very unpopular.  Rampant spending, but no jobs makes for a very toxic brew.  And the Leftist are not willing to give up power.  Remember, Obama was THE ONE.
    One what, you ask?  A full blown totalitarian.  This is just the dress  rehersal for the riots for 2012.  Then Obamalini will have an "excuse" to cancel the elections.  Its for the people, you know.  Its always for the people.
  • allen7777 Today 09:23 AM
    To simplify matters, the demonstrators want benefits, paid for by the despised productive rich. It is true that they don't have a clear perspective as to how things work. Yet that overlooks the psychology of the irresponsible who feel they want it and that's all that matters. Moreover their approach has worked for a long time, where the government distributes wealth, and tells its beneficiaries that they deserve it. So are they being irrational when they carry on?
  • Paul Murphy Today 10:13 AM
    Dear Ms. Feldmann:
    I think you're missing a couple of things here:
    1) the organizers, probably including the guy whose list of demands you quote, for the "occupy" movement are in and from Vancouver, Canada. That's foreign interference in American affairs - I'm Canadian too, but this goes, I think, beyond reasonable limits.
    2) the beneficiaries are in Washington - Pelosi's support is not a happy coincidence and neither is union involvment - this is part of the hate movement underlying Democratic party election strategies. It's scarily like what happened in Germany in about 1933/4 when another national socialist movement swept  all barriers of decency away in an avalange of hate.
    3) You seem to think the occupiers miss the message implicit in the technology they use. I doubt that, I think these people are grown children - emotional six year olds searching for a daddy whose money and power are infinite and whose gifts simply appear from thin air. You seem to think they're stupid and selfish, I think they're manipulated victims with no idea of what's been done to them.
  • Paul from SA Today 10:39 AM
    The national media coverage of the protesters is getting amusing.  They are trying so hard to make them appear authentic, legit, smart and thoughtful.  They want so much for this to inspire turnout against Republicans, and for Obama.  I think it will fizzle out.  They are too unappealing to America.  Much like Bill Maher, Rosie O'Donnel, Janeane Garafola, and Michael Moore, the liberal media don't really want this group to become some type of national spokemen or face for the Democrat party.  They are an embarrassment.  Let's see more.  Let's report what they are saying.

    They tried to drum up an OWS protest in San Antonio.  The top story from local news that day, from morning to night, was that one female protester was naked wearing only 2 pot leaves.  30 people showed up.  I'm not sure what that says about them or us!
  • joinamerica Today 11:00 AM
    Ms. Feldman's remark about Obama's organizational tendencies also brought to mind the 100 million dollars in grant money that Mr. Obama and Bill Ayers were given to improve the Chicago Schools. They used the money to teach the parents how to organize and demand more for their children. At the end of the grant period, Mr. Obama and Mr. Ayers admitted that their was no improvement in the Chicago schools as a result of their project.

    What was so upsetting was that these schools are so wretched, they cannot even get teachers or even substitute teachers and many children will sit unattended in a classroom for an entire day, never mind actually being taught anything, these children aren't even supervised. And the misguided Mr. Obama and Mr. Ayers wasted 100 million dollars on community organizing, a failed, useless undertaking in inner cities demoralized by 3 generations of welfare.

    I believe that history will judge the liberals very severely for the millions of lives their vote buying (aka welfare) destroyed and continues to destroy. Damaging the lives of those people, in my mind, is far more damning than the 13 trillion dollars of taxpayers' money which has been the cost to...
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  • cliffyk Today 11:02 AM
    PattyMor, I am saddened to say that I place 50/50 odds on what you describe actually happening--it is not going to be pretty...
  • clarice Today 11:14 AM
    Patty, I think they are really turning off more people than they are turning on, but we shall see.
  • curved space Today 11:38 AM
    These unwittingly able, trainable, chanting, marching, energy-surplussed young urban combatants are making the best case for reinstatement of the military draft we've seen since 1973.
  • This manifesto is merely union driven card check in disguise.  Demand wickedly labeled Number 13 - CARD CHECK!!!

    This is so clearly a union-driven hoax. First clue was the only jobs asked to be protected were all public sector jobs: police, fire, teachers nurses -- all union jobs. The big scandal only a few month ago was the righteous outrage about the huge and unsustainable salaries, benefits, job security, paid days off and retirement benefits granted only public sector employees. That remains the primary drain on young people's futures. Yet, this astro-turf deflection driven by those very unions is trying to bury this real assault on US prosperity. Don't let them. Plus how bogus  to claim 1% of the "corporation" voters can drown out their claim of 99% they claim are being now disenfranchised by this one percent. They are voters, But they keep voting in the problems - public sector union friends in Congress and now inserting card check in this highly devious agenda hoping people stop reading after the first few outrageous demands.
  • They don't want jobs. They want money. Someone else's money. And they don't want to work for it.
  • NavyVet was right about Jobs......before u start applying Sainthood to him....remember with all that worth Apple employed 300,000 people......over 250,000 of those jobs were in mainland China.....he was visionary, but he was always a businessman.....

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