CLASS WAR IN
AMERICA –
“NICKEL & DIMED”:
Author, Barbara
Ehrenreich, Agrees
With Tabacco That
Middleclass Didn’t
Start War - THE
PRIVILEGED RICH
ARE INSTIGATORS!
- RI10
Tabacco: In the 1947 Oscar winning film, “Gentleman’s Agreement”, a Christian (Gregory Peck) investigative journalist pretends to be Jewish to uncover the truth about anti-Semitism against Jews in America. Peck’s character got a lot more than he bargained for. But the ruse paid dividends for the magazine series Peck was writing on the subject.



BILL MOYERS: You know, you have been not only a journalist but an activist. I mean, I've seen you marching with poor people in Michigan-- handing out leaflets on the living wage and work-- demonstrating with immigrants. Why did you decide to cross the line between explaining the world and trying to change the world?
BARBARA EHRENREICH: I can't really distinguish these things. If I get incensed about some injustice, you can't make me-- I will not just going to sit at my desk, my computer all the time. I-- I might want to march out on that. And there's another interesting thing to me. I learn a lot in those situations. A year ago I was at the picket line of-- janitors at Miami Univer-- excuse me-- University of Miami. And these were-- janitors were earning $6 and change. And now they were on a hunger strike. And I listened to them. You know, I took notes. And that's part of me as a journalist.
BILL MOYERS: A janitor, I understand, is the fastest growing job in America, right?
BARBARA EHRENREICH: Yeah, it is. And that's something to think about when we're told, "Oh, don't worry about the-- the class polarization in America and the shrinking middle class and things like that". There's-- you just have to get an education to get ahead. Get an education to get ahead when the fastest growing jobs have been in things like janitorial services and food services and, you know, home health.
BILL MOYERS: Is there any hope that politics in 2008 will address these issues of rising inequality?
BARBARA EHRENREICH: I think that it can't be avoided. You know, even four years ago it was easier to avoid. But now, you know, we've had so many fairly centrist, even conservative-- people beginning to blow the whistle of alarm on this. You quoted The Economist. Well, Larry Summers, certainly no--
BILL MOYERS: Former President of--
BARBARA EHRENREICH: Harvard, yeah--
BILL MOYERS: --Harvard.
BARBARA EHRENREICH: -and an economist, you know, he has begun to say, "Well, there's something really wrong here". It's-- you know, it's not just-- John Edwards and Dennis Kucinich-- anymore. This is something that-- you know, it's too much in our face now.
BILL MOYERS: You know, it-- Oscar Wilde, I think it was, said, "It's the mark of a truly educated person to be deeply moved by statistics". You are very educated. Let me read you a statistic and you tell me if this moves you and why. Since 1979, the share of pretax income going to the top one percent of American households has risen by seven percent points to 16 percent. At the same time the share of income going to the bottom 80 percent has fallen by seven percentage points. What does that say to you, that statistic?
BARBARA EHRENREICH: The polarization is accelerating. The people at the top are getting an ever-greater share of-- of the wealth. And, you know, again, the question is well, what's wrong with that? And I would say-- you know, I talked before about how, you know, they can-- they're in a better position to compete for things like real estate, housing, et cetera. They're also--
BILL MOYERS: They drive everybody's prices.
BARBARA EHRENREICH: Yeah, they're also in a better position to control the-- electoral process, the political process.
BILL MOYERS: Contributions to candidates, right?
BARBARA EHRENREICH: Yeah, I mean, there-- you were talking about families, who can buy a Congressman or households that can buy a Congressman compared to households that can barely put dinner on the table. You know, that-- that is the-- the kind of--
BILL MOYERS: That's-- that's the par-- you don't have democracy?
BARBARA EHRENREICH: No.
BILL MOYERS: That's the paradox is that if they contribute so much to the political candidate, these candidates can not really talk about working class issues. Because they're obliged financially to the handful of people relative, who support their campaign.
BARBARA EHRENREICH: Well, this is what I think-- some of us have been saying to-- at least to the Democratic candidates for a while is, "You know, cut that bond. Cut that bond to the wealthy. And feel-- you know, try being a populist. Try going for the numbers. We don't have the money on our side. We have the numbers of people. And you know, we-- that's-- there's a difference. That top one percent may have all-- a huge disproportionate share of wealth but their numbers are small. We still count. Well, I-- I was going to say we still count votes. I hope we still count votes here, you know.
BILL MOYERS: Why has this become so important? I mean, I-- know that you majored in science. You went to Rockefeller University and doing graduate working with cell biology as your-- as your focus. How did you then start getting involved with poor people?
BARBARA EHRENREICH: Huh, well, it partly has to do with my own personal family background-- having come from a blue collar family that was quite poor when I was born and remained even as my father-- became upwardly mobile and bringing us with him so that I was able to go to college. But, you know, remaining in embedded in an expended-- extended family and-- and social network that always have-- and has a lot of people who are struggling in it. They can never get away from that.
BILL MOYERS: But did science teach you anything about looking into these problems, looking into--
BARBARA EHRENREICH: Yeah, well of course, I think everybody should get a PhD in science. (LAUGHTER)
BILL MOYERS: Do you have a PhD?
BARBARA EHRENREICH: Yeah, yeah.
BILL MOYERS: In-- in cell biology?
BARBARA EHRENREICH: I-- exactly, right.
BILL MOYERS: What did you bring from that to journalism?
BARBARA EHRENREICH: To me it was sort of a natural. Because science is about asking questions, getting to the bottom of things, investigating. And so I-- I immediately took to investigative journalism, which was the first kind of-- journalism I did.
BILL MOYERS: Finally, a real change for you, your last book, DANCING IN THE STREET, A HISTORY OF COLLECTIVE JOY. Why did that intrigue you, and what did you learn about collective joy?
BARBARA EHRENREICH: I'm interested in what bonds people together. You know, what brings us together in good ways? And there's not a lot known about that. We-- we spend a lot of time, scholarly time, thinking about love and sex but very little about the-- the kind of joy that can take over a crowd of people or a group of people, in festivity, in ecstatic ritual of some kind, in celebration. So, that drove me into this. Because I think we have to recapture that joy if we are going to make positive change together.
BILL MOYERS: Barbara Ehrenreich, DANCING IN THE STREETS, your latest book and many others. Thank you for joining us on the Journal.
BARBARA EHRENREICH: Oh, my pleasure.
BILL MOYERS: We'll be back in a moment for a discussion with the provocative and entertaining Clive James.
CLIVE JAMES: There's something about the creative force of liberal democracy which gives you hope that it can overcome any challenge including terrorism. I'm sure terrorism can punch very large holes in western civilization and probably will. But there's, also every reason to think that civilization is simply too strong to be brought down by terrorist activity.
BILL MOYERS: But first, remember that this Public Television station needs your support. Here's your chance to cast your vote for the programs you want to keep watching.
[PLEDGE BREAK]
BILL MOYERS: As you heard her describe it, Barbara Ehrenreich took on menial jobs at low wages for her book, NICKEL AND DIMED. Here is an extended look at the film, THE AMERICAN RULING CLASS, billed as "the world's first 'dramatic-documentary-musical'".
BARBARA EHRENREICH: "Boys! What are you doing here? Checking up on me?"
MAN #1: "No, no we just stopping by on the way back."
BILL MOYERS: Here's a scene where Barbara Ehrenreich revisits the time she worked as a waitress.
BARBARA EHRENREICH: "Can I get you a drink?"
MAN #1: "Coffee".
MAN #2: "I'll have a coke please".
BARBARA EHRENREICH: "Coke it is".
BILL MOYERS: It's a satirical tour through the corridors of power, written by Lewis Lapham, the long-time editor of HARPER'S Magazine.
BARBARA EHRENREICH: "Coffee...Coke..."
MAN #2: "Thanks a lot".
BARBARA EHRENREICH: "So does he know what I am doing? What I am up to here?"
MAN #1: "I told him".
BARBARA EHRENREICH: "You can't feel too sorry for me because I am really a journalist. I am doing this briefly. But one of the very humbling things for me has been to learn really that there are no unskilled jobs. All jobs take skill and intelligence and experience. They're hard".
MAN #2: "So what was the end result? I mean did....do people...can you get by? In other words".
BARBARA EHRENREICH: "Not on the jobs I've had. Right now I am already $100 dollars behind on the rent that I need to pay for my half-sized trailer in the trailer park. So you know even living in a trailer park seems to me a little ambitious at this moment".
MAN #2: "But we are talking about the height of the last boom..."
BILL MOYERS: The film takes on our political and financial elites, the top of America's food chain, but it's all for a purpose: to remind us of those struggling just to make ends meet.
"NICKELED AND DIMED"
Nickeled and Dimed
Nickeled and Dimed
There's No Free Lunch
or overtime
We Just Get
Nickeled and Dimed
They're gonna pay me seven bucks an hour
to clean out everybody's shower
Wipe the counter
Make the beds an'
(an') Stack the shirts
And sell the bread
Or work the register
Pour Coffee
an' take orders for delivery
do the floors (and)
And greet the guests (and)
And wear the nametag on my chest
Nickeled and Dimed
Oh Nickel and Dimed
There's no free lunch or overtime
We just get nickeled and dimed
Now three shifts at $2.25 plus tips 'll be $150
And then two days at $80 makes $160
That's $310 a week
I got $650 in rent
and then $110 in gas and utilities
Two for food and groceries leaves
$25 a week for me
Nickeled and Dimed
Oh Nickel and Dimed
There's no free lunch and no free time
We just get nickel and dimed
Now it don't always seem fair to me
But I'll get through it if I try
I don't call this prosperity 'cause
we're just barely getting by
Until my daughter breaks a bone
or what if my old Buick dies
or Verizon disconnects the phone
And they mess up my whole credit line
Nickel and Dimed
Oh, Nickeled and Dimed
There's no free lunch or overtime
We just get nickel and dimed
Nickel and Dimed
Nickeled and Dimed
There's no free lunch and no free time
There's no ladder I'm gonna climb
I'd rather lead a life of crime
than just get nickel and dimed.
http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/08032007/transcript4.html
Tabacco: I consider myself both a funnel and a filter. I funnel information, not readily available on the Mass Media, which is ignored and/or suppressed. I filter out the irrelevancies and trivialities to save both the time and effort of my Readers and bring consternation to the enemies of Truth & Fairness! When you read Tabacco, if you don’t learn something NEW, I’ve wasted your time.
In 1981's 'Body Heat', Kathleen Turner said, "Knowledge is power".

T.A.B.A.C.C.O. (Truth About Business And Congressional Crimes Organization)