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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (July 28, 2017)
Street Roots • July 28-August 3, 2017 News Page BY MEGAN WILDHOOD people’s experience. I think we all feel the with four generations of economic stability gap, wherever we are on the economic and what that provides in terms of the spectrum. And the question is what do we huck Collins is the great-grandson of ability to move forward in one’s life and the do with that emotionally? We could Oscar Mayer. A member of the family safety nets that are there to catch disconnect, or we could try to remain as economic elite, you might be tempted people from life’s inevitable challenges or as possible. And part of what I to stereotype him as callous. But in 1986, open-hearted he disruptions or bad luck is huge. try to do for all of my friends in the 99 donated his inheritance of half a million Put my family history alongside someone percent is to say, yes, there are these dollars to charitable organizations rather who is black with a parallel story of scoundrels who use their wealth and power than letting it mature to the $6 million or $7 dispossession. Five generations going back, to get more wealth and power. But there are million it would be today. your ancestors don’t even own themselves, also allies, people who are also using their Today, he’s an inequality expert, among they’re someone else’s property. Then the privilege to work toward a world with less- other things, with the Institute for Policy accumulating forces that come from the Jim unfair privilege. And there’s a huge segment Studies in Washington, D C, where he Crow era and racial discrimination in wealth of people who are anesthetized by privilege wrangles other wealthy people not only to building and the destruction of wealth in and the benefits of having way, way more contribute to building a more equitable and black business districts by violence and than they need. But they’re disconnected, sustainable society, but to take the majority programs. Put that next to a racialized and the invitation to the 99 percent is to of responsibility for fixing the future. system of mass incarceration. As white realize that there are a lot of people who are He expects a lot of the wealthy, since people, we look at our lives and we don’t see very fearful and they have more resources while others are the parallel, disconnected and who just trying to survive. He thinks the struggle multigenerational story want to be in an for economic justice and income equality that the person across authentic community of " B a r t © I w lia t k e e p s a s should be led by those excluded from wealth the table has gone connection and know and opportunity in order to avoid a p a r t is w e d © n % la through. The person that that means greater paternalism or a “we know what’s best” standing next to me at a n © p e n -h e a rte d w a » equality but have no mentality on the part of the rich. Wealthy the traffic crosswalk has a a d e r s t a a d e a c h © th e rm s idea how to get there people have more responsibility because had a very different e x p e r le a e e . P r iv ile g e Is a and need connection multigenerational journey they have more resources, but they should with other people just dlfae© »si® eS!® B d r s s g S h a t that has huge adversities not assume they are experts on what those like we all do. that th ey ’ve had to B e e p s yew« a p a r t « I t fc e e p s without means need; one of their primary overcom e ju st to be M.W.: How do people jo b ir o n s f e e liM ji o ilie r responsibilities is to get to know there at that intersection. p e o p le d e x p e r ie s ie e /* start to change these disadvantaged people and listen. We are just beginning to myths like wealth is His latest book, “Born on Third Base,” is CHOCK C O LO N S, catch a glimmer of just about virtue and poverty A U T H O R O F " B O R N O N T H IR D in service to his mission to change the BASE" how big those historic is about laziness? stories we tell about wealth and privilege to forces are. more accurate ones and begin to foster C.C.: I think part of it M.W.: Why do you empathy between the rich and the poor in is having role models of think it’s so hard to talk people who tell their order to reverse inequalities. about money and class in Am erica, publicly or story through the lens of advantage, in a “To build a movement,” he said, “we need am ong frien d s? matter-of-fact, uncomplicated, unshameful to win hearts and minds to the way. Shame actually holds us all back to shortsightedness of an economic system C.C.: That’s a good question. I think it is keep from telling honest stories. We attach that funnels most income and wealth to the related to culture. We have this story about a lot of shame to getting help in our culture. wealth, that it is basically evidence of few. Ultimately, we need to change the story If you’re in a privileged situation, all you individual virtue coupled with this very of wealth, how it is created, where it comes have to do is look at how we view people from and why it is distributed the way it is.” Protestant work ethic culture in this who need help in our culture and you think, country. I have friends from different This is an honest and personal book well, I don’t want to have that attitude cultures who are much more forward about intended to challenge common assumptions coming at me. money. They’ll not hesitate to ask, “How that contribute to inequality, such as “poor There is a lot of misunderstanding as to much was that?” “How much do you make?” people are lazy,” “wealth is virtuous and how systems of advantage work, how the They have less taboos, less uptightness earned,” and “people are self-made.” The deck is stacked in favor of some people and about money matters. For us, though, it’s so book offers some concrete suggestions for against others. Particularly in this moment, tied to your value as a human being that it what to do, if we find the political and social we are living in a time of deep structural creates shame and vulnerability. “How much will. inequalities that are delinked from individual do you make?” implies, “Why aren’t you Megan Wildhood: I haven’t heard anyone effort and merit, where both wealth and making more?” and “Why aren’t you else talk about the role o f empathy in tackling disadvantage are compounding. Building applying yourself more?” income inequality the way that you have. Why wealth is a lot about where you show up and M.W.: D o you think the huge wealth gap what you start with. We need to create a empathy? and the fact that it ’s growing rapidly is purely new framework for looking at the world that Chuck Collins: Part of what keeps us an Am erican thing? I know there’s a huge gap isn’t just about our own lives but looks at apart is we don’t, in an open-hearted way, between the wealthy and the poor globally. multigenerational advantage and the legacy understand each other’s experience. What do you think the roots o f this inequality of race. Privilege is a disconnection drug that keeps are? M y life experience of being in a family you apart. It keeps you from feeling other CONTRIBUTING WRITER C C.C.: It is a global phenomenon and it is a function of unrestrained capitalism. It’s the nature of capitalism to create inequalities. As wealth grows, it concentrates at the top so those people can rig the rules to get more wealth and power so it compounds ad infinitum. What’s different in the U .S . is the unbridled nature of capitalism. The Nordic countries (like Sweden, Denmark and Norway) tax higher incomes and wealth, and they also invest in things that raise the floor. So U .S. inequalities are worse. There is incredible evidence in every discipline that these income disparities are trashing everything we care about, from bodily and community health to sports, and that income inequality is making us sick. The same is true for unbridled corporate power in the U .S. In these Nordic countries, the inequalities are less drastic. Some people suggest that it’s just a function of technology, and to some extent, it is. But most of the gains of technology and so-called labor-saving devices have not reached the majority of people who use and depend on them. Corporations are trying to squeeze every nickel out of each of us w h eth er it’s o u r c e ll p h o n e b ill o r o u r e m p l o y m e n t o r our in surance. P a rt o f w hat large corporations that are controlled by wealthy interests do is try to extract as much value from nature and from people and from our community while paying as little as possible. So it’s understandable that people want to do away with this type of capitalism. We should be working toward a democratic capitalism, a stakeholder capitalism where communities, nature, workers, consumers and owners of capital are all stakeholders in a healthier society that doesn’t have these grotesque inequalities. I can imagine living in a society where, Megan, you get up early, you work hard, you do two jobs — and I really don’t want to do that. So you’re going to have as much as twice as much income as me. But that’s about the gap, a natural gap based on actual effort. There will be that. But I want to live in a society where no one falls all the way to the bottom, to complete destitution. And we shouldn’t be working so much. We shouldn’t be toiling to have a decent life. We should have an economy that’s focused on working to have a decent life but not working to death and creating a caring economy where the priority is caring for each other and for the Earth. Reprinted fro m Street R oots’ sister paper, R ea l Change News in Seattle.