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REVOLT AGAINST THE PLUTOCRACY

Jay T. Baldwin

 FormatISBN Price  
This Book is Available Paperback (5x8)9781418454876 £ 18.25  
About the Book

In a continuing line of thought provoking, controversial books, Revolt Against The Plutocracy picks up where Delight of The Overclass Demise of The Middleclass leaves off, and is another weapon against oppressive, undemocratic, destructive greedy corporate big capitalism, politics and the un-caring, sold out government.  It addresses the continued decline of working incomes and abatement of worker, and consumer rights.  All the while the incomes of the American bourgeoisie, corporate and political elites (plutocrats) have skyrocket to historical levels. Regardless of which party is in power, or the state of the economy, the plutocrats from both the left and the right barrage the American masses with ideological social control (brain washing) to accept stagnating incomes, a declining quality of life, and a slow methodical elimination of American rights and freedoms of choice as the norm.  It is a working Americans handbook, an anti-terrorist kit rich in easy methods not requiring a political degree to fend off corporate/political socio-economic terrorism and sabotage of the American Dream.  In light of the World Com, Enron, WallStreet corruption shenanigans, and the fleecing of America, it's a little guys big stick approach to hold the economy and corporate profit hostage until the we get our share of the American Dream returned to us with interest!  Also a call to arms for patriotic Americans to halt America from becoming the world's largest unchallenged plutocracy.  The plutocracy has been waging domestic war against the masses for twenty years, now it is the peoples time to retaliate!

About the Author

Coming from middleclass roots in Maryland, Jay T. Baldwin has witnessed his standard of living and income to cost ratio continue to decline into the new millennium.  Once living the American Dream comfortably with a blue collar income in the middle to late 80s, now this Dream is becoming a distant memory.  All in spite of taking up several blue collar professional trade career titles in a vane effort to maintain this American heritage, he and millions of his co-workers, once living a comfortable middleclass lifestyle are destined to become the new proletariat working class in a new two class society.  As writer/author of Delight of The Overclass Demise of The Middleclass, he continues his valiant struggle representing the average working American tradesman and company employee in Revolt Against The Plutocracy.  He fights on behalf of the everyday working Joe/Jane, against the greedy American Plutocracy, and to take back the once easily accessible American Dream through pride, quality, loyalty in hard work, the traditional methods of accessing this heritage passed down from generation to generation.

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The first economic boom in American history, to really make a mark on society, was the Post Civil War boom in the 1790s.  Then, we had a second such economic bliss period known as the Guilded age.  This was around the years of the 1880s.  Then everybody knows about the Roaring Twenties.  Marked by elite clubs, champagne nights, beautifully dressed fragrant wives to the first American bourgeoisie. The Post World War II period would be the first time capitalism, would be truly successful.  The first three economic haydays were very exclusive indeed.  They catered to the richest segments of society. This stirred up political visionaries such as Karl Marx to begin a campaign of bashing capitalism.  In their minds, capitalism would be only for the elites. It seemed capitalism was designed to be very exploitative for the masses, because of a severe disparity in incomes. This brought back visions of Kings, and castles where there was a favored few, whom benefited off the sweat, and toil of a proletariat or serf class.  Greed seemed to be the ruling factor.  But the 1950s through the 1960s, would put this theory to rest, supposedly forever, and shame Karl Marx, his comrades, and communism forever.  During  this period, we did watch the rise of the strongest middleclass, and the smallest number of poor in the history of the world.  In come differences were at their lowest.  The rich made between ten and twenty times the lowest paid workers. A typical single family home would fetch about $15,000.00, give or take a couple of thousand.  Yet, a mansion would not be that much more at about $30,000.00 and up. A typical family car would run $2,300.00, and a Cadillac Fleetwood of the rich, would run a whole two times the cost of the average family car. The lives of Americans would become the envy of the world.  America would be changed forever.  Hey you stupid facist commies, eat your hearts out!

Then came the 1980s, yes those 1980s!  Laissez-Faire capitalism at it's greediest, most efficient best.  The 1980s launched the fifth time in history the United States would experience an economic boom period.  However, something happened, that would slowly, and methodically unravel the masterpiece of American capitalism for the common man, the average American.  Like a giant Condor the economy soared, soared, and continues to rise on some invisible thermal to this day, eclipsing all of the previous prosperous periods, both in time span, and capital gains of those already with capital. Wednesday, December 1, 1999 in the Sun Sentinel page 31A, Frank Rich (not joking with the Rich part of his name) o f the New York Times wrote an article "Who doesn't want to be rich?" hitting the nail right on the head.  "When historians look back at America as it rang in the momentous year of 2000, what will they find? An outbreak of millennial spirituality?  "Prosperity with a purpose"?  Guess again. What they are going to see instead is a country drunk on a TV quiz show called Who Wants to BE a Millionaire?"  It seems we have suddenly gotten a craving for all of these shows glorifying endless wealth dreams are made of. "All the stuff our parents told us didn't come true." quoted NBC executive Rosalyn Weinman. All of the shows like Inside Edition, Sixty Minutes, 20/20, and Hard Copy etc. seem to gravitate around famous stars, sports heroes, or the lives of rich corporate icons.  These shows used to do stories mainly on events that effected the average American, from politics, economics to the heroic deed done by an average citizen. Now, they cover most things that have no bearing on our lives what so ever, and the average American shouldn't be the least bit interested in. Yet, we seem almost in a brain washed stupor cheering, and screaming at something that has no effect on our lives, and has as much of a chance of happening to us as an alien encounter, with a bonus ride in a flying saucer.  Most popular magazines seem to cater to the elite few, with articles, and advertisements of expensive vacations to exotic lands, luxurious homes on the water, gorgeous sleek boats, fancy big automobiles, diamond clad watches, and stock brokerage firms requesting a $ million minimum for first time investors.  You would think, if you were an alien visitor from another planet, by all of the hype about mass riches, and wealth that this country, and every single member of it's population were rolling in dough. That we wipe our _ _ es with hundred dollar bills, and flushed them down the toilet. We role our cigarettes with fifties, and each citizen has a cool $ million stashed away in the mattress.  Frank Rich quotes; "If this country is so rich, why are so many coveting prosperity they already have? The answer is that most people don't have it, and the gap between the haves and the have-nots---and the haves and the middle class---is growing. While nearly half the country invests in stocks, 90 percent of the shares are held by the wealthiest 10 percent of the households according to studies cited by The Wall Street journal; meanwhile, stock options have pushed the ratio of executive pay to factory worker pay from 42 to 1 in 1980 to 419 to 1 in 1998."  As you have learned in Delight Of The Overclass Demise Of The Middleclass somebody has to pay for this mass flood of wealth to the elite few.