The view from George Will’s house is just peachy

Guest Post by Morbo

George Will believes the Democrats can’t run on the issue of the economy because everything is going so well. Tax cuts for the super-rich have rained prosperity down on the nation, and the middle class has nothing to fear. So there.

If there’s one thing I can’t stand, it’s being lectured on how great the economy is by a multi-millionaire. Yes, these have been great times for the top 2 percent. Many of the rest of us continue to feel skittish, though. Will, ensconced in his McMansion in the posh D.C. suburb of Bethesda, Md., can’t see why we would feel that way.

As someone who was not born into the middle class but fought my way into it, I would like to enlighten Will. George, many in the middle class are worried about the following:

Higher Education: We’d like to be able to send our children to college, yet the cost just keeps escalating, way outstripping the rate of inflation. Sure, low-interest loans are available, but we’d rather not assume crushing debt or put our children in such a deep hole at a time when they are trying to make their own way in the world. Many states have pre-paid plans. They are better than nothing, but check out the monthly cost of a four-year plan. It’s quite steep. There has to be a better way.

Health Care: Yes, many in the middle class have access to a plan. But the costs keep going up, and we worry about our employers cutting back. Some already have cut back. We are aware that managed care has failed us, and we feel trapped in a dysfunctional system of private insurance that seems to prize the goal of finding ways to avoid paying claims over keeping people healthy. (For more on this, see Jonathan Cohn’s recent book, “Sick: The Untold Story of America’s Health Care Crisis — and the People Who Pay the Price.”)

Job Security: Sure, many of us in the middle class wear white collars and work in offices. We still worry about keeping our jobs. A lot of us have reached mid-level positions and are aware that corporations like to axe people in those positions. (See Barbara Ehrenreich’s Bait and Switch.) We are also aware that our brothers and sisters in the manufacturing sector are really hurting. Right-wing stuffed shirts who write two columns a week and appear on TV seem to have pretty good job security. Those of us who do real work for a living are feeling a tad uneasy, George.

Energy: It’s not just gasoline. The cost of all forms of energy is skyrocketing. In many states, ill-conceived deregulation schemes have nearly doubled the cost of heating and cooling a house. I live in the same state as Will — a state where some consumers have seen their energy bills increase by 75 percent. You see, George, most of us in the middle class get modest raises every year — if we get them at all. Seeing that raise eaten up by high energy bills is very infuriating because it means we’re running in place.

Retirement: Unlike you, George, we middle-class folks work hard and put in our dues. We’ll do what our employers expect, but we’d like to be able to retire someday. For many of us, the retirement age has already crept up to 67. Some of us will work beyond that because we want to or have to. But at some point, we all will stop working. We know Social Security will not be enough. Many of us have supplemental plans. But are they secure, and will they be enough?

The problem, George, is this: The plan your team has for all of this is, to be blunt, crap. It’s aimed at people who have a lot of disposable income, and that’s not us in the middle class. You offer us modest tax rebates or various pre-tax plans to save up for every possible contingency. We are encouraged to put aside large amounts every month to pay for college costs, retirement, unexpected medical expenses that may not be covered and so on. But we can’t put all that money away. We need something to live on now.

George, you need to get out of the house more often. You need not go far. Just a few miles from your glitzy suburb are some middle-class neighborhoods where good people who go to work and raise children struggle every day just to get by. The view from their front porches isn’t quite so rosy.

With regard to retirement, mark my words – the elderly boomers will become revolutionaries out of necessity. And it will be a group with nothing left ot lose.

  • I wonder if George has ever taken a trip out here in the margin where most of us live. The idea that for the most of us bankruptcy is merely one expensive accident away, while we’re between jobs and putting our kids through college in hopes they can do better has escaped the likes of Will. Yes, there are many things to fear if you are in the middle class here in America. One for sure is the idiocracy proffered by the likes of George, I’m proud I can use big words, Will. -Kevo

  • The economy’s going great for Georgie pooh. When you get paid a few million bucks a year and barely break a sweat, it’s no problem.

    The CEO of my employer said pretty much the same thing when we underlings were bitching and moaning about the stupid decisions to cut our jobs by our resident geniuses. His words were “Get over it.”

    It’s very easy to get over things when you’re given 8 million reasons why.

    At the rate the US debt is piling up and the US greenback is falling versus pretty much every currency, it won’t really matter. Even wannabe “millionaires” like Will will be shoveling shit to stay alive when their fortunes dry up like spit on a hot sidewalk. Personally, I’d like to be there to see when they realize that.

  • George Will … not see the facts even when they’re biting him on the arse.

    Thing is, DC and its environs are so arranged that it takes an act of (ahem) will, to be ignorant of the grinding poverty all around. But I suppose GW would say those people are just lazy and need to get jobs.

    I hope his cook does something dreadful in the soup.

  • You left out the ballooning federal deficit. Some of us who have perhaps more experience than Mr. Will has, with struggling to pay our own bills when there’s more money going out than there is coming in may have a better understanding that sooner or later, somebody is going to have to pay the bills for his tax cuts and the occupation of Iraq. George Will may well have as much trouble understanding that on any kind of fundamental level as I have imagining how groovy life must be when you can just keep writing bad checks without ever putting any money in your account and no one ever says boo about it.

    Sometimes I almost think “conservatives” are kinda cute when they lecture us on economics. There’s an almost child-like innocence in their obliviousness to the damage they’re wreaking, their seeming ignorance of the fact that all of their hair-brained ideas have been tried many times and never actually work, and their apparent inability to master the grade school arithmetic it takes to understand why they can’t possibly work in the first place. It’s very much like trying to explain to a preschooler why it’s a bad idea to trade a cow for a handful of beans in real life. They’re just certain that all you have to do is climb the magic beanstalk that will surely grow, kill one measly giant that lives on a cloud with your bare hands and you’ll get to live happily ever after in a McMansion on a lake with a Hummer in the driveway and a big-screen TV in every room, all paid for with golden eggs from the goose you brought home.

  • They are particularly blind to the poor and disabled. Many have lost everything once belonging to the middle class. Yes, we would rob you in a second because to us it’s totally unfair that we don’t have transportation, and barely enough money for food or housing and you have always had it all from the get go and have the audacity to think since you’re okay then the rest of us have nothing to complain about. I’ve noticed the middle class becoming poorer and poorer. But with a million in the bank you’re doing just fine. My God you haven’t a clue, just a loud mouth opinion devoid of any experience.

  • Maybe George will wake up once the value of his house has dropped by a third; or when he finds out this summer how much more expensive his favourite European hideaway has become.

  • George hated the Clinton economy even though Clinton ran the best Republican economy in the last fifty years – too many of the “wrong” people got rich.

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