#ActInTimeDEADLINETime left to limit global warming to 1.5°C 4YRS111DAYS10:33:44 LIFELINEWorld's energy from renewables14.785689592%Finland's last active coal-fired power and heat plant shuts down | Repairing peats could prevent Glasgow's tap water turning brown | Community-based conservation cuts thresher shark fishing by 91% in Indonesia | Colombia creates landmark territory to protect uncontacted Indigenous groups | Britain’s GHG fell 4% in 2024, government data shows | Renewables made up more than 90% of new power installed globally in 2024 | Mali embraces solar power for rural areas | Agroforestry can help fight climate change | More European oil refineries to close, convert in next 10 years | European cities are designing streets to push cars out | Finland's last active coal-fired power and heat plant shuts down | Repairing peats could prevent Glasgow's tap water turning brown | Community-based conservation cuts thresher shark fishing by 91% in Indonesia | Colombia creates landmark territory to protect uncontacted Indigenous groups | Britain’s GHG fell 4% in 2024, government data shows | Renewables made up more than 90% of new power installed globally in 2024 | Mali embraces solar power for rural areas | Agroforestry can help fight climate change | More European oil refineries to close, convert in next 10 years | European cities are designing streets to push cars out |

May 5, 2010

Ten Years Of Hell

Plutocracy: government by the wealthy

Plutonomy: a term that combines plutocracy and economy, refers to an economy in which growth is confined to people at the very top of the wealth pyramid. The term was coined by investment and marketing advisers to characterize the U.S. economy, as an ostensible guide to framing profitable investment and marketing strategies. Critics assert that this usage is one of the many indicators of the moral corruption of the system.

Plutonomy stands at the opposite end of the continuum from economic democracy, a system in which every person has an ownership stake in the means of production on which their livelihood depends. Economic democracy is an essential foundation of political democracy. Plutonomy and political democracy are mutually exclusive, as the current U.S. experience demonstrates so clearly.


This sounds a little "too left" for me, but it also seems there's a pretty strong sentiment in favor of it right now. 

Economic Justice is something we're used to hearing about from guys like Al Sharpton or Spike Lee - and of course, we've generally dismissed it as some coded message about Race-based Politics, but maybe now we're seeing a move toward the rhetorical framing that makes the concept of greater economic equality sound more acceptable emotionally - which in turn will make that equality more achievable politically.

The pendulum swings.


No comments:

Post a Comment