Sacramento County, CA March 7, 2000 Election
Smart Voter

The very rich and the very poor

By Walter F. Rice

Candidate for Member, Democratic Party County Central Committee; Supervisorial District 2

This information is provided by the candidate
The greatest issue of our time, which will not be solved by the next election, are the great growing class disparities that our econonmic and political policies and system are exacerbating.
This issue hits us from all sides. The prosperity of our times makes billionaires and many millionaires. I own stocks myself now, a few shares, and I read in the annual reports that the directors of these mighty companies are being given hundreds of thousands of shares each year for their contributions. I do not beleive these directors really earn this wealth, and I don't believe the wealthy really ever earn their wealth. At the same time, there are large numbers of homeless people, of people who must work multiple jobs to make ends meet, who don't have health benefits, or vacations, or sick leave, or fair representation on their jobs, and who don't have a pension except for the meager benefits of social security. For sure there are many who have violated our laws, but very many of the violaters are drug violaters who are poorer people who punish themselves as much as anyone else. I feel that as a class these are just a part of many kinds of people whose life opportunites evaporate because we as a society do not want to bother to reach out and help the less fortunate, but would rather make them a part of a growing under class. I see children in public schools whose opportunites are not going to increase, because school funding is local, which means that rich communities can benefit their own childrens schools only. I see a public that has come to believe in punishment and banishment and believes in it for 14 and 15 year old children now (Proposition 22). For sure There may be some children who may commit terrible crimes, but if we make punishment our primary vehicle, and we take descretion out of law, we will be creating something that applies to everyone and will have many more dire consequences than desirable consequences.

I see huge social problems that we are not addressing while we have great resources to solve them. I submit that we can solve these problems, except for the fact that this country is driven by ideology. It is not driven by democracy and it is not driven for the ordinary people, and it ought to be. Our political process is now driven by huge mmoney, that ordinary people do not have. By giving rich people unlimited access and power over the media, because of the money they have, we are actually creating a very undemocartic society.

Our society is becoming very undemocratic and very unfair to the many left out, and to many people of good will, and there are possible answers. The wealth of the very rich could be redistributed for the common benefit, and for the needs of those who need our attention who are being left out. We should at least return to some of the spirit of the New Deal that we have forgotten. We could also entertain some new ideas. One such proposal, that I understand exists in a very limited way in some countries, namely Germany, is a welath tax. It is not a tax on corporations themselves, so it would not hinder the productivity of corporations by taking from their operating needs. It is a tax on individuals only for their wealth, and it does include the wealth of shares they own from corporations. According to Molly Ivins, Germany has a 3% wealth tax. we could use a wealth tax from the super rich to help fund universal health care, or housing for the homeless, or universal good education opportunities, or for drug treatment, or adult jobs training, or liveable wages for everyone. We could make it an annual, say 40% for wealth over $50 Billion, 30% over 10 Billion, 20% over 1 Billion, 10% over 100 Million, 5% over 20 Million, 3% over 5 Million, and 1% over 1 Million. What we would be doing that would be good is we would be working to reduce the wealth gap and therefore making our country freer and more democratic for everyone, and we would be working on bring the good life to all of our people. Of course there are other ways to reduce the wealth gap and make for a freer country, but most significant of these would not come from above, as this one does, but from such things as building and empowering labor unions.

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ca/sac Created from information supplied by the candidate: February 27, 2000 19:49
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