Quotable Quote

A Tale of Two Economies

- Barbara Ehrenreich
"We have become so unequal as a nation that we increasingly occupy two different economies -- one for the rich and one for everyone else -- and the latter has been in a recession, if not a depression, for a long, long time. Not all economists can bring themselves to admit this."

   9 January 2008 Source

Barbara Ehrenreich. "Recession, Who Cares?" Huffington Post. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/barbara-ehrenreich/recession-who-cares_b_8...

The Economic Pains of the Middle Class

- Representative Nancy Pelosi
"Middle-class Americans’ paychecks are flat or dropping, while health care costs continue to rise and home heating costs are skyrocketing. U.S. trade deficits and the borrowing from China to fund tax cuts will have real and harsh impacts on future generations. Recent news about cuts in workers’ pay and insecurity about their pensions is also increasing the economic concerns of the American people. And yet the Bush administration is cheerleading policies that help the wealthy while doing nothing to address these fundamental problems."

    Source

Robert L. Borosage, Robert Loper, et al. Straight Talk: Common Sense for the Common Good. http://ourfuture.org/straighttalk.

A Stronger Voice for Workers

- Senator Edward Kennedy
"It’s time to return to a world where workers obtain their fair share of the nation’s economic growth. The best way to do so is to give them a stronger voice in the workplace…"

   27 March 2007 Source

Robert L. Borosage, Robert Loper, et al. Straight Talk: Common Sense for the Common Good. http://ourfuture.org/straighttalk.

The Growing Gap Between Consumers and Corporations

- Senator Hillary Clinton
"And let’s be clear. It’s not as if America hasn’t been successful economically these past years. But the measure of success doesn’t relate what’s happening in households across our country, because, while productivity and corporate profits are up, the fruits of that success just hasn’t reached many of our families. It’s like trickle-down economics, but without the trickle. As a result, the gap between those who are enjoying the fruits of the modern economy and those who aren’t is growing wider."

    Source

Robert L. Borosage, Robert Loper, et al. Straight Talk: Common Sense for the Common Good. http://ourfuture.org/straighttalk.

Main Street versus Wall Street: Measuring the Economy the Correct Way

- Senator Jim Webb
"In the early days of our republic, President Andrew Jackson established an important principle of American-style democracy--that we should measure the health of our society not at its apex, but at its base. Not with the numbers that come out of Wall Street, but with the living conditions that exist on Main Street. We must recapture that spirit today."

   23 January 2007 Source

Robert L. Borosage, Robert Loper, et al. Straight Talk: Common Sense for the Common Good. http://ourfuture.org/straighttalk.

While Middle-Class Families Struggle, Tax Cuts Given to the Wealthy

- Representative Nancy Pelosi
"The president claims he has created a strong economy, but working Americans are telling a different story. They feel the American dream slipping further from their grasp and they know the reality is that this economy is not delivering for middle-class families. The Bush administration’s call for another round of tax cuts for the wealthy few when middle-class families are struggling to pay their bills is another example of misplaced Republican priorities."

    Source

Robert L. Borosage, Robert Loper, et al. Straight Talk: Common Sense for the Common Good. http://ourfuture.org/straighttalk.

The Choice: Action or Inaction?

- John F. Kennedy
"Economic policy can result from governmental inaction as well as governmental action."

    Source

John F. Kennedy. Speech to the Associated Business Publications Conference, Biltmore Hotel, New York, NY. 12 October 1960.
Available from: http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=25779

Living Wages

- Franklin D. Roosevelt
"…[N]o business which depends for existence on paying less than living wages to its workers has any right to continue in this country. By "business" I mean the whole of commerce as well as the whole of industry; by workers I mean all workers, the white collar class as well as the men in overalls; and by living wages I mean more than a bare subsistence level-I mean the wages of decent living."

    Source

Franklin Roosevelt, Statement on the National Industrial Recovery Act. June 16, 1933.
Available from: http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/odnirast.html.