In the Second Gilded Age, the Mansions Get Bigger, and the Homeless Get Closer - usatoday.com
Excerpt from this article:
"The capital of America's second gilded age is Los Angeles, where homes worth tens of millions of dollars look out over a city in which the middle class struggles to afford shelfter and the numbrers of homeless increases daily."
-------------------------------
More recomended reading:
Where the Rich Get Richer and the Poor Go to Jail - lewrockwell.com
Excerpt from this article:
"'It is said that no one truly knows a nation until one has been inside its jails. A nation should not be judged by how it treats its highest citizens, but its lowest ones.' ― Nelson Mandela...Aided and abetted by the likes of Attorney General Jeff Sessions—a man who wouldn’t recognize the Constitution if it smacked him in the face—the American dream has become the American scheme: the rich are getting richer and more powerful, while anyone who doesn’t belong to the power elite gets poorer and more powerless to do anything about the nation’s steady slide towards fascism, authoritarianism and a profit-driven police state."
------------------------------------------------------
- Will Rogers (1879-1935) once said:
"Ten men in our country could buy the whole world, and ten million can't buy enough to eat."
Excerpt from this article:
"The capital of America's second gilded age is Los Angeles, where homes worth tens of millions of dollars look out over a city in which the middle class struggles to afford shelfter and the numbrers of homeless increases daily."
-------------------------------
More recomended reading:
Where the Rich Get Richer and the Poor Go to Jail - lewrockwell.com
Excerpt from this article:
"'It is said that no one truly knows a nation until one has been inside its jails. A nation should not be judged by how it treats its highest citizens, but its lowest ones.' ― Nelson Mandela...Aided and abetted by the likes of Attorney General Jeff Sessions—a man who wouldn’t recognize the Constitution if it smacked him in the face—the American dream has become the American scheme: the rich are getting richer and more powerful, while anyone who doesn’t belong to the power elite gets poorer and more powerless to do anything about the nation’s steady slide towards fascism, authoritarianism and a profit-driven police state."
------------------------------------------------------
- Will Rogers (1879-1935) once said:
"Ten men in our country could buy the whole world, and ten million can't buy enough to eat."