The big takeaway, for me, from Jeremy Rifkin’s The End Of Work was his warning of the threat to humanity arising from masses of unemployed young men. In the 20th century we watched such masses contributing to revolution in Russia, National Socialism in Germany and global terrorism spreading from countries in the Middle East and North Africa.
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt recognized the threat and created the Works Project Administration to put millions to work and begin the recovery from The Great Depression. In the ’60s, it can be argued that the Vietnam War siphoned off part of that mass—particularly because the troops fighting in Vietnam were disproportionally Black—but what to do with those too young to draft?
Roldo’s first story in Point Of Viəw dated 11 September 1968 tells us that: Summer Jobs Fail Again. He writes:
Cleveland National Alliance of Businessmen flopped 70 percent short of its announced goal of 4,200 summer jobs from youth from low-income families. The goal was set by NAB itself. Cleveland businessmen pledged 1,600 jobs in answer to the 4,200-goal, but actually hired less than 1,200.
G.J. Tankersley, president of East Ohio Gas Co. and head of the Cleveland NAB in June told a Hollenden House luncheon group that 10,000 needy youth would be involved in meaningful work this summer. “Victory in Job Battle Hailed by Tankersley,” a Cleveland Press headline read.
How difficult would it be for Cleveland industry to come up with 1,200 jobs? As a gauge one can look at the roster of member companies of the Greater Cleveland Growth Association. You’ll find that if each of the companies listed hired only one youth, the 1,200 figure is reached by the time one gets to company names beginning with “H.” That hardly seems a difficult task, or burden upon Cleveland businesses.
…
Federally-financed programs did better. The Neighborhood Youth Corps hired 4,000 youth and the Youth Employment Program, 2,100, both slightly above announced goals. The jobs, however, are primarily menial, pay only $1.25 an hour [the Federal minimum wage that summer was $1.60 an hour. JH] and are limited to 26 and 20 hours a week respectively. The most a youth could earn was $250 to $325 for the summer.
As a personal point of reference, I note that my first on-the-books job was as a movie usher for Dale McCoy at the Colony Theater in Marietta, Ohio. I worked 32 hours a week for 55 cents an hour. Roldo—anticipating Andrew Yang’s guaranteed minimum income scheme—concludes:
With all the bright young men at city hall and the “progressive” thinkers of Cleveland industry, a real jobs program for next years should be planned now.
A suggestion: that a program be put together that would insure every youth of a low-income family, not a job next summer, but an income. The idea of the government as “employer the last resort” could be the basis for a pilot program to test that idea in a unique manner.
If “meaningful” jobs (meaningful this summer meant digging in the cemetery for many youth that are acceptable to youth can be provided, fine. If not, then allow the youth the choice of taking the slight amount these jobs pay—from $250 to $325 a summer—and doing what they like to do.
In other words, stop the crap of stupid jobs that are meaningless to the kids, but help achieve what the society wants, cool summers. Stop the summer arts festivals, imposed upon people, but aimed at the same cool-it psychology, and start thinking and acting for the best interests of the youth.
Uncharacteristically, Roldo’s second piece—Wheel Power!—produced a spit take. I thought Roldo was having a laugh with quotes like:”Whenever it comes to helping the car-commuter in need, it appears the public turns its back;” “We need new highways and we need them now;” and “We would hope that an enlightened citizenry would become aware of the plight of thousands who daily take to treacherous highways to make their way, some as far as 30 and 40 miles, into and out of the city of Cleveland each day.”
Those quotes are from Warren Beaver [Roldo didn’t list a job title or company affiliation, JH] speaking:
…before more than 1,000 cheering road contractors, highway sign makers, billboard advertisers, automobile executives, service station managers, and representatives of Howard HighwayRobs and Holiday Sinns at a rally protesting the low allocation of state funds for highways [in Ohio].
There was no mention of White Flight or Urban Sprawl in the story. Roldo got his headline from the end of the meeting where he tells us:
As the meeting, hundreds joined one militant travelnik who started a chant that probably be heard much in the future. “Wheel Power, Wheel Power.”
Roldo is originally from Bridgeport, Conn., so when a piece appeared in Psychology Today on urban renewal in his home state, it caught his attention. Under the headline A WARNING, he writes:
Allen Talbot… writes of the lessons of New Haven, the nation’s model Model City in renewal and poverty programs.
[Talbot] writes: “Somewhere in America tonight a mayor or city manager is resting comfortably one on of the accomplishments which New Haven found was important, but really irrelevant.”
Cleveland Now is one of them and Mr. Talbot is one paragraph tells why New Haven failed and Cleveland Now won’t succeed:
“One can also see in the prelude to New Haven’s riots the conflict between delivering programs quickly and the imperative to deliver them democratically. At the head of the list of ghetto grievances is, very simply, the total lack of control or influence over what happens. In this context, the problems of joblessness, dreadful schools or poor housing are just symbols of impotence. When relief comes from above as it did in New Haven because it is really quicker and more efficient that way, the problem of impotence remains.”
One can argue about the efficiency of New Haven’s programs, but not with Mr. Talbot’s contention of hand-me-down decisions.
Finally, Roldo offered an election-year remedy in 1968 that would have worked even better in 2020:
Now you can vote for the least of three evils. That is if somebody comes up with a mechanism for figuring out the least evil among Wallace, Nixon and Humphrey. Ugh.
Suggestion: The formation of a Non-Participation Party with an army of workers to man the polls with little white boxes into which everyone who refrains from voting—at least for the presidential spot—can toss a coin or a dollar, the proceeds to go to the formation “government in exile.”
I hear that Mar-a-Logo may be available.
[Program Update (filed under Isn’t Serendipity Great?)—On 15 January, The City Club (virtual) Forum will be: More than a Paycheck: Reducing Inequality through Summer Jobs.]
Which brings us to Point Of Viəw Volume 1, Number 8 where the top headline reads: UNITED APPEAL UNFAIR SHARE. (United Appeal would change its name in the following decade to United Way.) Roldo ledes:
Last year in conjunction with the United Appeal Drive, the Plain Dealer ran a touching page one photo showing a close-up of a small girl’s face staring out appealingly for help. Reaching to her was a hand symbolic of UA agencies—offering all the help she would need, provided the public responded generously with donations.
The photo as a UA public relations man’s dream. The photographer had captured perfectly the sense of what UA wants the community to believe: your ‘fair share’ gift will solve the child’s problem and those of others like her.
Yet, if one studied the photo something highly disturbing emerged. Not only did the photo visualize the public image, but the reality and mythology of UA came through. The extending hand was white and the appealing child, black. At once the paternalism and welfare colonialism became visible. That’s the reality of the private institutions.
Mythology is powerful because it provides a comforting message to those uncomfortable with their choices. Roldo continues:
Last year after falling $565,000 short of its goal, UA commissioned a private study why. The study revealed, as UA suspected, that its fund drive was another ‘backlash’ victim. So well had the public been brainwashed through the years that many white workers felt their donations were going to ‘them’—blacks.
At the same time poor blacks and whites have awakened to the fact that UA funds are relatively meaningless to them.
But every little bit helps, right? No. As we’re seeing in the present day, the crumbs the Federal government is doling out to alleviate COVID-19 economic suffering helps a few buy Ferraris, but doesn’t do nearly enough to help Americans avoid cold and hunger. Bailing out the banks, and the airlines and the cruise lines helps the wealthy. Support ought not to trickle down but swell up.
Roldo looked at where the needy live and where United Appeal spends those Fair Share donations and found that:
Census figures show that Cleveland’s poverty is high concentrated in the inner city and that 76 percent of the 50,000 families in Cuyahoga County are in the city. This is a 1960 Census figure. However, the special census of 1965 reveals that poverty had alarmingly increased in city poverty areas here.
Yet, in 1965, funds expended by private agencies were as follows: $10.3 million, or 51 percent in the suburbs; $4.9 million, or 24 percent in non-poverty city areas and $5.1 million, or 25 percent, in Cleveland poverty areas.
Roldo next gets even more specific. He writes:
…in 1966 while the USO ($14,200 local budget) was “making change for cokes” (one of its stated ‘services’) and distributing “17,850 dozen home baked cookies,” some 40,000 children were living on 73 cents a day. What kind of minds mobilize cookie crusades when children are going without food?
…
No one is charging that UA agencies should become income maintenance agencies, as private charity once was. Nor, is anyone saying that all UA funds should be used in the inner city. However, UA and its affiliates have chosen over the years to give the impression they are ‘where the action,’ and they most certainly have not been or are they.
…
If one takes a look at the total amounts now spent by public and private agencies in health and welfare in the county, UA is almost irrelevant. First, if you take all funds spent, UA donations account for only 2.1 percent of health and welfare spending. Even if you eliminate major welfare programs such as Social Security and Veteran benefits UA only accounts for 4.4 percent of spending. Using either figure the kindest thing one can say of UA is that it is rather irrelevant. What makes the charge more meaningful is a review of the major problem areas of the city and UA spending. For example, on the funds expended for health, UA accounts for 1.5 percent; for welfare services, 5.8 percent; housing, less than 1 percent; job programs less than 1 percent; education, less than 1 percent.
If UA is irrelevant, why attack it? That can best be answered by another question. Why are we so vigorously implored to ‘give a fair share’ by so many civic elites, business leaders and the propaganda machinery of the mass media?
The answer to the second question evolves from industry’s concerns with keeping taxes down. The mythology that private institution, charitably financed, should and can deal with serious social problems has been used to oppose public programs. The United Way is the American Way, goes the theme. Professional fund-raisers coax support with the pitch that ‘business can give it to us, and keep taxes down.’ The Haves are very open to such suggestions.
…
Further, an attack on UA is necessary for many of the reasons that Point Of Viəw rejected Cleveland Now., which is merely a new twist on the UA philosophy. Not only are needed public programs hurt, but Industry earns the image of a progressive, responsible community force, without delivering. A good example of the thinking is displayed by a Cleveland firm which hired a community relations person who wanted the company to know upon employment that he meant to speak out on issues and for programs that would hurt the company financially through taxes. “You do what you have to do for our image. Don’t worry, we have strong enough lobbies so you won’t hurt us,” was the reply.
They are more concerned with, as one political scientist says “Projects… which lend prestige, attract public support and avoid controversy.”
Indeed, at this state of social upheaval, any agency trying to fulfill the above three qualifications has no relationship to the needs of poor people.
Roldo concludes:
A perfect example of paternalism and lack of concern for poor people is evidenced in the [Welfare Federation of Cleveland]’s public welfare committee. Despite the major conflicts of public welfare and the growth of welfare rights organizations, none of the mothers vocal in the fight were on the [allocation] committee.
This isn’t an oversight by any means, but evolves naturally from an agency more concerned with ‘responsible’ public image than getting a job done.
Distasteful confrontation is necessary, not roast beef luncheons with state legislators to plead for better welfare allowances.
The recent compromise by the Welfare Federation in increasing its 36-member board by three representatives of poor people indicates not only the amount of concern for the poor, but for the idea of democratic participation.
It is an insult and should be turned down.
All of this goes to the heart of the economic battle between Capitalism and Democratic Socialism. The capitalists, as the accumulators of wealth, see the money as their and they ought to decide what to do with any surplus they might designate. The Democratic Socialists, as the actual producers, through workers, of wealth, see the money as belonging to the
People, and they ought to decide what to do with any surplus they might designate.
That makes good sense to me.
See here for a bibliography of books and other materials mentioned in this series.
Previously while Readin’ Roldo…
Bonus No. 1: Trickle-down economics doesn’t work but build-up does…
Bonus No. 2: In a Crisis, a Compromise Solution Is Worse Than No Solution at All.
Bonus No. 3: Dominion worker sues Trump campaign and conservative media.
Bonus No. 4: 2020 electdion map where each data point represent 250,000 voters.