Sunday, December 22, 2013

Entry 9

Jacqueline Wells
ENG1A
Professor Monique Williams
22 December 2013
Social Capitalism: A Positive Solution To A Struggling America
Where one is born is random, and whether they are born into a world of wealth or one of misery is left entirely up to chance. In Finland, expectant mothers receive a box from the government, filled with all the necessary tools for baby care. The theory is that each person entering the world deserves an equal starting point. One born in America is either not so fortunate or vastly better off. Like a flip of a coin, a child’s life is mapped down a fixed road, and seldom are there any major forks to a better direction. For those whose paths include college, the wealthy and the wary may chance to intermingle and stand equally as intellectual giants, but not before the economic binary has established the elitist status-quo of affordability versus affluence. College has been long revered as the definitive answer to the question of how to make a better life for oneself.  If we break open the vault that holds the vast majority of the nation’s wealth and redistribute it to fund public colleges and eradicate the student loan system, we will see the demolition of intellectual entitlement bred from the wealthy, and a foundation for unified knowledge and success for all.  Ushering in this period of true competition and economic growth would result in two things: achieving the dream of the proponents of true capitalism, while simultaneously indulging in socialist theory. A solution is defined as a mixture of two or more substances. To solve a problem, the answer generally lies in a compromise between conflicting entities. In this case, a solution between socialism and capitalism will be the only way in which we may observe the cessation of oppressing a struggling “student class,” and the reestablishment of economic balance.
Capitalism was hefted aloft on the backs of laborers in the same way that it was raised in the glass of the beneficiaries. The premise was idealistic and inspired: Work hard, go to school, climb the corporate ladder, and bask in success. The problem lay in the giant hole in the system: The ladder is narrow and far out of reach. Every person cannot become the CEO, or the latest Cinderella story of rags to riches on the evening news. Nevertheless, the latest generation of American college students has sacrificed their futures in order to enable them. They have submerged themselves in easily attainable student loans in order to fund their education and even their living expenses, all with the hope of achieving The American Dream of success, wealth, and by extension, happiness.  But measuring the economic successes of socialist-oriented countries overseas is not solely accounted for in money. It is measured in the socioeconomic happiness and prosperity of the effected society. The general welfare of a nation’s citizens is paramount to the purpose of government; it is written in our U.S. Constitution. “Ensuring domestic tranquility” does not mean that few should retain financial prowess at the sacrifice of many. “Providing for the common defense” does not mean that the progressive ideas that have been cultivated and nurtured in our classrooms should fall silent on ears tuned only to the ringing of the Wall Street bell. “With 50 million Americans under siege, we must move from the asylum of denial into the stadium of game-changing action” (Smiley and West 202). Taking the control away from those who are starving this country from growth via P.A. for-profit private organizations and greedy politicians will be the only manner in which we can start any real reform.
In order to crush the financial chains binding students to their destinies, it is imperative that we break the handshake between capitalism and education. A college system funded by U.S. tax dollars will ignite a healthy cycle of cash-flow, watering the aspirations of many by creating jobs and harvesting progression, meanwhile opening the floodgates for other social programs to blossom, such as healthcare, better welfare, and homeless shelters. Keeping knowledge closed and out of reach to the underprivileged is itself grossly oppressive, and may further be construed as an act of slavery, however unconventional. The master in this case has many faces, many names, and many dollars. We are the slaves, and college students are simply indenturing themselves in a desperate attempt to mitigate the chaos that is our economic system (College Conspiracy 1). In so doing, free government-funded colleges will provide for an equal launching pad for adults who are emerging into the working world, just as the Finnish babies emerge as equals at the start of their lives. “We can boldly imagine the unimaginable only if history serves as our touchstone” (Smiley and West 168). If we stay the course of blindly cowing to the capitalist script, there will be no opportunity for any change. History has established that this system benefits very few. Changing it will require not only a revolution in economics, but also one of imagery. Socialism is not the master. Government is not the master. The masters of the universe are the ones slipping money into the pockets of the lawmakers and the diplomats. As students financially enslaved for the rest of their lives, it is clear that the mission of our founding fathers has fallen to the wayside in lieu of monetary success. To overthrow the system, Americans need only refer to the preamble of the U.S. Constitution, and reevaluate the singular purpose of the document: ensure freedom for all.


Works Cited
College Conspiracy. National Inflation Association, n.d.
Lee, Helena. "Why Finnish Babies Sleep in Cardboard Boxes." BBC News Magazine 4 June 2013: n. pag. Print.

Smiley, Tavis, and Cornel West. The Rich and the Rest of Us: A Poverty Manifesto. New York: Smiley, 2012. Print.