Herrington: We Built It

Chris Herrington, Contributing Writer

Public and private matters are a big debate topic nowadays. What is to remain private and what is in the public venue or sector? Obviously, maybe, anything that affects us all, that seems to be public, right? And anything that has to do with only you and only yours, that most certainly has to be what they mean by private, I’m sure. But we do have a lot of stuff that seems to overlap those two areas, and this seems to be where the debate has been heading. There are many key discussions that are on the forefront of what is like a boil that is coming to a head by November, just a few short weeks from now. I do not support either candidate formally. I question all platforms. I am what you might call an independent, so here is my view from off Main Street.

Let’s handle the slogans of the conventions. The point that has raised the most eye brows is the “Yes, we did build it!” campaign. Yes, we built what? The business? The roads up to the business? The public transportation, education, and communications systems? The arguments went back and forth until your head was swimming, right? We might argue that without the seed ideas, the original capital, and the entrepreneurial drive of the business owner, there would be no business. True enough. I’m there. If we are asking if he needed worker bees, cleaning crews, buildings to manufacture his products, and transportation systems to make the operation possible, then no he did not do it all by himself. The question is one of defining who did what. The republicans did not really totally ferret out that problem. Obama, for all of his supposedly grand ability to communicate, literally got parsed right out of context. If Jon Stewart has anything to do with it, it would be worth taking the time to actually see the entire video of the incident instead of a snippet of the context which is out of context, but that is water under the bridge by now. All I know is that business owners, who are business builders, are the key ingredient. No, they did not make the chair they are sitting in. No, they did not personally carve the door to their office, most likely. But when a basketball player makes a winning shot in NBA finals, he does not make the ball that makes the shot, or the hoop or the court or the stadium. When someone builds a business from the ground up, they assemble the group of people who actually do the basic chores to make the business operate. They bear the load of risk. They are the ones who will fail miserably if the entire thing falls apart. Okay?

On the other hand, the question the general public is asking about this process is, is there any shared ownership in the process of building a business? Yes, people get paid as they go, but the question remains, if people make you millions or billions of dollars, weren’t they underpaid all along? This is of course a very slippery slope. If you and I go do a deal and we split the money, how much should my cut be? If the idea was to move a box and we were to get $10 for doing the job, if you had the contact? You make 6 and I get 4? 7 and 3? 8 and 2? Well, some CEO’s make 500 to 1. Some even more. The guy on the line wants to know, “If you can afford to pay him as much per hour as I make in a year, why can’t I have a raise?” A company that takes away a $50 monthly benefit from 15,000 employees saves $9,000,000 a year. But if the bonus for saving that $9,000,000 is the amount the CEO makes as a bonus, then couldn’t we say he took it from them and gave it to himself?

Now the argument always goes, “If you don’t like working here, go somewhere else.” But, is there an agreement, however unstated, that a business has some integrity and will act in good faith towards its employees? If the employees are building wealth in the company by working underpaid while creating it and then are seen as unnecessary after the automation kicks in, then those people are seen as expendable all along, not necessary, just cogs in a set of gears. If so, then what the “Yes, we did build it” slogan really means is, “We paid people sub-standard wages to do a job for us, gave them no ownership, saw them as expendable, and then wrote them off when productivity reached a level where they were no longer necessary to do the heavy lifting, and we objectified them all by ourselves.” By the time a large scale business comes in and destroys the local business infrastructure so all the mom and pop stores go out of business, the only recourse to working somewhere else is to move from your family home and relocate, selling off what may have been the home you had dreamed of living in all your life. But then, it is only business, and when you hired on you should have thought about that. It is called good planning and not putting all your eggs in one basket. Do not depend on a business taking you all the way, because you are only an employee as long as they need you. They will get your labor, your good ideas, and your health. But when they are done with you, they built this business all by themselves and they own it and if they can find a way to jettison you with no costs at all, the CEO will get a bigger bonus this year.

To tell you the truth, life is a buyer beware event. If you get screwed, it is your own fault. People do not act with integrity, and they owe you nothing. The product is only good until the warranty is out. They will take you to the cleaners on price. And if it is not illegal and there is a loop hole that allows it, then it is a good business practice as long as it makes you money. No one is going to look out for you and everything that is anything they will use against you at the last minute is all in the original paperwork or in an e-mail outlining their official standing, all written out in language so dense it takes a constitutional lawyer to negotiate what it says, while they tie you up in court for a generation. This is the American way, and we built it.

runningturtle87

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4 Responses to Herrington: We Built It

  1. LEAH says:

    What has happened to this site?

  2. madmilker says:

    [ This is the American way, and we built it.]

    it ain’t so…..it’s all about Made In China and has nothing to do with an American…

    and We the People sure as he!! didn’t build that…..Wal*Mart did.

    Wal*Mart didn’t move their Global Procurement Office to China to purchase more Made In America…..

    Wal*Mart didn’t partner with a person from Hong Kong on a port in Mexico to make sure longshoremen on America’s coast had job security….

    Wal*Mart puts less than 5% foreign in all their stores in China….they not doing that to promote Made In America….

    1960 America had a $6 billion dollar trade surplus and the American consumers supported the American worker by buying Made In America items….

    1975 was the last year America had a trade surplus….for the past thirty-seven years more and more Retail has been made that makes NOTHING…it only moves the fuel(currency) of a country.

    If you want jobs in America again…..just stop purchasing Made In China cause that George Washington in your pocket book or purse is better off there than in the hands of foreigners.

    Global trade has to be free but it also has to be fair. If you want a better America just support her cause it doesn’t matter how cheap those items get…..if you don’t have a George Washington in your pocket book or purse….that price ain’t gonna mean sh!!.

    Shop locally and shop Made In America and you will see change.

    oh! and while I’m on the subject of change….

    The American Government was $71 million in debt in the year 1790….six years before George Washington wrote his Farewell Address and told all those turnips he was fed up with the spending and going back to his farm….

    2012 the American Government is over $16 trillion in debt. There has only been one 10 year period in the past 100 years that the Government debt has gone down 1920-1930.

    If you want to change the direction of that debt….stop putting a jack@ or elephant on Jenkins Hill in Washington D. C. and put a person of character with a love of what made America…..the Made In America label.

    The rest of the world owns $7 trillion more of US than we own of them……you so-call American consumers purchasing all that so-call cheaper foreign made stuff think about that….

    Corporatism took the driver seat in 1975 and put Capitalism in the trunk of a foreign made automobile driving the ignorance of the American consumers to the parking lots of big box stores…..and foreigners from around the world have been laughing at US every since.

    runningturtle87….this O’fart enjoyed your article.

    God Bless!

  3. Billy Dix says:

    Sir, you should go back a edit some of your articles. Try this old trick. Pretend like each word is worth a dollar and see how much money you can save.

    • runningturtle87 says:

      I will do so, and I appreciate your comment. I tend to be wordy and say things in a longer way when I might have economized and said it in a shorter sentence, it is so very true. I could write shorter sentences. I’ll get to it. I’ll try.

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