Watch Me Discuss the Future of the Economy on The Sam Lesante Show!
Let's start 2016 by getting up-to-speed on the American economy! Here's an interview with me, just in time for the holidays...
The Grand Republican Strategy: We Win, You Pay!
No longer can a Republican run for president without admitting that the government must do something about our nation's most pressing problems -- but neither can he ask his friends in the One Percent to pay for it. Thus is born a new slogan: We win, you pay!
Listen to Me Discuss "Letter to the One Percent" with Filippo Voltaggio!
Last year, my friend Filippo Voltaggio interviewed me about my book Letter to the One Percent on his radio show Life Changes with Filippo. Finally, it is available here for you to enjoy...
Speak Up and Give Back if You Want the Economy to Improve
We celebrate the success of the One Percent, and rightly so. All we ask, especially in this time of giving, is for the compassion, the humility, the shared experience that existed only a few decades ago.
Not Everyone Has the Tools to Become Rich: How Our Childhood Shapes Our Ability to Succeed
For those Americans who have been materially successful, it may seem like everyone else simply chose not to follow the same path, but the reality is that most Americans don't know how to find that path.
An Open Letter to the One Percent
You are the most powerful citizens of the most powerful country in the world. Your country needs you. You have the influence, the means, and the brainpower to turn this economy around, but you must know the facts. You must hear the cold, hard truth.
My New Book Has Been Published! Just in Time for the Holidays...
"Letter to the One Percent" is exactly what it sounds like: a letter to the richest one percent of American households. It is a call to action, a plea for compassion, and a manifesto for the future.
Geography: The Latest Front in the Class War
We talk a lot about the partisan divide in this country, but we don't talk enough about the geographic divide. The citizens who feel the greatest disconnect from collective institutions are often the ones who live farthest away from them.