Poster of Inequality for All

Inequality for All

Documentary

Director: Jacob Kornbluth

Release Date: April 24, 2015

Where to Watch

Inequality for All may be a preach to the choir film, but it isn’t strident in its earnestness, and if viewed with an open heart and mind, can be appealing to people regardless of political or economic background. Inequality for All has an affable centralizing personality and political figure, Robert Reich, currently an economics professor at Berkeley and formerly US Labor Secretary under during Clinton’s first term who got his start under the Ford administration. Inequality for All argues that by having a strong middle class through government subsidized education, unions and corporate money out of politics, the US economy will improve, and it will actually make the wealthy prosper. Inequality for All uses a lot of historical facts, but if you treat the documentary as background tv, the details can get lost in the first-hand stories of the people who are wealthy or in the lower middle class. These stories are cleverly interspersed throughout Inequality for All to illustrate Reich’s economic points. Inequality for All is a must see for all Americans, but don’t waste your time if you feel like you have all the answers.

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