"You're not making an impact if you're not pissing someone off"

Monthly Archives: August 2012

While the notion given by gun advocates assures us that there would be less violent crime, especially that related to guns, the incident at the Empire State Building in NY City demonstrates why allowing people to tote firearms in public is a bad idea.

 

It appears that the main stream media paid little attention to a consequence of the police officers taking down a shooter in front of the Empire State Building last Friday who had just killed a former colleague he had been fighting with after being laid off a year ago.   The fact that a rapid reaction by the police also wounded nine bystanders doesn’t seem to have aroused any interests in how people legally armed and firing in defense of themselves and others can seriously injure others who are in close proximity.

(Reuters) – All nine of the bystanders wounded on Friday near the Empire State Building were hit by police gunfire, six by bullet fragments, when officers fatally shot a man who had killed a former coworker, authorities confirmed on Saturday.

The shooting was a rare example of the drawbacks posed by so-called hollow-point bullets. The New York Police Department started using those 14 years ago to reduce the likelihood of hitting bystanders, even though in this case the use of such bullets may have resulted in the opposite effect.

The bullets have become standard issue for many law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, as a replacement for traditional bullets that can pass right through a suspect.   SOURCE     

With the exception of one report by Doug Mataconis at Outside the Beltway.com, I have yet to see any comments in those reports about the shooting and how the defensive return fire by others in crowded areas can hurt or even kill innocent bystanders when such a shootout occurs.

This incident also brings to mind something that came up in the aftermath of the shooting in Aurora, Colorado. At the time, many gun advocates said that one armed person in the theater would have been able to stop Holmes before he caused as much damage as  he did. I’m a strong supporter of the 2nd Amendment, but I’ve got to say that this incident provides some pretty stark proof that those people were, most likely, wrong. Here was an incident out in public where two men who are trained professionally to react to situations like this still managed to misfire enough to cause (minor) injuries to bystanders. Do the people advocating that theory about Aurora think that the situation in the theater than(sic) night would have been any different? At the best, an armed citizen would have ended up in [a] shootout with Holmes, who had far superior weaponry to anything that someone with a Concealed Carry permit would be carrying. Inevitably, people would have been hurt in the crossfire, and possibly killed. In the end, given the protection that Holmes was wearing, it’s unlikely that he would’ve even been injured.  - Doug Mataconis

I was even a little disappointed that the Brady Campaign, one of the preeminent organizations that promotes sane gun control legislation, hasn’t pointed this out yet on their website.  Why this isn’t more of an issue being brought into the public discourse on measures to curb gun violence is incomprehensible to me.

In one of the most comprehensive rundowns available on mass killings over the last 30 years, a report by Mother Jones has demonstrated that “Just under half of the cases involved school or workplace shootings;  … the other 31 cases took place in locations including shopping malls, restaurants, government buildings, and military bases.”  What would have been the body count of wounded and dead if in all of these tragic events normal citizens, armed with some kind of firearm, would have drawn their weapons in an attempt to down a determined shooter who was perhaps less worried about being killed than anyone else there?

Unlike Doug Mataconis, I am not “a strong supporter of the 2nd Amendment”, especially as it relates to private ownership of most weapons.  But I have resolved myself that the Constitution does allow this right, even though I’m sure the extent it has been carried out by many gun advocates exceeds the expectations of most, if not all, of the founding fathers who included this in the Constitution several years after it was originally ratified.

 

I have consistently pointed out that we are no longer the agrarian, frontier society who just defeated the British military forces of a suppressive monarchy or in fear of hostile attacks from native American tribes protecting their ancestral lands.   This would have been the mindset of the authors of the Bill of Rights when they allowed for the right to keep and bear arms as spelled out in the 2nd amendment.  They would have left it up to future civilized American societies to retain this concept or alter it as needed if the social dynamics warranted it.

The notion that private arsenals of assault weapons would reach the level it has today and easily accessible by the criminal element and gangs, would have likely never crossed the minds of those rural farmers of the 18th century.  What is likely though is that if some form of time travel were possible today where these intelligent, rationale men could see how we have evolved, surely they would wonder what sort of insanity would have allowed  gun ownership to go as far as it has and why common sense approaches in our densely populated society are not part of the rationale to prevent a concealed weapon permit for every Tom, Dick and Mary.


As Republican Governors and legislatures try to inhibit the voting rights of some people along with the Party’s support of Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision that classifies  corporations as people and money as speech, should Americans be concerned that representative government is on its way out?

 

In our democratic-republican form of government we elect officials to represent us and the area population we live with. As it was initially set up in the 18th century the varying views of a constituency would hopefully elicit a decision from their elected official that represented a consensus rather than one which always favored a select group, especially the wealthy gentry of that age.  Over time however this democratic intent has become flawed through the unethical practices of gerrymandering which target those voters that will ensure their re-election and isolate the ones who can hinder their chances.

Back then too, people normally made their choices based upon criteria that candidates 1) were very familiar with the area they represent, 2)had a pretty good understanding of the political machinery they would be involved with, 3)had shared empathy with their constituencies and were knowledgable of the factors they made decisions on and 4), hopefully avoided conflicts of interests with their decisions and their personal lives.

Clearly today this is an ideal we don’t always live up to, with many voters choosing single issues like gay marriage and abortion as their sole reason for voting for anyone.

image by John Jonik 

The representative government we were handed following the ratification of the Constitution back in 1789 has gradually morphed into something that better resembles an oligarchy or plutocracy than it does as any form of democracy.  The specter of crony capitalism where corporate wealth is influencing policy in our legislatures is no longer a perception lingering in the shadows.  Such associations are often openly boasted about in the guise of advancing free market principles.

 

Then there are those times when it seems we reflect the practices of a theocracy as demonstrated in efforts by the christian right to impose their beliefs on abortion and contraception, along with a host of other issues about prayer in the school, dress codes and what people can buy on Sundays.

Not that these issues are not worth consideration in the public forum but our government was set up to essentially ensure that religious dogma would not dictate how we are to be governed.  This limitation was a natural consequence of the religious discrimination earlier settlers had experienced in Europe and was in part the reason many left their homes in the old world.

However, many issues that people of faith are concerned about are also shared with those of limited and no faith because we all seek to establish some reasonable moral norms.  Thus when consensus in multi-cultural and economically diverse constituencies is reached by all groups, we obviously have agreement not directly dictated by the dominant religion’s values alone.   But for elected officials in the Republican Party, this is no longer the norm.  Party loyalty to a narrow ideology now takes precedence over the general will of the people, a conclusion drawn by the authors who have studied the deterioration of our system of government in their insightful book It’s Even Worse Than It Looks: How the American Constitutional System Collided With the New Politics of Extremism”   

A glaring current example is with women’s rights as it relates to abortion and contraception.  We seem to have a preponderance of those elected officials from faith-based systems, especially amongst the more fundamentalist churches that are overbearingly white with higher income earners, willing to ignore fulfilling a couple of the obligations for objective representation – sharing an empathy and knowledge of the factors they make decisions on and avoiding conflicts of interests with their decisions and their personal lives.

Women representatives would of course be capable of sharing empathy and knowledge criteria as it relates to pregnancy.  Like men however, some are capable of basing their political motives on their strict religious world view.   So let’s focus a little bit on these efforts by conservative Republicans aimed at restricting the larger half of the U.S. population’s right to determine how and when they become pregnant.

 

Abortion is by no means acceptable to anyone, even those who are faced with a need for ending an unwanted pregnancy.  And though the idea that too many women use abortion as a means of contraception, at least one study shows that there are no single reasons women choose to abort an unwanted pregnancy.  Of those surveyed, unmarried women were 17% more likely than currently married women to choose abortion to prevent others from knowing they had sex or became pregnant.  This hardly constitutes a rationale to prejudge why most women have an abortion.

There are of course more socially acceptable forms of contraception with the pill, prophylactics and intrauterine devices (IUDs).  But again we have seen strong protestations from religious fundamentalists who oppose the use of these based, apart from the belief that it encourages pre-marital sex, that any form of contraception not sanctioned by the church is a violation of God’s law.

For society to forbid abortions under all or some conditions, it must be based on a consensus view and where facts and not feelings are in the forefront.  The more practical pros and cons on this issue can be found here. Yet the decisions made by conservative Republicans (are there any other kind these days) in several state legislatures have been made by people who not only overstep the requirements for fair representation but who base part of their decisions on fantastical assumptions that exemplify someone who harbors a pro-religious bias – a condition that our constitution sought to avoid.

The current mentality expressed by some within the Republican Party are made too often by white males who are incapable of experiencing the anguish of an unwanted pregnancy and by both male and females who have no shared experience in becoming pregnant through rape.  And by rape I mean the brutal assault of a woman by a man who ignores the protests of their victim and forces himself into her.  That may be an ugly way to portray rape for the weak of heart but it may be putting it mildly for the woman who has survived such an assault.  

 

Beyond a rational and common sense argument about the legality of abortions are those sentiments expressed by the so-called “pro-life” group who feel even rape is no excuse to terminate an unwanted pregnancy.  In a manner that expresses no concern for the victims of rape is a mentality that has chosen to view a fertilized egg in a woman’s womb as equal to that of any postnatal life.  Though I can comprehend the view that life begins at fertilization, I am hard pressed to make a comparison between a 4-week old fetus and a child carried to full term.  But this would be an argument that falls within a realistic context.

 

What falls outside of that context is the belief some hold that a life created from a traumatic event like rape is somehow a “method of conception” sanctified by God, as expressed recently by the presumptive Republican vice-presidential nominee,  Paul Ryan.

“I’m very proud of my pro-life record, and I’ve always adopted the idea that, the position that the method of conception doesn’t change the definition of life,” Ryan explained. “But let’s remember, I’m joining the Romney-Ryan ticket. And the president makes policy.”

“And the president, in this case the future President Mitt Romney, has exceptions for rape, incest, and life of the mother, which is a vast improvement of where we are right now.”   SOURCE   

Here are other examples of unrealistic views concerning rape held by those within the GOP.

- Back in January, 2010, when Sharron Angle was running against Harry Reid in Nevada she was asked if there was any reason for abortion, including rape and incest.  ”No”, was her reply.   She replied that as a Christian she believed “that God has a plan and a purpose for each one of our lives and that he can intercede in all kinds of situations and we need to have a little faith in many things.”

- In January of this year, then candidate for the GOP Presidential  nomination, Rick Santorum, expounded on this notion.   In an interview with CNN’s Piers Morgan, Santorum said that “I think the right approach is to accept this horribly created — in the sense of rape — but nevertheless a gift in a very broken way, the gift of human life, and accept what God has given to you.”  

- Last week, Missouri republican Senate Candidate Todd Akin tried to frame any pregnancy from rape in terms of the rape’s “legitimacy”.

“First of all, from what I understand from doctors, [pregnancy from rape] is really rare. If it’s a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down,” Akin said.

Regarding his opinion on whether to allow for an abortion in such instances, Akin added: “But let’s assume that maybe that didn’t work or something. I think there should be some punishment, but the punishment ought to be on the rapist and not attacking the child.”

- Sharon Barnes, a member of the Missouri state Republican central committee, said regarding Mr. Akin’s statement that very few rapes resulted in pregnancy that “at that point [after being raped], if God has chosen to bless this person with a life, you don’t kill it.  That’s more what I believe he was trying to state,” Ms. Barnes said. “He just phrased it badly.”   SOURCE

- When asked by AP reporter Mark Scolforo how he would explain it to his daughter why she needed to keep a baby if she were, “God forbid”, raped, Tom Smith, the Republican challenging Sen. Bob Casey’s (D-PA) seat stated that he had undergone a similar experience when his daughter had a child out of wedlock.  This is the exchange that followed between Scolforo and Smith.

SCOLFORO: Similar how?

SMITH: Uh, having a baby out of wedlock.

SCOLFORO: That’s similar to rape?

SMITH: No, no, no, but… put yourself in a father’s situation, yes. It is similar. But, back to the original, I’m pro-life, period.    SOURCE

 

It’s true that Romney doesn’t share Ryan’s views about not allowing abortions that result from rape and incest, but the Republican Party platform that will be on display this week during their convention apparently does.  Ultimately it will be the legislature that enacts legislation concerning when abortion is or isn’t allowed and even though a Romney presidency could refuse to sign the bill, he may bend to the will of the Party and sign such legislation anyway, especially if there is enough support in both houses to override any veto he chooses to take.

 

In light of the fact that most people, especially women, have always felt that abortion should be legal at some levels, would anyone be considered irrational to suggest that true representative government  no longer exists within the Republican Party.  Coupled with the view that most people also think that same-sex marriage should be legal, Medicare should be left alone, government should regulate green house gases, sensible immigration laws should be enacted, and that Americans favor higher taxes on those with high incomes, why do Republicans still claim to speak “for the people”.  Clearly they don’t

 

RELATED ARTICLE:

Men Defining Rape: A History


As a puppet for the GOP and right-wing advocates, FOX has worked to tarnish the image of Barack Obama in every way possible, including his biggest strength with foreign policy.  Now it seems they’re even willing to jeopardize the life of a former Navy SEAL to further that effort.

 

I don’t usually put out two pieces on same day, at least not in quite some time.  Nor do I intend on doing so in the future.  But there is a story out there that is so compelling, in my opinion, that simply cannot wait for me to report on it next week.  It is one where an organization who takes pride in claiming it is a super-patriotic defender of freedom and conservative values – FOX News – has committed the egregious act of putting a life at risk.  Something they have been adamant about in their attacks on liberals they feel are guilty of such misconduct.

The right-wing blogosphere has essentially ignored this story and of the 3 big ultra-conservative websites of The Weekley StandardNewsmax and Redstate, only Newsmax had an article on this, buried down in the middle of their page and that said nothing about the threat this revelation by FOX’s would have on the Navy SEAL who participated in the mission to assassinate Osama bin Laden

I wonder how many people who faithfully follow and trust FOX news feel betrayed after reporter Justin Fishel released the real identity of a former Navy SEAL team member who participated in the assassination of Osama bin Laden.  Many on the right expressed outrage at the Obama administration last year after Fishel at that time went after intelligence officials and senior administration officials that leaked details of the secret mission to the press.

The original plan, [then Defense Secretary] Gates said, was to protect their identities completely by not releasing any information about the raid. “Frankly, a week ago Sunday in the Situation Room we all agreed that we would not release any operational details from the effort to take out bin Laden. That all fell apart on Monday, the next day.”

Rather than keeping the details secret, intelligence officials and senior administration officials briefed members of the press. It quickly leaked out that the mission was performed by 24 members of the elite and classified counterterrorism SEAL squadron, known as SEAL team 6.  Despite that leak, Gates says the government continues to protect their identities.    SOURCE 

Last month Mitt Romney accused the President of leaking classified information about the raid that killed Osama bin Laden.  Back in June at a White House news conference Obama rejected such a  notion calling the charge “offensive”.  Following Romney’s comments a spokesman for the Obama campaign, Ben LaBolt, “said Romney was resorting to ‘cheap attacks’ on the president ‘that lack credibility rather than answering the most basic questions about his foreign policy agenda.’”  

Earlier this month the Special Operations OPSEC Education Fund, Inc., an organization run by people with ties to the Republican Party and the Tea Party, distributed a video that chastised the President for giving too much information away too soon about the mission.

So why would the FOX news station, owned by billionaire Rupert Murdcoh’s News Corp., that donated $1 million to the Republican Governors Association last year, violate a trust they accuse Obama of?  Well, based on this recent report of Fishel’s it appears that he may be serving as a means for a vendetta.  According to Fishel, “multiple sources” gave him the real name of the author of “No Easy Day: The Firsthand Account of the Mission That Killed Osama Bin Laden,” written by the former SEAL under the pseudonym of Mark Owen.

The tell-all book also has apparently upset a large population of former and current SEAL members who worry about releasing information that could compromise future missions. One Navy SEAL told Fox News, “How do we tell our guys to stay quiet when this guy won’t?” Other SEALs are expressing anger, with some going so far as to call him a “traitor.”    SOURCE 

FOX has always served as a conduit for right-wing groups to promote specious charges aimed at disparaging the President and Democratic candidates.  Their strong support for the Tea Party back in 2009 is a matter of record.   Could this “large population of former and current SEAL membersbe connected with the Special Operations OPSEC Education Fund whose current president is Scott Taylor, a former Navy SEAL who vied for the Republican nomination for a Virginia congressional seat in 2010?  Chad Kolton, a former Bush administration official serves as a spokesperson for the OPSEC organization as well as former SEAL, Ben Smith, who also served as a spokesperson for the Tea Party Express.  It wasn’t anyone from the Pentagon or the CIA because Fishel tells us in his report that they “were unaware of the SEAL’s true identity”.

Is the concern of former and current SEAL members about feeling betrayed by Mark Owen a legitimate one or do they feel this book would inadvertently prop up the commander-in-chief image of Barack Obama who authorized this daring mission to capture or kill the man responsible for thousands of American deaths on 9/11?  The President has never conveyed that he was the one responsible for the secret mission’s success and has rightfully always credited Navy SEAL Team 6 members for their courage and daring in this mission.  But Romney, the Republican Party leadership and now Special Operations OPSEC have tried so vigorously to tarnish his image in the hopes of minimizing Obama’s foreign policy bona fides as we approach the November elections.

The ideology of the far right it seems would do anything to give themselves an advantage to claim victory this fall.  Does that now include putting at risk the life of one who has bravely served his country?

 

UPDATE: Al-Qaida linked websites threaten ex-Navy SEAL turned author with ‘destruction’

 

RELATED ARTICLE

Is FOX News Really “fair and balanced”? 


 

Back when I started this blog in January of last year I did so on the heals of the mass murder shootings in Tucson, Arizona.  I presented my first blog post as an olive branch to acknowledge that the dialogue between people in this country had turn to rancor and threatened to tear this country apart.  

As Gabbi [Gifford] struggles to open her eyes more, maybe we as a nation can also begin to open ours and start viewing others with more dignity and grace than we have for nearly two decades.  The political divide in this country has eaten away at the spirit and the soul of our national character and left us mistrusting of our government that was once the pride of the entire world.  A government that Lincoln declared was for, by and of the people as he assuaged the hearts and minds of another public assembly following a civil tragedy between Americans on the fields of Gettysburg some 150 years ago.

The national discourse between extremes in this country has reached pitched levels that many of us haven’t seen since the civil rights days of the late 1950’s and most of the 1960’s.  The expressed forms of hate and the anger revealed on the faces of those at political rallies and organized events has reached a new high.  In the last two years the government that Ms. Giffords has devoted her life to and that is supposed to represent the people of this nation, has devolved into a partisan divide creating a gridlock that resembles more a battlefield than the halls of a democracy that once defied the rule of a monarchy and began the greatest experiment in human freedom the world had ever seen.

Things haven’t changed much since then and some would say it’s gotten even worse as we near the 2012 elections.  The campaign money both sides have spent on negative ads is humiliating at a time when too many people can’t scrape enough money together to give their children 2 nutritional meals a day.  What a waste.

I fear it may only get worse before it gets better.  But we all need to keep doing everything we can to dissolve the partisanship that has developed across the nation.  We all need to work a bit more harder and reach across those barriers that have been erected over the last few years before civility is destroyed even more than it has recently.  I inaugurated and continue this blog in that endeavor and to put more focus on that which separates us and what we all share in common. The small physical changes I’ve made to my blog here is my symbolic gesture to keep me focused in this direction

As suggested with it’s title and its new tag line and header image, Woodgate’s View continues to work to develop a better perspective of what political and social landscape surrounds us.  From the restricted view at lower elevations and the obstructions of mountain sides in our ascent, our understanding of the mountain range itself is limited until we can rise above these obstacles to gain a wider visual layout of that which we have been climbing.

The new header image was done by mine friend Jean Calomeni over at Snoring Dog Studios, who beautifully captured the previous google image replacing the younger female mountain climber with one who more represents myself.  I’ve replaced the old tag line of “A Portal to Progressive Views on the Issues of Our Time”, thinking it might send the wrong signal to people searching the blogosphere for more objective sources to become a part of.   To be honest too, it was a statement that I used to raise my liberal flag in an effort to connect to other liberals.  That concern no longer interests me.  The new tag line encourages dialogue while discouraging fidelity to established ideologies.

I want Woodgate’s View to become a forum to share my views with not only like-minded people, but with people who’ve yet to develop any real foundation on critical issues or those who hold opposing views and want a place to have them challenged.  But I want it to be a place where thoughtful exchanges occur and not vitriol and blind, baseless accusations.

Opinions are just that and they only have value if they have some basis in fact to support them.  But they are not absolutes or truth by any stretch of the imagination.  In fact, there are few absolutes in this world and I am pretty certain there are none outside of the physical sciences.  I would align myself with short story writer, Harlan Ellison who says that You are not entitled to your opinion. You are entitled to your informed opinion. No one is entitled to be ignorant.”

What good is a point of view if it doesn’t have some basis in the facts we have at our disposal.  Data that can be researched and information that has withstood the test of time are great equalizers against the rumors, innuendos and bald face lies that people attempt to pass off as opinion.

There are several bloggers who I subscribe to that have been an inspiration to me over time and finding myself often envying their cogent, descriptive styles.  One is Scott Erb at World in Motion and another is Ron Byrnes at Pressing Pause.   Jean Calomeni, who I commissioned to do my new header image, is also an artful writer at her Snoring Dog Studios blog site on subject matters that engage rather than offend you.  All of these people have been pretty consistent about expressing their comments in an open-ended and plausible manner, creating an atmosphere that is non-threatening or demeaning of those people or ideas they may be at odds with.

I have lived 60 plus years and have seen quite a lot in that time.  I have also tried to stay informed through readings and conversations with real experts on relevant matters.  This doesn’t make me an authority on the subjects I write about.  It does, I believe, allow me to form an enlightened opinion that I can share with others and perhaps even debate for the sake of coming as close to the truth as possible on a given issue.

Human beings tend to be fickle creatures and though some think they have a truly independent mind, I think I can honestly say that we are all influenced by events, our environs and other people more than some are willing to acknowledge.  We may choose what to eat but can do so only with what’s available and are compelled to nourish our body that tells us when.  We may decide where we want to live but cannot control the weather that may flood our homes or get ripped apart by strong winds.  These choices depend upon other people being willing to provide food that we can purchase and experts in the regional weather patterns to inform us how safe an area may or may not be.

I have evolved over time and undergone multiple transitions, becoming older and wiser, yet remain imperfect.  I have concluded that life is a process in which growing in all human aspects is what is expected of us until the day we breathe our last.  What’s after that isn’t clear but I feel comfortable with the notion that if you’re not through growing in this life then there will be opportunities in the next, if one exists.  This can only occur if we respectfully and sincerely engage others that share this tiny blue dot with us.  

I have found it inhibiting to get locked into one belief system or have a singular aspiration where we become too willing to ignore that the differences amongst the inhabitants of this planet are what makes us unique and makes life more rich and fulfilling.  Our growth should consist of the effort to understand the variables amongst us, knowing that a common thread runs through us all that is derived from the same source, be it one’s version of a supernatural, omnipresent deity or through some evolutionary process that began like the tiniest seed of the orchid that produces perennial herbs which are now widely distributed around the earth.

So, Woodgate’s View is an attempt to express things in terms that has a more encompassing view of life and in so doing may point an accusing finger at those who would limit this perspective.  I can’t control how some people will interpret what I write.  The fact that some views expressed on this blog appear to be more “liberal” than conservative isn’t intended to make that perspective superior to any other view.  But I am not going to apologize if my writings don’t concur with someone else’s rigid world view.  Some people are simply too thin-skinned to carry out a discourse on issues too deeply ingrained in their being.

Our imaginations can exist to either help us deal with our problems or serve as a means to further isolate us.  One is productive, the other, destructive.  Fear motivates one where inner courage elevates the other.  Neither the self or the collective “we” must cancel the other out totally.  It’s a commingling of the two that offers the greatest hope for success if we are to survive as a nation, a species and a member of this universe.  The ability to choose resides in the personal will of each and every one of us.

I’ll conclude with this quote I excerpted from a recent Eugene Robinson column that touches on the premise implicit in this post.

This is not about free enterprise, and it’s not about personal liberty; those fundamental principles are unquestioned. But for at least the past 100 years, we have understood capitalism and freedom to exist within a larger context — a complicated, real-world, human context.

Some people begin life at a disadvantage, and it’s in the national interest to open doors of opportunity for them. Some people make mistakes, and it’s in the national interest to create second chances. Some people are too young, too old or too infirm to care for themselves, and it’s in the national interest to secure their welfare.

 

The view is always better at the top but the thrill is often in the ride.

 


For every action there is a reaction and there are unseen consequences that can negatively affect the general welfare of the public when decisions are too narrowly focused on things that have short-term benefits.  Short term benefits that too often only really benefit a small, financially sound group. 

Oh the irony of drowning in junk mail and its effect on diminishing water supplies

Inherent in the U.S. Postal Service’s struggle to stay solvent and viable is an action that will have negative consequences for a diminishing resource that the human race depends on for its existence.  The problems USPS faces stems primarily from the enactment of the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006 that requires the USPS to pre-fund the pensions of its workers 75 years in advance.    They say that the devil is in the details so when we look closely at this we do see the efforts of those loyal to Grover Norquist’s dream at play here to shrink government small enough to drown in a bath tub.

This act was one of the “poison pill” pieces of legislation that a GOP-controlled congress enacted to sabotage public services, much like the Medicare Part D legislation they also passed which, among other things, increases prescription costs for beneficiaries.  By creating this debt burden for the postal service, USPS is now forced to close over 250 mail processing centers by the end of  2014, eliminating tens of thousands of postal worker jobs to the unemployment rolls.  But not only did this legislation become a “job killer”, it also had the indirect consequence of contributing to reducing perhaps the single most important resource necessary to sustain life on this planet – WATER!

Sadly, one of the choices now facing the USPS to aid them in overcoming their debit issue is to seek revenue through other sources like direct mail advertisers.  One of the biggest enterprises in direct mail services is Valassis Communications Inc. and the postal service is offering them huge discount rates to increase their mailings.

The post office expects to generate $15 million in profits over three years by cutting what it charges Valassis Communications Inc. for new mass mailings. Livonia, Mich.-based Valassis sent more than 3 billion pieces of so-called junk mail through the post office last year. Under the proposal, Valassis has promised to send even more bulk mail. On those additional mailings, the Postal Service will give the company a discount of up to 34 percent. Valassis has agreed to pay a penalty if it does not boost its use of the mail service.  SOURCE 

That means you and I get more garbage to toss and burden the already overloaded landfills in this country.   Nearly 40% of all paper tossed wounds up in those landfills.   If you’re lucky enough to have recycling services in your community there is some sense that this waste can still be beneficial.  “According to the American Forest and Paper Association, nearly 80 percent of America’s paper mills are designed to use paper collected in recycling programs, and they depend on paper recycling to supply the raw materials they need to make new paper.”

And though the remaining 20% comes from new trees that are sustained with more than 1.7 million new trees being planted each day, there is still the issue of the amount of water used to produce the paper that this junk mail comes from.  It takes approximately 85 gallons of water to produce a little less than two pounds of paper.  That’s a little less than what the Sunday NY Times weighs with its advertising flier inserts.  Average worldwide annual paper consumption is 48 KG per person with North America accounting for over 1/3 of that total.

There is another popular Republican issue we are currently facing that threatens to reduce fresh water in even larger quantities than paper manufacturing.  That’s their support for increasing oil and natural gas exploration over cleaner energy sources through the use of “fracking” to extract the more difficult to reach fossil fuel resources.

In order to fracture shale formations that often exist thousands of feet below the surface, drillers use anywhere from 1 to 8 million gallons of water per frack. A well may be fracked up to 18 times. The water, usually drawn from natural resources such as lakes and rivers, is unrecoverable once it’s blasted into the earth, and out of the water cycle for good.    SOURCE 

Of the total Earth’s water supply, only 2.5% of it is freshwater.  Over two-thirds of that is locked up in the polar caps and glaciers around the globe.  Of the remaining potable water for human consumption nearly 70% of that is polluted from industry, agriculture, human and animal waste, leaving only about 0.5% of the world’s freshwater supply available for human and animal consumption around the globe.

And of that 70% of fresh water that becomes polluted from industry, agriculture, human and animal waste, how many of you automatically think of Republicans in a positive light when you think of efforts to reduce air and water pollution?

All people make mistakes with decisions that had the best intentions.  The sign of good leadership however is observed in people who, upon realizing their poor choices, show the ability to recognize that fact and take the speedy action necessary to reverse or diminish the negative impacts they effected.   But have we created a form of gridlock in this country that will in effect prevent such leadership from being put into effect?

Men make history and not the other way around. In periods where there is no leadership, society stands still. Progress occurs when courageous, skillful leaders seize the opportunity to change things for the better.   – Harry Truman

In an age where ideology trumps compromise and reasoned alternatives, and corporations and their money are seen as equals to real people and free speech, are we creating the seeds of our destruction?  Have too many gone too far in being captivated by the allure of Randian “objectivism”?  Have the extremists on the right demonized all government so bad that trust in those institutions no longer exists sufficiently to coordinate and unite us as a people?  Is e pluribus unum dead and with it the strength to face the global challenges, not only from nature’s wrath but from our own short-sightedness?


What is it with the extremist element in Republican politics that just can’t express any empathy for women who have been raped?

Rep. Todd Akin from Missouri.  Just another religious zealot who can’t understand why women don’t want to carry their rapist’s child for 9 months?

Back in January, 2010, when Sharron Angle was running against Harry Reid in Nevada she was asked if there was any reason for abortion, including rape and incest.  ”No”, was her reply.   She replied that as a Christian she believed “that God has a plan and a purpose for each one of our lives and that he can intercede in all kinds of situations and we need to have a little faith in many things.”

Ouch!  Who would have thought God had a plan for rape as a part of unwanted pregnancies.

But two years later in January of this year, then candidate for the GOP Presidential  nomination, Rick Santorum, expounded on this notion.   In an interview with CNN’s Piers Morgan, Santorum said that “I think the right approach is to accept this horribly created — in the sense of rape — but nevertheless a gift in a very broken way, the gift of human life, and accept what God has given to you.”  

Wow!  Women who hope to have a child someday through the biblical-sanctioned practice of a loving marriage must not reject God’s preference for birth through rape?  Lest you think this may be too far fetched, check out what a member of the Missouri state Republican central committee said in this regard. (see below)

You begin to get the sense that the zealots who oppose abortion feel that pregnancy by rape is none-the-less legitimate in the eye’s of God simply because a life has been generated.  In their view, God is the creator of all life, ergo, rape serves a “plan and a purpose”  albeit “in a very broken way” for creating life.

So the next logical step in this sociopathic mindset is to see rape in some “legitimate” terms?

Missouri Republican Senate nominee Rep. Todd Akin was answering a question regarding his position on abortion rights in instances when a woman is a victim of rape and seems to have carried the utter unconcern for the woman to a preposterous conclusion.

“People always want to make it into one of those things — well, how do you slice this particularly tough ethical question,” Akin said in an interview on KTVI-TV, video of which was circulated by the Democratic super PAC American Bridge. 

“First of all, from what I understand from doctors, [pregnancy from rape] is really rare. If it’s a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down,” Akin said. 

Regarding his opinion on whether to allow for an abortion in such instances, Akin added: “But let’s assume that maybe that didn’t work or something. I think there should be some punishment, but the punishment ought to be on the rapist and not attacking the child.”   SOURCE 


When you watch the video on this one you can almost visually see Rep. Akin resisting his body’s attempt to tie itself in knots.

Here’s what Sharon Barnes, a member of the Missouri state Republican central committee, said regarding Mr. Akin’s statement that very few rapes resulted in pregnancy.

“at that point [after being raped], if God has chosen to bless this person with a life, you don’t kill it.  That’s more what I believe he was trying to state,” Ms. Barnes said. “He just phrased it badly.”   SOURCE

Hey Missouri!  Better check the water source you’re drinking from.  As the “Show Me” state can you show the rest of the nation why you would “legitimately” consider this man as a serious candidate to represent you in the U.S. Senate?   Here’s hoping you show him a one-way ticket back to his private life that hopefully doesn’t consist of making decisions for women.


We act out fantasies as children about the glory of war that we garner from video games, TV and movies we see in our youth.  Too many of us never really learn that the fantasy doesn’t match the reality.

Which one will play the suicide bomber?

 

If you haven’t caught it yet, NBC has started airing it’s new reality TV show “Stars Earn Stripes”.  It consists of would-be and has-been celebrities who are paired up with “military and law enforcement veterans” who bring to TV a farce they attempt to justify by saying it honors  “the individuals that have sacrificed so much for all of us”, or so says co-host, Former NATO commander General Wesley Clark.  This “honor” is simply an honoraria in the amount of $100,000 that the C-class celebrities get to donate to the military-related charity of their choice.  I’m sure they are all sufficiently rewarded for their own efforts, along with the opportunity of displaying some ego-centered moxie for viewers.  Then of course there are the millions NBC will make from its commercial advertisers.

Kids grown up re-enacting childhood war fantasies on NBC’s new reality TV show, “Stars Earn Stripes”

I have seen and felt the death and destruction of war in Vietnam and I am sickened at the thought that celebrities from TV and sports venues can presume to honor combat veterans by participating in choreographed situations that supposedly simulate real life missions.  I am equally saddened that those military personnel who have shared my war time experiences, who were paired up with these actors, are part of a facade that continues to sell war to a naive public who also have no deep understanding about the devastating nature of war.

If anyone really wants to honor those who “sacrifice so much for all of us” they can begin with opposing the continued build up of the military-industrial complex in this country that makes millions for the  corporate war profiteers while those sent to the slaughter get a ceremonial flag at their funeral or an artificial body part to replace the one that the real bullets and explosives of war created a need for.

It’s unsettling for me to watch and listen to TV personality and former Dancing With The Stars co-host Samantha Harris, decked out in fashionable mauve denim khakis, a blue tank top and black mud boots, as she barks out instructions in drill sergeant fashion to the participants and later tell two of the celebrities about what they going to be facing

Samantha Harris barking instructions to players in NBC’s “Stars Earn Stripes”

“You’re about to experience first hand live fire during a mission and experience what these gentlemen do every single day.  How does that make you feel?”, she asks boxer Laila Ali and former TV superman Dean Cain   Surely the military experts who are assigned to Ali and Cain have to be chuckling under their breath about how there is any similarity to what is being played out for the cameras here and what they have undergone while serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.

What you will see I’m sure in NBC’s latest commercial venture is an assortment of camera angles that will repeat over and over the awesome display of explosives and yelling screaming participants as noisy helicopters and heavy equipment inundate the sound system to replicate real battlefield scenes.  There may be real panic on the players faces as they come at safely protected distances from the destructive forces of mortars, napalm, Semtex and C4 explosives.

  

The celebrity heros have to face the terrorizing threat from an empty guard tower and paper target gunmen

What they and the rest of the viewing audience won’t see is the awful destruction that occurs when weapons of war make contact with real people and the communities they live in.  The graphic displays we see in modern cinema of bodies exploding  are horrifying but we know in reality that people don’t really die from these action scenes.  We are not traumatized from stunts where no one really gets hurt and where life resumes to normal when filming ends.

Even the news clips we may see on network television of bodies and injured people from war’s devastation are but distant and brief visuals that fade rapidly when the commercial breaks quickly change our focus to the latest drug remedy for our pathetic conditions or remind us that its time to buy the back-to-school supplies and fashion for kids whose greatest trauma experience is losing power to their I-pads.

March 2012 : Afghan mother and her two children killed in an earlier US strike. (Photo: Pakistan Defense)

                                 Real victims of war

 

Those “true heroes” that NBC claims are at the heart of their televised program are victims of murders and mutilations that they are not only recipients of but who have, under fire or duress, exacted on innocent civilians, many of them women and children.  Very few of these men and women walk away and erase the memory of this insane and inhumane life they have lived through.  In fact, it was just revealed today that “thirty-eight soldiers killed themselves in July, the worst month for suicides since the Army began releasing figures in 2009, according to Pentagon officials.”  Only the most pathological individual who has experienced this horror would feel very little lasting impact after watching their buddies head blown off from a grenade launcher round or realize the precision air strike from a Black Hawk helicopter had just wiped out a classroom full of kids.

The civilian hawks who tout these wars and the entrepreneurs who promote video games of war carnage share the mentality of the producers who create the likes of something called “Stars Earn Stripes”.  They hold unrealistically shallow views of war’s “glory” because they have to do something to allow for the fact that they were never a part of the real thing, by fate or choice.  Ticker tape parades and awarding medals for bravery are well-intentioned but fail to address the real needs of men and women who have made great sacrifices that they will be expected to endure for the rest of their lives; that is for those lucky enough to make it back home.

Now I’m not saying that General Clark and the real military and law enforcement players in this TV “reality” show don’t feel, somewhere in their hearts, that this serves a higher good for the men and women who serve.  And in some respects, when that $100,000 check comes into play for combat veterans who would be without resources to provide for their needs that resulted from their sacrifices, that money will serve a real need.

But underlying all of this is the cavalier approach by commercial interests to expose viewers to this seriously flawed view of war.  There is and always will be far more losers than winners when the awesome power of war machines are let loose on defenseless civilians.  Those service personnel who engaged in combat and survived it are likely to develop emotional traumas that may well have latent effects on them and their family’s lives and could have social and economic consequences that affect us as a nation for years to come.

  

When fantasy imitates reality

 

Those too far removed from this however see war as something unwanted but inevitable, so why not profit from it.  Perhaps the people at NBC think it is better to exploit the appeal some have for pyrotechnics by wrapping it up in the flag and enact some faux military bravado than spending their vast fortune on ways to ameliorate the causes of war.  They are after all an entertainment industry and I’m sure the P.T. Barnum mindset that says “give them want they want” allows them to overlook that such exploitation will only enable future generations to disregard the awful destruction we have now incorporated into our world view as “leaders of the free world”.

 

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I think voters need to step back and take a serious, measured look at what our real choices are for President this fall.   Hard working Americans who have become victims of this recession are not dead beats looking for a free lunch.  They see their plight as temporary but would feel better about it if  there was some genuine empathy from one of the candidates who could be President but appears to have no idea what it’s like to be struggling economically when times are hard.   

 

While corporate profits reach record highs, wages remain stagnant

 

The high unemployment rate that just refuses to recede back to that 4-5% rate that most economists view as the norm continues to drain savings accounts, puts families out of their homes and clearly brings into perspective that the idea of an American dream is no longer a reality for most people as it once was.  More people have slipped from middle incomes levels into the ranks of poverty as a result of the financial collapse on Wall Street back in 2008.

As a consequence, the need for state and federal aid has grown in the form of unemployment benefits, food stamps and Medicaid benefits.  Older workers are discovering how difficult it is to find comparable work that they once held before being laid off and are often forced to collect Social Security benefits at the earlier retirement age of 62, putting an added burden on that trust fund when receipts are shrinking from fewer income earners in the job market.

This isn’t a condition any of these people sought or feel comfortable with.  It is taxing and humiliating on individuals to go through the paperwork and expend the time applying for benefits while simultaneously trying to compete with 4-5 other people looking for that one job that will put them back in the work force.  Many have put off taking such action until there is nothing else left for them to do after they’ve emptied their savings, sold their home and moved in with relatives, all while cutting back on food and health needs to sustain them.  It is a depressing state that has a deteriorating affect on their physical health, leading to greater economic woes for them and their family.

Nobody wants what Paul Ryan recently suggested about having “a safety net that turns into a hammock that lulls people into dependency in this country”.   That’s a fear smear used by the political right to mischaracterize necessary welfare programs in this country that fill the void when free markets fail.  All anyone really wants now as they did during the Great Depression was “the right to live, Mister, Give me back my job again.”  Jim Garland’s 1941 lyrics to All I Want was part of the social protest movement expressed in the music of the Almanac Singers that consisted of Garland, Wood Guthrie and Pete Seeger

We worked to build this country, Mister,

While you enjoyed a life of ease.

You’ve stolen all that we built, Mister,

Now our children starve and freeze.

 

So, I don’t want your millions, Mister,

I don’t want your diamond ring.

All I want is the right to live, Mister,

Give me back my job again.

 

Charities of every kind are over-burdened with the needs to meet this new population who just a few short years ago were themselves contributing to food banks, work programs and life support organizations that routinely meet the needs of society’s poor and disenfranchised groups.  As a society we are just not wired to become dependent on others, looking for a “free lunch”, and will go out of our way to avoid relying on the kindness of strangers.

It would be nice then if the presumed Republican nominee for president, Mitt Romney, would stop disparaging these people, portraying them as a “culture of dependency” and showed some empathy by ending his demeaning narrative towards those policies and programs that offer some solace in these economic hard times until the promises of the free markets correct what they essentially caused.  Without some government assistance at this time, this doesn’t seem likely anytime soon. Paul Ryan’s entry into the race as Romney’s VP will have no affect on this dynamic.  It will in fact bring it more into focus since Ryan is the poster boy for wanting to privatize Medicaid/Medicare.

 

“There is no such thing as a free-market.  A market looks free only because we so unconditionally accept its underlying restrictions that we fail to see them.”economist Ha-Joon Chang

 

In order for the “invisible hand” of the free markets to work its magic, more people will likely lose their homes, their savings and their hopes of an ideal American dream first .  Unfettered markets will rely solely on the forces of supply and demand from the private sector to revive the economy.  Without government stimulus to generate demand and speed up the recovery, those currently unemployed will have to hope that a high level of entrepreneurship springs into action quicker rather than later.  The prospects for that happening soon are not promising.

And while waiting for this to occur the victims of the great recession are finding it more difficult to rely on state and federal assistance to tide them over.  The free markets do not accommodate families struggling who are waiting for the “job creators” to provide employment opportunities.  This puts them deeper in debt and prevents them from rejoining the ranks of consumers if they are mostly reliant on private charities.

If people are not buying then demand is weak and employment either remains the same or shrinks, creating even less demand needed to turn the unemployment crisis around.  Thus the new unemployed population that developed when the banks too big to fail went under have to hope that the failed premise of trickle down economics Romney and Ryan offer will deliver this time where it hasn’t in the past.

The deck remains stacked in favor of Wall Street.  A Romney Presidency will gain them a card dealer who deals to them from the bottom of the deck.

 

President Obama has been criticized by apostles of supply side economics for his use of the Keynesian approach requiring government intervention during economic hard times.  These efforts were effective in stopping the rapid rate of job losses and even began to turn the tide shortly after being applied.  But the stimulus package passed by Congress shortly after Obama’s inauguration, without any Republican backing, was too little for an economy that had deeper issues than nearly anyone on either side predicted.

As a result, the Republicans exploited this short-sightedness and portrayed it as a failure of policy, even though they battled to insure its failure.  Angry voters who watched Washington bailout Wall Street while Main Street went under easily bought in to the straw man offered by forces eager to regain their prominence under the neo-conservative policies of the Bush/Cheney days

Acting behind the scenes to promote the anti-government, anti-tax fervor of the small libertarian contingent in this country which came to be known as the T.E.A. Party,  they repackaged trickle down economics in a thinly veiled manner that allows even greater revenue loss to prop up the social safety net that is saving millions from falling deeper into debt and poverty.   While middle-income families who still have a job are led to believe that it is the expense of maintaining this social safety net that’s causing their economic concerns, the wealthiest amongst us are getting richer from lower taxes and less regulation to keep their greed in check.

This is the select group of people who Mitt Romney comes from and Ryan supports to the detriment of the middle-income victims of failed free-market policies.  The gaffes Romney makes and continues to make about the working class in America and his feigned concern for them is becoming legendary.  Yet he retains a modicum of persuasion over those who will ultimately be adversely affected by his hoped-for victory come November because of a level of hate for Obama that can’t be rationally explained.  In the end however this may not save him because Romney still lives in a fog about his own culture of wealth as writer Jonathan Chait  has noted.

Romney has taken no steps at all to put a middle-class sheen on his background, and he’s allowed Democrats to define him by his wealth and heartlessness. He seems to have fallen into the trap of believing that the sentiments about wealth that prevail among movement conservatives reflect the beliefs of Americans as a whole.    SOURCE 

Polls are clearly showing that this may well work against the presumed GOP nominee for president.  Not only do more people like Barack Obama than they do Romney, they also don’t identify with his wealth culture.  It remains to be seen if Ryan’s inclusion into the Romney campaign will alter these poll results more in favor of the man who continues to demonstrate his failure to connect with the average American.

So why are those Independents who will eventually decide the outcome of this election still waiting to make their choice?  Obama has understandably been disappointing for not being more aggressive going after the culture of greed that caused our current state of affairs and has been too willing to compromise with people who have made it clear that compromise is itself a dirty word.  The GOP has focused on this weak aspect of his leadership to undermine the president in all things.  But the choice between Obama and a man who has no clue what it’s like to be unemployed and struggling to meet the daily needs to survive seems like a no-brainer.


 

It’s not that wealthy people are automatically out of touch with poorer working class families.  Not all of them are.  In his inaugural address John Kennedy warned that “If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich.”  But Romney clearly showed his ignorance of poverty in America when he implied at Otterbein University in Ohio earlier this year that financial success was simply a matter of  “borrowing money if you have to from your parents”. 

Reinstating Obama means we will still at least have a sympathetic ear and a foot in the door to accomplish greater things we were led to believe would come to fruition shortly after his inauguration.  He will remain in place to block any draconian measures by a GOP-controlled House or Senate that attempt to severe necessary benefits for the most vulnerable in our society – the elderly, children and the handicapped.

For all his misgivings in his first term they still remain outdone by what he did achieve.   Obama is likely to be more receptive to the change we still need in Washington in his second and final term as President.  This may not inspire the hope for many that voted for Obama in 2008 but it remains a lifeline for working families and the indigent poor.

That door slams shut however if Romney is elected.  The alternative of a Romney/Ryan ticket promises to return the status quo view of economics that sent markets dropping like lead balloons four short years ago.   The only form of hope likely to be left then for most Americans will be that their lottery numbers hit and trickle down economics will at least contribute more to the foods banks and free health clinics.

 

“It is really not so repulsive to see the poor asking for money as it is seeing the rich asking for more money.” - G.K Chesterton

 

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I thought I knew most of what I needed to know about the Tea Party’s sweetheart, Ayn Rand, until I read Mark Ames’ coverage of Rand’s sociopathic affinity for serial killers.  I knew she had an unrealistic ideal view of the hero character she portrays in her works but I wasn’t aware just how much she attributed a decadent sense of morality to people like her fictional Howard Rourke in The Fountainhead “who was born without the ability to consider others.”

I’ll leave it to the reader to view Ames’ awful truth about the serial killer William Edward Hickman who Rand was infatuated with but do want to share the theme of Ames’ article and a quote by Rand that explains why people on the far right view people who have fallen on hard times as parasites when they seek some government assistance to tide them over until the economy improves. 

With Paul Ryan’s recent ascendency to the post of presumed GOP vice-presidential nominee, it should be remembered what a big fan the Wisconsin congressman is of Ayn Rand.  He proudly acknowledges how he expects all of his staff people to read Rand’s Atlas Shrugged to get an idea of what the “ideal” American should look like in the fictional character of John Galt.  Here’s a quote from Ms. Rand that reflects I suppose what her characters in her novels are supposed to epitomize.

“If [people] place such things as friendship and family ties above their own productive work, yes, then they are immoral. Friendship, family life and human relationships are not primary in a man’s life. A man who places others first, above his own creative work, is an emotional parasite.”   

Congressman Ryan is on record for saying how “Rand makes the best case for the morality of democratic capitalism.”    And here we thought the Christian conservatives in this country believed the bible made the best case for morality, including the New Testament where Jesus lays bare the core principles of today’s Christianity that elevates the spirit of altruism.  The religious right in this country screams “persecution” when prayer is removed from public schools and the Ten Commandments are taken from public edifices.  Yet they apparently have no problem holding up the laissez-faire economic model that repudiates helping those in their hour of need.  Jesus himself would be seen as a weakling in Rand’s novels and would have justified the crowd’s chant to “crucify him”.

So come election time this November,  remember who the GOP represent and have starkly selected to represent them in the White House.  Mark Ames’ conclusion to his unmasking of the fringe element that seeks to gain control of what’s left of the government, handed to us by some of the early founding fathers, is a warning that needs to be absorbed by that angry contingent who thinks they know what will restore “America’s greatness”.

Whenever you hear politicians or Tea Baggers dividing up the world between “producers” and “collectivism,” just know that those ideas and words more likely than not are derived from the deranged mind of a serial-killer groupie. When you hear them threaten to “Go John Galt,” hide your daughters and tell them not to talk to any strangers — or Tea Party Republicans. And when you see them taking their razor blades to the last remaining programs protecting the middle class from total abject destitution — Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid — and brag about their plans to slash them for “moral” reasons, just remember Ayn’s morality and who inspired her.

 

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In the past I have posted segments that gave relatively brief accounts of current events I called “Considerations and Tidbits”  and another that I employed less frequently called “I wish I Had Said That!”.   I am going to try to start those up again and post them at the end of the week, when people are less inclined to peruse longer winded comments of mine and are winding down themselves for a hopefully relaxing weekend.  

 

Here’s my first effort for this rebirth.  As you will notice with the last quote, I found some interesting comments in fiction too that aptly make a statement about contemporary real-life.

 

QUIZ

This first comment was made back in 1980.  See if you can guess who said it.

1.  When you have more government, industrialists take it over and the two together form a coalition against the ordinary worker and the ordinary consumer.  I think business is a wonderful institution, provided, it has to face competition in the market place and it can’t get away with something except by producing a better product at a lower cost and that’s why I don’t want the government to step in and help the business community.   

The answer is at the bottom of the page

 

2.  We can devise all the clever schemes imaginable to clean up politics and get money out of campaigns, but it won’t work until the American people collectively give up on certain fond illusions: the Horatio Alger myth, American Exceptionalism, and the whole mass of magical thinking that boils down to the belief that God loves America because we’re so virtuous, handsome, and smart, and that we, too, could win the lottery. Well, we’re not necessarily any of those things. The truth is that we lucked into adverse possession of a mostly empty continent in a temperate zone with lots of resources, and straddled east and west by two huge moats. We had firearms and resistance to smallpox, and the original owners didn’t. Virtue had very little to do with it.   - Mike Lofgren

 

3.  We always knew that it was good to be smart and hard-working, and that if you were born or raised with those qualities, you were incredibly lucky, just as you were lucky if you grew up in the United States rather than in Somalia. But the … research helps us understand why many people who have those qualities never find much success in the marketplace. Chance elements in the information flows that promote that success are sometimes the most important random factors of all.                                                                                                                                 

Of course, we should keep celebrating the talented, hard-working people who have succeeded in their businesses or careers. But the research provides an important moral lesson: that these people might also do well to remain more humbly mindful of their own good fortune.  – Robert H. Frank,  Luck vs. Skill: Seeking the Secret of Your Success 

 

4.  Want to really learn how to suck eggs, from an old hound dog?  I’ve spent ten years with [Congressman] Wickham.  He’s the smartest hound there is, but he’s up against a bad lot.  The Republicans are the country’s pit bulls, Mitch.  Barking in the night, all night, every night, right or wrong, savaging their enemies without mercy.  They claim to represent plain folks, but they represent those who vote, when they vote at all, on pocketbooks and fear and gut instinct.”   Dick Gianelli in Greg Bear’s SciFi novel Darwin’s Children”  (chapter 6)

 

 

 

Answer to comment #1 – Milton Friedman, the laissez-faire capitalists that many conservatives like to quote but many, once in office, fail to emulate.  Also, concealed in Mr. Friedman’s remarks is the fact that bigger government usually evolved as abuses by businesses evolved



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