Posts Tagged ‘congress’
August 22, 2016

Victory is a state of mind.
OTHER MEN DIE
And the old vet was up in his studio bedroom in Mom’s attic
Painting magic eyeballs on his fingertips
To go with the mystic spirals on the backs of his hands
And he told us about seagulls in the early dawn
Of feeding them barehanded
Palms stretched to the skies
Lying upon his back on the wet sand
Observing the feathered feeding frenzy
Of the messy, greedy birds
That pecked his fingers and palms and wrists
Opening red puncture wounds
And he loved it
Because it brought him
So close to life.
And I saw that vet by another name
Sitting cross-legged in swim briefs
In wind-tossed dune reed grass
In cold wind whistling off a Winter Pacific
And I asked
“Why do you sit in the freezing cold, Shane?”
And he replied
“Because, at least I know I’m alive.”
And so it goes
jl/PDX/1-13

- A Decent World
WAGING WAR FROM A BURNING HOUSE
No More Troops to Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, Iraq, so forth, so on
Dear President Obama,
Stop sending troops to Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, Iraq, so forth, so on.
I am a Vietnam Era veteran. We stood nearly twenty years while our military-industrial complex ruined Vietnam. Our prolonged stay, and side invasions of Cambodia and Laos, generationally disrupted and destabilized Southeast Asia, distorted America’s rule of law, and led directly to the present Reagan-Bush corporatist neo-conservative miasma.
Look at how the radical right Republicans have warped the nation they want us to fight for, die for, and honor. The self-destructive insanity of the radical right Republican way of war makes it looks as if the bad guys have already won. We are fighting a war for the life of the republic, as a result.
These are politically motivated corporatist wars, fought to extremes because of ill-informed egos and profit. These bloody-handed murderers-by-proxy began their plunder of the American nation by taking the Peace Dividend away from us after the Berlin Wall fell. They shifted to terrorism as the object of their monolithic war machine, and plunged the whole world into wrack and ruin. Bush’s indefensible “give war a chance” was disgusting; so is Obama’s continued pursuit of it.
End the war now, no matter how wimpy it looks to arrested-adolescent bullyboys, or corporatist oil barons and banksters. We’ve got a lot of positive work to do, and one dollar spent on peace really is worth ten wasted in war!

AND WHAT ABOUT THESE MERCENARY BANDITS YOU HIRED?
Quit outsourcing government jobs to private contractors. The People can get the job done better for less cost and for the community’s and not just a few individuals’ profit.
The performance of mission critical security functions by profit-driven contractors is counterproductive and often immoral and criminal.
It’s bad for the morale of our real American troops to see these overpaid and pampered bought-and-sold mercenaries. I know because I have nephews and nieces who have served in our military in Afghanistan and Iraq. Talk to real American troops to hear it.
Office of Federal Procurement Policy’s list of inherently governmental functions that these mercenaries must not perform should include: guard services, convoy security services, pass and identification services, plant protection services, the operation of prison or detention facilities, and any security operations that might reasonably require the use of deadly force; and, from support of intelligence activities (including covert operations), interrogation, military and police training, and repair and maintenance of weapon systems.
Machiavelli famously wrote that mercenaries might be trusted for only two things: to demand more money; and to run out when the chips are down. Don’t buy champagne for mercenaries, use our money wisely to equip and protect our real American troops.
Finally, have you given any thought as to what is to happen if these mercenaries decide they’ve got a better business proposition from our archenemies? Or, face unemployment? In Europe unemployed mercenaries set off the Hundred Years’ War, which might properly be called the “Rape, Murder and Plunder Crusade.” The “Holy Crusades” were invented by the Pope as a safety vent to send these murder mavens packing out of town to do their dirty deeds. We prefer killing “heathens” to our own to this very day. But that can change.

Don’t forget to click on the images for MORE information, or a larger image. Keep on keepin’ on, and don’t forget to salute the Man in the Moon. We’re in this together. All the best! j
Tags:adolescent bully boys, America, congress, corporations, democracy, environment, Iraq, mercenaries, no more war, obama, other men die, peace, stop war, veterans, vietnam, war
Posted in Essays, Politics (mostly), War and Peace | Leave a Comment »
May 18, 2011

- Gene Kelley danced past Joe’s in “Singing in the Rain.”
OLD BLACK MAGIC:
“Separateness is a useful illusion.” – The Big Kahuna.
Separateness is a youthful illusion. Jl.
“God, the original Tony Soprano.” – church sign, Simpsons.
The ancient Sumerians had no concept of guilt or sin. Later, the Renaissance considered a life unencumbered by revealed religion. Religionists study “The Book” in preference to studying themselves; they put enormous energy into it, which if applied to the exploration of self, might produce a more fulfilling result.
“Monotheism is the flip side of intolerance.” – TV Travel Channel on sacred sites, explaining Amarna, Egypt.
Note: In the typical Christian, Moslem, Jewish life, Life is a pain. One must suffer and hopefully endure until the bitter pill of death is administered. Within that pain is the typically human drive to pursue happiness. Happiness is fleeting, of course, but its pursuit keeps us busy, which alleviates the pain, and the fear we have of death. Pursuing happiness is an attempt to overcome and/or keep the pain at bay as long as humanly possible; but it is just a pastime after all, not a destination.
“[When I die] all these moments will be lost in time, like tears in the rain.” – Rutger Hauer, Bladerunner.
INAPPROPRIATE BEHAVIORS:
“What is it like to feel a stranger?” – – PBS question. Senator Craig?
I wrote: “Ryan’s wagon was parked by the curb with its tailgate down.” Spell check gave me: “The curb with its tailgate down parked Ryan’s wagon.” Typed: “Ryan’s tailgate was parked with its wagon down at the curb.” Speel check not trubled. Glow figger.
“Monte Markham as the voice of Plutarch.” – credit, Cleopatra, A&E Classroom. Get central casting! He doesn’t even sound like Plutarch.
She boasted she could shoot and manage a horse as well as a man. (Duck, guys!).
“There’s never been ANYTHING like it.” – Shaq, for Icy Hot.
We have different views of art. He draws a stick. I struggle for “stickness.” 8/97
Creative people routinely demonstrate how to get from here to there. 10/97
Q: “Just when are you coming down to earth, young man?” A: “When it’s all over, I hope.” – Fred Astaire, The Sky’s the Limit.
“No doesn’t mean no. It means you gotta cut a corner, work harder, and beat the system.” – Baloo, Disney’s Tailspin, 1/94. Walt Disney, always a powerful force for strong evangelistic coporatist morality.
“We want to talk about reducing nuclear weapons, particularly the kind that kill people.” – Casper Weinberger, Nixon’s Secretary of Defense, CBS News.
“Mr. Begin has offered to let each member of the PLO to leave Lebanon carrying an arm.” Dianne Sawyer, 6/30/82. But leave the other arm and both legs behind.
“On a farm with no watch dog, the fox rules the roost.” – Ancient Sumerian proverb.
“NEVAH GO THIRSTY AGAIN!”
“Don’t drink alone, Scarlet. People always find out, and it ruins the reputation.” – Rhett Butler (Clark Gable), Gone With the Wind.
DAMN LIBERAL CONSERVATIVES:
Against “tax and spend bleeding heart liberal socialist democrats,” place “rob, rape, and ruin selfish warmongering radical conservative republicans.”
Said of the Congress: “They have to find a way to institutionalize the existing situation, so they don’t have to fix it.”
“It’s the lie you tell yourself that matters.” – Inspector Morse, ’95.
“No sensible man would allow himself to be sent to war to defend a politician.” – Minister, The Dreyfus Affair.
Q: Why do we serve the system? A: Because it’s comforting in its routines and, like any abused child, we’d rather keep the horror we’ve got than deal with fear of the unknown and the uncertainty of change.
Our national debate has become timid. The Neville Brothers sing, “You can tell the truth, as long as you don’t tell too much.” So what can one do about it? Here’s a starter list:
- Stick up for your rights – your own integrity matters more than loyalty to a negative cause.
- Stimulate sympathy – there are social and political reasons for what we do. The social reasons create the greatest measure of self-identification and response.
- Speak only from fact – listen, especially when you don’t agree.
- Use a variety of sources of information; try to understand the other view.
- Act. Do something positive everyday.
Thomas Jefferson wrote, “I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of society but the people themselves.”
LAST COMMENT:
Pain is an itch we can’t scratch. All life is pain in the Buddhistic sense. Its temporal fleeting nature is a constant bitter sweetness, forever a tear on the edge of beauty, a sigh on the cusp of grief. We only get it for a moment, and sitting in silence, alone, we can feel its presence somewhere, always within, always informing, if we will it so.
Peace and Love, brothers and sisters. Keep on keepin’ on, and don’t forget to salute the Man in the Moon!
JUST KEEPS GETTING BETTER:
Published on Tuesday, July 28, 2009 by The Guardian/UK
Human Activity Is Driving Earth’s ‘Sixth Great Extinction Event’. Population growth, pollution, and invasive species are having a disastrous effect on species in the southern hemisphere, a major review by conservationists warns, by Ian Sample. Earth is experiencing its “sixth great extinction event” with disease and human activity taking a devastating toll on vulnerable species, according to a major review by conservationists.
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/07/28-11

Tags:A&E, A&E Classroom, abraham lincoln, abused child, act, alien, aliens, Amarna, art, award, awards, Baloo, battlefield, battlefields, beauty, Begin, behavior, big Kahuna, Bladerunner, bleeding heart liberals, brothers, buddha, Buddhistic, Casper Weinberger, cavalry, CBS Morning News, CBS News, change, christian, Clark gable, Cleopatra, comedians, comics, condos, confederate, confederates, congress, conservatives, creative, crop circles, democrats, Dianne Sawyer, Disney, Dracula, dreyfus affair, egypt, egyptian, evangelism, evangelistic, fact, farm, fascist, fear, fear of the unknown, fox, Fred Astaire, general Burnside, general James Longstreet, george Pickett, Gettysburg, gone with the wind, grant, grief, guilt, happiness, horror, icy hot, ideas, illusion, information, inspector Morse, integrity, intolerance, itch, Jeb Stuart, Jewish, know it all, Larry Craig, liberals, lifestyle, listen, little Roundtop, Longstreet, love, Loveline.Com, loyalty, magic, man in the moon, Menachim Begin, military, military science, monotheism, Monte Markham, morality, morals, Moslem, music, napoleon, Napoleonic era, national debate, negative, neoconservative republicans, neville brothers, Nixon, nuclear weapons, old black magic, pain, pbs, peace, Pickett’s charge, Plutarch, politics, positive, pronunciation, proverb, proverbs, race, radical republicans, rank, religion, religionists, religions, renaissance, republicans, reputation, revealed religion, Rhett butler, Richard Nixon, Richmond, Robert E. Lee, Rutger Hauer, Scarlet, Scarlet O’Hara, secretary of defense, senator, senators, shaq, Sherman, siege, siege of Richmond, sin, sing, singers, singing, sisters, social, socialists, spell check, split-levels, stonewall Jackson, strategy, subdivision, Sumerians, sympathy, system, tail spin, the sky’s the limit, the system, Thomas Henry stonewall Jackson, thomas jefferson, TV Travel Channel, Ulysses Simpson grant, Vivian Leigh, Walt Disney, war, warmongers, watch dog, wheat fields, William Tecumseh Sherman
Posted in Environment and Population, Humor and Entertainment, Politics (mostly), Religion and Philosophy | Leave a Comment »
December 8, 2010

HOW TO FIGHT REPUBLICAN INSURANCE NAZIS:

ABSTRACT:
7 Ways We Can Fight Back Against the Rising Fascist Threat
By Sara Robinson, Campaign for America’s Future
Writing about fascism for Americans is a fraught business. A third of the readers dismiss the topic (and the blogger’s sanity); they’ve got their own definition, or anyone who invokes the F-word is a de facto alarmist of questionable credibility.
Another third dismiss it because America has been fascist since (choose one:) 1) 9/11; 2) Reagan; 3) McCarthy; 4) the Civil War; 5) July 4, 1776. For them, careful analysis and worried warnings are dangerously naive.
The final third engage in thoughtful discussion, including what must be done.
The most insidious part of fascism is that when it’s obvious to everyone that these people are dangerously out of control, it’s too late to do anything about it. Early warnings are the business of futurists. We can still change our minds, and spend our future elsewhere, but we are now actively choosing, whether aware of it or not. Things are happening now that set a course we may be unable to alter.
How do we turn back? A few basic principles:
First: Teabaggers must not win. When a bully learns that intimidation and threats work, he does more of it. The longer he goes without penalty, the worse he gets and the harder it is to stop him. Do nothing, and he takes over.
It only takes a handful of thugs to terrorize people into giving up civil rights, abandoning democracy and doing what they’re told. The main imperative becomes staying off the goons’ radar. All enforcers need do is make a horrific example out of “troublemakers” now and then to keep everybody else in line.
With a colossal conservative investment in organizing and directing teabaggers, we’d be stupid to believe that this will go away when Congress returns in September. Having had a taste of power and publicity, these newly empowered mobs are likely to stick around and see what else they can muck up.
Our choice is stark: knock them back while they’re new, small and not yet entrenched; or later when they have real power to fight, and the cost is higher.
Second: Think nationally, fight locally. Conservatives run this fight as a national campaign, but the terror that fuels fascism is always intensely, intimately local. Fascist goon squads recruit from the neighborhood, built on people we know. Since that’s where they start, that’s where they have to be stopped. This is why all the best tactics involve community-level action. Anybody who sits this one out because they assume that folks in D.C. will handle it shouldn’t be surprised when they get “special treatment” from longtime neighbors, or discover their car vandalized.
That’s the next baby step from where we are now; and in some places, it’s already happening. Winning means getting out and defending community standards and boundaries while they’re still there to be defended.
Third: Use nonviolent resistance — leave heavy lifting and rough enforcement to police. The only way to stop a bully is to stand up to them, but that doesn’t involve eye-for-an-eye. If we meet thuggery with thuggery, we lose, because they’re better at, and enjoy it. The right wing is looking hard to make a case that they’re innocent victims of the “left”. The Nazis used this kind of victim-blaming to tremendous effect as they built up their party. We must not give our proto-brownshirts any basis to make the same kind of argument.
It’s about the moral high ground. Our choices must be consistent with our values. Standing up for health care reform is important; but before that, we need to stand up for civil discourse and free speech. We’re defending the rule of law; our best tactic is to use the law. When people from either side cross the line, it’s time for police and prosecutors to assert that bullying people in a public meeting (or anywhere else) is illegal and will not be tolerated.
Fourth: Make sure media gets the story right. Teabaggers run out of power if the media turns off their cameras, but this nefariously incited drama is a real ratings-booster. Left alone, the media (local news in particular) turn these hate and fear mongers into cultural heroes. The best cure for bad speech is good speech: documented, on YouTube, blogged, spread widely; a coordinated rapid-response letterwriting to local papers; and keeping local reporters well-fed with news of concerned nonpartisan citizens working to keep control of democratic discourse in the face of organized thugs trying to suppress it. Since the media are watching, make sure they see it all.
Fifth: Support legislators who don’t show fear. The Democratic leadership knows that these noisy, scary people don’t represent the 73 percent of Americans who support health care reform. The GOP runs the risk of being marginalized as the Party of No, and the Party of Moonbat Crazy. If you’ve never attended a public meeting, August 2009 is the month to start. Your congressperson’s Web site probably lists his or her schedule, or a number to call to inquire.
That’s a first step. Do more. Write. Call. Find out where your local congressional office is, and drop by. Tell staff how you feel about health care reform, teabaggers, your legislator’s courage. If they’re stressed, encourage them. A constituent in the office counts. One visit or call is good. More is better. Contact your representatives at least once a week to support their public service.
Sixth: Shut down the hate talkers. Teabaggers come straight out of right-wing talk-radio audiences, mainlining raw emotion and toxic misinformation: “death panels!” “kill your granny!” “Join the “resistance!” Cut off this endless torrent of lies and fearmongering to power down the whole movement. Basic recipe:
- Record their shows.
- Note anything intimidating, threatening, or aimed at inciting violence against a named target.
- Note every advertiser.
- Write a polite letter to the CEOs of sponsors, toss in choice quotes and ask if they want their product identified with them. This works extremely well — and quickly — at local and national levels.
Finally: Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty. Conservatives invest a lot of money and effort to build a mass movement aimed at destroying democratic government — and they’re not going to let up as long as Democrats are in control. This is our new reality — and it comes straight out of Chapter 6 of Hitler’s Mein Kampf. They intend to keep the outrage junkies high with never-ending, made-up reasons to act out. Which means that even if we win this round, we must push back against the bullies, over and over, for the next three to seven years.
There are only two outcomes: get very good at spotting and stopping these attempts at a brownshirt takeover the minute they crop up; or they get very good at public intimidation and keep ratcheting it up toward violence and goon rule.
That’s how it’s going to be for the rest of this administration. The sooner we resign ourselves to the zero-sum nature of this fight, the sooner we can get on with getting good at it.
Sara Robinson is a fellow at the Campaign for America’s Future and a consulting partner with the Cognitive Policy Works in Seattle. One of the few trained social futurists in North America, she has blogged on authoritarian and extremist movements at Orcinus since 2006, and is a founding member of Group News Blog.
Read the full story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/141929/

One nation indivisible.
Tags:americans for prosperity, anti-american, anti-immigrant, bill o'reilly, birthers, brownshirts, campaign for america's future, congress, conservatives, constitution, constitutional government, corporationists, corporations, democratic liberties, democratic party, democrats, dick armey, evangelistic christians, fascism, fascists, fox news, frank schaeffer, free elections, freedomworks, Germans, glen beck, goon squads, GOP, group news blog, harassment, health care, health care meetings, health insurance, hispanic, historians, history, hitler, hitlerism, ignorant, insurance, intimidation, Jim Crow, john boehner, KKK, liberals, lobbyists, mobs, mussolini, national pride, nationalism, New York Times, obama, palin, paul krugman, politics of fear and rage, president obama, pro-life movement, proto-fascism, public officials, racism, religions, representatives, republican leaders, republicans, right-wing, right-wing talking heads, rise and fall of the third reich, robert paxton, rowdies, rural, rural movements, Rush Limbaugh, sara robinson, sarah palin, scorched earth policy, sexism, shock troops, social futurists, talking heads, teabag movement, third reich, thugs, tim phillips, town halls, white, william l. shirer, workers, world war two
Posted in Politics (mostly), Religion and Philosophy | Leave a Comment »
August 6, 2010

Older Letters to elected Officials and speculations on and about the subjects of war and recession, with links to today’s realities. Not much has changed, except for some of the faces of the players. Some issues are career opportunities for foot-dragging, do-nothing profiteers and cowardly politicians. It is plain that the People must lead.
ARAB-ISRAELI LOVE-FEST:
Ltr to Ron Wyden, Senator, OR. – January 8, 2009
The ancient Arab-Israeli confrontation is not worthy of support on either side. Only some radical change of policy will break this savage inhumane cycle. The Senate‘s recent unequivocal support of Israel is disgraceful. Why do we support violence from anybody toward anybody? Why not give peace a chance? It has never been done, and we seem instead incapable of overcoming our religious, ethnic, and other generational prejudices. We support people who coach their children to kill their enemies’ children. This is madness. It is insupportable. The morass of the middle east does not reveal a champion for the United States to support, and Israel cannot claim the Holocaust as refuge or excuse for a holocaust of its own making that it refuses to stop. Hamas‘ despicable actions are not an excuse for Israelis to murder, and the dead children they describe as collateral damage are not an acceptable cost for their security.
Murder and violence are what they are, not the stuff of virtue, right, or decent national policy – Israel’s, Palestine‘s, or the United States’. I urge you to re-think this issue outside of its historic insanity – and the personal blindness of culture and peer pressure. Help devise an alternative approach to international murder and mayhem. Help, too, to take the United States off its century-long war status.
Yours in sorrow and regret. j
EXIT STRATEGY:
I am a veteran and senior citizen.
Ltr to Representative Earl Blumenauer, OR – July 26, 2005 10:32 AM
Subject: Please support House Joint Resolution 55, toward ending the Iraq occupation.
The war in Iraq has been a personal project for George Bush using American lives and treasure. I believe he is ruining the world’s finest military. For what? He fights like the boneheaded English general Kitchener at Gallipoli, who observing the troops running uphill against Turkish guns said, “Stout fellows these Englishmen, they always run for the thickest part of the fence.”
Added to which, Bush’s war toys don’t work? They do if they’re just designed to fill the pockets of his war-profiteering cronies; that’s what they accomplish.
I was glad to see that Rep. Jones is leading a bipartisan effort to press President Bush to create an exit strategy and timetable for withdrawal of our troops from Iraq. Being an occupying force with no end in sight only fuels insurgency there.
I ask you to join the thirty other members of Congress already cosponsoring the resolution, and to support it by voting for it. Thank you for your consideration.
IRAQ DEBATE:
Personal historical view – February 14, 2007; 3-1-08 rev.
Colin Powell said, “Don’t get into war unless it’s absolutely necessary, and when we do, go to win, no half measures,” but it doesn’t apply very much in real life.
As a Vietnam veteran, I know Johnson‘s phony Gulf of Tonkin Incident fished us into war (I was drafted). He bought into the radical right’s communist containment scare. The Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars wrote:
“In part, the process of deception has also been unintentional. Much of the rhetoric and many of the actions that have accompanied our… involvement have been ad hoc responses to situations of stress: a cumulative series of reflex moves and lunges produced by deepening executive anxiety, defensiveness, alarm, desperation, and even a sensed state of siege. Similarly in rhetoric, our ‘national honor,’ ‘[enemies] with nuclear weapons,’ and the goal of ‘peace with honor’ – all have misled the public. At the root of executive deception is a vast amount of executive self-deception – or, .to put it bluntly, stupidity.”
America blithely ignores offers of friendship and makes enemies as fast as we can throw the first sucker punch. This is not military sense; it’s a bad case of ideology and invention over reason and fact. But, Americans don’t run out when the fight’s tough – see: Khe San. We stood nearly twenty years (dating from Eisenhower putting the first American boots on the ground in the Fifties when the French got tossed out) while our military-industrial complex ruined Vietnam. Our prolonged stay, and side invasions of Cambodia and Laos, generationally disrupted and destabilized Southeast Asia, distorted America’s rule of law, and led directly to the Bush leadership miasma.
We are now fighting a war for the health and life of the republic. Look at how the radical right Republicans and Tea Party and War Democrats have warped the nation they want us to fight for, die for, and honor. The self-destructive insanity of the radical right way of war makes it looks as if the bad guys have already won.
These are politically motivated wars, fought to extremes because of ill-informed egos and profit. Bush’s indefensible “give war a chance” was disgusting; so is Obama’s current pursuit of it. End the war now, no matter how wimpy it looks to arrested-adolescent bullyboys.
We’ve got a lot of positive work to do, and one dollar spent on peace really is worth ten wasted in war!
COST OF DOING WAR WITH YOU: – 3/21/08
Ltr to Rep Blumenauer; Recession and the War
The recession will force states to cut back their budgets. Most likely, the cuts are going to affect the services that working families need to survive.
The Iraq war costs Americans more than $338 million a day. We borrow $343 million every day to finance it. Gas prices are close to double what they were before the war. Oil hovers around $100 barrel [sic].
That money could help people who are hurting. For less than we spend on the war, we could pay for affordable housing, healthcare, or education scholarships for hundreds of thousands.
Our skyrocketing debt is a growing drag on the economy, slowing recovery and robbing generations of a secure future. Iraq sucks up the resources we need to make our economy work again. MoveOn writes, “The tradeoffs are stark: bombs or unemployment insurance, billions for Halliburton and Blackwater, or help for people on the verge of losing their homes because of the sub prime meltdown?”
Economic forecasts will be grim as long as we continue to dump billions into a reckless war that has no end in sight. The excessive and increasing degradation of our domestic economy is an attack on the nation. Thank you for continuing to oppose this excessive, costly and ultimately criminal war.
LAST WORDS:
A secret reformation helped to create the United States of America; it eradicated many of the weeds of prejudice; a spirit of freedom and moderation was diffused. The liberty of conscience was declared a common benefit, an inalienable right; the free government introduced the practice of toleration; and the narrow allowance of the laws was enlarged by the prudence and humanity of the times. In the exercise, the mind understood the limits of its powers, and the words and shadows that might amuse the child can no longer satisfy adult reason. – Paraphrase – Gibbon, p1937.
Maybe human civilization has progressed; it depends upon what you’re measuring. Human progress and perfectibility are two man-made ideals without much moral evidence to support them.
“One crowded hour of glorious life is worth an age without a name.” – Travis at the Alamo quoting Thomas Osbert Mordaunt, Verses Written During the War, 1756-63.
“Sin sangre, y sin lagrimas, hay no es gloria.” – Santa Ana (“without blood, and without tears, there is no glory”).
“The urgent consideration of the public safety may undoubtedly authorize the violation of every positive law. How far that or any other consideration may operate to dissolve the natural obligations of humanity and justice is terrible to contemplate.” – Gibbon, p830.
Politician 1: “Why do politicians treat everyone else like idiots?” Politician 2: “Probably, because they voted for us in the first place.” — Poirot, “The Incredible Theft,” BBC, David Suchet.
INTERESTING LINKS:
San Francisco Dems Tell Pelosi to Support McGovern ‘Afghan Exit’ Bill, by Tom Gallager, www.commondreams.org. http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/07/24-3
Can America Prevail on Afghanistan/Pakistan Front? No! It’s Obama’s war now, and a Vietnam-like quagmire is dead ahead. by Helen Thomas, www.Minneapolis/St.PaulStarTribune http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/07/23-13
Blackwater Seeks Gag Order, by Jeremy Scahill. www.thenation http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/07/23-2
Biden: Afghan War is ‘Worth the Effort’. www.bbcnews http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/07/23-0
RADICAL and NOT RIGHT:
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/07/23-2 Christian Right Aims to Change History Lessons in Texas Schools. State’s education board to consider adding Christianity’s role in American history to curriculum [and dump all reference to labor unions among other exclusions; the larger issue is that Texas textbook decisions affect every state in the union; textbook monopoly ONLY consults Texas education board!], by
Chris McGreal in Washington,
The Guardian/UK
Tags:affordable housing, alamo, America, american, arab, BBC, bipartisan, blackwater, borrowing, budgets, cambodia, champions, children, Christianity, christians, civilization, colin powell, collateral damage, committee of concerned asian scholars, communist, congress, conscience, containment, curriculum, David Suchet, debate, debt, depression, dollar, earl blumenauer, economy, education, education board, edward gibbon, end the war now, england, English, englishmen, ethnic, exit strategy, financial forecasts, gallipoli, gas prices, George Bush, George W. Bush, gulf of tonkin, gulf of tonkin incident, Halliburton, hamas, healthcare, Helen Thomas, holocaust, honor, ideology, idiots, inalienable right, Iraq, iraq occupation, israel, israeli, israelis, Joe biden, johnson, khe san, kitchener, labor unions, laos, liberty, lord kitchener, lyndon johnson, madness, middle east, military, military-industrial complex, morals, mortgages, MoveOn, murder, national honor, national policy, obama, occupying forces, oil, Oregon, palestine, palestinian, peace, peace with honor, peer pressure. strategy, Poirot, policy, politicians, prejudice, president, president johnson, president obama, profit, progress, public safety, radical right, recession, recovery, religious, representative, republic, republicans, resolutions, rhetoric, right, Ron Wyden, rule of law, santa ana, security, senate, senator, seniior citizens, senior citizen, seniors, southeast asia, stress, sub prime meltdown, texas, textbook monopoly, textbooks, timetable, Travis, troops, turkey, turkish, unions, united states, veteran, veterans, vice-President Biden, vietnam, vietnam veteran, violence, virtue, vote, voters, voting, war, war toys, war-profiteering, withdrawal, xe
Posted in Environment and Population, Essays, Politics (mostly) | Leave a Comment »
March 28, 2010
The Unbearable Lightness of Reform by Bill Moyers and Michael Winship March 27, 2010 by CommonDreams.org
That wickedly satirical Ambrose Bierce described politics as “the conduct of public affairs for private advantage.”
Bierce vanished to Mexico nearly a hundred years ago — to the relief of the American political class of his day, one assumes — but in an eerie way he was forecasting America’s political culture today. It seems like most efforts to reform a system that’s gone awry — to clean house and make a fresh start — end up benefiting the very people who wrecked it in the first place.
Which is why Bierce, in his classic little book, The Devil’s Dictionary, defined reform as “a thing that mostly satisfies reformers opposed to reformation.”
Give the victors their due: the bill Obama signed expands coverage to many more people, stops some very ugly and immoral practices by the health insurance industry that should have been stopped long ago, and offers a framework for more change down the road, if there’s any heart or will left to fight for it.
But reformation? Hardly. For all their screaming and gnashing of teeth, the insurance companies still make out like bandits. Millions of new customers, under penalty of law, will be required to buy the companies’ policies, feeding the insatiable greed of their CEO’s and filling the campaign coffers of the politicians they wine and dine. Profits are secure; they don’t have to worry about competition from a public alternative to their cartel, and they can continue to scam us without fear of antitrust action. READ MORE: http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/03/27-0
Earth ‘Entering New Age of Geological Time’ by Murray Wardrop March 27, 2010 by The Telegraph/UK
The Earth has entered a new age of geological time – the epoch of new man, scientists claim.
Humans have wrought such vast and unprecedented changes on the planet that we may be ushering in a new period of geological history. It is feared that the damage mankind has inflicted will lead to the sixth mass extinction in Earth’s history with thousands of plants and animals being wiped out.
The new epoch, called the Anthropocene – meaning new man – would be the first period of geological time shaped by the action of a single species. Although the term has been in informal use among scientists for more than a decade, it is now under consideration as an official term.
A new working group of experts has now been established to gather all the evidence which would support recognising it as the successor to the current Holocene epoch. It will consider changes human activities have brought to Earth’s biodiversity and rock structure as well as the impact of factors including pollution and mineral extraction.
It is hoped that within three years, their case will be presented to the International Union of Geological Sciences, which would decide whether the transition to a new epoch has been made. READ MORE: http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2010/03/27
Celebrating (Mourning) a Culture of Lies by Robert Freeman March 28, 2010 by CommonDreams.org
Tomorrow, March 29th, marks the thirty-seventh anniversary of America’s withdrawal from Vietnam. You won’t hear it celebrated in any mainstream media, though it should be. Or more precisely, it should be mourned. Vietnam is the first war America ever lost.
It should be remembered so that we might learn the lessons of that loss. They are many, they are profound, and they could inform so many of our policy decisions today: that withdrawal from immoral wars doesn’t mean the end of civilization as we know it; that even America’s seemingly limitless resources are, in fact, limited; that masses of engaged, moral individuals can constrain the reckless, destructive folly of renegade elites.
Perhaps the most important lesson of Vietnam is that policies based on lies will ultimately fail, for in an open society it is the consent of the governed that is required to sustain major policy initiatives. A government can either earn that consent, or it must forfeit the essence of its democracy. If lying becomes its essential modus operandi, a nation ceases to be a democracy. Rather, it becomes a criminal conspiracy of self-interested insiders donning the trappings of democracy in order to gull the credulous.
It is time to grow out of our materialistic fetishes and begin cultivating the personal and civic maturity we like to fancy we possess, but which we don’t. It is time to grow up and accept the burdens of mature citizenship, among the most important of which are a capacity and a willingness to tell the truth, letting go the comforting but corrosive lies in the confidence that courage mustered now will yield not only greater self respect today but a more sane, a more decent, and a safer society in the future.
It is important that we commemorate Vietnam, both to mourn the objective horror of what it was, but also to redeem our capacity to tell the truth, to ourselves, about ourselves. Only in that way can we begin to reclaim the country and the people we want to imagine ourselves to be.
Robert Freeman writes on economics, history and education. His earlier piece, “Is Iraq Another Vietnam?” was also published on CommonDreams. He can reached at robertfreeman10@yahoo.com. READ MORE: http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/03/28-3
Related: https://johnlegry.wordpress.com/politics-mostly/organized-irresponsibility/
The Rage Is Not About Health Care by Frank Rich March 28, 2010 by The New York Times
THERE were times when last Sunday’s great G.O.P. health care implosion threatened to bring the thrill back to reality television. On ABC’s “This Week,” a frothing and filibustering Karl Rove all but lost it in a debate with the Obama strategist David Plouffe. A few hours later, the perennially copper-faced Republican leader John Boehner revved up his “Hell no, you can’t!” incantation in the House chamber – instant fodder for a new viral video remixing his rap with will.i.am’s “Yes, we can!” classic from the campaign. Boehner, having previously likened the health care bill to Armageddon, was now so apoplectic you had to wonder if he had just discovered one of its more obscure revenue-generating provisions, a tax on indoor tanning salons.
But the laughs evaporated soon enough. There’s nothing entertaining about watching goons hurl venomous slurs at congressmen like the civil rights hero John Lewis and the openly gay Barney Frank. And as the week dragged on, and reports of death threats and vandalism stretched from Arizona to Kansas to upstate New York, the F.B.I. and the local police had to get into the act to protect members of Congress and their families.
How curious that a mob fond of likening President Obama to Hitler knows so little about history that it doesn’t recognize its own small-scale mimicry of Kristallnacht. The weapon of choice for vigilante violence at Congressional offices has been a brick hurled through a window. So far.
After the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was passed, some responsible leaders in both parties spoke out to try to put a lid on the resistance and violence. The arch-segregationist Russell of Georgia, concerned about what might happen in his own backyard, declared flatly that the law is “now on the books.” Yet no Republican or conservative leader of stature has taken on Palin, Perry, Boehner or any of the others who have been stoking these fires for a good 17 months now. Last week McCain even endorsed Palin’s “reload” rhetoric.
Are these politicians so frightened of offending anyone in the Tea Party-Glenn Beck base that they would rather fall silent than call out its extremist elements and their enablers? Seemingly so, and if G.O.P. leaders of all stripes, from Romney to Mitch McConnell to Olympia Snowe to Lindsey Graham, are afraid of these forces, that’s the strongest possible indicator that the rest of us have reason to fear them too. Copyright 2010 The New York Times Company. Frank Rich is a regular columnist for The New York Times. He is the author of many books, including The Great Story Ever Sold: The Decline and Fall of Truth from 9/11 to Katrina. READ MORE: http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/03/28
INTRODUCING WORLD WAR III
Have a Nice World War, Folks by John Pilger March 28, 2010 by CommonDreams.org
Here is news of the Third World War. The United States has invaded Africa. US troops have entered Somalia, extending their war front from Afghanistan and Pakistan to Yemen and now the Horn of Africa. In preparation for an attack on Iran, American missiles have been placed in four Persian Gulf states, and “bunker-buster” bombs are said to be arriving at the US base on the British island of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean.
In Gaza, the sick and abandoned population, mostly children, is being entombed behind underground American-supplied walls in order to reinforce a criminal siege. In Latin America, the Obama administration has secured seven bases in Colombia, from which to wage a war of attrition against the popular democracies in Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador and Paraguay. Meanwhile, the secretary of “defence” Robert Gates complains that “the general [European] public and the political class” are so opposed to war they are an “impediment” to peace. Remember this is the month of the March Hare.
According to an American general, the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan is not so much a real war as a “war of perception”. Thus, the recent “liberation of the city of Marja” from the Taliban’s “command and control structure” was pure Hollywood. Marja is not a city; there was no Taliban command and control. The heroic liberators killed the usual civilians, poorest of the poor. Otherwise, it was fake. A war of perception is meant to provide fake news for the folks back home, to make a failed colonial adventure seem worthwhile and patriotic, as if The Hurt Locker were real and parades of flag-wrapped coffins through the Wiltshire town of Wooten Basset were not a cynical propaganda exercise.
Norman Mailer once said he believed the United States, in its endless pursuit of war and domination, had entered a “pre-fascist era”. Mailer seemed tentative, as if trying to warn about something even he could not quite define. “Fascism” is not right, for it invokes lazy historical precedents, conjuring yet again the iconography of German and Italian repression. On the other hand, American authoritarianism, as the cultural critic Henry Giroux pointed out recently, is “more nuance, less theatrical, more cunning, less concerned with repressive modes of control than with manipulative modes of consent.”
This is Americanism, the only predatory ideology to deny that it is an ideology. The rise of tentacular corporations that are dictatorships in their own right and of a military that is now a state with the state, set behind the façade of the best democracy 35,000 Washington lobbyists can buy, and a popular culture programmed to divert and stultify, is without precedent. More nuanced perhaps, but the results are both unambiguous and familiar. Denis Halliday and Hans von Sponeck, the senior United Nations officials in Iraq during the American and British-led blockade, are in no doubt they witnessed genocide. They saw no gas chambers. Insidious, undeclared, even presented wittily as enlightenment on the march, the Third World War and its genocide proceeded, human being by human being.
In the coming election campaign in Britain, the candidates will refer to this war only to laud “our boys”. The candidates are almost identical political mummies shrouded in the Union Jack and the Stars and Stripes. As Blair demonstrated a mite too eagerly, the British elite loves America because America allows it to barrack and bomb the natives and call itself a “partner”. We should interrupt their fun.
John Pilger was born and educated in Sydney, Australia. He has been a war correspondent, film-maker and playwright. Based in London, he has written from many countries and has twice won British journalism’s highest award, that of “Journalist of the Year,” for his work in Vietnam and Cambodia. READ MORE: http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/03/28-5

Tags:afghanistan, ambrose bierce, America, american flag, americanism, anthropocene, armageddon, barney frank, britain, civil rights act of 1964, congress, criminal conspiracy, david plouffe, death threats, democracy, elections, fake news, fascism, genocide, glenn beck, GOP, health insurance industry wins, horn of africa, international union of geological sciences, john boehner, karl rove, kristallnacht, mexico, new man, norman mailer, pakistan, palin's reload rhetoric, peace, political mummies, political mummies wrapped in the flag, president obama, reform. healthcare reform, republicans, sixth mass extinction, somolia, tea party, us troops, vietnam, vietnamese war, war, war of perception, world war III, yemen
Posted in Environment and Population, Politics (mostly) | 1 Comment »
February 6, 2010

Remember?
Donna Edwards’ No Corporate Monopoly of Elections Amendment by John Nichols February 4, 2010 by The Nation
Maryland Congresswoman Donna Edwards turned to Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis for guidance in framing the Constitutional amendment she proposed Tuesday as the right and necessary response to the decision by Chief Justice John Roberts and a high court majority to abandon law and precedent with the purpose of permitting corporations to dominate the political discourse.
Brandeis knew that giving corporations monopoly power over our economic life or our politics would be deadly to democracy.
“The ruling reached by the Roberts’ Court overturned decades of legal precedent by allowing corporations unfettered spending in our political campaigns. Another law will not rectify this disastrous decision,” Edwards said Tuesday. “A Constitutional Amendment is necessary to undo what this Court has done. Justice Brandeis got it right: ‘We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can’t have both.’ It is time we remove corporate influence from our policies and our politics. We cannot allow corporations to dominate our elections, to do so would be both undemocratic and unfair to ordinary citizens.”
Edwards explains the amendment in a powerful video
Edwards does not stand alone. In addition to an array of public interest groups including Public Citizen, Voter Action, The Center for Corporate Policy and the American Independent Business Alliance, the congresswoman’s proposed amendment is being backed by House Judiciary Committee chair John Conyers, the Michigan Democrat who is the dean of civil libertarians in Congress.
Here is the text of the legislation proposed by Edwards and Conyers:
JOINT RESOLUTION:
Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled (two-thirds of each House concurring therein), That the following article is proposed as an amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which shall be valid to all intents and purposes as part of the Constitution when ratified by the legislatures of three-fourths of the several States within seven years after the date of its submission for ratification:
‘‘ARTICLE—
‘‘SECTION 1. The sovereign right of the people to govern being essential to a free democracy, Congress and the States may regulate the expenditure of funds for political speech by any corporation, limited liability company, or other corporate entity.
‘‘SECTION 2. Nothing contained in this Article shall be construed to abridge the freedom of the press.’
Edwards and Conyers may soon have a Senate sponsor for their amendment proposal.
Senator Russ Feingold, the Wisconsin Democrat who chairs the Constitution subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee declared: “As legislators, we have a duty to carefully consider the constitutional questions raised by legislation. I urge you to do your duty but not be dissuaded from acting by fear of the Court. This terrible decision deserves as robust a response as possible. Nothing less than the future of our democracy is at stake.” READ MORE: http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2010/02/04

University of Wisconsin law professor Joel Rogers says, “Public opinion in the United States is conventionally mapped on a liberal-conservative axis understood to run from government do-gooders without values on one end to free marketeering rich people without hearts at the other end. Most people in America place themselves in the middle. They don’t find either end particularly attractive. Today, the fight isn’t really between liberals and conservatives but between the workers/consumers/citizens who actually want the economy to reflect our values and those who want to keep things the way they are with a few irresponsible corporations running the country for their own benefit. In that fight we can win. It’s our country. Let’s run it for the people.”

Citizen Paine
Paine may be the only true revolutionary in our Revolution. His ideals bring common people together as a community. No one is above the law. Justice and fairness shall prevail. Everyone gets to vote. He argued for social security, childcare reform, universal health care, animal cruelty penalties and animal shelters 225 years ago!
He warned us to watch, guide, and stop the powerful elite if we want humanity in general to succeed. He proposed that any bill that enriches a corporation or grants a corporate charter should be enacted in one session of the legislature, and confirmed in a second, after a vote of the people, to stop corporate raids on the public treasury.

One Nation Indivisible.
Tags:chief justice john roberts, congress, constitutional amendments, corporate monopoly of elections, corporations are people, corrupt supreme court justices, donna edwards, fascist supreme court justices, irresponsible corporations, louis brandeis, patriots, people are property, property is people, republican fascists, republican party obstructionists, soylent green is people, supreme court five, supreme court justices, thomas paine, we the people
Posted in Politics (mostly) | Leave a Comment »
January 7, 2010

Celebrating Cronkite While Ignoring What He Did
GET A NEWSPAPER?
We are fools to allow corporations like FOX, or subversive rightwing billionaires like Pete Peterson and Rupert Murdoch to determine our national information policy, control our public airways, and own our means of civic communication. We are fools to allow them to continue to distort our national consciousness, or to interfere with our right to meet and discuss and decide as a unified national community. We are fools to allow them to keep us ignorant and apart.
Peterson and Murdoch are propagandistic liars, and consistently anti-American. The co-opted cowardice of all the so-called “real” (read “infotainment”) news organizations, including the major television networks, convinces me that we need a reformed public ownership of uncensored airwaves, subject to strong democratic citizen oversight.
Here’s the latest outrage, hitting newspapers this time:
Conservative Mogul Buying Up Reporters to Promote His Regressive Agenda By William Greider, The Nation.
Pete Peterson, the Wall Street billionaire who wants to loot Social Security, has created a “news network” hooked up to the Washington Post.
He’s baaack — the Wall Street billionaire who wants to loot Social Security. This time, Pete Peterson has invented his own “news network” to promote his right-wing rants about shrinking the only retirement security system available to millions of working people. Peterson styles himself as a patriot saving the nation from fiscal insolvency and has committed $1 billion to that cause (a chunk of the wealth he accumulated at Blackstone Group, the notorious corporate-takeover firm). His efforts might be dismissed as ludicrous — except money does talk in Washington, and Peterson is now buying Washington reporters to spread his dire warnings.
The retired mogul has created a digital news agency he dubs “The Fiscal Times” and hired eight seasoned reporters to do the work there. “An impressive group of veteran journalists,” Peterson calls them. I hope they have shaken a lot of money out of this rich geezer. Because I predict doing hack work for him will seriously soil their reputations for objectivity and independence.
With his great wealth, Peterson could have also bought a newspaper to publish his dispatches, but he did better than that. He hooked up with the Washington Post, which has agreed to “jointly produce content focusing on the budget and fiscal issues.” (This media scandal was first uncovered by economist Dean Baker.) The newspaper is thus compromising its own integrity. It’s like buying political propaganda from a Washington lobbyist, then printing it in the news columns as if it was just another news story. Shame on the Post, my old newspaper. I predict a big stink like the one that greeted the Post when its publisher decided to hold pay-for-access “salons” for corporate biggies.
The first TFT “dispatch” to appear in the Post — “Support grows for tackling nation’s debt” — made no mention of Peterson’s crusade. But it featured the same devious gimmick the financier has been peddling around Washington. Congress should create a special commission of eighteen senators and representatives empowered to to make the “tough” budget decisions politicians are loathe to face — slashing benefits, raising payroll taxes or both. Other members of Congress would be prohibited from changing any of the particular measures, and would cast only an up-or-down vote on the entire package, no amendments allowed.
Supposedly, this would give them political cover. Look, no hands. We just cut Social Security but it wasn’t our fault. READ MORE:
http://www.alternet.org/media/144961/conservative_mogul_buying_up_reporters_to_promote_his_regressive_agenda
HERE WE GO AGAIN?
A visionary approach committed to the fight against climate chaos would use power to dramatically re-engineer failing industry so that its factories could build the infrastructure of the green economy the world desperately needs, instead of leaving industry unchanged. Obama took real effort not to nationalize the banks. He could have mandated loans for factories to be retrofitted and new green infrastructure to be built. Instead he declared that the government shouldn’t tell failed banks how to run their businesses.
Imagine if the three huge economic engines — the banks, the auto companies, the stimulus bill — had been harnessed to a common green vision. By the time Copenhagen rolled around, the U.S. would already have been well on its way to dramatically cutting emissions, poised to inspire, rather than disappoint, the rest of the world.
What will happen as the Democrats face the employment crisis?
Jobs: The One Issue That Can Sink Democrats in November By Robert Reich, Robert Reich’s Blog.
If unemployment is 10 percent or more next November, the Dems are in danger of losing the House and will almost certainly be short of the 60 votes they need in the Senate.
Just about everything you’ll hear coming out of Washington starting now is really about November’s mid-term election. The gravitational pull of the midterms was already apparent last year, as Republicans marched in perfect lockstep to vote against whatever the President and Democrats proposed (Republicans always have authoritarian discipline on their side, which is why they’re Republicans), but you haven’t seen anything yet.
The Democrats have enough votes to enact health care — the hurdle Bill Clinton failed to jump, contributing to the Republican takeover in 1994 — but when it’s enacted, expect the spin machines on both sides to be at full throttle. And because health care legislation won’t be implemented for another three or four years (depending whether the House or Senate versions prevail), Americans won’t be able to test the veracity of these wildly divergent claims. So don’t count on health reform to help Dems next November — nor harm them, either.
Foreign policy is just as unlikely to tip the scales. Sad to say, absent a draft most American families will read about American deaths in Afghanistan much the way they’ve absorbed the U.S. body count in Iraq — as news items rather than personal tragedies. Nor will Iran’s nuclear capabilities, North Korea’s missile launches, Pakistan’s tumult, or Yemen’s terrorists have much electoral effect — unless terrorists commit an atrocity in America or on American travelers. Needless to say, China’s decision about whether and how much to revalue its currency, although important, will affect the votes of about three Americans (and I think I know all of them).
Issue Number One — the overriding concern that will determine more than anything how many seats the Democrats lose next fall — is jobs. If unemployment is 10 percent or more next November, the Dems are in danger of losing the House and will almost certainly be short of the 60 votes they need in the Senate.
But why would employment be 10 percent or above next November? Surely, you say, there are enough signs of recovery that we can count on a lower rate. Don’t be so sure. Here are likely scenarios, with my probabilities: READ MORE:
http://www.alternet.org/workplace/144954/jobs%3A_the_one_issue_that_can_sink_democrats_in_november
GOT A JOB?
Joel Waul, 28, climbs on top of his rubber band ball on the driveway of his home in Lauderhill, Fla., Friday, Oct. 23, 2009. Waul, a 27-year-old who works nights restocking a Gap clothing store, has spent the last six years carefully wrapping and linking and stretching rubber bands of various sizes into the ball shape. The Guinness Book of World Records declared it the world’s largest rubber band ball in 2008. Photo/Alan Diaz
Which brings up the basic question: Why?
Tags:afghanistan, blackstone group, censorship fo the airwaves, congress, copenhagen, corporate takeover firms, democrats, fiscal times, fox, fun, funny, green economy, guinness book of world records, health care legislation, information, jobs, joel waul, loot social security, media, nationalize the banks, news, obama, payroll taxes, pete peterson, press, propaganda, public airwaves, public information, public need to know, rightwing media, rubberband balls, rupert murdoch, social security, stimulus bill, television, unemployment, war, washington post
Posted in Environment and Population, Politics (mostly) | 5 Comments »
December 11, 2009
WHY?
Word is that jobs – employment – and the economy are the priority. Global warming and climate change must take a back seat. However, one isn’t exclusive of the other. The two are compatible and complementary.
For example, make every roof in the United States white. Spend bailout money for labor and materials to Re-roof the Nation, changing every single dark-roofed structure in the country, using ONLY U.S. manufactured materials and union family-wage labor. This simple action will significantly lower the planetary temperature, and start the nation moving on the rehabilatation and restoration of our environment.
Get real. Quit subsidizing the poisonous consumer culture. Why do we support a consumption-based capitalist system? Why are there no options to lifetime indenture to a corporate behemoth? Why are we dutifully trudging forward on a downward path to oblivion? Why are we giving up, surrendering individuality, self-sufficiency, and independent living for a voluntary enslavement to a destructive ethos that is killing the planet?
Why are our leaders so clueless? The facts are plain, the evidence overwhelming, and the results self-evident before our very eyes. We’ve flunked any “stewardship of the earth” test in favor of an “eat everything in sight” survival panic. So we overgraze our range. Starvation will finally depopulate our habitat. Climate change will cleanse it via our extinction. Hopefully, tenacious life will find a new way with a new shepherd who truly minds the flock, instead of one whose only thought is to fleece and eat it. JL/12-09
Zinn’s ‘People’s History’ Masterwork Hits the History Channel By Dave Zirin, AlterNet.
Don’t miss Howard Zinn’s ‘Voices of a People’s History’ debut on the History Channel on December 13th.
On December 13th, a date I’ve basically had tattooed on my arm like the guy from Memento, The People Speak finally makes its debut on the History Channel. This is more than just must-see-TV. It is nothing less than the life’s work of “people’s historian” Howard Zinn brought to life by some of the most talented actors, musicians, and poets in the country. Howard Zinn and his partner Anthony Arnove chose the most stirring political passages in Zinn’s classic A People’s History of the United States, creating a written anthology called Voices of a People’s History of the United States. Those “voices” have now been fully resurrected by a collection of performers ranging from Matt Damon to hip hop artist Lupe Fiasco to poet Staceyann Chin. READ MORE:
http://www.alternet.org/rights/144486/zinn%27s_%27people%27s_history%27_masterwork_hits_the_history_channel
Dear Barack, Spare Me Your E-Mails By Robert Scheer, Truthdig.
Barack Obama’s faux populism is beginning to grate, and when yet another one of those “we the people” e-mails from the president landed on my screen as I was fishing around for a column subject, I came unglued. It is one thing to rob us blind by rewarding the power elite that created our problems but quite another to sugarcoat it in the rhetoric of a David taking on those Goliaths.
In each of the three most important areas of policy with which he has dealt, Obama speaks in the voice of the little people’s champion, but his actions cater fully to the demands of the most powerful economic interests. READ MORE:
http://www.alternet.org/politics/144500/dear_barack%2C_spare_me_your_e-mails
Supreme Court’s Ruling Would Allow Bin Laden to Donate to Sarah Palin’s Presidential Campaign By Greg Palast, AlterNet.
I’m biting my nails waiting for the Supreme Court’s ruling in ‘Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission’ — here’s why you should be too.
Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, which could come down as early as Tuesday, at issue: whether corporations, as “unnatural persons,” can make contributions to political campaigns.
The outcome is foregone: the five GOP appointees to the court are expected to use the case to junk federal laws that now bar corporations from stuffing campaign coffers.
Technically, there’s a narrower matter before the court in this case: whether the McCain-Feingold Act may prohibit corporations from funding “independent” campaign advertisements such as the “Swift Boat” ads that smeared John Kerry. However, campaign finance reformers are steeling themselves for the court’s right wing to go much further, knocking down all longstanding rules against donations by corporate treasuries.
Allowing company campaign spending will not, as progressives fear, cause an avalanche of corporate cash into politics. Sadly, that’s already happened: we have been snowed under by tens of millions of dollars given through corporate PACs and “bundling” of individual contributions from corporate pay-rollers.
The court’s expected decision is far, far more dangerous to U.S. democracy. Think: Manchurian candidates. READ MORE:
http://www.alternet.org/rights/144502/supreme_court%27s_ruling_would_allow_bin_laden_to_donate_to_sarah_palin%27s_presidential_campaign
Center Goes to Copenhagen — Watch Footage and Check Out Our Blog
This week, the Center for Biological Diversity is at the center of the action in Copenhagen for the United Nations global warming talks, taking a stand for our climate and broadcasting the dire need for President Barack Obama to promote an agreement that will prevent climate catastrophe. On Tuesday, we released a report showing that Obama has clear legal authority — not to mention the obligation — to commit the United States to meaningful greenhouse gas pollution reductions without waiting for Congress to act, and without paying heed to the grossly inadequate cap-and-trade bill currently under debate. The Center’s Climate Law Institute Director Kassie Siegel spoke alongside other legal and policy experts on how Obama can and must return the United States to a position of global leadership on climate change before it’s too late.
Siegel, Senior Attorney Vera Pardee, and Public Lands Director Brendan Cummings are bringing us exciting daily reports and photos from the scene.
Check out this video in a New York Times blog and read the Center’s Copenhagen blog, full of photos, more video footage, a slideshow, and daily updates on the most important global negotiations of our time. And check back in tomorrow, when Siegel will give a Copenhagen briefing to bloggers and online media around the world.

Victory is a state of mind.
Tags:barack obama, bin laden, bloggers, campaign spending, center for biodiversity, citizens united, climate change, congress, consumer culture, consumerism, copenhagen, coporate personhood, corporate cash in politics, david and goliath, economy, employment, family-wage jobs, federal election commission, global warming, howard zinn, McCain-Feingold Act, media, people's history, president obama, roofing, sarah palin, supreme court, the people speak, union, white roofs
Posted in Environment and Population, Politics (mostly) | Leave a Comment »
October 26, 2009

Michael Moore’s Action Plan: 15 Things Every American Can Do Right Now By Michael Moore, MichaelMoore.com.
5 things to demand Obama and Congress to do immediately, 5 things the politicians must hear from us, 5 things we should do to protect ourselves and family.
Friends,
It’s the #1 question I’m constantly asked after people see my movie: “OK — so now what can I do?!” You want something to do? Well, you’ve come to the right place! ‘Cause I got 15 things you and I can do right now to fight back and try to fix this very broken system. Here they are:
FIVE THINGS WE DEMAND THE PRESIDENT AND CONGRESS DO IMMEDIATELY:
1. Declare a moratorium on all home evictions.
2. Congress must join the civilized world and expand Medicare For All Americans. The bill to make this happen is called H.R. 3200 (but only with Rep. Anthony Weiner’s amendment). You must call AND write your members of Congress and demand its passage, no compromises allowed.
3. Demand publicly-funded elections and a prohibition on elected officials leaving office and becoming lobbyists. Tell your members of Congress they must support campaign finance bill H.R.1826.
4. Each of the 50 states must create a state-owned public bank like they have in North Dakota. Reinstate all the strict pre-Reagan regulations on all commercial banks, investment firms, insurance companies (Click here for some info about the state-owned Bank of North Dakota.)
5. Save this fragile planet and declare that all the energy resources above and beneath the ground are owned collectively by all of us. (For more on this, here’s a proposal I wrote in December.)
FIVE THINGS WE CAN DO TO MAKE CONGRESS AND THE PRESIDENT LISTEN TO US:
1. Each of us must get into the daily habit of taking 5 minutes to make four brief calls: One to the President (202-456-1414), one to your Congressperson (202-224-3121) and one to each of your two Senators (202-224-3121). To find out who represents you, click here. Trust me, they will listen. If you have another five minutes, click here to send them each an email. And if you really want to drop an anvil on them, send them a snail mail letter!
2. Take over your local Democratic Party. When you all become the local Democratic Party, send me a photo of the group and I’ll post it on my website.
3. Recruit someone to run for office who can win in your local elections next year — or, better yet, consider running for office yourself! Check out examples of regular citizens who got elected. The list goes on and on — and you should be on it!
4. Show up. Picket the local branch of a big bank that took the bailout money. Make some noise, have some fun, get on the local news.
5. Start your own media. Start a blog! Start a website. Tweet your friends and use Facebook. The daily papers are dying. Fill that void.
FIVE THINGS WE SHOULD DO TO PROTECT OURSELVES AND OUR LOVED ONES UNTIL WE GET THROUGH THIS MESS:
1. Take your money out of your bank if it took bailout money and place it in a locally-owned bank or, preferably, a credit union.
2. Get rid of all your credit cards but one — the kind where you have to pay up at the end of the month or you lose your card.
3. Do not invest in the stock market. Buy very safe government savings bonds or T-bills. Or just buy your mother some flowers.
4. Unionize your workplace so that you and your coworkers have a say in how your business is run. Here’s how to do it (more info here). Turn your business into a worker-owned cooperative. You are not a wage slave.
5. Take care of yourself and your family. Turn off the TV and the Blackberry and go for a 30-minute walk every day.
I’m sure there are many other ideas you can come up with on how we can build this movement. Get creative. And when you act, send me your stories, your photos and your video — and be sure to post your ideas in the comments beneath this letter on my site so they can be shared with millions.
C’mon people — we can do this! I expect nothing less of all of you, my true and trusted fellow travelers!
Yours, Michael Moore
MMFlint@aol.com, MichaelMoore.com
READ MORE:
http://www.alternet.org/action/143444/michael_moore%27s_action_plan%3A_15_things_every_american_can_do_right_now?page=3
Inter Press Service
American Public More Complacent About Climate Change by Jim Lobe.
WASHINGTON – Less than two months before a key international conference on curbing climate change, a major U.S. poll has found a sharp drop in public concern about global warming.
According to the survey by the Pew Research Centre for the People & the Press, 65 percent of the public believes that warming constitutes either a “very serious” (35 percent) or “somewhat serious” (30 percent) problem, down from 79 percent in July 2006 and from 73 percent just 18 months ago.
The survey also recorded a sharp drop in the percentage of the public that believes that “there is solid evidence the Earth is warming” – down from 71 percent in April, 2008, to 57 percent – and in the percentage that believes global warming is caused primarily by human activity – from 47 percent to 36 percent over the same period.
The survey of 1,500 adult respondents comes was released just six weeks before the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen where the representatives of 192 nations will gather to hash out the basic principles of a treaty to curb global emissions of greenhouse gases that virtually all climate and atmospheric scientists agree constitute the major cause of global warming. READ MORE:
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/10/23-0

Tags:action plan, bailout money, blackberry, blogs, business, call your congressperson, climate change, climate treaty, commercial banks, congress, copenhagen, credit cards, credit unions, democratic party, devestiture, elections, energy, fish, fishing, global warming, greenhouse gasses, immediate co2 cuts, insurance companies, investment firms, koi, koi pond, lobbyists, local democratic party, media, michel moore, moratorium on home evictions, north dakota, obama, office-holding, politicians, public apathy, publicly-funded elections, reagan, Ronald Reagan, save the planet, state-owned public bank, stock market, tv, u.n. climate change conference, walking, worker-owned cooperatives
Posted in Environment and Population, Politics (mostly) | Leave a Comment »
September 16, 2009

Published on Tuesday, September 15, 2009 by Brave New Films
WATCH THE VIDEO:
The Health Insurance Racket
CIGNAs Edward Hanway spends his holidays in a $13 million beach house in New Jersey. Meanwhile, regular Americans are routinely denied coverage for the care they need when they need it most.
Welcome to the American health insurance industry. Instead of helping policyholders attain the health security they need for their families, big insurance companies get rich by denying coverage to patients. Now theyre sending lobbyists to Washington, DC to twist the arms of lawmakers to oppose reform of the status quo. Why? Because the status quo pays.
http://www.commondreams.org/video/2009/09/15-0

The Private Mandate Sausage Machine
Dear Friends,
It is said one should not ask how sausage or laws are made. Are you concerned about a public option? Let me share with you some insight about health care legislation which may not be good for your health.
A lesson in politics. The Kucinich Prediction: Here’s what’s going to happen …
- House will make a big deal about keeping/putting a public option in HR3200 because it competes with insurance companies and will keep insurance rates low.
- The White House will refer to the President’s speech last week where he spoke favorably of the public option.
- The Senate will kill the competitive public option in favor of non-competitive “co-ops”. Senate leaders like Kent Conrad have said the votes to pass a public option were never there in the Senate.
- The bill will come to a House-Senate Conference Committee without the public option.
- House Democrats will be told to support the conference report on the legislation to support the President.
- The bill will pass, not with a “public option” but with a private mandate requiring 30 million uninsured to buy private health insurance (if one doesn’t already have it). If you are broke, you may get a subsidy. If you are not broke, you will get a fine if you do not purchase insurance.
This legislative sausage will be celebrated as a new breakthrough and will be packaged as health insurance reform. However, the bill may require a Surgeon General’s warning label: Your Money or Your Life!
The bill that Congress passes may pale in comparison to the bill that millions of Americans will get every month/year for having or not having private health insurance.
It will take four years for the new legislation to go into effect. During that time we are going to build a constituency of millions in support of real health care, a constituency which will be recognized and a cause which is right and just: Health Care as a Civil Right.
Join our efforts. Sign the petition. Contribute. http://kucinich.us/hcpetition Insure a democratic future.
Thank you.

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Tags:bandits, bills, brave new films, cigna, civil rights, conference committee, congress, corporations, corruption, democracy, dennis kucinich, edward hanway, greed, health, health care, health care legislation, house, HR3200, insurance, insurance corporations, insurance rates, kent conrad, kucinich, laws, legislation, obama, petition, poliitical, president, private mandate, public option, representatives, robbers, senate, sports, surgeon general, thieves, washington, white house
Posted in Environment and Population, Politics (mostly) | Leave a Comment »