Seeking truth through diverse,openminded expression,explaining america to the world
Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Building A Better Border
THE BORDER between the U.S. and Mexico, nineteen hundred miles long, is equipped with a barrier, sporadically, for seven hundred miles, Along much of the border, the terrain is so rugged as to be impassable, thus making a man made barrier unnecessary. The adjacent land is a wildlife habitat of marvelous bio diversity. Species large and small cross and recross the invisible line predictably, of necessity, seeking food and mates in their feeding and breeding grounds. To construct a monolithic, impassable wall along the entire length would bring about a disaster of massive proportions, properly called a "crime against nature". The result would be mass extinctions. Species become extinct when their population is fragmented, isolating members from food and mates. Those who support such a wall are either unaware of this, or unconcerned by it. Why worry about mass extinctions when confronted with the dreadful reality of human beings from a foreign culture seeking their own survival? There are other practical considerations. An eighteen foot wall can be crossed with a nineteen foot ladder, or a tunnel. As General Patton said: "Fixed fortifications are monuments to the stupidity of man." With considerable opposition from the sane segment of the American people, the Trump administration has thus far managed nothing more than a few miles of reinforcement and and construction, and there is no indication that a great wall will ever exist. The great wall of china was successful for a single reason: it was from the beginning manned and monitored by a vast military presence perched atop it. The question looms: since any continuous unbroken barrier nineteen hundred miles long would require constant monitoring along its entire length, why not simply deploy the manpower and forego the steel and concrete, save money, and face?
Monday, December 30, 2019
Choosing Faith
THERE ARE HUNDREDS of varieties of Christianity. Within the past two hundred years the United States alone has spawned no fewer than half a dozen; Mormonism, Christian science, Jehovah's Witnesses, among others. Estimates as to the number of religions in the world range from a few hundred to a few thousand, depending on the method of classification. They all claim exclusive possession of the truth. As Pilate said: "what is truth?" Either God favors religious diversity, there is one true religion among all the varieties, none of them are true, in which case none of us knows what we're talking about, and all religions are inventions of the human mind and culture. The latter theory is the most supported by evidence. Goethe said: "when I realized that everyone invents his own religion, I decided to invent mine." According to many sociological anthropologists, religion emerged from within human culture as a response to curiosity, fear, and the inherent human need for societal cohesion. There is no evidence that religiosity improves human behavior, individually, or societally. Quite the contrary, in fact. Concerted analysis indicates that religion serves, in a sense, as a sort of excuse for bad behavior, and as justification for it. Religion engendered science. science, in a sense, has replaced religion as our means to gain knowledge about the universe. To the extant that we worship anything, we should worship the divine ability within us to pay attention to the world, and to achieve at least a rudimentary understanding of it. Einstein, when accused of being "the man who knows everything", responded that he didn't know one millionth of one percent of anything. Neither does anyone else, though you'd be hard pressed to prove it by listening to devoutly religious people reveal their truth, which by nature they consider to be inviolable and universal, tragically. Science is self correcting. Religion defends error. When considering whether science or religion has given humanity more benefit, simply log on to your computer, and ask yourself: "which religion is responsible for this blessing?"
Sunday, December 29, 2019
Taking Our Chances
ANYONE WHO FLIES on a commercial passenger jet liner stands a one in two million chance of being killed in a crash, give or take a corpse or two, an acceptable risk for most folks. Everyone who lives on planet Earth lives with a one in two thousand chance of being killed by an asteroid or comet. The chances of all life on Earth being eliminated by a collision with a celestial object the size of a city are one thousand times greater than the odds of an airplane falling from the sky and crashing to Earth. We go to great lengths to ensure safe air travel, and the results are evident. We do little or nothing to protect the planet from mid space collision. The space through which the Earth moves at thousands of miles per second is littered with objects large enough to send, upon impact, to send up a suffocating cloud of dust for a long enough period of time to suffocate all life. It has happened before, at least once, to the detriment of dinosaurs. The Earth's atmosphere is a paper thin layer of gases, like a layer of paint on a basketball. Even as we speak humanity is committing suicide by tampering with this fragile layer of life, without relent. Only quite recently has any systematic program been organized to locate and monitor potentially lethal near Earth objects. They are extremely numerous, and, by cosmic standards, nearby. What better way to unite humanity in a common purpose than to take arms against a sea of troubles, by organizing an intensive international effort to locate, monitor, and, when necessary, deflect by computers, rockets, and lasers anything which dares approach too closely? To live with a constant one in two thousand threat of planetary destruction is unacceptable, if avoidable, and it is avoidable. Whoever and wherever you are, your chances of bein raped, robbed, murdered or mutilated are far less than that of being obliterated by a meteorite. We have work to do.
Friday, December 27, 2019
Draining the Swamp
ANDREW JOHNSON, barely literate but stubborn as a heifer in a horse pond, wanted to ge out from under the shadow of Lincoln, and drain the swamp, as we like to say today. He fired a cabinet member, having been told not to by Congress, and, under the "Tenure of Office Act", which was only in effect for twenty years, ran afoul of Congress, and Lincoln's ghost. A hundred years later "Trickie Dick" Nixon earned his appellation. He started fixing elections in college, if not earlier. Maintaining and utilizing a not so pro temp gang of "operatives", aka thugs, to do his dirty work while serving in the nation's highest office was a bit beyond the pale, as they used to say, so out he went. Clinton had sexual relations with his non wife, lied about it to a grand jury, got caught, and paid the partisan price. Trump has taken it to a whole 'nuther level. His offenses make the above three shady characters look sun shiny by comparison. Not only does he have the aforementioned gang of operatives, his seems to include over sixty million members. Not only has he fired a government employee without apparent just cause, he has fired enough people to fill every employment office west of the Appalachians. Not only has our current impeachable president been impeached, he has had more illicit sex with more women, lied about it more often, and to more people, than even "Slick Willie" can "lay" claim to, and that's goin' some, as some us us say. The only difference is that Don the Con has kept his pants appropriately arranged as president, but, again, who knows?arguably, lying to the three hundred and thirty five million member American people over fifteen thousand times in less than three years makes a single fib told to a twenty four member grand jury look little, and white. The emoluments clause, and Trump's nearly innumerable violations thereof, come to mind. To gain access to the president, simply sack out at his hotel which used to be a post office, right down Pennsylvania Avenue. Its no secret. Various and sundry investigations into financial matters are ongoing; Trump shut down Trump University, such as it was, and the Trump charitable foundation, which was really a personal bank account, just in the nick of time. Then, for the piece de resistance, the Ukraine, the facts of which are becoming better known by the day, notwithstanding the mass denial of them by Trump, Republican lawmakers, and a majority of the sixty million member mafia. To solicit political assistance from China on national television might be considered evidence. Chief of Staff Mulvaney's nationally televised press conference confirming the Ukrainian quid pro quo seems authoritative enough: Of course we did it. Get over it. Mulvaney must have missed the meeting, the memo, or both. Yes, we'll get over it, right about the time a flowing mass of orange hair is seen slinking from the District, and into the dustbin of ignominious history.
Wednesday, December 25, 2019
Progressing
WHEN I WAS A CHILD in the nineteen sixties it was illegal, everywhere in the United States, to be gay, or as we called it then, "queer". Gay folks were incarcerated, all across the fruited plain, here in freedom's land, the land of purported liberty. Nobody ever discussed homosexuality. Homosexuals kept their sexual orientation hidden by whatever means necessary. To be "outed" was to lose one's life, or any opportunity for a fulfilling one. To be outed, or the mere thought of it, was terrifying for gay people. Among mainstream middle class American children, the greatest insult one could level in anger was "queer". Fast forward fifty years, and gay marriage is legal and rather common, and a gay guy is running for president, and doing well. There are, of course, many ways to look at this. Generally, there are two, positively, and negatively. Generally, liberals consider it positive, and conservatives think its negative. Liberals see progress, achieved at great cost, through their exertions, amid conservative resistance. Conservatives see societal decline and decay, caused by liberals and all they believe in, being forced upon a reluctant society and implemented to everyone's detriment. What is not in doubt is that American societal attitudes about homosexuality have changed greatly over the past half century, evolving, for a variety of reasons, into a far more tolerant attitude. There is no reason to think this will not continue in the future. Also evident is that past attitudes about homosexuality in America were more conservative, and present attitudes,
are more liberal. Similar situations exist with regard to blacks, women, and most "minorities". (women of course outnumber men). Poorly though members of those sub groups are often treated today, their lot, overall, over time, has vastly improved.A surprisingly large proportion of American society does not embrace the change, the constant struggle of historically under represented groups to gain social equality. Many would argue that whether change equates to progress is outweighed by people's right from government and societal coercion, even to do what most people consider good. It is undeniable that equality for minorities in America, such as it exists, has been achieved only through decades of hard struggle, and with a considerable does of government coercion, as reflected in legislation. Just as nature tends towards balance and justice, history, with frequent interruptions, tends towards progress. Whether America should be made great "again, as it was in the past, or should be made great in a way in which it has never before been, depends upon one's ideology is conservative or liberal. The direction of America's social change may suggest an answer.
Tuesday, December 24, 2019
Justifying Trump
I AM CEASELESSLY TEMPTED to ask any and all Trump supporters a single, simple question: has the president every said anything which utterly horrified you? There is a decent chance that the answer will be "yes", although I would neither hold my breath nor count on it. Conspicuously, Trump supporters overlook their leader's behavior, both words and deeds. I would have at least some measure of respect for these people if even one of them would say: "I support the president in spite of his bad behavior, not because of it." Or maybe something like: "I believe so strongly in tax cuts for the wealthy, that climate change is a hoax, and that illegal immigrant children should be locked in cages that I support Trump, although admittedly I might prefer that these noble Christ-like policies be carried out by a true Christian, like Ted Cruz." That, I could handle. That, I might even semi respect. But this business of reflexively turning a blind eye to all presidential misconduct, which Trump's evangelical Christian supporters invariably do, I find egregiously unacceptable, by virtue of being dishonest and cowardly. As we joyfully celebrate the Yuletide, thanking God for the gift our our saved existence, let us all pray that our conservative Trump supporting evangelical Christian colleagues shall somehow summon the courage, wisdom, and integrity necessary for the little darling to begin to accept the reality of the Trump era: that it is riddled with corruption and deceit, among other horrible things, of their own manufacture. Christmas is a time for self reflection and improvement, among other things. We must derive, from whatever source, a means of cleansing our nation of the right wing populist disease which afflicts it, and begin to build a smarter, saner America. Make America smart again, make America sane again. God bless us every one.Amen
Monday, December 23, 2019
Keeping The Faith
ALTHOUGH I AM NOT RELIGIOUS in any traditional sense, the Christmas season gives me a great deal of happiness, perhaps largely because the happiness of Christmas has been instilled in me since I was in diapers. Christmas is in fact among my favorite holidays, and I pretty much like them all. It is also my favorite manifestation of the Christian religion, notwithstanding the well known facts concerning the holiday's convoluted history. Moving Christ's birthday from early April to late December can be viewed in retrospect as good strategy for a faith desperate and eager to expand into the wilderness. It always surprises people to learn hos insignificant Christmas was during American colonial times, and how much later, well into the nineteenth century, it began becoming popular. In 1843 Charles Dickens published his immortal book "A Christmas Carol", which caused a sudden spike in Christmas interest, which remains to this day. In short, Christmas has undergone a long, circuitous, and complicated history of change, with much pagan influence, over the centuries. Somehow, amid the profusion of commercialized hedonistic debauchery Christmas in modern America has become, it seems to bring the best in us. Being religious, it turns out, does not necessarily bring out the best in us. Being religious does not make a person more virtuous. Yes, there are tangible, provable ways of measuring this, they have been employed extensively and exhaustively by objective, meticulous scientific research, and such studies have yielded some surprising results. Non religious people, it turns out, are no more lacking in basic human decency and goodness and morality than the devout. Even more surprising, studies have found that indeed atheists as a whole tend to be more generous, more compassionate, and less judgmental that people extremely devoted to their religion, especially Christians. There exists a fair amount of literature so support and explain the research and conclusions. It appears that the benefits of religion include community cohesion, a sense of purpose, comfort, inspiration, and a sense of belonging, but not an improved, morally superior creature. Sociologists have also noted that all the benefits derived from religious devotion can be gotten from other sources, sources without dogma, proscriptions, or social hierarchies. But so what? With or without its vast assortment of religions, humanity, we can all surely agree, still has a long way to go before claiming to have hoisted itself out of and above the barbaric mess we have given ourselves thus far. The only question is how to do it. Meanwhile, we may as well rejoice in the delightful Christmas season, no matter how or why it seems to work.
Saturday, December 21, 2019
Justifying
EVANGELICAL SUPPORT for President Trump can be, and is, rationalized and justified according to three general principles. 1) the vessel of God paradigm. 2) compartmentalization 3) the lesser of two evils argument. First, the first. According to the bible, the inerrant word of God, God by granting free will to humanity, permitted a world in which all human beings are flawed, fallen. he has a purpose for everyone, including the most egregious sinners, and that purpose if often to use the fallen for good purposes. The bible is replete with examples: Noah, King David, King Cyrus of Persia, John the baptist, to name but a few. And thus it is with Donald Trump; a severely sinful man whom the lord has raised for the purpose of doing His will. Compartmentalization, the process by which most people separate their own actions and beliefs into separate categories to avoid the inconvenience of cognitive dissonance, allows evangelical Christians to proclaim: "we did not elect a preacher, we elected a president, and in the words of one evangelical minister: "I want the meanest S.O.B. can find to serve as president, that the kingdom of God can be brought to America, by brute force if necessary. The president of the United States need not and should not behave according to the precepts articulated in the Sermon On the Mount, he should speak and act as viciously as necessary to ensure that the rest of us do, or have the freedom to. The lesser of two evils theory, perhaps the method containing the most truth, a shard of it, holds that when confronted with two choices, one's only recourse is to select the better one. Accordingly, Hillary Clinton, whose alleged crime are mere unsubstantiated accusation and whose behavior fare more closely exemplifies the teaching of Christ, is opposed at any price. Her tax scheme would have us rendering too much unto Caesar, and her tolerance of homosexuals and transgender people is not biblical. Never mind that the Bible is full of admonitions which by today's standards seem overly harsh. Mathew 15:4 comes to mind. Never mind that the normal compassion of Christ is punctuated by brutality, and that the biblical god is "harsh" to say the least, not only in the Old testament, but in the New Testament as well. Never mind that the Bible endorses male subjugation of women, slavery, murder, and genocide. And, never mind that Jesus himself never mentions homosexuality. It must be sinful, because other parts of the Bible say so. The remark often falsely attributed to Thomas Jefferson: "When law becomes injustice, resistance becomes duty" seems applicable to opposition to evangelicals gaining political power. The remark accurately attributed to Goethe: "Confronted with great merit, the only resistance is admiration (love), seems applicable to those who oppose evangelicals gaining political power. Much of the bible seems to render another Goethe quote appropo: "Only by errors (in dogma) which really irk us do we advance. Accordingly, we will advance only be relegating all evangelical incursion into politics a thing of the past.
Friday, December 20, 2019
Sinning
IT HAS BECOME EVIDENT that evangelical support for the president is predicated at least partly upon the dubious proposition that since we, including Mr. Trump, are all inherently sinful, his often reprehensible words and deeds do not disqualify him from the presidency. The lord has a purpose for everyone, and, after all, Noah was a drunkard, and King David was a murderer and adulterer. Examples of fallen folks serving the will of God permeate the Bible, which is a litany of violence and genocide enacted by a wrathful God who alternately is a petty tyrant, petulant child, and mass genocidal sociopath. It would seem that the more debauched the sheep, the greater the likelihood of becoming a "vessel of God". Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart were not isolated anomalies. Bakker did five years for embezzlement, Swaggart fretted and strutted upon the stage, confessing only after being caught at a cheap motel with a cheap prostitute, sobbing, confessing, repenting. It was too late to save their highly lucrative ministries. A recently published monograph by evangelical Christian Ben Howe, titled "The Immoral Majority: Why Evangelicals chose Political Power Over Christian values" attempt to elucidate this ostensibly inexplicable phenomenon. During the Clinton presidency, a single instance of fellatio and a lie about it told to a grand jury were sufficient to warrant impeachment and removal. During the Trump presidency, a self proclaimed claim of serial sexual molestation, over fifteen thousand lies told to three hundred and thirty five million Americans, and an endless avalanche of vicious slander leveled against women, disabled people, and the deceased is insufficient to preclude election to the presidency. A quarter of the American people describe themselves a "evangelical Christians", who, unlike twenty years ago, are bending over backwards to forgive the sins of a chief executive who has neither confessed, repented, nor atoned. The evangelical movement would serve itself better by cleaning its own house, by excommunicating the seeming army of pedophiles, serial sexual molesters, and adulterers with which the movement is infected, than to lamely excuse the incessantly execrable behavior of a reprobate president who only recently switched his affiliation from pro choice to pro life. As if we are all not "pro life". The mere fact that limited government conservative Christian insist on overturning Roe v. Wade evinces their lack of faith in God. God has the power to move a woman's heart,and to steer her clear of the murder of her unborn child. That he/she/it usually fails to do so indicates that he/she/it is either pro choice, lacks omnipotence, or is so devoted to free will that he has permitted forty five million children to die before they are born, in defense of personal liberty. We may assume that, ultimately, the universe and this small planet operate according to God's will. As Archibald McLeish said: "If God is God, God is not good. If God is good, God is not God". This conundrum is of no concern to the evangelical community, which, upon close scrutiny, neither believes in God nor acts according to the admonitions of his only begotten son.
Thursday, December 19, 2019
Accusing
CONSERVATIVE REPUBLICANS are so repulsed by progress, which requires change, that whenever a Democrat proposes it, they accuse the person of being a "socialist", mistakenly thinking the term derogatory, and themselves clever. They seem blissfully unaware they they themselves are socialists. So are we all. Understanding this requires understanding what socialism is, of which they are evidently incapable. I have never met an American who does not display a distinct preference for publicly funded and operated fire and police departments. "Quasi socialism" a conservative colleague conceded. So be it. My fellow quasi socialist conservative citizens, unite! July 25, a day which will live in infamy. July 25, 1990, President Bush the first invites Saddam Hussein to invade Kuwait in his well documented carrot and stick war crime approach, July 25, 2019, President Trump invites a another foreign power, the third, to influence an american election. On both occasions, Republicans accused those in opposition of being socialists, and worse. In 1935, at the advent of social security, they accused its advocates of being......socialists. They were quite correct. Socialistic social security has always been and remains a glowing success, having virtually eliminated poverty among America's elderly. My mother, born in 1920 and staunchly opposed to socialism as a fifteen year old, feared that she would never receive what she would eventually put into it. She did. She retired as sixty five, and lived to ninety three. She cashed every check, and lived rather well. The wars against Iraq went badly; again the socialists were on the right side. Left with nothing better, the Congressional Trump sycophants brought the tired charge out again; the radical left wing socialists, with their anti-Trump agenda. The one common thread is that whenever a right winger accuses a left winger of being a socialist, the accusation is always irrelevant, and the conservative is always talking about herself, without even knowing it.
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
Ranting
THOMAS JEFFERSON made it quite clear that he neither embraced nor respected organized religion, Christianity in particular, to which he referred as "our modern superstition". Later excoriated by politically correct revisionist historians for his many manifestations of hypocrisy, he attended church regularly, presumably to keep up appearances. He cared what people thought. His "Jefferson Bible", is available in any good university library. Dreamy Tom, the first occupant of the White House, sat in his office with a pair of scissors, and divided the scripture into two parts: the credible, and the nonsensical. The latter pile of paper was far higher. When asked his purpose, he replied that "I am extracting diamonds from a dung heap". The book of Revelation he called "the rantings of a lunatic". Note that in the Declaration of Independence he refers to God as a subset of nature, like a true deist. Jefferson's ascent to the presidency was in itself somewhat of a "coup", he having bribed a newspaper man to slander his opponent, John Adams. The notion of a presidential coup, coupled with ranting, seems oddly familiar. Our modern versions both derive from the same source; the current president of the United States. Trump got elected fully aware of, accepting, welcoming, and doing nothing to prevent the assistance of Russian operatives who contributed a massive misinformation advertising campaign, slandering Hillary Clinton. It made the difference, close analysis indicates. Our Chief Executive was, in short, the beneficiary of a coup, orchestrated on foreign soil. Unlike Jefferson, Trump didn't even have to pay for the smear campaign; Jefferson's cost him fifty dollars. Then, there's the ranting. Jefferson never ranted, and was known to be a good listener, charming, always seeking to please his guests, upon whom he lavished hospitality to the point where he died a hundred thousand dollars in debt. Our current president charms no one, insults everyone, and, regrettably, rants incessantly, usually, mercifully, in increments limited to two hundred and eighty words. That, we might agree, is quite enough. Like Jefferson, Trump often pretends to be what he is not; Christian, for one, and intelligent, for another. Jefferson had no need to feign intelligence. As John F. Kennedy told a room full of Nobel prize winners: " I am honored that we have in this room the greatest assemblage of intellect seen since Thomas Jefferson dined here, alone. Trump's most recent rant, a six pager filled with the usual lies and insults, was obviously ghost written, as it contains several sentences with subordinate clauses and polysyllabic words. There will likely come a time when Trump takes his meals alone, unless he has the good fortune of sharing his cell with someone of modest talent, twisted values, and the patience to withstand a good rant.
Tuesday, December 17, 2019
Reconciling, Albeit Briefly
OVER AT THE SENIOR CENTER, where the most recently employed team of kitchen workers has elevated the food to culinary exquisiteness, a small but undeterred group of democrats holds forth valiantly, amid a crushing mass of evangelical Trump supporters. We are discreet. My compromise is that I only discuss politics with people with whom I agree. One of my friends is an eighty two year old gentleman with an eighth grade education, who, when he was quite young, suffered the indignity of having a collar laced around his neck, and being tied to a clothesline, just to keep him out of trouble. They ate what they could hunt, catch, or grow. He gets his news from something called "Free Speech TV", and me. One day recently he showed up at the center wearing a MAGA ball cap, black in color. He was unsatisfied, preferring a red one. One of my fellow Trump despisers, an intrepid lady, was able to approach him from behind, and without his noticing, place a strip of duct tape across the MAGA, reading "Make America Smart Again". I wrote the message, doubtful of whether the word "Again" was appropriate. When the lady who assaulted him suggested that I should place the tape on head, I abstained, with the excuse "he would kill me". She had more courage, being female. The racist, right wing evangelical gentleman who supplied the black hat finally got in a batch of red ones, and gave him one. He was pleased, indicating his intent of relegating the black one to the back shelf. So I decided to take advantage of the opportunity. I thought he might give me the black one, which I could then wear to the senior center as a show of conciliatory intent. After all, who among us disagrees with the notion of making America greater? All along my contention has been that wearing the MAGA cap is a sure sign of a traitor, since we on the left generally consider our country to have already been great, if greatly flawed, long before this conservative populist disease took hold. I could wear the thing for a day or two, then dispose of it according to the HAZMAT protocol. But it was a cold day, and we both thought it better that he don the black one beneath the red, atop his misguided head. All that Free Speech TV, for nothing. My consolation is that a single MAGA is too flimsily made to offer any protection against cold, and thus holds the promise of decomposing, in the biodegradable dustbin of history.
Monday, December 16, 2019
Procrastinating, and Sharing A cell With Jane
THE POWERS OF THE EARTH gathered together, representationally, in Madrid, for the purpose of arriving at a global agreement on decreasing carbon emissions for the purpose of salvaging what's left of the earth's ecosystem. They even harbored the increasingly vain hope that humanity might restore what it has destroyed. They spent two weeks mealy mouthing about a bit, then adjourned without anything substantive agreed, as if solving the problem were optional, as if there existed the option of dealing with a minor matter at some future date. Heaven forbid that saving the environment, and the life which once thrived in it, ever became expensive to our corporate masters, I am reminded of the nearly innumerable diabetic people I know who awaken of a morning, grab a donut or two, well sugared, then rush home to shoot up, only to return for more pastry. No matter, we can concern ourselves with rising sea levels, decreasing oxygen levels in the oceans, and increasingly violent weather another day, maybe next year. Meanwhile, folks living next to Chesapeake Bay see their property slowly inundated, surfboards break out just above coastal highways, and Pacific islanders adorn wading boots. Jane Fonda and Greta Thunberg are swimming upstream, against a strong current of ignorance submerged beneath an apparent human death wish. Fonda, now 81, has moved to Washington D.C., and acquired the habit of getting arrested every Friday evening for the unspeakable crime of trying to convince the nation and the world that we had better do something. She's 81 now, beautiful and smart as ever, if a bit less impulsive, and points out that when she was born, there were a scant two million people on board, and that her childhood was spent amid flocks of birds which no longer exist, there being three billion fewer of them in North America than in her childhood. The passenger pigeon, it appears, will soon have company, in heaven. When Jane posed sitting on a piece of North Vietnamese artillery, back in the sixties, her detractors may have had a point. That was, after all, a bit over the top. But just for the record, we who opposed and protested the war were proven correct, in the scholarship of historians, if not the conservative community. This time Jane is dead on, even at the risk of spending three months in jail upon her next inevitable infraction. I'd like to share a cell with her, just to talk, and, with any luck, to hold her courageous hand.
Friday, December 13, 2019
Having Fun
CURIOUSER AND CURIOUSER. Welcome to the USA, the world's largest fun house. President Trump, in an apparent pique of jealousy, described the appearance of Greta Thunberg on the cover of Time magazine as "ridiculous". He didn't specify why, but asserted that she would be better served going to a movie, like a normal teenager. That she is crusading to save the world from people like Donald J. Trump Donald J. Trump ascribes to anger management issues. it is he who resides in the fun house, all images grotesquely distorted, nothing as it seems. On the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue, the Senate Majority leader, prepares to participate in the forthcoming impeachment trial of the distorted one. he announced on national television that it is his intent to coordinate the republican caucus with the president, for the evident purpose of meshing republican Senators with the president, to make sure thy are all on the same page, so to speak. Bear in mind that the purpose of the United States Senate in an impeachment trial is to serve as the jury. The image of a jury foreman announcing his intention of coordinating with the defendant on trial comes to mind. "since the defendant never once can be shown to have uttered the words "I intend to murder my wife", no guilt can be established. But of course the president is without guilt. Where does the term "quid pro quo" appear on any document, any telephone transcript, or any surveillance video? Nowhar, that's whar!, as congressman Davy Crockett once screamed in the House of representatives regarding some money missing from the federal treasury. Crockett was accusing Henry clay, John Quincy Adams, and Henry C. Calhoun, three of the most prominent politicians of the nineteenth century, of, well, being grifters. according to the congressional record they all glowered at him, but he didn't give a fig. To quote recording artist Joe Jackson: "I can't help but believe that I'm living a life of illusion".
Thursday, December 12, 2019
Being Discreet, and Discrete
I HAVE OFTEN MENTIONED, uninvited, that when I was in sixth grade, in 1966-67, my teacher, a lady I adored, told our class that there are two subjects one should never discuss: you guessed it: religion, and politics. Ah distinctly I recall sitting there, front row, thinking that she was precluding the two most interesting topics available. I understood her reasoning, of course, and still do. But I disobeyed her, perhaps unwisely. Now, in the midst of Trump, in the midst of high percentage evangelical support for Trump, there stands my sixth grade teacher, who may still be alive, admonishing me. My current thinking is that discussing religion is pointless, because everybody has one, or doesn't, as Goethe said "When I realized that everyone invents his own religion, I decided to invent mine." 'Nuff said. But politics is a different animal. In a country in which we the people, at least nominally, are required to govern our country, doesn't someone, anyone, at some point, need to discuss politics? How can we discuss politics, the science/art of governance, without talking about it? On that matter, my sister, a retired pentagon employee, holds firm. Yes, she allows, someone in the United States needs to discuss politics. But she'll be damned if she is going to be the one to do it. "Nuff said. Whether I find her viewpoint less than admirable is quite irrelevant. The current polarization of America is well documented. We are an angry, arrogant people, and every single one of us has the truth. we have become, somehow, entitled not only to our own opinions, but to our own facts. The president is either a criminal and a traitor, seeking political assistance from foreigners, or, he has made America great again, presumably just by being there. your choice. After all, in modern America, nobody is ever wrong.
Tuesday, December 10, 2019
Rewriting History
IN THE PRECEDING EPISODE, I discussed a lady, and the fact that I live in a "free" country permits me to divulge her name, Jill Ciment, who made the mistake of falling in love with her forty seven year old high school art teacher when she was seventeen, marrying him, and living happily ever after. a writer herself, she later in life, at the age of 41, wrote a book about her experience as a child bride, then over twenty years later, in her mid sixties, she wrote another, from an entirely different point of view. The advent of the "me Too" movement woke her up to the fact that her husband, now deceased, had in the beginning in fact been a sexual predator. So there you have it; a long and happy marriage which began as an act of sexual molestation, rape, if you will. The reader is invited to decide for him or her self. The same is true for everything else having to do with the past, for all of history. that's what makes history such an interesting, as well as important, subject. Its largely a matter of opinion. You would tend to think otherwise, that history is written in stone, in terms of facts and events, and that it would all be settled. Quite the opposite is true. Consider American history. People of a certain age will recall when American history was taught in public schools from the point of view that the United States could, in the past, do no wrong. What we today call theft and genocide we Americans once celebrated as a courageous expansion of civilization, a process in which we generously offered the savage natives to join us in civilized culture, or else. We Americans are making it perfectly obvious, much to our national embarrassment, that current events, so current as to be happening in front of our noses, can be interpreted in vastly differing ways. History, which is far less accessible than the present, is infinitely more vulnerable to unlimited interpretations and explanations than events we see happening with our own eyes. Its even possible, in our world of complications, to look back on your own life, on a long and happy marriage, and wonder whether it was good...or bad...Probably, like most everything else, it was both.
Monday, December 9, 2019
Revising History
SHE WAS SIXTEEN IN 1970, to which I can relate, having been fifteen in the long ago year. In 1970 I was girl crazy, but utterly incapable, emotionally or intellectually, of doing anything about it. She, like many people of her age and generation, had a crush on one of her teachers, a forty seven year old art teacher. Long story short, then ended up getting married, and stayed that way, happily so, for decades, until his death did them part. A writer since she was young, in 1996 she wrote a book in novel form based upon her life with her much older husband, titled "Half A Life", which is fascinating and enjoyed some success. In her book, she falls in love, and goes to class every day, feeling teenaged hopelessness. Her feelings for her teacher only intensify, so boldly she acts, seducing him, luring him into a relationship, dating, becoming engaged, then marrying and spending forty happy years together as man and wife. Her theme is somewhat "against all odds"; a most unlikely love story which began as an impossible fantasy, and turned into a beautiful love story. In her book, she is very definitely the instigator, her husband merely a passive participant. Now in her mid sixties, a widow, she has just published another book, the same story told from another point of view, titled "The Other Half". Between 1996 and 2019, the world, in particular American culture changed. the "Me Too" movement sprang forth, as seemingly thousands of rich and powerful men, most famously Donald Trump, were exposed as sexual predators, as having spent decades sexually mistreating women. In the United States, sexually mistreating women, much like drinking and driving, was considered essentially harmless, to be expected, with blame distributed between the "participants". In 1996, when the author was forty one and happily married, her story did not seem to her even remotely related to any form of sexual misbehavior. Now, it does. In her revised version, she tells the story from a 2020 point of view, the same story, only her husband becomes what we all agree he is today. Both books are believable. Both tell the truth. and yet, they cannot both be true. They give contradictory versions of the exact same story. By the time she was in her mid sixties, she was willing to accept the reality that he, not she, had been the initiator, the "aggressor". What his true motives were, back in 1970, when he, as a forty seven year old teacher decided to "pursue" a sixteen year old girl, we'll never know. Maybe we don't really want to.
Saturday, December 7, 2019
Facing Death
WE ARE DOOMED to extinction. that much, we know. There is probably not a human alive on this planet who actually believes that billions of years from now, in the far, far future, when teh universe is aging and winding down, that humanity, or anything remotely like it, will still be busying about on planet earth. Or, for creationists, the rapture and end times will arrive soon enough. Humans, who may or may not be the only living species on Earth aware of its individual and collective mortality, has been predicting its o end, forever. As the year 999 A.D. waned, and the year 1000 approached, Europe was in an uproar about it, it being widely believed that the end of the millennium would be the end of the world. Those of a certain age will recall a similar sociological phenomenon in 1999, with our much ballyhooed Y2K crisis, which, like all the rest of the end of the world scenarios, never happened. As December 31, 1999 loomed, millions were frightened that when the clock struck midnight, and the year 2000 entered, all computers would, for some never revealed reason, cease to function, and our modern world would dissolved in chaos. People were stocking up on canned tuna and toilet paper in backyard underground bunkers. I clearly recall not being worried about it in the least. I think I would have stayed calm a thousand years ago, or in 1843 and again 1844 when the Millerites stood on hill tops, awaiting the rapture. The fact that in both instances western humanity celebrated the millennium a year too early does not inspire confidence in human predictive capabilities. Our perpetual fear of mass extinction is well founded. all things considered, it is a miracle that we haven't already been wiped out. Nuclear warfare and climate change are at the top of the current list of dire threats. An uncontrollable viral epidemic is always possible, and, in the long run, inevitable. Huge meteors and asteroids hurtle through space constantly, and often pass alarmingly close to earth. S big enough collision would wipe us, and all other life, off the planet. To assume that life will continue on earth until the sun goes nova in a few billion years seems unrealistic. Our best, indeed only option is to reduce as much as possible opportunities for destroying ourselves, by keeping our environment clean and eliminating weapons and conflicts from culture and future history. The universe will find some way to get rid of us soon enough.
Thursday, December 5, 2019
Asking the Right Questions
FOR THE SAKE of political correctness, for the sake of sheer tact, there may be some questions which are best never asked. Which tend to be more intelligent, liberals, or conservatives? Or are they equally bright? Which group tends to be better educated? It turns out this is an easy one to answer, because its measurable from simple surveys. What about deeply religious people compared to non religious types? Believe it or not, and presumably many will not, a recent study seemed to suggest that people who are fervently, zealously dogmatically religious, and people who are right wing extremists, suffer from brain damage. something to do with an underdeveloped cerebral cortex. By all means, look it up. it is noticeable that these two types of people, the religious fanatic and the right wing fanatic, are often, very often, the same person. Similarly, everyone has noticed that America's college and university campuses, with the exception of zealously religious institutions of higher education, such as Liberty University and Oral Roberts University, tend to be heavily concentrated with liberals, both among the students and the faculty. Universities tend to be less religious and more politically progressive than the general population. it has been noted that colleges and universities tend to attract intelligent, educated people. Among Americans who were not raised coercively to be a conservative christian, and acquired higher education, Americans tend to be progressive. Without question, your mainstream conservative evangelical Trump supporter, who tends to be blue collar, is less educated and, studies suggest, less intelligent than the far left anti-Trump masses who cluster in institutions of higher education. The people, studies suggest, who deny climate change, science, evolution, and history could stand a bit of higher education. Like everything else, there are many exceptions. it is surprising how many well educated people continue to embrace primitive, factually false religions merely for the sake of preserving tradition, even while confronted with the reality of modern science, which of course utterly refutes all human religion. From this we must conclude that we humans cling to our comfort sources.
Wednesday, December 4, 2019
Giving Credit To Trump
IF ONE IS a "Never Trumper", one must, if one has integrity, be careful to not automatically dislike everything Trump says and does, but instead, to avaluate every word and deed objectively, fairly. That is precisely the process by which congress is currently investigating president Trump. Sworn testimony and documentation by several Trump administration insiders has established the facts, especially the salient, inarguable fact of the president's traitorous treachery. The next step is to let the experts, many experts on constitutional law, tell us whether the testimony gathered so far warrants impeachment of Trump, and whether it warrants his conviction for high crimes and removal from office. Among Trump's defenders are two schools; those who insist that he did nothing wrong, and those who admit that he did, but that it doesn't warrant removal nor impeachment. both schools of thought seem logically, factually, intellectually....weak. One law professor after another will have testified that Trump is a criminal who should be impeached, triad, convicted, and removed from office, and still Trump's supporters will, incredibly, continue to defend him. On two key issues I agree with and support Trump. NATO members should all pay their fair share. Also, china is a human rights nightmare, and should be held accountable for it. Fair trade and economic relationships with China could be better established by united pressure from the entire world, instead of Trump trying to do it by himself. And, to be honest, the United States, a human rights nightmare itself, does not have a great deal of moral superiority in insisting that China, or anyone else, clean up its human rights behavior. That is the sad and tragic fact; the United States might at one time have possessed more moral credibility than it does now, under Trump. That sad fact might be the best reason of all to remove and replace the president.
Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Sowing the Seeds To Save the World
ONE TRILLION TREES may sound like a lot, but, according to the best science, its the minimum of what we the human species needs to plant, post haste, if we are to harbor any hope of even starting on the laborious process of repairing our damaged planet. Our efforts thus far are, tragically, being far outpaced by our continued destruction, and now time is running short, according to simple, explainable science. The weather has already become far more violent, and as this increases, so will our acceptance of and panic over climate change of the man made kind. its frightening to think of my generation, baby boomer 1955 model, sliding into old age with the earth in the balance, poised between ecological disasters and salvation, our summers too hot and long. My generation may die away never knowing the end of the story. it would be nice, as an American, to fade away watching the United States of America take the lead in fighting and reversing climate change. Currently, under present political conditions, that seems less likely than ever, unless their is a massive effort by the states, cities, and people, independent of national government. we are told by conservatives that we must not make America more like Europe. Actually, we should, and must. The French, German, and English countrysides are manicured, almost like one huge national park. No litter, no garbage. European buildings and houses always seem to be freshly painted, without any of the stained and corroded look of many American structures. In the "new world" land was unlimited; everything could be thrown away. It might be time to start treating our public spaces like art museums, instead of trash heaps. We could probably plant a trillion trees in the United states alone. it is amazing, while cruising across country, the number of places in america where there could and should be trees, but aren't. The more exclusive the neighborhood, the larger, the more expensive the lawns and houses - the fewer the trees, weirdly. Wealthy suburban Americans seem to hate trees, as if tress might block the view of their gorgeous houses, and scatter unsightly leaves across the perfectly manicured lawn, with its carpet like grass. Maybe some huge climate changed storm will blow all the McMansions down, replaced them with high rise apartments, and surround them with wilderness, that we, and other species might live.
Monday, December 2, 2019
Fighting Climate Change & Science
THE LATEST REPORT on climate change, from the intergalactic panel on climate change, or whatever they call it, is dire. More dire than ever. Each one, and they come out at least once a year, is worse than the last, and it has nothing to do with a conspiracy to turn the government over to liberal democrats, or anything stupid like that. Every day, new information is gathered on climate science, new data, and every year our knowledge and understanding of it improves. That's the way science works, the beauty of science; the results it produces. Our smart phones and computers and cars and debit cards and medicine was all brought to us by science, not religion, fantasy, or pseudo science. Let that sink in, oh ye evangelical conservatives and paranormal people. The U.N. meeting on climate change, beginning today, had better produce some serious results leading to real progress...or, we're cooked, so to speak. The best way to reverse global warming, as always, is to plant a trillion trees. We could get started today, with everybody planting one, then going from there. Around the world there have recently been several impressive tree planting projects, with several countries planting millions in a single day. This proves it can be done. Homo sapiens could have a trillion new trees in the ground in less than a year. Assuming, of course, that we take all the other drastic steps necessary to save ourselves and our descendants, all well known. Our descendants will, we hope, someday laugh and marvel at our stupidity in nearly bringing all life on Earth to extinction by burning billions and billions of tons of fossil fuels, and dumping the left over carbon into the atmosphere, century, after century, without a second thought. we further hope and trust that our descendants some day soon laugh and scoff at the incredible fact that at as late as the year 2020 tens of millions of Americans continued to deny the existence of one trillion tons of carbon in the atmosphere, put there by human kind. Or maybe they accept the reality of the carbon, but deny the laws of physics and chemistry and physics by which it absorbs heat, or something like that. Whatever their thinking, its crazy, and your guess is as good as mine. It would be nice to live long enough to see climate change deniers universally ridiculed, and a trillion young trees growing, turning carbon into oxygen, cooling the Earth down, and making America great, again...
Thursday, November 28, 2019
Getting To Know Guy part II
GUY, IT TURNS OUT, is homeless. (see article "Getting To Know guy" below) That is to say, he lives in his car. I had no idea, and finding out shocked me. The information came from an impeccable source, so I'm sure its true. Also, he apparently can neither read nor write. He comes to our local senior center every day, and eats, and several people think he looks better than he did when he first arrived. He brings a Tupperware container for leftovers. We managed to get him an application, many pages long, for low income housing, and filled it out for him. The word is he is going to get into a nice apartment very soon. In our very small town we have a very nice government subsidized apartment complex, with a dozen units or so, all very nice. Across the nation, we need a massive investment in housing for low income people, and seniors. Guy must be seventy five or eighty years old, but I would be more than happy to teach him how to read and write, were he willing, which, for all I know, he might be. Remind me to ask him. We all agree; its never too late, right? Of course, he'll probably say no. If he were interested in learning to be literate, he probably would have become so, long ago. Guy can't hear a thing. He says the thing he misses most is his hearing, and I think anybody can understand that. We were sitting at his table, and across the room a country band was playing, loudly. he couldn't hear a note. I think he understands me only because of lip reading. Hearing aids are, of course, ridiculously expensive, and should somehow be made far less so. Dare I utter the dreaded word "socialism"? Getting Money in Guy's hands, by any means, can only help the rest of us, by supplying the economy with another consumer, driving up demand, fueling production, job growth, and prosperity for all. The more money we can get into the hands of more different people who do not currently have much, the greater the stimulative effect on the economy. So let's all pitch in and help guys and gals like Guy, by any and all means.
Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Calling the Raise
MISTERS BLOOMBERG AND STEYER will most likely do no harm to the Demmocrat(ic), (parenthesis to acknowledge the clever gimmick invented by Rush Limbaugh of calling the party the "Democrat" party)... party in its quest to save the nation from Trump and his supporters. Presumably, all party members are aware of and on board with this quest, which is nothing more or less than a quest for human survival. Neither will probably get the nomination, which still seems likely to go to one of the big four; Biden, Warren, Sanders, Buttegeig. But maybe its good to have a couple of bona fide multi billionaires in the hunt, just for appearances. that is, lest we forget that this is still America, the land where, as the song says, "Its Money That Matters", and all political power is purchases, a bit too expensively for most of us, the mere masses. People who oppose Trump oppose him so thoroughly that they would be willing to elect a yellow dog, or anyone else, to replace him as president. Those who support Trump, a somewhat shrunken but hardened core of fervent sycophants, are evidently willing to do most anything to keep him in power. Thus, the nation may be headed for head on reckoning, followed, kn the best case scenario by a period of repentance, atonement, and reform among right wing evangelical extremist Trumpers. The Democratic party, like everything else in life, is a plutocracy; it was never realistic to suppose that billionaires would fail to seize control of it. But you have to like, if you have a brain and heart, what folks like Steyer, Gates, and Buffet have done with their money, compared to what people like Trump do with theirs. Bankruptcy protection is but one of a myriad of socialistic government based programs of which Donald Trump has taken massive advantage to stay financially afloat, ironically. I for one would rather hear a progressive billionaire complain about paying insufficient taxes than hearing a conservative billionaire talk about cutting taxes on the wealthy to relieve the poor dears of their terrible burden of contributing to society.
Tuesday, November 26, 2019
Getting To Know Guy
I NOTICED that there was an old guy, a new old guy, sitting alone at a round table in the corner. This happens often at the senior center; some senior sitting alone, though generally folks tend to clump up, cliquishly. This particular old guy started showing up every day, staying awhile, and always sitting at the same seat at the same table, drinking coffee until lunch, then, having lunch. he droves himself to the center, saying that he lives nearby. The second day I noticed that nobody had bothered to walk five feet to his table, introduce themselves, and welcome him to the senior center, which did not surprise me, since I recall receiving roughly similar treatment from many members upon my arrival, four years past. Angered me, but did not surprise me, having lived in the United States my entire life. Hell, how much effort would it take for just one or a couple of seniors sot sit down with him, for a few minutes, and chat? Americans can be friendly, but they can be cliquish, stand offish, you know how it is, if you're an American. No, American culture is not the friendliest, nor the most welcoming, in the world. It might not even be in the top ten, but then again, that's a matter of opinion, and another topic. I mentioned it to my fellow kitchen workers, that our mainstream members did not seem to be all that friendly to the new guy, and they agreed. I sat down at his table and introduced myself; his name was "Guy". He turned out to not be very talkative, with a soft hard to hear voice, and also very hard of hearing, so, conversation was a bit hampered, but not seriously so. He needs a hearing aid, but, who can afford one? I started getting in the habit of initiating conversations with him, and found, that like most average Americans, he prefers talking about himself. Nor does he initiate conversations, unless he has a question about the senior center or a piece of information to share about himself. He is looking for a place to live, and our society is starting to see the need for low income housing for seniors. He has been coming to the center for about a month, and the people there are no more friendly to him now than before, although to their credit they are neither hostile nor "unfriendly" to him either. They just kind of tend to ignore him. I have accepted the fact that they aint gonna change, not at their age, and that if guy ever wants to make friends, he had better initiate the process himself, the way I did, all those long years ago.
Sunday, November 24, 2019
Impeaching, Or Whatever
AS FAR AS I KNOW, there is no doubt by anyone that the president frequently bears false witness, merely different reactions to it. His opponents righteously declare their abhorrence to it, while his supporters either ignore it, or, more strangely still, insist that it really isn't all the important. Trump's flippant remark that he could gun somebody down in broad daylight on new York's bustling fifth avenue without losing any support doesn't seem so flippant now. It seems obvious. So now it merely becomes a matter of whether what the president did, tried to blackmail the Ukraine, was bad enough to merit impeachment. I could go either way on it. My bumper sticker "Impeach Trump" has been on my car for at least two years, but I've never been fervently a believer in his impeachment. Some progressive organization sent me the bumper sticker, and I put it on. Although I, like half the country, am convinced that impeachment and removal is appropriate, I am perfectly willing to await to next election, now less than a year away, and let my vote do my talking. This Ukraine scheme cannot possibly help Trump. the fact that all the testimony comes from members of the Trump administration pretty much disproves any conspiracy theories accusing Democrats and media types of orchestrating a coup. Only Devin Nunes is crazy enough to even say something that crazy, let alone actually believe it. As the election approaches, defense of Trump will begin to sound more laughable, more ludicrous, more desperate, more so than they already do. Trump's first term, in terms of both his words and his deeds, will be used against him, as evidence, proof of his unfitness for the job. In the seemingly unlikely event that he is reelected, the impeachment process might be pushed forward all over again, a nightmarish thought. Equally nightmarish is the thought of how brazen Trump's lawlessness could become in a second term, when he has no concerns about being reelected.
Saturday, November 23, 2019
Wearing The Color
THE OLD BOY came walking into the senior center wearing a MAGA cap, black, not red. He did it just to push a few buttons, including mine. I told him that the cap needs to be red, and he said that he got it for free, because its previous owner was indeed looking for a red one. He didn't care, since for him, the whole thing, all the fuss and politics, is irrelevant, nothing but a joke. Maybe he has a point. Somebody wrote "MASA" (Make America Smart Again) on a piece of tape, and covered up the old boy's message, which was spelled out across his cap. He didn't even notice, until he went home, and took off his hat. He blamed me, falsely. He watches the news, usually in his NRA cap, and probably understands, like nearly three quarters of the American people, that the president did something very, very bad. Every witness on national television came from within the Trump administration, doing damage to conspiracy theories linking the investigation into Trump's little blackmail scheme to a massive hoax involving the Democrats and all the other usual suspects. Its just a matter of how bad. The defense that since the president got caught before he could complete his scheme and is therefore innocent of any wrongdoing seems hollow as well, if only because it is. As the better than fiction narrative of Trump's prolonged, organized, and widely known attempt to blackmail the Ukraine sinks in, the percentage of Americans who actually understand the seriousness and danger of this will creep, inexorably, towards one hundred. of course, it will never get all the way there.
Wednesday, November 20, 2019
Capitalizing Church
I barely have TV. About a year ago I bought my first flat screen, and never bothered to subscribe to cable or satellite. With my small antenna I can get from three to six channels. Even so, I flip around a lot. That's what men do, right? If my eyes weren't deceiving me, I suddenly saw Joel Osteen and Kanye West standing together on a huge stage, under bright lights, wearing I barely know who these people are, but I vaguely know that they are both huge celebrities in greatly divergent areas of endeavor. If I'm not dreaming, Joel has a huge megachurch with thousands of members, a tremendous quantity of devotion to Christ, a beautiful wife, and, apparently, a lot of money, judging by the Lamborghini I vaguely remember seeing him slip into on TV. Kanye is a big time rap singer, actor, director, or all of the above, correct? and, again, unless I'm dreaming the content of his artistic creations as well as his personal behavior have not always been anything even remotely remindful of Christian values, am I wrong? Is this a marriage of convenience corporate values? Big time big money religion, and big time big money mainstream entertainment culture, mating for..what? more power and money? The Korporate Kristian Komplex, and the corporate entertainment industry, merging, to accumulate more people and more money for Christ? Kanye, cleaning up his image by finding the lord, and Joel, ever expansive, expanding his empire for Christ? Global and particularly American economic developments make you wonder whither eventually one person will end up with all the money in the world. What about religious authority? will huge corporate church complexes emerge around the world, and ultimately compete for global supremacy?
Sunday, November 17, 2019
Bringing The War Home
ANYONE WHO KNOWS ANYTHING about American history and culture knows that white supremacy is and has always been a core American value. More specifically, white Christian supremacy. As much ado as Americans have made about "equality" among their core values, the United States has never had social, economic, racial, ethnic, legal, gender, religious, nor any other type of equality, including equality of opportunity. So, precisely what is meant by the term when it is used to describes American characteristics and aspirations may be a bit uncertain. The more Americans espouse rehe virtue of equality, the less of it the country seems to have as a whole. You can't help but notice how often some angry young man commits, mass murder, then gives thanks to President Trump for inspiring him, and spouting extremist right wing ideology. The mainstream conservative American community has chosen to describe every one of them, notwithstanding their obvious similarities, as "lone wolves", flukes, anomalies. This, of course, is pure nonsense. The anger and hatred of america's right wing is palpable, roughly defined as conservative christian evangelical Republican capitalistic Trumpers. This, by and large, is community from which racism and white supremacism emerge. The complete history and analysis of white supremacism in the United States, from before the civil War to the Trump movement and the alt right, is brilliantly delineated by Kathleen Belew in her seminal work "Bring The War Home". Our modern movement, she asserts, originated in the nineteen seventies, in the aftermath of post Viet Nam war societal unrest. Obviously, modern white supremacy has its American origins with slavery, and the entire tragic history stemming from the Civil war and emancipation. But there has been a cyclical nature to it, and the era Trump is an era of white supremacist resurgence. Like most sociologists and historians, Belew sees Trump as more a symptom than a cause. Progress in recent years in gaining equal rights for minorities such as the LGBTQ community, African-Americans, and Hispanics, and particularly the election of Barack Obama, Belew sees as engendering a backlash throughout the white Christian conservative community. Considering the president's apparent popularity because of, not in spite of his racism and anti-minority attitude, the current racial and cultural situation in America does not seem to bode well, for equality, inclusion, tolerance, or acceptance, for the foreseeable future.
Lingering Laughability
FUTURE GENERATIONS of Americans will be amazed that Donald Trump was allowed to remain president as long as he was, considering. Considering the fact that he was in violation of the constitution the moment he was inaugurated. he still is, the emoluments clause, among others. But with each passing day, it is becoming more difficult for his supporters to support him, their excuses for his behavior become more laughable and ludicrous. Donald Trump was so determined to blackmail the Ukraine for political dirt on Biden that he orchestrated a smear campaign which led to the ultimate removal of the United States Ambassador to the Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch, a lady of impeccable quality, her only fault being that she was opposed to and would be an impediment to Trump's blackmail scheme. Her "involvement: in Trump's criminal plot, opposing it, was the reason for her testimony in Congress and appearance on national television. Like all the other witnesses so far and those to come, Ms. Yovanovitch's testimony was quite damaging to the president. Her testimony was so impressive, that as she walked out of the room afterwards, everyone, including the Republicans, gave her a standing ovation. Even those who know Trump best would probably never have expected that the ill advised president would actually start tweeting an attack on her during her testimony. This is another Donald Trump crime of the day; witnessing tampering, specifically. Trump's defense? It isn't witnessing tampering, because it was done during her testimony, and she never would have known about it had somebody, the committee chairman, not interrupted her testimony told her about the president's attack. We'll see how well that laughable argument holds up. meanwhile, the tweet will be listed among the eventual articles of impeachment, along with obstruction of justice, and others. it is very cooperative and convenient of teh president to contribute to the list of impeachable offenses even as the list is being compiled, and this cooperative behavior, were it not unintentional, would be grounds for a lighter prison sentence. Historians sometimes marvel at how long and how many of Hitler's followers remained loyal, even after the war. The Trump cult is remindful of this, but, there are some slight indications that as Trump's massive criminal behavior comes to light, his support will shrink, and that, if little else, gives us reason for hope.
Saturday, November 16, 2019
Seeking Perfection On Paper
IN AMERICAN CULTURE there seems to be a tendency for people who are extremely religious to also be extremely patriotic, as if these two pillars of conservative tradition somehow automatically go hand in hand. The bible, and the constitution, two documents which were not considered perfect by the people who wrote them, and whose serious flaws render their alleged "perfection" dubious at best. Perhaps there is psychological comfort, as well as social strength, in veneration words on paper, or in stone. As if we humans need superior role models to which to aspire. Thomas Jefferson, who didn't write the constitution but taught James Madison how to, firmly believed that a new version would be preferable every generation, that each generation could govern itself, without being constrained to the methods of its ancestors, a reasonable sounding notion. As a society, we have chosen, of course, to do just the opposite, the enshrine the constitution of our ancestors, content to let them govern us, willing to change the slightest part of the sacred text only with great reluctance. Thus we the modern American people live under a constitutional which mention slavery three times, but never by name, which seems strange, almost as if the framers realized that the peculiar institution required addressing, but were ashamed of it,which, in fact, they were. without protecting slavery, the constitution would never have been approved, and the new nation would never have come into existence. Indentured servitude, a form of slavery for white seven year slaves, also required protection. In all three mentions, the institution is upheld, the slaves regarded as property, not people. This is one of teh reasons why some people believe that we should heed the message of Thomas Jefferson, and create a new constitution, suitable for the twenty first century, rather than the eighteenth. The problem, of course, is the literate human tendency to place way too much importance upon words on paper, or in stone. Illiterate humans, strangely, often share this tendency. regarding the Bible, Goethe said it best: "It is beyond me how anyone can believe taht God speaks to us in books and stories. If the world does not reveal itself to us, and if our hearts do not tell us what we owe ourselves and others, we will surely not learn it from books, which at best are designed only to give names to our errors."
Thursday, November 14, 2019
Wising Up
THE MOST OBVIOUS BENEFIT of the televised hearings is that millions of Americans will learn something about what has been going on. It is difficult to imagine this elucidation to chance Trump's following; by now, you'd think, anyone on board with Trump got on board long ago. The facts are damaging to the president, which is why the hearings are occurring in the first place. Simple hatred of Trump alone is not enough to motivate such an elaborate situation, including many high ranking officials from within the Trump administration, people of high character and impeccable backgrounds, including decades of service and purple hearts, providing the damaging information. The people who hat Trump didn't start out hating him. They paid attention to his behavior, his words and actions, and their hatred grew, reluctantly. I started out as a Trump supporter, when he began his campaign, but I turned on him when he called Ted Cruz a liar, dozens of times. For me, that was over the top. The rest has been even more atrocious, including this Ukrainian blackmail scheme, which is intolerable. Nobody is calling it "blackmail", even the Democrat Trump haters are calling it "bribery" or "coercion", but blackmail is what it is, and laying it out on television cannot but help hurt the president. The project involved many high ranking people, took a lot of effort and time, weeks, and includes a great deal more than one phone call, which itself was far from perfect. The best scenario might be to impeach him, try him, and fail to remove him, and then let the election next year decide. By then, enough people will have enough facts. In particular, the patriotic conservative evangelical Christian community will have to eventually abandon Trump, not only because of his distinctly un-Christian personal behavior, but because of his traitorous behavior as well. Conservative Christians will have to accept the fact that progressive political policies are far more Christian, and there is no war against Christianity, merely a determined movement to keep church and state separate, as they were intended by the founders. Particularly relevant are the defenses of Trump being offered by his assistants and supporters, all of which might sound good on the surface, but fall flat and fail, badly. The accusation by Trump and many of his cult members that this is nothing but a witch hunt", is even more dishonest and ridiculous than it was when used to attack the Mueller report. Republicans with courage and integrity, like Jeff Flake, Mitt Romney, and Colin Powell, are coming clean about Trump. Everyone else will be forced, one way or another, to do likewise.
Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Participating
YOU MIGHT NOT WIN the Super Bowl, for instance, but you can show up on the playground at recess, catch a couple of passes in a pick up touch football game, lose with your team by a point or two, then go back to class a bit pissed at having lost, but relaxed, smiling, and feeling pretty good about your personal performance, exercise, fun, and participation. And that, arguably, is a good attitude, a healthy attitude, the "right" attitude. Leave it to American culture to have no idea what the right attitude is about anything, but to decide arbitrarily, then impose the arbitrary choice upon the world. Noticing, like most people, that American Darwinistic competitive culture, with its win at any and all cost moral fiber, had subsumed America's children, the bleeding hearts started handing out participation trophies. In my childhood, over fifty years ago, they were unknown. Either you won or you didn't. But I also recall that back then it actually something to finish i second place, or even third, in a field of, say five. Winning wasn't everything. Nor was it the only thing. But somewhere along the way it became everything, fueled, one might wonder, by some unseen but insidious indoctrination of corporate competitive culture? When in doubt, blame corporate indoctrination. Maybe we handed out a few too many participation trophies, and patted a few too many last place losers on the back, because, sure enough, one way or another, we inspired the ire of America's conservative community, fearing as usual the demise of tradition. Political correctness, which began with liberal's poking fun at the artificial equality of everyone espoused in Mao's little red book, morphed from basic decency and equality into subversive assault on American core values, chief among them, the right to be rude. Political correctness became the laughing stock of mainstream America. when you've been mocked by a right wing mob, you've been mocked. Somewhere, in fact probably most everywhere, there are participation trophies sitting in the back of the closet, gathering dust, awaiting their inevitable trip to the dumpster. There are more to come; the very notion of celebrating and rewarding fun and participation is becoming about as acceptable in rough and tumble Trumpland as opening doors for other people, just because they're people.
Tuesday, November 12, 2019
Critical Thinking
I CONSIDER MYSELF a basically positive person, with a healthy dose of healthy skepticism. Skepticism is crucial for human progress. Without skepticism, without questioning everything, people will believe anything. Prolonged skepticism can lead, however, to cynicism, a negative attitude which is far less productive, to the point of being detrimental to progress. We are indeed entitled to our own opinions, but not to our own facts, which can be verified or disproven empirically. Trump is dangerous because of all his many lies, and even more dangerous when he calls proven facts which don't suit him "fake news". American culture needs more skepticism, a good healthy dose of it, and less cynicism. At my local senior center where I volunteer, a co worker, during a political discussion, decided to rise above it all, a popular tactic. Referring to our political leaders, she exclaimed: "I think we should just throw the whole bunch out!" As if we haven't all heard that before. Its way too cynical also. And simplistic, with not enough analysis. Obviously, every politician should be evaluated on his or her merits, individually, and obviously, its better if nobody stays in any office for too long. They're not all bad. One of my senior comrades, summarizing history, asserted that "greed pretty much explains it all". Greed is indeed a big factor, and far be it for me to diminish its impact, but, I had to remind the cynic; there is much more to all of us, and therefore much more to history, than greed. Even the most cynical among us would surely have to acknowledge that much. Again, the observation was too cynical, too simplistic, too general. Simplistic, categorical thinking leads to false conclusions. it is no coincidence or mystery that the same people who believe in an all powerful anthropomorphic god in the sky and that its a good idea for all good people to carry guns tend to generally not believe in evolution or climate change. Believing in nonsense impedes one's chance of believing in reality. If the time ever comes when the human species uses its intelligence intelligently and wisely, its survival chances, and the conditions in which it survives will be far better. But that, as they say, is a mighty big "if".
Monday, November 11, 2019
Celebrating Peace
WORLD WAR ONE was such a nightmare that when it ended, the joy and celebration inspired the idea to create a new holiday in honor of the end of the war to end all wars, "Armistice Day". A day to celebrate peace. The war was so horrible, so destructive compared to earlier predictions, and its end so wildly wonderrul, such a great salvation, that it was widely and mistakenly believed that all the major differences between nations had finally been solved permanently, and humankind was ushering in a permanent peace. The eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, a time of peace. Then the holiday morphed into veterans day. The Armistice part of it, the message of peace through negotiation, agreement, and treaty, peace for all time, got lost in the shuffle, as it became obvious that there was no such thing. Celebrating peace seemed silly in a world filled with war. Better to honer to vets as heroes, and honor the wars as glorious, noble endeavors, rather than celebrate a nonexistent peace. It always makes us better to justify our behavior even our bad behavior. Maybe its time to reintroduce the original meaning of the holiday, the return to celebrating peace, and the hope and dream that we can attain peace permanently. What, precisely, is wrong with celebrating aspirations and hope? Veterans, Armistice, and Peace Day. Over the one hundred years since the end of World War One the trend has been for few wars, and lower death rates in war, believe it or not. Despite our seemingly war torn world, it seems that the world is less war torn than ever. this certainly says much about human nature and history, but it also gives up reason to be hopeful, about our capacity to create lasting peace. Einstein said that as long as there are people, there will be war. maybe he was wrong. It wouldn't be the first or the only time. may we always celebrate and honor our heroic military veterans, and particularly those who made the ultimate sacrifice to preserve the United States. And what better day to pay tribute to the humany capacity for living in peaceful harmony, and the eternal hope that we will someday achieve it?
Sunday, November 10, 2019
Being Careful What You Wish For
I CONFESS I hadn't seen this angle coming. But, that's what makes life interesting. The Facebook post said, roughly paraphrased: "Now that the rainbow flag is fling from government buildings, I want to see crosses and statues of the Ten Commandments on government property, and bibles and prayers in the classroom". I immediately responded: "The difference is that the rainbow flag does not represent any religion, and therefore is not prohibited by the first amendment." Then, just to be safe, I added: "Don't take my word for it. Ask a legal authority, preferably a constitutional expert." I omitted mention of the actual separation of church and state clause, assuming the person would know what the first amendment, says, which, come to think of it, you can't always do, when dealing with Americans. As far as I know, the rainbow flag, symbolizing inclusiveness, ethnically and culturally, has only been flown at a few U/S. embassies around the world, for specific reasons. I don't think it has become, or threatens to become, standard practice at government buildings and facilities. The thought occurred to me that there are probably at least one hundred million Americans, mostly conservative evangelical Christians, (the usual suspects) who agree with the idea of inserting Christianity into the government wherever possible, and ultimately turning the United States into a "christian" nation, officially, a theocracy. Historically and currently, the United States is only a Christian nation in one respect: a majority of Americans are Christians. But that's a s far as it goes. The founders passionately created a secular government entirely separate from any and all religion, for a reason. We can be certain that conservative evangelical Christian American patriots would resist violently Islam ever became the official religion of these United States of America. there are thousands of religions in the world, and in the United States. We all truly and deeply want, love, and wish to defend our great American separation of church and state, whether we fully realize it or not. All thoughtful, intelligent Christians well educated in American history understand this. Dig if you will a picture, of Christians symbols and rituals springing up everywhere, on all public property across the fruited plain. A nationwide explosion and proliferation of crosses, statues of Moses, Jesus, and God on every public lawn and park, Bible in every classroom, with no disagreements between Christian denominations about the details. You can't. You can't imagine it because its impossible. To formally, officially Christianize America would be to create a never ending war among the hundreds of Christian factions, which at fist sounds humorous and desirable, but, upon further reflection, becomes nightmarish. We want to, and thankfully do indeed live in a wonderful country in which all religious expression of all religions is permitted and protected, and none of it is prevented, nor endorsed and adopted by the government. God Bless the United States of Secular America.
Saturday, November 9, 2019
Warning the MAGA Peeps
THIS WILL HAVE TO SERVE as my final warning to my friends and fellow Americans. To wit; the more devoutly you support president Trump, the more likely I am to disrespect and despise you, and the less likely I am to respect or associate with you. Fair warning. To support Trump at all at this point is, to my reasoning, simply unacceptable. The latest, you may have heard, is that he is required by the justice system to pay two million to charity, Trump having confessed to white collar crime. He paid, reports have it, calling it a "donation" to save face, which, at this point, is arguably impossible. Trump has a lifetime of white collar crime under his belt, which is only now being thoroughly investigated, and which in all likelihood will at length result in the current president's incarceration. For instance, the Trump Foundation, now defunct by court order, was evidently never a charitable enterprise, as advertised, and in fact was never anything other than a money laundering operation, the money in question being raised by donations under false pretenses. While running for president, Trump raised millions for veterans, or so he said, then bragged about his great patriotism, you may recall. Then, he directed the money, through the Trump Foundation, into his campaign, for which he should be imprisoned, not merely fined. By all indications, this is neither fake news nor a conspiratorial set up engineered by some fictitious "deep state", Democrats, the mainstream liberal media, the Chinese, extraterrestrials, et al. This is Trump, committing crimes. Can you imagine anything more reprehensible or traitorous than pretending to raise money through donations for veterans, then giving it to yourself instead? Fraud, and embezzlement, all rolled into one. Throw in the Ukraine blackmail scheme, the obstruction of justice, collusion with the Russians, massive violations of the emoluments clause, and a thousand other crimes, and we are confronted with the dreadful specter of a president so evil that to support him is evil. Hence my warning to all Trump supporters, friend and fellow citizen alike: stop support him now, and throw his criminal ass under the bus. The president must be impeached, removed, indicted, tried, convicted,and incarcerated. Beyond that, let god control what happens, as a final gesture of respect to Trump's devout Christian evangelical supporters. You'll find dumping Trump infinitely easier than clinging to a sinking ship, all stressed out, knowing full well that by so doing you are selling your soul to the devil, forfeiting any remaining claim to human decency, and good citizenship, allowing your pride to destroy your integrity and your very soul. You're in so deep that you're afraid to back out, afraid of what other people will do and say, thinking you will be the object of scorn and ridicule. Trust me, it won't be that bad. We who are smart enough to oppose Trump are more forgiving than you might think, and we will welcome your change of heart, ever as Trump screams at you for being traitors to his glorious ass. Its your last chance to save the vountry and keep my friendship, and that's worth a lot. And who cares how mad Trump gets..at...you?
Friday, November 8, 2019
Being American
SHE CAME TO AMERICA in 1996, as a nine year old, with her parents. It bears reminding that she had no real choice but to accompany her parents, who made all the decisions, and kept a tight rein oh her. In El Salvador, their life had become hell. Their gang infested town had few job opportunities; you could only get work by either joining or pledging strict obedience to to local controlling gang. Gangster government. Wages were pathetic, and much of every paycheck was extracted by the gang as fealty. The family lived in constant fear, and already her two older brothers had been killed by gang violence. There seemed to be no hope for the future, other than escape, or death. So, her parents planned and saved what they could, and finally one spring morning they headed north. Mostly they walked, since they had sneaked out of town on foot, without any companions, who would make escape difficult, detection easy. The journey took about six weeks in its entirety, and would have taken much longer without several lucky breaks. Without several lucky breaks neither they, nor anyone else, would have made it to the Unites States at all. Much of the way they were able to get a ride, once with another friendly family, and once by paying a single man who was on his way to America. Fortunately, they never had to sell their souls to any gangs or coyotes. They easily sneaked into the country, through a hole in a fence, in the middle of the night. Legally seeking asylum or a passport had never a possibility, not in their home town, not at the border, where for their own survival they simply could not risk being caught, turned back, incarcerated, or worse. President Clinton had made it clear that he was a hawk on illegal immigration, with no pity or sympathy for them. In America they built a life, the parents got work, and she started going to school. Through persistence and hard work, they achieved upward mobility, and she turned out to be a superior student. Her study habits got her into a respected university, and into a lucrative career in corporate management, where she rapidly climbed the ladder, advancing into mid level corporate management. She managed to dodge, elude and avoid any problems due to her illegal status, and she remained a dreamer, in more ways than one. Her family developed a comfort zone, and an ongoing fear of revealing their illegal status. She married, had a family, and with her hard working successful American husband and her own career, she and her two children thrived. Now she is thirty two, a beautiful brunette with an American accent without a trace of Latino, who loves her adopted country, and thanks most Americans take it too much for granted. She has never returned to El Salvador, nor does she intend to, unless perhaps for a brief visit. Though arguably as productive if nor more so than ninety nine percent of "native Americans", she remains an illegal immigrant, with a hidden life of sorts. Under Trump, her chances of clearing the situation up seem dim, if not impossible. Though she could be deported at any moment, she at least has the satisfaction of knowing that her children at least for the moment, are legal birthright American citizens, and that her husband could remain behind in America to raise them. She has overcome great obstacles to succeed because she works hard, makes good decisions, and lives in a great land of opportunity. Arguably, she deserves more.
Thursday, November 7, 2019
Reaching The Breaking Point
ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY PROFESSIONALS have not yet reached a consensus concerning exactly what it would take for Trump supporters to abandon their support of an obviously corrupt president, corrupt by his own, unwitting admission. (he publicly called for foreign countries to investigate his political opponent for damaging information). Trump was evidently on the right rack when he proclaimed his capability of gunning someone gun in broad daylight without suffering any loss of popularity. With each passing day, with each passing witness, the testimony increases, the evidence accumulates, and hardens into plain, irrefutable proof that president Trump blackmailed a foreign country into assisting his reelection campaign in exchange for military assistance, using his office for personal gain, flagrantly illegal. Wednesday, 11/9, when the House hearings come to television, millions of uninformed, undecided citizens will learn a great deal, and this may push the president's popularity below any hope of recovery. Then, again, maybe not. The Trump base, somewhere in the upper thirty percentile, has hardened beyond any hope of cracking. Hitler's people went through the same process; hardening their support for their leader, and continuing it even beyond the war, and into hiding amid the ruins of post war starvation, devastation, and mass migrations of millions of refugees across Europe. There are simply a brand of sycophants who insist on going down with the ship. Nixon comes to mind. Initially the prospect of his impeachment had far less public support than Trump's impending impeachment does. But when the vast abundance of evidence of his shenanigans came across the fruited plain via television, the tide turned, and Trickie Dickie bailed, just as his supporters already had. television was the catalyst which broke the camels back, back then. the difference, then and now, is that Nixon was not a cult leader, the fuhrer at the head of a vast right wing extremist populist uprising, which came to power with the power of a coup, with foreign assistance. Donald Trump is an illegitimate president, who was elected illegally, a de facto coup, and who while in office, starting the day of his inauguration, has engaged in a monstrous variety of unethical and illegal activities. And yet,his support remains firm, albeit a minority. First, he and they calime he did noting wrong, and his accusers are witch hunting. then, confronted with proof, they insist that even though he may have done something improper, there was nothing seriously illegal about it. The final step is to accept the illegality, but to insist that the crime does not rise to impeachable standards. Plainly, these folks, the forever trumpers, are determined to go down with the ship, and to maybe even cling to a bit of floating flotsam, singing their sieg heils as they slowly sink beneath the murky swamp, and down into the abyss.
Wednesday, November 6, 2019
Going To the Movies, and Escaping
AT MY LOCAL SENIOR CENTER, tucked into the green hills of the American south, Thursday afternoon is movie day. Right after lunch, before they all leave. I have to rush to get done with the dishes. The girls bring out the popcorn machine they found cobweb encrusted in the storage shed. Safe,y ensconced, El Director slapped in "The Amityville Horror". By this time I had done the dishes, and a little work on my computer. I was just logging off when all hell broke loose. Seventy five percent of the audience, church ladies, stormed out, summarily, while the director came racing in, hysterical, screaming apologies. within ten minutes a couple had gotten naked, and begun making love. Wrong version. When everybody had settled down, and the original version of the movie loaded, my interest "peaked", and I decided to join the party. First, I got my popcorn, which was delicious. Then, I settled in next to the four remaining ladies. I like to hang with intrepid, forgiving, open minded people. Within ten minutes, teh same couple (or was it?) began making out, but kept their clothes on. I decide to have a little fun, to get into the evident spirit of the day.Up I bolted, and proclaimed: "We need another movie! This one's no better than the other one!" It drew laughter. A couple more one liners, and I realized I had actually conveyed the false impression of being a prude. Oh well. Worse things can happen. Much worse. The local university, from which my father graduated law school in 1940 before serving int he war, he once described as "an oasis in the midst of a vast cultural wasteland". And he wasn't just whistling Dixie. There are memes out and about to the eff,ct that we can disagree and still respect each other, and treat each other with civility. I'm all down with the civility part, but respect I have trouble with, not to end a sentence with a preposition, a bad practice, up with which I will not put. I have low standards, but I have them, they're mine, and their all I've got. If you don't believe in don't accept their reality of evolution by natural selection, and climate change by human behavior, I don't respect you. Willful ignorance is has no excuse, unless you'r in denial of your time in Afghanistan, Iraq, or an E5 tornado. NO, this is not my insistence that my view point is the only correct one, and everyone should agree with me, so you right wingers needn't even try pulling that one on me. I am the intelligent, educated, tolerant , open minded one, and you, alas, are not. To worship a book, and to believe it even when it says that the world is flat and the stars are holes in the sky is simply not acceptable. You're the one who needs to change, grow, and improve, and abandon your willful ignorance, Also, the time for climate change deniers to straighten up and fly right has long since arrived. Basic science proves God made evolution and human made climate change as well as it does Newtonian physics, Euclidian geometry, and rocker science. If they had just given the original movie a few more minutes, we might have gotten to see some more good sex, and who knows, maybe a better flick.
Monday, November 4, 2019
Being A Good Traitor
LET'S FACE IT. We Americans know all about how to be traitors. We're good at it, and always have been. After all, we started early, by necessity, or so we like to think. We were being treated so badly by the British that we had no choice, so we are taught. We never say much about the colonial American aristocratic land owning powerful elite's desire to assume actual ownership and control of the country; the replacement of one governing aristocrat, the traditional, "legal" one, and another one, an upstart. And in fact, all of Jefferson's complaints enumerated in the declaration of independence are perfectly valid, perfectly true. And yet, in many ways, British colonial rule of the American colonies was soft, gentle, beneficent, hands off, by comparison to how the British governed their own people. The ocean had its advantages. We Americans had to be talked into revolting, and nearly half couldn't be, called "loyalists" or "Tories", and ended up siding with the British, meaning that over one hundred thousand left the country, and went to places like Canada and the Caribbean. From the British point of view, the Americans were traitors. Objectively, they were. Traitors to their country. the same was true in the Civil War; the founders and citizens of the Confederate States of America were traitors. A second vicious revolutionary war started and waged by traitors. Its happened many times; groups of Americans, or individual Americans, turning against the United States. During the Civil war, at leas one country in every Confederate states refused to join the Confederacy; traitor's traitors. Every few years you hear about some country in some far western or southern state wanting to declare its independence from its state and the United States, adn form its own country. there is and always has been a strong independence movement in Texas, which of course was an independent country for ten years, 1835 to 1845, after being a colony of five different superpower empires for centuries. There have been African-american secession movements, justifiably,and of course many native-american nations exist within the United States, a technically independent but in reality controlled by the American government, a hodge podge nation rife with conflict, division, and separation. So maybe this time we will split up into a Republican America, and a Democratic America. Who are the traitors? All of us?
Sunday, November 3, 2019
Creating The Perfect Firestorm
EVERY YEAR, the wildfires which consume California consume larger portions of it, or so it certainly seems. The wet and dry cycles which the climate bestows upon this land mass which came floating in from the ocean and collided with the continent hundreds of millions of years ago, are nearly as ancient as the collision. Wet and dry seasons, and a veritable plethora of earthquakes are, alas, California's heritage, its destiny. Nonetheless, the dry season gradually becomes longer, and drier, as climate change inexorably changes the climate of the entire world. A perfect storm, a combination of circumstances, produces this tragic situation. First, of course, is climate change. Then too, the sheer abundance of ill advised human construction; cities and housing projects built where these firs are most common, only exacerbates the loss of property and life. Unwise construction methods, predicated on maximizing profit rather than minimizing fire hazards, plays a large role. Houses are literally built to burn, that less money money be burned building them. California, perhaps more than any other state on the union, is replete with invasive species of flora; plant species which do not belong there, have been imported for aesthetic and other reason, which multiply, crowd our native plant life, and fill the land with a tangle of flammable bio mass. and, there is much truth to the oft mentioned lack of forest clearing, the tendency of land management policies to place too great an emphasis on preventing wildfires, rather than allowing them to burn naturally, thus clearing the land, thinning out the foliage, and in the long run reducing the flammability of the land. Above, the most serious cause of this dire situation is not what people do, but what they have not done. We the people have failed to develop desalination and water management policies which could and would replenish the water content in the soil, depleted by too mush use by to many people. funding for fire management measure has been lacking, and even now the Trump administration is reducing federal aid to California, based on the president's misguided belief that the entire blame belongs to the state's policies, and ignoring the huge impact of climate change, in which the president famously, like most of his misguided supporters, famously do not believe. The president is conspicuous by his silence during the current conflagration. Trump does not like California, for good reason. The progressive people of the state despise him at the highest levels in the country; the west coast and the east coast oppose the president by huge margins, while his support comes from the conservative center of the country. For this to underpin the president's refusal to address California's fire plagued woes simply reveals yet another form of presidential criminal behavior, among the many others, well known. Like solutions to the nation's other pressing problems, solutions to California's dilemma will beyond doubt come from progressive thinkers and politicians, not the intellectually moribund reprobates on the far right.
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