I’m not worried … yes, I am … no, not really … well, maybe a little.

lead_960The prospect of Donald Trump being elected president in 2016 doesn’t worry me at all.

He would be assassinated by the shadow government within 90 days of taking office.

Uh-oh!

That would mean that whatever half-wit buffoon — the bad clone on the ticket as his Vice-President, an even worse version of Mr. Trump himself — would now be in charge.

Would the self-declared-above-the-law slime balls in the CIA risk a “double-header” by taking out in such short order whatever unfortunate fool now sat in the Oval Office?

Of course, they would!  Accidents happen.  Fish bone stuck in the throat at a state dinner. Falling down the steps exiting Air Force One, splattering brains all over the tarmac.

The American public is so gullible.  No worries!  Problem solved.

But wait!  This time the shadow boys push things too far.  People are not just suspicious. The lights go on.  They figure it out!

“This is bullshit!” becomes the meme of the day.  Only it lasts for months and months.

And citizens are armed to the teeth!  Over 300,000,000 firearms in private hands.

Really scary!

Revolution anyone?

Naw . . . just one incredible made-for-TV shootout!  People dropping like flies.  Everyone starts living under their beds.  No one is safe anymore.

Hmm.  Anymore?  When is the last time we felt safe?

Millard_Fillmore._Waist_length,_seated_-_NARA_-_530497Who was president back then?

Millard Fillmore?

Frankly . . .

I’m a little worried.

How about you?

 

Posted in Deconstruction, Democracy, Nihilism, Political Rant, Satire | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Oratory as a Weapon of Mass Deception

Obama at UNI used to say President Obama is a great orator.

In retrospect, particularly in view of his speeches over the past two years, I would have to modify my appraisal: Mr. Obama is a mind-numbingly effective orator — with major emphasis on ‘mind-numbing’ — whose powers of persuasion are both awe-inspiring and reality-altering.

But great? I think not.

You see, great orators don’t insult their audiences by lying and using their enormous gifts to wreak havoc on the world, demean other world leaders, and generally inflict listeners with self-serving propaganda.

Great orators ennoble, enlighten, inspire!

There is so much deception, obfuscation, manipulative innuendo, faulty logic, sheer raw hypocrisy in his recent U.N. speech, I could write volumes. But it’s not worth your time or mine, since so many of the lies upon which he built this petty and self-aggrandizing show have been repeated with such relentless regularity, they are part of the accepted collective wisdom of both the American public and the government propaganda apparatus, aka the main stream media.

I’ll just throw out a few comments.

“But we cannot stand by when the sovereignty and territorial integrity of a nation is flagrantly violated. If that happens without consequence in Ukraine, it could happen to any nation gathered here today.”

Like Yemen being bombed by the U.S.-supported tyrannical government of Saudi Arabia? Like Iraq? Or Libya? Or Afghanistan? Or any of the 30+ countries the U.S. has attacked or effected regime change by proxy?

Here’s a real gem.

“It is not a conspiracy of U.S.-backed NGOs that expose corruption and raise the expectations of people around the globe; it’s technology, social media, and the irreducible desire of people everywhere to make their own choices about how they are governed.”

Oh really? One of America’s favorite ‘NGOs’ is the National Endowment for Democracy. First of all even calling it an NGO is a laugh. Everyone knows — at least in the crowd I run with — that the NED was created by the CIA and is funded by Congress. For some reason, whenever it shows up on the scene, countries become immersed in chaos and insurrection, with regime change soon to follow. The most recent victim of its handiwork is Ukraine, where it fomented the overthrow of the legitimate democraticallyelected government, then installed a chocolate puppet doll to do the bidding of the U.S.

Here the President deftly conflated bragging and threats, as in, “See how we’ve messed up things for you, Russia? If you don’t tow the line, you ain’t seen nothing yet, baby!”

“Sanctions have led to capital flight, a contracting economy, a fallen ruble, and the emigration of more educated Russians.”

Then just when I thought it was safe to stop gagging and listen further, I picked up on this.

“When a dictator slaughters tens of thousands of his own people, that is not just a matter of one nation’s internal affairs — it breeds human suffering on an order of magnitude that affects us all.”

Which is why we supplied chemical weapons to Iraq dictator Saddam Hussein in order to get the job done right back when he was one of our buddies? Which is why we overthrew the democratically-elected leader of Chile and replaced him with a brutal autocrat who then proceeded to kill tens of thousands of his people? Of course, I could go on with many more examples. But it’s tedious and pointless, as hypocrisy is apparently now considered one of the great virtues in the Empire of Chaos.

“Assad reacted to peaceful protests by escalating repression and killing that, in turn, created the environment for the current strife.”

Really? Is that the whole story? Or just the one the U.S. creates for its fairy tale version of every uprising it seeds and supports to overthrow governments it doesn’t like?

Oh yes . . . about those crazy Muslims running around beheading people, driving tens of thousands to flee their native lands and seek refuge in Europe:

“We know that ISIL — which emerged out of the chaos of Iraq and Syria — depends on perpetual war to survive.”

Like the U.S. military-industrial complex? Or the U.S. itself which can’t stop bombing countries into complying with its dictates?

US Bombing Record

Credit where credit is due, however:  Our president did stumble into the truth a few times. Thus, here is absolutely my favorite quote from his speech . . .

“On this basis, we see some major powers assert themselves in ways that contravene international law. We see an erosion of the democratic principles and human rights that are fundamental to this institution’s mission; information is strictly controlled, the space for civil society restricted. We’re told that such retrenchment is required to beat back disorder; that it’s the only way to stamp out terrorism, or prevent foreign meddling.”

. . . because it perfectly describes the United States of America, in particular the policies aggressively promoted by Mr. Obama himself.


Watch President Obama’s entire speech and judge for yourself whether this man is ever capable of doing anything but creating a smokescreen for America’s malfeasance in the world, its monomaniacal fixation with its power, its self-proclaimed right to lecture and dictate to others how the world should be run.

Posted in Deconstruction, Democracy, Political Analysis, Political Rant, War and Peace | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Promises and Platitudes vs. Contractual Commitment

Trump Campaign PromisesIn my last posting, I proposed that we as voters demand that Bernie Sanders make a clear, firm commitment toward less military, less war, less imperial misadventure, less of much that goes on in the name of “defense of the homeland”, specifically those items which are bankrupting our country and making the U.S. the enemy of the world.

Many of his supporters predictably rallied to his defense and directed me to a recent document which appears on the web site of the esteemed senator.

All well and good. I’m glad Bernie Sanders recognizes the need to “answer” to the people and explain where he stands on things.

Without getting into a lot of specifics here — I may do that in a future posting — his policy statement certainly leaves a lot of room for interpretation. It’s intentionally vague. It is the kind of public relations-oriented piece which we’ve come to expect of other lesser men and women but is not at all flattering to a self-described socialist who has taken admirable stands on many other issues. It is fraught with the sort of sweeping, noble-sounding but non-committal declarations that allowed Mr. Sanders to vote, for example, against the War in Iraq but for funding that very same war in defense appropriations bills.

Maybe that’s fine for some people but I think we should expect more.

If the country is not to be further bankrupted by endless war, then nice-sounding feel-good assurances will not cut it. We need specifics. We need details. We need accountability.

Among other things, we need to demand of Mr. Sanders and any candidate who claims to have the interests of the U.S. at heart: ending the illegal war crime of bombing countries with drones, which is just recruiting more terrorists and swelling the ranks of jihadists; closing most of the 900+ bases around the world; ending the confrontations with Russia and China; closing Guantanamo and all of the other “black sites” where we torture; firing the neocons who infect our government and foreign policy apparatus like a deadly plague; stopping all of our meddling in other countries; ending the policy of regime change which has produced anger and chaos across the globe, creating more enemies than we can ever possibly deal with; cutting the military budget by 40 or 50%, since we already spend more than 10 times what any other country in the world spends on defense.

And we need to demand it in writing using legally-binding contracts.

Or it simply won’t get done.

My strategy is not designed to target Mr. Sanders or just defense policy. In fact, it applies across the board on a host of issues — Social Security and Medicare which are both under attack, the minimum wage, debt and mortgage relief, affordable education, safer food and water, ending corporate welfare, are just some examples — critical issues where there is a lot of talk and promises from politicians but no action. It applies across the board to every individual running for federal office, Democrat, Republican, Green, Libertarian, Tea Party.

If you look at many of these areas of citizen concern, you find enormous agreement, polls reflecting consensus numbers in the 60s, 70s, 80s, even 90% of the public.

72% of American voters want a federal minimum wage
of $10.00 per hour or more.

74% of American voters are for ending
oil industry subsidies.

75% of voters want fair trade agreements protecting jobs,
workers, the environment.

76% of voters want a cut back on military spending.

76% of voters want the U.S. completely out of Afghanistan.

79% of voters want no reductions in Social Security,
70% support expanding it.

79% of voters want no reductions in Medicare.

80% of voters oppose the Citizens United Supreme Court
decision, with 65% strongly opposing it.

68% of voters think taxes on the wealthy
should be increased.

71% of voters support massive infrastructure renewal.

93% of voters want GMO labeling on their food.

There is huge disagreement alright. It’s between what the people want done and what our elected officials do!

All I’m saying is . . . this is not democracy!

Not by any stretch or any standard or any interpretation of our Constitution can you call it democracy when the people want one thing and our legislators deliver the opposite.

What I am pushing — hoping people will stick up for themselves and regain some control of their country and their own futures — is a specific method for guaranteeing on certain specific issues that our elected officials represent us and do what we want!

Is my plan radical?

At one time, the idea that America should chuck its bondage to the King of England and go it alone was radical. The suggestion we should free the slaves was radical. The outrageous idea that women should have the right to vote was radical.

My plan is no more radical that the Constitution itself. That hallowed document which everyone loves to point to but apparently very few bother to read, lays the foundation for self-government — government of the people, by the people, for the people.

It doesn’t say . . . “government for the rich and powerful and to hell with the rest of you.”

No, the idea that people should have direct say in the running of this country is only radical right now because we as citizens have become convinced that we should just sit back and let the “experts” run things, that we are powerless and should just shut up. We’ve been convinced of this by a tiny elite of rich and powerful, anti-democratic plutocrats who love having complete control of our government and our legislative bodies, who literally now own our politicians, because it serves their agenda, keeps them rich, and makes sure that nothing stands in their way of total autocratic rule.

If you are as fed up as I am at the gridlock, the shutdowns, the broken promises, the back door deals, the endless excuses, the horrifying waste of our hard-earned tax dollars that ends up lining the pockets of the already ultra-wealthy 1%, the Wall Street bankers, and the fat cats of the military-industrial complex — who keep the wars going because that keeps the profits flowing — if you are as fed up as I am at we the people always being last on the list when it comes to fixing the problems we need to tackle for America to fulfill its constitutional mandate to promote the general welfare and offer a quality life for every American, not just the filthy rich, then at least . . . LOOK AT WHAT I’M PROPOSING.

It’s different. It’s unprecedented. But it’s not very difficult and it certainly isn’t radical.

It’s a way to have REAL REPRESENTATIVE DEMOCRACY in this country.

It’s a way to have our elected officials serve us, take orders from us, get done at least some of the things we want done for a change.

My offer still stands. My strategy is explained in simple, readable language in two of my books. They are available for free. Just click on the “Contact Me” button on the right side of the page and send me a request.

If you wait for your next door neighbor and your next door neighbor waits for you and you both wait for someone else to start paying attention, we’ll never get things straightened out and America will continue its sure steady decline. The rich and powerful will eat the meal, you and I will get the crumbs that fall off the table.

Just take a few minutes. We can have the country we want and a decent future to hand down to our children and their children.

Is this too much to ask?


CC_eBook Cover_Final_200x300 “Candidate Contracts: Taking Back Our Democracy” was published middle of last year and is available worldwide from all the usual suspects:

Amazon (Kindle)  . . . amzn.to/1QJRiNZ
Amazon (Print) . . . amzn.to/1Cuq0du
Apple (iTunes) . . . apple.co/1BXnPcy
Barnes & Noble . . . bit.ly/1GpTTLq
Kobo (Indigo) . . . bit.ly/1OEI2xj
Smashwords . . . bit.ly/1B4DQCp
Direct from printer . . . bit.ly/1MGjDnN

 

!!!FFTDWD_Cover_200x300“Fighting for the Democracy We Deserve” was published this past September and also is available both in every popular ebook format and as a deluxe paperback:

Amazon (Kindle) . . . amzn.to/1VMf2Ft
Amazon (Print) . . . amzn.to/1L9SdIC
Apple (iTunes) . . . apple.co/1JD1YAg
Barnes & Noble . . . bit.ly/1ZUJUpn
Kobo (Indigo) . . . bit.ly/1IX6rO4
Smashwords . . . bit.ly/22PXWLf
Direct from printer . . . bit.ly/1i7ISFM

 

Posted in Political Analysis, Political Rant, War and Peace | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

What part of “Listen to me!” didn’t you understand?

Bernie and the BombIt astounds me how wimpy and servile voters are. Dude, we’re Americans! We’re supposed to be independent, tough, ruggedly individualistic, exceptional!

No one pushes us around! Unless they want their asses kicked!

Right.

So why is it when the election cycle rolls around and as voters we have to start listening to the professional windbags courting our approval, we let the candidates tell us what they’re going to do when they get elected?

Excuse me! Shouldn’t we be telling them what they’ll be doing if they get elected?

Voters seem to have forgotten how much power they collectively hold in their hands. The simple fact is, if we don’t like what we see, we don’t have to vote for someone. And if we don’t vote for them, they are out of a job.

Let me talk directly to you progressives out there — since the odds that a conservative or even centrist is visiting my web site are pretty nil — and discuss a perfect example of the kind of surrender that has perpetuated the powerlessness we all complain about, i.e. not getting our elected officials to listen to us and begin serving us instead of the 1%.

Understandably, we lefties are encouraged by the rise in popularity of Bernie Sanders.

His campaign is certainly a much-welcome breath of fresh air next to both the belligerent bombast of the certifiably insane Republican presidential candidates, and the slippery shape-shifting rhetoric of Hillary the Terminator, the Democrat’s heavy puncher in the neocon-driven cage fight to decide who has the most expedient blue print for incinerating the planet and destroying all living things in the nuclear holocaust of WWIII.

Why is Sanders gaining traction?

Because unlike everyone else, he’s addressing bread-and-butter issues, the challenges which affect the daily lives of most Americans. He’s talking about better jobs, increasing income, reducing wealth inequality, rebuilding our industrial base, bringing factories and jobs back to America, improving health care, education, making college affordable, etc.

Unfortunately . . . Sanders is NOT TALKING ABOUT ending unnecessary wars, reducing the defense budget, reversing the self-destructive pursuit of American empire, ending the monopoly control of foreign policy and promotion of military adventurism by the military-industrial complex, halting the unconstitutional citizen surveillance by the NSA, CIA, FBI and other security agencies, or ending the fraudulent War on Terror.

The simple truth is, all of his noble aspirations about improving the day-to-day lives of the majority of Americans will come to naught unless the militarization of American society and the imperialist agenda of world domination is reversed. As long as the current military mindset of Washington DC prevails, there will never be any money to address the needs of American citizens, nor will it ever be a priority. There will always be another bogeyman, terrorist group, rogue nation, another war, another “humanitarian intervention” to pursue. You and I, the everyday Americans who fund all of these illegal, immoral misadventures and self-destructive policies, will always be last on the list. Not even in the kitchen, much less on the back burner.

Whether Mr. Sanders is willfully ignorant of this reality, or whether he’s just confused, it’s up to us to set him straight.

Here’s what we say . . .

“Mr. Sanders, your intentions are good. You want to help the majority of American citizens enjoy a decent life. That’s very nice. But you’re delusional if you think that’s going to happen with an out-of-control military and a foreign policy built around confrontation and conquest. You want to be president and we want you to be president. But here’s the deal. Unless you change your positions on defense and foreign policy, you are not getting our vote. It’s your choice. You come around and stop all of this insanity, we’ll back you 100%. If you don’t, you can say ‘Hi’ to Hillary when she walks by you at the Democratic convention on her way to the podium to make her acceptance speech.”

Yes, this is playing hardball.

But you know what? If we don’t use our right to vote to our advantage, then there’s not much point in having it. We’re just puppets pretending we live in a democracy.

Now you might ask . . .

Is there a way to get this message to Mr. Sanders?

Glad you asked.

I have a clear, completely bulletproof, step-by-step strategy for doing exactly that.

It’s contained in my two books, Candidate Contracts: Taking Back Our Democracy and the abridged version of the same set of plans, Fighting for the Democracy We Deserve.

Am I trying to sell you a book?

Yes . . . but no.

If you are too cheap to buy either, or you simply can’t afford it, give me your email address and I’ll send you a free PDF copy. (Contact button is on the right side of this page.)

Does it get easier than that?

Take a few minutes here and save your country from the tyranny of the rich and powerful.

Your children will thank you.


CC_eBook Cover_Final_200x300 “Candidate Contracts: Taking Back Our Democracy” was published middle of last year and is available worldwide from all the usual suspects:

Amazon (Kindle)  . . . amzn.to/1QJRiNZ
Amazon (Print) . . . amzn.to/1Cuq0du
Apple (iTunes) . . . apple.co/1BXnPcy
Barnes & Noble . . . bit.ly/1GpTTLq
Kobo (Indigo) . . . bit.ly/1OEI2xj
Smashwords . . . bit.ly/1B4DQCp
Direct from printer . . . bit.ly/1MGjDnN

 

!!!FFTDWD_Cover_200x300“Fighting for the Democracy We Deserve” was published this past September and also is available both in every popular ebook format and as a deluxe paperback:

Amazon (Kindle) . . . amzn.to/1VMf2Ft
Amazon (Print) . . . amzn.to/1L9SdIC
Apple (iTunes) . . . apple.co/1JD1YAg
Barnes & Noble . . . bit.ly/1ZUJUpn
Kobo (Indigo) . . . bit.ly/1IX6rO4
Smashwords . . . bit.ly/22PXWLf
Direct from printer . . . bit.ly/1i7ISFM

 

Posted in Corporatism, Democracy, Political Analysis, War and Peace | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

What Passes for Rationality in the Modern World

gunfight“If you pull your trigger, my gun will instantly fire as well.”

“Yeah, I know what you mean. If you pull your trigger my gun will go off too.”

“My arm’s getting tired.”

“Let’s get this over with.”

Appropriately named MAD — Mutual Assured Destruction — it has been in place since the 1950s and constitutes a strategy of deterrence whereby both Russia and the U.S. refrains from using their vast nuclear arsenals because both know their nations and probably the rest of the world would be destroyed. This bilateral suicide pact has been keeping the world “safe” for over half a century.

Now the U.S. in its quest for ultimate superiority and global supremacy is chipping away at it, installing ABM systems on Russia’s borders, literally creating a powerful incentive for them to “get this over with”.  It literally makes it a rational choice for each side to get a jump on the other and by initiating a pre-emptive strike.

I don’t think Russia will hit the launch buttons. Despite all of the venomous anti-Russian propaganda and Putin-bashing going on right now in the U.S., Russia has been militarily a defensive nation for several hundred years. This is also true of China. Especially compared to the U.S. and its allies, both Russia and China have been notably unaggressive in their pursuit of power and standing in the world.

That’s not to say either nation will cower before the chest-thumping of America’s relentless pursuit of military superiority and world domination. Without any doubt, given what both countries have suffered historically at the hands of aggressors both in the Asia and the Europe, one can be absolutely certain they will stand their ground.

Yet, building on its almost perfect record of losing every conflict it has either started or been involved with since WWII, the U.S. is creating the conditions for confrontation with China with its “pivot to Asia“, and pushing all the wrong buttons by starting the conflict in Ukraine, then prompting a number of countries on Russia’s borders to station missiles and augment their military against an imagined threat of Russian aggression.

I’m not going to not pull punches here. Obama, Biden, Kerry, Clinton before him, and the entire rat pack of power-crazed imperialists are driving the America and the world toward war — the war to end all wars, because it will end everything.

Hasn’t the world had enough conflict, destruction and carnage?

Do any of these people read history?

Is there any way to explain all of the self-sabotaging maneuvering going on right now?

Let’s look at this with the the clarity and objectivity you and I have by living outside the Washington DC bubble and imperious fantasy world of our neocon government.

Who in their right mind would come up with MAD, then destabilize it with policies which replace its precarious, paranoid, hair-trigger brinkmanship with more confrontation and a renewed arms race?

Aah . . . maybe I’m on to something!

Who in their right mind . . .?

Nuclear Forces in the World

Posted in Deconstruction, Nihilism, Political Analysis, War and Peace | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Fighting for the Democracy We Deserve

!!!FFTDWD_Cover_200x300Everybody is busy. I understand that.

Finding the time to read a book is a challenge.

So I am doing my best to make is easy.

My latest effort is to condense down to 56 pages the essence of my ideas for taking our democracy back from the plutocrats, having the voice of the people heard again, and putting our country back on track toward achieving a good life for all Americans, not just the privileged few.

My proposals are not difficult. But they are different than anything else around. Believe me I know. I read hours and hours every day. What do I see? A lot of head-scratching, pining, wishing, whining, growling, howling, blaming, shaming, denigration, screaming, and vitriolic abuse.

It’s a veritable grouse-fest out there!

In spite of all of the speculating, bloviating, bellyaching and bombast, there is one thing that is conspicuously absent . . .

Solutions!

Remember those? We have problems and they go away because of . . . solutions.

I’m not saying I have all the answers.

But I do have a detailed plan for replacing the do-nothing, pay-for-play clown-puppets who are now in office. You know who they are. They’re the ones who smile and thank you for voting them into their cushy jobs, then go to Washington DC and ignore you.

What’s the simple truth? Our democracy is broken. We don’t have a democracy anymore!

And guess what? None of the other problems get solved until we fix that.

I can only do what I can do. Which is put it out there. I’m not going to beg people to give this the attention it deserves.

Fighting for the Democracy We Deserve offers a real plan.

56 pages. How long does it take to read 56 pages?

Still too long?

Be patient. I’m working on a version that fits on one side of a match box.

After that, my final dramatic attempt to trim it down will be to fit it on a grain of rice.

We eat a lot of rice here in Japan.


Fighting for the Democracy We Deserve was just published a couple days ago. But it is available now both as a Kindle ebook and in print.

HAPPY-READER-300x200Amazon (Kindle) . . . amzn.to/1VMf2Ft
Amazon (Print) . . . amzn.to/1L9SdIC
Apple (iTunes) . . . apple.co/1JD1YAg
Barnes & Noble . . . bit.ly/1ZUJUpn
Kobo (Indigo) . . . bit.ly/1IX6rO4
Smashwords . . . bit.ly/22PXWLf
Direct from printer . . . bit.ly/1i7ISFM

Let’s fix the mess this country is in.

 

Posted in Books, Deconstruction, Democracy | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Just a theory . . .

Can you imagine?  Many ancient cities and monuments were built by dragging enormous blocks of stone on sleds.  It took hundreds of slaves to move giant boulders and huge slabs of cut rock into position.

Then someone suggested putting logs under the sleds, permitting a reduced number of slaves to push the incredibly heavy pieces along, or the same number of slaves to move the load much more quickly.  This also allowed transporting even more monstrous blocks of cut stone and other bulky components. Some of the great wonders of the world came out of this simple suggestion, which seems obvious to us now.

Who thought of that?  Some inventive member of the royal court?  Maybe one of the slave foremen who was trying to score some points with the king?

Who subsequently made the astonishing mental leap to create the wheel?  To make a large disk, drill a hole in the center, mount it on a long shaft attached to the “sled”?

Was it some cosmic thinker?

Maybe it was a slave who thought it might be his ticket to freedom. You can imagine him getting 50 lashes for dilly-dallying, drawing his theory for revolutionizing transportation for the entire future of mankind, in the sand with a stick . . .

“Listen, I have this idea for making . . . Ow! . . . Damn!  That really hurts! . . . It’s just a theory but . . . AAAAAH! . . .”

My latest political book came out June 7.  To put it mildly, it’s been an interesting couple months.

I’ve sent out over 900 copies. The book is a step-by-step plan for radical electoral reform, designed specifically to address the pandemic corruption among our elected politicos. It outlines in detail a real alternative to the two-party monopoly which has crippled our system. These copies went to independent political candidates and campaign managers, party campaign strategists, political analysts, academicians, pundits, journalists, opinion makers, bloggers, across a wide diversity of institutions __ colleges and universities, think tanks, media outlets, local and national political organizations.

I can’t say the response is very encouraging.

Most people don’t have time or are simply not interested in something outside-the-box and paradigm-shifting. Big ideas are the stuff of lunatics or delusionals. Everyone knows that change crawls along like a turtle and the hares should be put on Ritalin.

One moderately famous activist __ most progressives would know him, as he is involved in a lot of grass roots work and is regularly published in the media outlets of the left __ while tearing me a new anal sphincter, pointed out all of the ridiculous flaws and dead ends he could see in my worthless ideas. In a series of several long emails, he demolished my plan point-by-point, taking down one idea after another, condemning it all as just more of the same stuff that he typically finds in “these kinds of books”.

Of course, none of the ideas he so devastatingly ripped to shreds actually appeared in my book.  He had clearly not read it, or any portion of it.  The ideas he found easy to dismiss were the ones he assumed were there, I guess by looking at the title and the book cover.

When I pointed this out to him, I was accused of being obnoxious and too sensitive to criticism.  The capper was accusing me in no uncertain terms of being out-of-control, hysterical, and going ballistic.

Granted, I’m not by any stretch a master of diplomacy. But I didn’t think that telling him that he might want to actually read the book before wasting any more of his or my time carrying on about how worthless it was, would be considered unreasonable or impolitic.

He concluded six very long, detailed emails by saying whatever the particulars of my strategy might be, it was “just a theory”.

Just a theory?

What is that supposed to mean?

A theory.

You mean like drilling a hole in a large disk, mounting it on an axle?

Am I comparing my approach to electoral reform to something as profound and truly history-shaping as the invention of the wheel?

Of course not. Maybe I’m more like the guy at the bottom of a lake who suggested making boats out of concrete instead of wood.

But . . .

How will we ever know if we don’t try?

How will we see any progress if we don’t look at new ideas, fresh approaches?

How does anyone new get heard when “established” experts go off like a cluster bomb when anyone encroaches on the staked-out territory of their self-proclaimed expertise?

Having said that . . . let me finish on a more positive note.

Other than a few very negative responses like the one I just described, and the 99% of those 900+ who didn’t respond at all, I did get some encouragement.

I’m not a name-dropper, so I’m not going to give you names.

But a very well-known government whistle-blower, certainly famous in circles of people concerned about the errant ways of the CIA and NSA on torture and spying, read my book cover-to-cover and said this:

“It is absolutely outstanding — a public service, really.  You made it analytic, yet easy to understand, logical, and convincing. Well done.”

Another individual whose name the vast majority of Americans would know, who is widely respected as a progressive fighter and a fierce advocate for peace, a gentleman who served his country for most of his life, and has even run for president, called me from Washington DC and we talked for twenty minutes. He said my ideas were promising, that the kind of creative and unique thinking I brought to the difficult challenges of electoral reform and restoring representative democracy, were quite welcome and certainly valuable. He said that typically now, many established thinkers were locked into methodologies that didn’t work. Dramatic change would only come from dramatic and bold new ideas.

I’m not going to pretend it didn’t feel good to get some positive feedback, especially from two individuals who I respect and admire on a lot of different levels.

At the same time __ and I sincerely mean this __ a nice pat on the back is not what I’m looking for.  Approval is great but it’s not what drives me to do the enormous amount of work that goes into a book like this, or even writing my political blogs and magazine articles.  There’s much more:

I’d like to see some serious changes in both the way we see things and the way government does things.

I’d like to see people become inspired again to get involved, particularly young people who mostly don’t vote or believe that politics is worth their time and attention.

I’d like to see the cynicism about the potential for change to be replaced with genuine hope and a positive vision for the future.

I’d like to make a constructive and enduring contribution to discussions and debates, be one of the voices which injects energy and fresh ideas into the national conversation.

But then I am sometimes prompted to ask . . . what national conversation?

It seems like everyone is talking. No one is listening.

Is citizen engagement possible when so many of those we look to for leadership themselves are not engaged?

Is it possible for groups of people working together __ and there are many phenomenal, highly motivated activist organizations these days doing their best, trying to get America back on track, attempting to shape a better future for themselves and generations to come __ to force our leaders to change their ways?

Is it possible for one citizen to make a difference anymore?

Or is that just a theory?

Posted in Books, Creativity, Deconstruction, Democracy, Political Analysis, Social Commentary | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Beauty . . . is everywhere!

I often jokingly say . . .

“Beauty is in the eyelids of the beholder.”

There is an element of truth in this. It suggests that the world is sometimes such an ugly, offensive place, we must resort to projecting within our mind’s eye an imagined reality, creating a beauty that’s not really there but meets our craving for visual delight.

I just returned from three weeks in Scandinavia, the fulfillment of a lifelong yearning to see this unique part of the world.

A few of those days were spent in Norway, and I am convinced that it may be the most beautiful country in the world. The photo at the head of this blog is the Geirangerfjord, which is indescribable __ even the above picture can’t begin to capture the breathtaking majesty of this phenomenal place.

Since my return home, I’ve introduced into my routine something new. I’ve started to climb a small mountain __ maybe 1100 feet __ three times a week.

Besides improving my stamina, it has also resulted in a profound epiphany.

This is the view from the top . . .

If you have a good arm, you could throw a rock and hit my house from up here. It is less than 3/4 of a mile from my doorstep to the trail head and only takes a few minutes to get there on my bike.

Here are some other highlights of the hike, which takes about an hour round trip.

Getting back to the epiphany . . .

When I was in Africa working for a number of NGOs, we would visit various local organizations which were giving much-needed help to area residents. This is a photo from a visit to an AIDS/HIV orphanage.

Like the other 120 children there, this little girl was HIV positive. In this region __ the poorest, most-backward sub-county in Uganda __ that is a death sentence.  This lovely, innocent child is probably dead now.  She took a special liking to me, was so giggly and full of life at the time, full of the blind optimism of youth.

It’s heartbreaking to think about.

In any case, on my official visits, I was usually asked to sign an organization’s guest book. On one of my walks up the mountain the other morning, I remembered what I used to always write above my signature . . .

“There is beauty everywhere.”

In the midst of the worst squalor and unconscionable living conditions, immersed in the uncertainty and despair of the most hopeless situations, one can find beauty.

Though I’m glad I did, I didn’t have to fly 5,200 miles for a view that would take my breath away after all.

It was right down the street.

Posted in Philosophy, Social Commentary, Spiritual, Travel | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Donald Knows Best

It’s obvious why everyone loves Donald Trump. He’s saying the right things and people finally have someone speaking their minds. He’s spewing the ignorant, hateful, ill-informed, and entirely irrational stuff a lot of folks have been thinking but were too embarrassed to say themselves.

Hillary’s handlers had her saying the right things too, but there’s a reason why she did not resonate.  That’s because just too many could see she’s a pathological liar, a political chameleon, a psychopathic warmonger, and a self-aggrandizing opportunist.  And those are actually her pluses. Things went downhill from there.  Just like her poll numbers, before she finally bit the dust in the election.

Granted, Donald Trump isn’t the sharpest needle in the haystack.

But the office of president is a team effort. Thus, what Grand Canyon-size deficiencies the master of the comb-over now brings to the job can readily be offset by making the right Cabinet appointments.

Thus, I’ve taken the liberty of putting together the Donald Trump dream team. They all coincidentally are named Donald, which in a twisted way assures absolute transparency. Whatever flashes of genius come from this synergistic partnership as they lead America into a new age of peace, love, harmony, respect, and national pride, we’ll always know:

“It was Donald’s idea.”

The corollary to that is, of course, when things go wrong they can stop blaming Vladimir Putin for everything and declare:  “It was Donald’s fault!”

Here we go . . .

Donald Sutherland:  Secretary of Bible Studies. I don’t know where he stands politically — he’s probably another closet Communist like 99% of those Hollywood liberals — or what his religious inclinations are, but look at that beard and hair!  My goodness, it’s enough to make Moses twitch with envy.

In terms of credentials, did you see him in MASH?

What a cut up!

Donald Rumsfeld:  Secretary of Known Unknowns. This probably comes as a surprise. But considering the other appointments and being entirely objective about President Trump himself, I genuinely feel his administration needs some sex appeal.  Granted, at 83, Rumsfeld probably seems like an odd choice, given the availability of Donald “Donny” Osmond.  But the fact is, Rumsfeld who was literally a sex god during the George W. Bush presidency, is still living up to his libidinous image with the ladies as “yummy Rummy” — even as his evident decay accelerates. Hey, what can I say? Like the expression goes . . . Some people have just got it, baby!

 

Donald O’Connor:  Secretary of State.  So many of our politicos are accused of dancing around the truth. Well, here’s a guy who can really dance!  Who can forget his sensational make-’em-laugh routine in “Singing In The Rain”?

Granted, this phenomenal talent has been dead for over a decade. But this is actually an advantage.  He won’t be able to wreak as much chaos and destruction, or further destroy America’s reputation in the world, as his recent maniacal predecessors.  Besides, even dead he has more charisma than John Kerry.

Donald Duck:  Secretary of the Treasury.  Okay okay. I’m stretching it here.  A cartoon character?  Actually, when it comes to things like the debt ceiling, the responsibility of shaping a coherent budget, the U.S. honoring its financial obligations, abiding by international law, or just handling the press, ‘duck’ seems to be the operating word.

Besides, after having Timothy Geitner as Secretary of the Treasury, and watching all of the other Wall Street crooks sucking up to the Obama administration, it will be refreshing to have someone looking after our nation’s financial interests who comes with no nasty baggage.  Name one major scandal involving Donald Duck, and I’ll send you my entire collection of Kajagoogoo posters.

Yo! MC Donald:  Secretary of Education in the Popular Arts.  Here’s a guy with a real solid rap sheet.  Successful entrepreneur, acclaimed and respected nutritionist, great role model, loved by the whole family — an all-around good guy!  Beyond putting a smile on reporters’ pouty little pusses during press conferences, his is the sort of “public face” America needs today across the globe to offset its standing reputation as a warmongering rogue nation.  And how can you not love this man?  It has been rumored that based on the enormous success of teaching Ebonics in the public schools, this forward-thinking adviser to President Trump will be introducing “Beginning and Advanced Rap” into the curricula of all federally-funded school districts.  Every student will receive a free rhyming dictionary, plus a 75-watt signature Kanye West beat box will be provided for every class room.

Admit it.  Isn’t this what makes America great again?  Everyone else in the world takes all this political stuff WAY TOO SERIOUSLY, whereas here in the U.S. we know that it’s all just a TV sitcom, merely another way to market more stuff, a resplendent assembly line of products we never knew we needed until we saw them on television and in YouTube ads.

Which, by the way, includes a phenomenal selection of Donald Trump tie clasps, charm bracelets, t-shirts, action figures, and bronze busts for the mantle or dining room table.

Don’t wait until it’s too late.  Once Trump takes the oath of office, the price of this stuff is going through the roof!

Posted in Deconstruction, Political Analysis, Satire, Social Commentary | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Nothing new . . . but who knew or even knows now?

I finally got around to reading Confessions of An Economic Hit Man by John Perkins. I highly recommend this book to anyone who cares about America and is concerned with the recent proliferation of events and crises which appear to be sabotaging much of what most of us hold dear about our country. I especially recommend it to people out there who have naively bought into the satisfying but quite simplistic notion that everything our country does is wonderful and altruistic, that our primary mission in the world is and has been to spread democracy, promote justice and human rights, fight for freedom and equality, that the U.S. just wants peace and only resorts to violence and military conflict as a last resort.

I do this, not to shock anyone, or pursue some malicious agenda.

I do this because humankind appears to be rushing headlong down a suicidal path which can only result in the extinction of our species, yet somehow we face our self-annihilation not with alarm and trepidation, but embrace and celebrate most of what is taking us there, with glee and joyful abandon. Actually, much of what the book talks about has been going on, unbeknownst to most of us (including myself), for a long time. And I believe the only way to turn things around and begin constructive and cooperative engagement with the rest of the world community __ if it’s not too late __ is to fully understand what the worst of these activities consists of, to openly confront what has been done in our names as U.S. citizens, and analyze what prompts such sinister pursuits, towards demanding this ugly business immediately stop.

Much of what I discovered in Confessions aligned with my already deeply held suspicions about the “purity” of our values and intentions, and my intuitive sense of the hollowness of the self-congratulatory rhetoric we disseminate as to our exceptional role in history as the nation chosen by destiny to lead.

But going far beyond those superficial impressions, Perkins’ highly readable exposition provided a thorough and clear narrative which explains, among other things, what often appear to be dubious, self-sabotaging decisions by our political leaders, decisions which seem to be at odds with the broader interests of the country. It also goes a long way toward explaining why America’s favored approach is quickly making us the most hated empire in modern times.

Our methodology is easy to grasp.  America sends out some of its finest economic advisers to developing countries in the world to recommend taking on huge loans for infrastructure development.  These are provided mostly through the IMF and World Bank.  Our advisers are referred to as EHMs, as in ‘economic hit men’, and their job is to use all sorts of highly sophisticated models, dense and incomprehensible statistics and other persuasive devices, to conjure overly-optimistic forecasts for all of the wonderful benefits of taking on highly inflated bank loans. These loans are never intended to be paid back. They are by design so onerous they guarantee default, at which time the banks go into the country and take over national assets, plunder the natural resources __ oil, gas, diamonds, precious metals __ and privatize the public services.  Essentially, the banks “repo” the country.  By the way, we have been watching this exact scenario unfold in Greece over the past couple years. Tragically, Ukraine has also bought into this shell game.

This is what imperialism looks like in the 21st Century. America is conquering the world, one country at a time, using its own wealth and powerful economic institutions to gobble up naive and unsuspecting victim countries, impoverishing their populations, enriching their oligarchic class (who get a nice cut of the initial loans but force their own citizens to pay the loan balance), stripping the wealth that could have been used to raise the countries out of poverty, and lastly gaining a permanent foothold for our military bases and further corporate exploitation.

The real kicker is that the money for these loans never arrives in the countries themselves. These deals are arranged so that the public works projects __ dams, hydroelectric plants, communication systems, and other infrastructure __ are all performed by giant American corporations like Halliburton and Bechtel. The loans go from the banks into the coffers of these behemoths, with virtually none of it trickling down to help the local populations.

So we loan the country money they can never repay, the money goes to U.S. corporations, the country defaults, we go in and plunder the nation’s resources, our already incredibly wealthy .01% who own the corporations get even richer, America ends up with another vassal state, and the people of the country sink even deeper in misery.

This is what passes for the noble work of the U.S. across our globe.

I would love to say that I admire Mr. Perkins for his “confession”. I certainly appreciate the insider view he has given into the vicious enterprise which he himself participated in and benefited from over most of his life.  He claims that he had moral issues with what he was doing over the entire course of his career. That he waited over thirty years, during which time he accumulated a sizable fortune and lived the privileged life of a high-level corporate executive, before he finally made the break from his notorious, highly destructive career as an EHM, casts a long shadow of doubt as to his honor and how much praise he deserves for his late-adopted penitent role as whistle blower.

We all make difficult choices in life, putting career before art, sometimes job before family or community service. But for most of us, the little compromises and rationalizations don’t result in the destruction of whole countries, uprooting of hundreds of thousands of people, genocide of indigenous tribes, ruination of rain forests, the poisoning and devastation of entire ecosystems, wholesale plundering of economies, the enslavement of millions of innocent individuals, or accelerating the crippling wealth inequality across the planet.

Mr. Perkins should be commended for telling his story and giving invaluable insights into the behind-the-scenes workings of U.S. foreign policy, but he certainly should not be given a pass for the decades he gave in service to such horrifying plunder, especially considering his dedication and effectiveness as a corporate sellout of the worst kind ultimately made possible this book, which will net him even more income, yet another reward for his villainous role as an economic hit man.

Posted in Banking, Books, Corporatism, Democracy, Economics, Political Analysis, War and Peace | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment