tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-151102862024-03-18T23:55:43.024-04:00Simply Left BehindThe Non-Rapturist's Guide To The Galaxy"Democrats Work For Solutions; Republicans Pray The Problem Will Go Away" - Actor212Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comBlogger6107125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-6114678217946880332021-04-23T10:36:00.005-04:002021-04-23T10:36:39.709-04:00To Old Friends<p>Yesterday, I received the jarring news that my old friend -- and friend of this blog -- <a href="http://lancemannion.com" target="_blank">Lance Mannion</a> had passed away in his home from natural causes. </p><p>His was a gentle soul, a man named David who lived and loved his family and did his level best to provide for them (along with his wife, but more on that in a bit) while sharing the stories of his days and his observations.</p><p>He was first and foremost a father and husband. Then a writer, then a teacher, then a critiquer. </p><p>I can't call him a critic because he rarely wrote about things that didn't interest him, which means an inordinate amount of his blogging, even to this day of the devolution of the blogosphere, was about his daily existence. </p><p>He continued to blog while maintaining a social media presence, which is where my friendship with him both continued and lagged. I had left the blogosphere but remained on Facebook. </p><p>His posts, both at his site and on Facebook, were wonderfully trivial and homey. In the face of the challenges life had thrown at him, that's saying a lot. </p><p>See, it's easy to sit and complain, expounding on how life gave you lemons but forgot to give you a squeezer for lemonade, but that was not Lance's style. He'd mention something -- his wife's brain trauma, his son's learning disorder -- and it was done. He didn't have to tell us the weight of the world was on his shoulders. He showed us. </p><p>He was antithetical to the Kardashian Society we've surrounded and enveloped ourselves with. He could have been an influencer but chose not to and in so doing, became a greater influencer than the world deserved. </p><p>When I was working full time, and blogging was a distraction, I had a handful of sites I'd visit regularly, even daily: Wonkette, Lawyers Guns & Money, World-O-Crap.</p><p>And Lance Mannion. </p><p>That's the company I held him in: funny, informative, off-beat, and all three at the same time. </p><p>And now he's gone. No more "early morning coffee on the porch watching the mist dissolve". No more notes about Pops Mannion, his beloved father who died a few years back, or Oliver (his son) to The Blonde, the irrepressible and alluring Mrs M. </p><p>He could have complained about the plumbing disaster, or helping his family through yet another health crisis, and lobbied for more. Instead, he gave with little thought of what he'd get in return. </p><p>So many of the people we admire and respect have that kind of presence in our lives. They give. And give. And give. </p><p>And in the void that follows in their wake, we wonder how those who received will survive. </p><p>I am especially concerned for his family. Mrs M cannot hold a job and so it's on the two sons to take care of things. The friends of Lance have set up a <a href="https://www.gofundme.com/f/lance-mannion-has-died-and-his-family-needs-help?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=p_cp%20share-sheet&fbclid=IwAR0-RbHdIATMMPC20iJcLbhBhAwC36rbu2wv60MdsSqwn9gV1Fx0s3oHMPo" target="_blank">GoFundMe</a>, a tribute to just how unfair life can be since a man with as much talent and majesty as Lance shouldn't have to worry about providing for his family after he's gone. </p><p>But Lance would explain that societal shortcoming better than I ever could. </p><p>Godspeed, David. You gave me -- us -- so much of yourself. I felt it only appropriate to dust off Blogger and write a post in your memory. </p>Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-46756804260169242072016-12-29T11:02:00.002-05:002016-12-29T11:02:53.583-05:00Thoughts on InnocenceIf 2016 was anything, it was a watershed year that tested the concept of innocence.<br />
<br />
From the tragic and shocking deaths of David Bowie and Prince, to the Chicago Cubs winning the World Series for the first time in over a century, through the election of Donald Trump and right into the deaths of Carrie Fisher (and now her mother, Debbie Reynolds), America was forced to grow up a little.<br />
<br />
I'll focus on the last bit in a moment. I want to explain why I think that.<br />
<br />
America has had a sense of innocence and the concomitant sense of superiority ever since the Revolution that created us. We are one of two nations that span an entire continent from sea to sea (Australia, and sorry Canada, but Alaska cockblocks you on this) and that insulation has protected the citizenry of America from the ravages of war, with one or two exceptions (the Revolution -- including the War of 1812 -- of course, and the Civil War).<br />
<br />
We've been able to grow and prosper without a thought to who might come along and take it. This singular insularity has allowed us to create a culture that has to look inwardly in order to find enemies. If there is a single reason why xenophobia has such a long and strange history in this nation built on the backs of the immigrants, it's that fact: no one worries about Canada or Mexico invading us.<br />
<br />
Unlike, say, France, which has always had to worry about the Germans, or the English or the Spanish.<br />
<br />
Effectively, any damage that America has suffered has generally come at the hands of her own people. This allows for a large measure of naivety, I think. It's easy to call Oklahoma City an act of extremism, even if that extremism is far more mainstream than we'd want to believe, because it goes against the grain of what we laughingly refer to as our values.<br />
<br />
When an American drives a truck into a building full of children or even pulls out a semi-automatic weapon and mows them down, he's a nutcase -- despite the fact that he has mainstream media outlets spewing anti-liberal, anti-Christian venom into his ear regularly.<br />
<br />
When a Saudi flies an airplane into a building full of adults, he's a fiendish terrorist.<br />
<br />
Yet the acts achieve the same result: terror, anger, a sense of weakness.<br />
<br />
This year, tho, I think the cracks in our facade of innocence have started to expand. Large chunks of that facade have fallen down. We're starting to see the rotting timbers of our structure and we don't like it much.<br />
<br />
The deaths early on in 2016 of Bowie and Prince revealed to us that no one is exempt from the Grim Reaper.<br />
<br />
By all accounts, apart from the occasional drug use long ago, David Bowie was a fairly healthy man, with a well of creativity deeper than the dark pools of Iman's eyes. He had much to live for yet (he just released an album the weekend before his death, in fact).<br />
<br />
That he could be taken from us in such an insidious way at an age some might consider young tore a veil away from the eyes of many. The death of Prince reinforced that notion, that having it all meant nothing in the end, since it could all be taken in a moment.<br />
<br />
And then there was that hideous campaign. The less said of the result, the better, I think, but the universal observation that rings truest is that Trump's "victory" was an invasion of our homeland, a cold war fought in digitalia.<br />
<br />
The campaign, however, allowed freaks to fly their flags nationwide.<br />
<br />
Which they relished.<br />
<br />
While they still only make up 26% of the population, they feel like they are a far larger percentage. The innocence that any one of us is more than three meals away from rioting is on the table again, even if it was truly never off, even if the laws that protected us from the terror of the minority seemed to work well.<br />
<br />
People voted for Trump out of anger, to be sure, and anger subsides. If The Donald, the Ferret-headed Fuckface, doesn't acquiesce to their demands, that anger will dissipate a little. If he does acquiesce, it will likely intensify as they find more and more to gripe about.<br />
<br />
The American innocence that we are somehow sunny optimists is gone, and will be drowned in the cesspool over the next four years. While Democrats have won six of the last seven Presidential elections, we've only had two presidents to show for it.<br />
<br />
If we had three, six terms out of seven, then the optimism that is America would be in force.<br />
<br />
The final nail in the innocence coffin, in my mind, is the death of Princess Leia.<br />
<br />
I'm sorry, Carrie: you've had a storied and wonderful career, full of tales ad life, but at the end of the day, every obituary featured your portrayal of Princess Leia. That's why I want to talk about it in this framework.<br />
<br />
Leia came about at a time when America was starting to lose its grip on its innocence: 1977. Just after Watergate, just ahead of the Iran hostage crisis and the OPEC recession. We elected an honest peanut farmer from Georgia, blissfully ignorant that events would swamp his Presidency and while he was a nuanced and thoughtful man, he skated his administration on the knife's edge in terms of action and policy, an edge that did not leave him much room to maneuver.<br />
<br />
Leia and her cohorts reminded us that good men must stand up to tyranny but we viewed that tyranny as an external foe. In our innocence, we believed the Empire to be the Soviet Union when in point of fact, Lucas was pointing out that empires begin at home.<br />
<br />
Her death, and the <a href="http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/presidential-races/303702-spy-tells-fbi-russia-wants-to-cultivate-trump-report" target="_blank">selection of Trump by the Russians</a> to be President, are two sides of the same coin. Empires grow before our very eyes, but only because nations (or planets, as the case may be) let them be cultivated.<br />
<br />
I have little doubt the next four years will prove our innocence was long misplaced, that rather than believing that a leader could fix us, we needed to pick up the axes and shovels and do the fixing ourselves, by electing people who agreed that America needed fixing, and was not some shining city on a hill.<br />
<br />
Instead, we have what we have.<br />
<br />
And I have a bad feeling about this.Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-50501273042929608952016-11-30T13:56:00.003-05:002016-11-30T13:56:50.952-05:00A New Direction HomeI've been doing a lot of navel gazing these past weeks.<br />
<br />
Less about Hillary's defeat...because she won, even if the electoral vote is rigged in some fashion, and besides, this would still be applicable if she had swept into the Presidency as a re-election issue...than about how to expand the Democratic vote.<br />
<br />
See, if you count heads, the Democrats have won the Presidential election in six of the last seven cycles. Two Bill Clinton, one Gore, two Obama, one Hillary.<br />
<br />
The one cycle Republicans won was by a hair's breadth, over arguably the least competent candidate since Mike Dukakis.<br />
<br />
And yet, we can't seem to expand those victories to places where our message of equal opportunity for all should resonate like a church bell on a quiet June morning.<br />
<br />
This isn't about pursuing the angry white male. Fuck no, and fuck them (see, I'm one myself, so I know whereof I speak). This is about <a href="http://www.rollcall.com/news/politics/rural-democrats-ignored-suffer-consequences" target="_blank">shattering the solid red wall</a> in the middle of the country.<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<div class="" style="box-sizing: border-box; color: #333333; font-family: 'Open Sans', sans-serif; font-size: 14px; margin-bottom: 10px;">
“The Democratic Party ceded rural America to the Republicans quite some time ago,” said Vickie Rock, a member of the Nevada State Democratic Central Committee from rural Humboldt County. “They invested nothing, they built no bench. They don’t even send out signs anymore, which is a staple of rural politics. </div>
<div class="" style="box-sizing: border-box; color: #333333; font-family: 'Open Sans', sans-serif; font-size: 14px; margin-bottom: 10px;">
“All Trump had to do was peel off a small percentage of urban votes, and he was going to win,” Rock said. “Because he already had, in his back pocket, rural America.”</div>
<div class="" style="box-sizing: border-box; color: #333333; font-family: 'Open Sans', sans-serif; font-size: 14px; margin-bottom: 10px;">
[...]</div>
<div class="" style="box-sizing: border-box; color: #333333; font-family: 'Open Sans', sans-serif; font-size: 14px; margin-bottom: 10px;">
Some Democratic officials in rural areas are plotting runs for leadership in state parties, while other gurus say they will take it upon themselves to train a new generation of rural-friendly operatives. These kinds of efforts won’t solve the problem alone, the strategists readily acknowledge, but would at least help the party begin to understand how much ground it must make up.</div>
</blockquote>
The kicker is, we have the tools lying around to do just what our rural brethren are asking for.<br />
<br />
Before I get too deep in the weeds, let's review what we're talking about so we speak a common language.<br />
<br />
The <a href="https://wallethub.com/edu/states-most-least-dependent-on-the-federal-government/2700/" target="_blank">largest beneficiary of Federal government spending</a> (adjusting for total population of the state) is typically a sparsely populated rural agricultural community. Farm subsidies, food programs, defense contractors (those missile silos in Kansas need to be peopled), interstate highways -- admittedly, not a Democratic program, but...-- are all funded in large part by there Federal government. Our tax money.<br />
<br />
Yet, every election cycle, we Democrats and pundits scratch our heads trying to figure out why those people won't vote for the people who would rather spend that money on them then take it away in tax cuts for the wealthy.<br />
<br />
Now I want to talk about the other commonality we see every election cycle: the fact that Democrats and liberals in those areas feel like they are isolated, alone, and at the mercy of their more vocal and more belligerent political opposition.<br />
<br />
If you need to think about this more thoroughly, imagine being at a picnic or a barbecue. Let's say you're a University of Michigan fan, but there are about an equal number of Ohio State fans there. But those guys had a head start on the beer, and are extolling the virtues of OSU loudly.<br />
<br />
You might tease them with a "Go Blue" cheer (there's a reason I picked those two schools), but they've already bonded and they drown you out quickly.<br />
<br />
The other UM fans see that and decide it's not worth creating a ruckus. They'll just cheer when they get home.<br />
<br />
But...<br />
<br />
What if at that picnic, you were handed a list of people who also liked UM? And you sought them out? Made friends? Bonded?<br />
<br />
Now, suddenly, you aren't getting drowned out. You have back up.<br />
<br />
<i>(I'll get back to this analogy in a moment)</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
This is where the Democrats have fallen woefully short: connecting the blue dots in the red sea.<br />
<br />
We've been communicating top down, and we've paid a price. We've told people in Utah and Michigan and North Carolina what our positions are on issues, and on larger issues, that's fine. But tell me: what's a good agricultural policy for the Democrats to pursue?<br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.motherjones.com/environment/2016/07/five-things-know-about-hillary-clinton-and-agriculture-policy" target="_blank">Here's Hillary's.</a><br />
<br />
One of the most important issues in the heartland, and all she could muster was two paragraphs, one that would increase regulation.<br />
<br />
I'm a city boy, altho I'm the spawn of farmers and love living part time in farm country, and I can think of about a dozen bigger issues for rural Americans than where salmon spawn or what kind of fertilizer I use or how much my workers are paid.<br />
<br />
You want rural votes? This isn't brain surgery. You know all those farm subsidies we hand out like candy? How about targeting them better? Give the lion's share to folks whose name is actually on the mailbox, the ones who actually raise food for a living, and not for a board of directors to pay out in dividends.<br />
<br />
Create infrastructure to help those farmers get their food to market faster, cheaper and yes, more environmentally-safe.<br />
<br />
Talk about water rights. Talk about how you aren't banning people from capturing rain water but you are keeping their neighbors from damming up streams they rely on.<br />
<br />
Back to the hypothetical picnic above: You, a Michigan fan, scan the list, look up and see a bunch of other people looking around, lists in hand. So you gravitate over to them, and you all start to talk about your love of UMichigan and you find out that one of them is the county ag commissioner, and another is the local Methodist minister, and a third is the Girl Scout troop leader.<br />
<br />
In other words, authority figures. People that other people will respect when they speak up.<br />
<br />
But instead of talking about the quarterback or the coach, now they're starting to talk about how they got in touch with the state party chairman and he's arranging for the county officials to come up and speak to the legislature about including some provisions about, say, that creek that overflows every few years, or that road that all the trucks use that needs to be filled in every spring.<br />
<br />
And they make a point of saying these are Democrats working for the people in the county, to make their lives a little easier.<br />
<br />
Have you ever attended a local party meeting? It's ludicrous how few people show up, apart from the officials who hold an office there. It's insular, and everyone is elbowing, jockeying for position to be the next person to move up the food chain in the county/state/national party.<br />
<br />
Instead of addressing needs, they seek power through alliances and vote trading. And if you try and speak your mind on a subject, you get quickly reminded of the time limits and oh, there's a point of order!<br />
<br />
This means that there are just not enough people showing up at these meetings to make the complacency go away, and here, the party is to blame as well. There are simply too many chiefs at every level and not enough soldiers.<br />
<br />
The Democratic party needs to take a cue from the old corporate mantra of flattening the hierarchy and distributing responsibility. But then they need to go all in here and distribute the authority too.<br />
<br />
In this case, authority = money. Stop investing in these grand national and state-wide schemes like the Fifty State plan of Howard Dean, or the federalism of Debbie Wasserman-Schulz (I had to make something up because, frankly, I couldn't remember that she had a strategy beyond winning the Presidency again). We're winning those frikkin' elections! We can afford -- no, we can't afford <b>not</b> to -- pay attention way down the ballot.<br />
<br />
That's where the Electoral College is won or lost now. The two parties have so finely divided the nation through gerrymandering and abject pandering that we're down to a county by county fight for winning vote combinations. That we can win a seat by two and a half million votes yet lose the election is an embarrassment.<br />
<br />
So here's a comprehensive plan, a road map for a new direction home, for the Democratic party.<br />
<br />
<b>1) Identify the blue dots in the red seas and encourage those blue dots to meet up for coffee and birthdays, and have star-power visit them in off-years. </b>Barack & Michelle Obama, Hillary and Bill. Create a buzz about the Democratic party where it's not seen as "I need your vote" but "I want to listen to you".<br />
<br />
Hillary did this to great effect in 2000 across New York State and she performed admirably even in rural counties against a candidate who was basically a lightweight version of Trump.<br />
<br />
<b>2) Find and develop those local officials who can persuade people, either through their charisma or their office, to think differently about Democrats.</b> Imagine some small town in Idaho has Barack Obama show up to the church one Sunday. You think those people won't turn out to listen? And if the President talks about the pastor or the sheriff or the principal and endorses his commitment to the people of the county or town, you think that might carry just a little weight with that town? What if those people talk about how, you know, the farm subsidies were an invention of the Democrats who didn't want people to lose their homes when drought happened or when food prices plummeted?<br />
<br />
<b>3) Fund them for further pursuit of politics.</b> So there's Barack Obama talking about this local resident and what a great job he did finding money to redirect that damned creek that kept overflowing. Now that man or woman runs for town council or school board, and then state legislature. And then Congress. And then run on the local issues he or she has been talking about for years. Suddenly, we change a red bulb to blue on the board.<br />
<br />
California, New York, those states will take care of themselves. Texas will likely turn blue by 2024, Virginia is nearly a certainty as well now, but we can take Colorado, Arizona, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin regularly if we stop forcing the national party down people's throats are start listening to the people on the ground there. And we might scrape a few more states into play by just talking to the people who get their hands dirty and reassure them that we're listening.<br />
<br />
The benches of both parties are mighty weak, but the Democrats have a slightly stronger one, one that can continue our grand tradition of winning the Presidency. We have the Castro twins. We have Corey Booker. We have Tulsi Gabbard. We have a nucleus for the immediate future but beyond that, we are starting to run thin. A clinton victory would have bought us time but not that much in the grand scheme of things.<br />
<br />
We as a party can offer an alternative to politics as it has been now, right now, if we're willing to climb up onto the high wire and walk across. It's going to take money, but we have that behind us now, what with the massive train wreck that we will see in the next four years and even the wealthy realizing that things are in dire straits.<br />
<br />
While Trump dismantles all we hold dear, we need to be out there, reminding people who put those programs they love in place and who will do their damnedest to fix them up again.Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-90444753278522003542016-11-12T12:02:00.002-05:002016-11-12T12:02:25.241-05:00This Is Not Slut-Shaming<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://thenypost.files.wordpress.com/2016/07/melania_-_copie_2.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=664" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://thenypost.files.wordpress.com/2016/07/melania_-_copie_2.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=664" width="228" /></a></div>
<a href="https://www.blogger.com/"></a><span id="goog_868455353"></span><span id="goog_868455354"></span><br />
<br />
This photo, from a modeling shoot that then-Melania Knauss did for a French magazine in 1996, made this rounds this summer as The Donald's campaign heated up.<br />
<br />
There's nothing wrong with the photo: it's shows a moderately attractive -- I have extremely high standards -- if awkward looking woman, posing nude, protecting her femininity from manual assault by, say, some creepy short fingered vulgarian with her left hand.<br />
<br />
She posed for it as a struggling young model in New York City, a city filled with some of the most beautiful women on the planet. She's done many many more, including one that sees her rolling around on a faux-Oval Office rug (you'll start seeing that more often, now).<br />
<br />
As The Donald edged closer to the nomination, and ultimately the Presidency, this photo was circulated more and more.<br />
<br />
Many people believe this is slut-shaming at a new level, and I can understand that point of view. No one posted nude photos of Hillary, or Sarah Palin (altho some were spoofed up, to be sure), and while much humor was made at the expense of the moral fiber of Bristol Palin (two children out of wedlock) and that could conceivably be slut-shaming, no woman had ever directly been exploited in quite this way in a Presidential campaign.<br />
<br />
"Exploited". That's quite an explosive word. Paula Jones was exploited. She was dragged out into the limelight to confront Bill Clinton because she was promised fame and fortune. She got infamy and a small check. The other Clinton accusers, they were exploited.<br />
<br />
Monica Lewinsky, exploited. She still is, every time someone cracks a joke about a blue dress or a Bill Clinton cigar.<br />
<br />
This?<br />
<br />
I'm not sure.<br />
<br />
It's certainly titillating, no pun intended. It's certainly attention-grabbing. Slut-shaming, though?<br />
<br />
I'm going to disagree. I believe the reason this photo has such energy about it, is such a good summary of the entire Trump family, is not about Melania. Rather, it's about The Donald.<br />
<br />
More specifically, it's about The Donald and his "say anything, do anything" campaign of desperation to get elected. He made a choice early on to campaign as a "come to Jesus" Christian. He stumbled badly, so badly that it nearly cost him his nomination ("Two Corinthians walk into a bar...").<br />
<br />
This photo is about the fundamentalist Christians who abandoned Ted Cruz and Mike Huckabee, and flocked to The Donald's message of hate and spite, abandoning even their stern and conservative Lord God for this Antichrist.<br />
<br />
If this photo is about Melania in anyway, in fact, it's about her personal shames. After all, take a good look at that photo (or any photo of her, if this one offends you). This is a woman who by all accounts has a nice temperament, is a devoted mother to their son, Barron, and who has a decent figure and a well-sculpted face.<br />
<br />
<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi8lk76YYwZABwWNqe9lA07J8mi5yf6EcCImju69LBSdbV3HLKxKVS8oKV79Rk9O9c04v7jzbtmiA5ro9CKcmIu8lukLKQP915itKd0sdf_z37D4nF7lh-7689AMdr4iVuZYnMO9A/s1600/Marionette.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="272" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi8lk76YYwZABwWNqe9lA07J8mi5yf6EcCImju69LBSdbV3HLKxKVS8oKV79Rk9O9c04v7jzbtmiA5ro9CKcmIu8lukLKQP915itKd0sdf_z37D4nF7lh-7689AMdr4iVuZYnMO9A/s320/Marionette.jpg" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;"><i>She even plagiarized her looks...</i></td></tr>
</tbody></table>
<div>
This is about a woman who has all the attributes one might want in a partner...and still the Rapist-Elect felt the need to cheat on her.</div>
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
We know that rape and assault are not crimes of sex, they are crimes of power, of control. A man feels the need to physically dominate a woman (in the case of man-on-woman rape) and use her for his own pleasure. </div>
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
Yet, this photo of Melania speaks to me as photographer of her power, her autonomy, her control over her own body. </div>
<div>
<br /></div>
<div>
I don't know that she's like that in real life, but for the good of the women of this nation, I truly hope she can stand up to The Donald in the manner this photo presents. </div>
<span id="goog_868455359"></span><span id="goog_868455360"></span><br />Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-26087512643631646232016-11-09T08:16:00.001-05:002016-11-11T15:12:19.089-05:00It's Mourning in America<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://qzprod.files.wordpress.com/2015/12/ap_651188993449.jpg?quality=80&strip=all&w=1600" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="180" src="https://qzprod.files.wordpress.com/2015/12/ap_651188993449.jpg?quality=80&strip=all&w=1600" width="320" /></a></div>
<br />
<br />
When George W Bush won in 200 and again in 2004, I was angry. I was worried he'd take us down the wrong road (he did) and would cause irreparable harm to the United States (pretty close).<br />
<br />
But I was never scared of him as an existential threat.<br />
<br />
A few thoughts about Trump before I get into the meat of this post: I don't see him surviving the first term in office. Not that he'll be assassinated, and goodness knows I don't wish that on him. I think the combination of stress, his weight and foul temper will do him in.<br />
<br />
Remember, this is a man who is used to taking even perceived slights and turning them into street fights. He's not going to be able to do that anymore (certainly to the extent he did as a civilian). He won't be able to tweet at 3AM, he won't be able to get his attaboys from his followers, he'll effectively be locked away in the White House.<br />
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He'll be on call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. He'll wake up to a briefing, go to bed with a crisis, and pretty much never sleep.<br />
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Then you look at the toll the office takes on a younger, healthier man, like President Obama or even a completely disinterested generalist like Dumbya, and you realize this geezer doesn't have enough gas in the tank to do this. Reagan could do it, but the Reagan wasn't dealing with cell phones and the internet, and 24 hour a day decision making.<br />
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Trump can't hide from the world, even if he wants to.<br />
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What scares me most about a Trump presidency is his utter lack of interest in anything. He has demonstrated time and time again that he can't get past page one in a briefing book, and that executive summaries had better be three paragraphs or less.<br />
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And he'll be expected to make decisions based on that summary. Decisions that will affect the entire planet (just look at the markets today, the day after Armageddon), decisions that will need to be finessed and nuanced.<br />
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He'll rely on his advisors but if you look closely at those advisors, you can't find a more motley crew than those: bootlickers, rageaholics, toadies who were the only public faces willing to step up in support of him. The debris of the 1990s political power nexus so desperate to remain relevant they hitched their wagons to the only person who wasn't afraid of all the baggage they brought along because of his own baggage.<br />
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And Chris Christie, notably absent from any talk of a Trump administration. Interesting, that.<br />
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As for his policies and how he's going to implement them, well, there's another fear factor: how?<br />
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He doesn't have a bulletproof Congress. The Senate can be filibustered, unless McConnell invokes the nuclear option. His own party is deeply divided over him, so badly that Marco Rubio couldn't even talk about him by name until the last weekend of the campaign. Yes. they'll unite behind the President but it won't be unity driven from party spirit but a facade ready to fall apart at the slightest hint of weakness on Trump's part.<br />
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Yet another reason to believe he won't survive his first term. He'll be wrangling cats.<br />
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As for Dems, forget any chance of a bipartisan solution to anything. Given the absolute certainty of a filibuster on any legislation in the Senate (Dems took notes these past years), Trump's agenda is dead in the water.<br />
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Repeal Obamacare? No.<br />
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Tax cuts for the wealthy? No.<br />
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The wall? No. Not even if Mexico offered to pay upfront, which they might for President Trump.<br />
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New trade deals? No.<br />
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Jobs bill? No.<br />
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And Republicans will be forced to defend the use of executive orders. Again. Executive orders only have limited scope and force, however. He can't, for instance, overturn Roe v. Wade. He can make it harder to find a clinic.<br />
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Foreign policy could be even worse. Trump has called Angela Merkel, the most powerful woman in the world, <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2016/09/29/donald-trumps-flip-flop-on-angela-merkel-is-mind-boggling/" target="_blank">a "disaster"</a>. He's butted heads with his own party over <a href="http://www.politico.com/story/2016/09/trump-putin-embrace-fallout-227940" target="_blank">Vladimir Putin</a>, whom he admires -- despite the fact that Putin is an absolute threat to the United States (more on that in a bit). And if Russia does decide to become an aggressor, <a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/news/archive/2016/07/trump-nato/492341/" target="_blank">NATO is on their own</a>, according to Trump.<br />
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<a href="http://www.newyorker.com/business/currency/why-donald-trump-is-wrong-about-manufacturing-jobs-and-china" target="_blank">China</a> is practically chomping at the bit to test Trump's resolve on trade deals and has to feel threatened by <a href="http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/donald-trump-president-elect-impact-on-india-modi/1/806222.html" target="_blank">Trump's overtures to India</a>.<br />
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All of this is taking as a given his feelings about the Middle East, South Asia, and our involvement there.<br />
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We do know <a href="http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/09/time-donald-trump-called-saudi-arabia-good-place-get-divorce" target="_blank">Trump loves him some Sharia Law</a>...when it comes to women, and not much else when it comes to Muslims.<br />
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So I'm failing to see where Trump's Presidency is anything but an abject failure from day one. Maybe, if he had President Obama's temperament, he could get stuff done.<br />
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You know, like Obama did.<br />
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And he really only has a short window to accomplish much of anything, since the midterm elections are literally around the corner in political time. He'll lose seats in Congress, bigly (the standard operating procedure in the first midterm elections, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_midterm_election" target="_blank">altho there have been exceptions</a>.)<br />
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Now, there is one window that trump might be able to clamber out of, and curiously, I think it involves Russia and Putin.<br />
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Wikileaks.<br />
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As you know, Julian Assange did signal service to Putin by dumping buckets of emails purported to come from he DNC and aides to Hillary Clinton in the middle of the campaign. While the emails themselves were pretty innocuous...recipes, dinner dates, small talk mostly...the reminder that Hillary has this baggage helped seal the deal with independent voters that she can't be trusted.<br />
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But what if...<br />
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After all, Putin's goal wasn't to stop Clinton. That would mean admitting that he was afraid of her and while that's a distinct possibility, I think he has larger ambitions.<br />
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To destroy democracy. To finish the job that Osama bin Laden started. To bring the greatest nation to its knees by raising fears that, in fact, it's not as great a system as it seems.<br />
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Let's play the first half of this scenario out: assume Clinton had won.<br />
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Well, we already know that the useful idiots in Congress would have tied her up in endless hearings over her emails, more about Benghazi, etc etc etc. Jason "Bacon on the Hoof" Chaffetz admitted as much.<br />
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While her coattails might have drawn enough Democrats in behind her to prevent some of this nonsense, it would have gone on and like the birther conspiracy, would have given a significant portion of the population reason to doubt her legitimacy.<br />
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Probably moreso than the birther movement affected Obama because this kind of nonsense has been going on around Hillary since the 1990s. There's sort of this air of presumption that she must be guilty of <i>some</i>thing (she's not.)<br />
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So if Clinton wins, Putin still gets a version of his disruption of American democracy. His best case scenario is if Trump wins.<br />
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In the lame duck period between now and January 20, I think -- altho I have no hard information on this -- we will see a new Wikileaks dump on Trump.<br />
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Tax returns, admissions of felonious behavior, infidelities, who knows? The point is, dump enough stuff on Trump to raise a ruckus and cast the results of the election into doubt.<br />
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(Given the closeness of the vote versus the polling, it wouldn't surprise me to find out that some of the results were manipulated already, but I digress.)<br />
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Trump, already wildly unpopular, will lose any chance of making a case for his Presidency, a case as I've already demonstrated was not likely to be worth a bucket of warm spit, and will leave an electorate even angrier than before.<br />
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A nation already practically at each other's throats is not a long stride from a nation at war with itself.<br />
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And THAT is why I find Trump to be so scary.Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-90538164550157953872016-09-11T08:37:00.002-04:002016-09-11T08:37:41.421-04:00The Good That Came Out of 9/11<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I've never been one to dwell in the past. Whatever mistakes I've made, I learn from and move on. The people I've hurt, the people who have hurt me, I find it easier to forget them than to wonder what might have been.<br />
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September 11, that's a hard thing to ignore, particularly on a big fat juicy anniversary like the fifteenth.<br />
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Such tragedies don't happen often in a nation's history. Tragedies similar, yes. Hell, we lose more innocent people to gun violence in a year than we lost on September 11, by a factor of three.<br />
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Normally, I acknowledge the day with a small prayer for the victims and for the nation to find the wisdom to prevent this form occurring again.<br />
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Something bothered me this weekend, tho: usually out of terrible events, some good can be found: connections, outcomes, developments.<br />
<br />
Take Pearl Harbor: you can trace a line from Pearl Harbor to the end of the Great Depression, the rise of the American automotive and housing industries (after the war, the GI Bill helped these become powerhouses), the racial and gender equality movements, the computer, nuclear energy, the rise of the middle class in America, and any number of other positives that shaped the nation today.<br />
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Maybe it's just too soon to really recognize what September 11 gave us a gift. After all, many of the things on the list of Pearl Harbor took decades to come about.<br />
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Some did not. Some were almost immediate.<br />
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So I meditated on this theme a little: can we point to anything and say it is ultimately a positive for our country?<br />
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Let's look at the immediate aftermath of the attacks: we declared war and invaded two nations, one of which, as it turned out, was not even close to having anything to do with the attacks (indeed, we shared a common enemy with Saddam Hussein and probably should have used him as our proxy in retaliating.)<br />
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We wasted trillions of dollars hunting down the perpetrators who planned and financed the attacks. We endangered our allies in the Coalition of the Bought and Paid For (7/7/07, among any number of terror attacks in Europe and Asia). We blew up a budget deficit that was already skyrocketing from the ill0conceived triple tax cuts of the Bush administration -- remember, Bill Clinton left us on the path to economic solvency with a surplus that, projected, could have paid off the entire national debt.<br />
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Our housing market exploded thanks to low interest rates, a President who on the day after 9/11 encouraged us to spend as a show of our patriotism -- encouraging people to take out HELOCs and second mortgages -- and a complete and deliberate lack of oversight from the Federal government, creating the Lesser Great Depression of 2008, when Americans ended up more in debt than the government ($128 trillion to $104 trillion by 2007) and much that debt was suddenly being called in.<br />
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Because, conservatives. Conservatives suck.<br />
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Our culture suffered, too. America has long been a deeply paranoid nation, but our paranoia ran towards delusions of grandeur: we couldn't be hurt. An ocean protected us.<br />
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After 9/11, that quaint jingoism turned dark and ugly: we began to see shadows in the daylight, afraid of our neighbors, even people who lived here for years. Not just Muslims, either. Look at our egregious reduction in voting rights of minorities across the board, the nasty depiction of hard working immigrants as "illegal aliens," the rise of the men's rights activists and the war on uteri.<br />
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Things we had assumed were generally viewed as good things: that everyone has a right to vote, that everyone was free to immigrate here and help us build a nation, that a human body was sacrosanct from government intrusion, all went by the board after September 11.<br />
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Why?<br />
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I think it's because 9/11 hastened trends that had been building for decades: the dismantling of the middle class by the monied classes, for one thing. The inevitable downward slope of a nation's power, that history teaches us is unavoidable since it touches facets of society that are not easily predicted, is another factor.<br />
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That wages have been stagnant for thirty five years while productivity has skyrocketed beyond even what we could expect from the technological revolution speaks to me of a people scared of the future, and willing to effectively become indentured servants to the whims of a boss who at any moment can pick up and head to the exits and the greener pastures of southeast Asia.<br />
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All happening as the government is forced to withdrawal from the social safety net by a small but wealthy few who demand it.<br />
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You see what I mean about the difficulty in finding the good of September 11.<br />
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But there hope. For one thing, we as a nation rose up after we understood the treasons of the Bush administration and threw conservatives out of the executive and legislative branch (one house, admittedly...conservatives had already rigged the other one for permanent status).<br />
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Yes, we gave the Senate back in 2010 and if there's a reason to hate Debbie Wasserman-Schulz's reign as DNC chair, it's that she oversaw over 700 electoral losses in her tenure, many that could have been prevented.<br />
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We elected the first African American president. We are poised to elect the first woman President (the polls don't sweat me: in 2008, John McCain was <i>leading</i> Barack Obama at this stage), and to take back the Senate.<br />
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We are about to turn Texas into a blue state, while keeping California and New York. Maybe Texans are finally just that embarrassed by their state politics, that gave us Bush 43, and Rick "Three Strikes" Perry, and Ted Cruz, and Greg Abbott. <br />
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We have young people who galvanized around a 70-something Jew from Brooklyn who asked, "wouldn't it be nice if we could have back some of the blessings we worked so hard for forty years ago?"<br />
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We saw the Occupy movement. We see the Black Lives Matter movement. We see anger and outrage being channeled into challenging the system, instead of at each other.<br />
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This fall's elections is a critical benchmark in the movement to a progressive America, and so if there's any good to speak of out of September 11, it's that we are moving in the right direction.<br />
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Finally. Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-42681632159416758582016-07-08T07:03:00.000-04:002016-07-08T07:04:16.902-04:00We Have Met the Enemy...<div data-contents="true">
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="clgkh-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="clgkh-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="clgkh-0-0">It strikes me that it's not only bad cops who are at fault when a cop kills an innocent citizen. </span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="1pr7m-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="1pr7m-0-0">And while black men and women get killed with alarmingly frequency, white kids are often killed for no good reason. But there's clearly a racial factor at play nationwide. </span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="30fsl-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="30fsl-0-0">There's a much deeper problem, though, and it goes beyond bad cops and beyond good cops not stepping up to intervene.</span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="bvd2a-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="bvd2a-0-0">It's institutional. It's societal. It's about a culture that demands we underfund our cops -- because God forbid we should raise taxes! -- then insist they keep crime at a zero tolerance level. It's about turning citizens into statistics, and outsourcing our prison system to corporatists who see nothing but profit.</span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="35ecb-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="35ecb-0-0">It's about a culture that worships guns and weapons, valuing them well above the very lives they are alleged to protect. </span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="4jn4d-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="4jn4d-0-0">It's about turning our citizenry into targets in a video game. It's the same culture that has turned "citizens" into "civilians" as if the cops are one big armed occupying force and we the mere motion capture bystanders (or worse, perps) in a huge game of Grand Theft Auto. </span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="ctnb0-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="ctnb0-0-0">When arrest statistics and "perpretrators incarcerated" become the goal of the average flatfoot on the street, when the line item for policing in the budget has to be justified with cherry picked statistics, he's going to have little incentive to actually solve problems. </span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="3itfi-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="3itfi-0-0">Police work is hard. By God, it's hard, and there are millions of cops out there who do good, even great work every day. </span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="aho27-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="aho27-0-0">The problem is, there are also thousands, maybe tens of thousands, of really horrible people wearing uniforms precisely because crime fighting has become less about fixing problems and more about "how many people can I sweep off the street today?". </span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="30o26-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="30o26-0-0">We see an innocent man shot because he was complying with police orders.</span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="d73om-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="d73om-0-0">We see an innocent man shot for having a legal gun to protect himself. </span></div>
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<span data-offset-key="2o3fk-0-0">And we see the Blue Wall of Silence envelop the killers to protect them, like some grand omerta. We see a cop culture that echoes how badly kids are raised these days as opposed to "in the day," and how you should treat them with not respect but capitulation and deference, as if they are noblemen and we serfs.</span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="a6vrq-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="a6vrq-0-0">Funny thing is, those cops grew up in that same culture. Hell, they helped create it. </span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="fq2bv-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="fq2bv-0-0">And here's the kicker: today's culture is no more or less respectful of authority than any generation of the past. You have only to look at the 60s hippies, or the 50s hoods, the 20s gangsters to see that. </span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="120o3-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="120o3-0-0">It's just that today, we have instant access to information from around the nation and we see right in front of us the culture from all sides. </span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="apbm3-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="apbm3-0-0">It's not a surprise to me that nearly the first reaction of an officer is to shoot first and let the chips fall where they may. When you have the conflicting ideals of putting people away and keeping your numbers down against "serve and protect" (because how are they doing either by shooting people in knee jerk situations?), you are strongly tempted to take the easiest course of action. </span></div>
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<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="3glss-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="3glss-0-0">And it's no surprise to me to see entire communities rise up against these tactics (sadly resorting to violence and slaughter, as evidence by the tragic events last night in Dallas). </span><span class="_5u8n" data-offset-key="3glss-1-0" spellcheck="false">BlackLivesMatter</span><span data-offset-key="3glss-2-0"> is a real and a good thing: it reminds us that there are still entire communities who cannot live their lives and go about their business in peace. </span></div>
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<span data-offset-key="84l3f-0-0"><br data-text="true" /></span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="1c80n-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="1c80n-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="1c80n-0-0">Thing is, we're fighting the wrong enemy: the cops are a tool. They are quite literally nothing more than a tool to enforce the status quo of a society that is terrified of dissent and deviation of thought and opinion. </span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="bsneg-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="bsneg-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="bsneg-0-0"><br data-text="true" /></span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="22m06-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="22m06-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="22m06-0-0">The real enemy is the society that forces these poor men and women into aggressive stances and situations where they are forced to make a split second decision to shoot or not because there are billions of dollars on the line each and every day across the nation: prisons are profit centers, police departments are cost centers, citizens are civilians in an armed occupation.</span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="4j380-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="4j380-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="4j380-0-0"><br data-text="true" /></span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="araia-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="araia-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="araia-0-0">The police aren't the enemy. The kids being killed, black AND white, aren't the enemy. Our culture is the enemy and that enemy is pervasive and insidious.</span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="uof7-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="uof7-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="uof7-0-0"><br data-text="true" /></span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="e211r-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="e211r-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="e211r-0-0">And that enemy is us. </span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="3hdoq-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="3hdoq-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="3hdoq-0-0"><br data-text="true" /></span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="10eil-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="10eil-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="10eil-0-0">You and me. We have the power to stop the slaughter and violence from both sides. We can turn the relationship with law enforcement from an adversarial one, where the average cop has to have his hand hovering near his gun for a simple traffic stop, into a cooperative one. </span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="c0u42-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="c0u42-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="c0u42-0-0"><br data-text="true" /></span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="5dbjq-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="5dbjq-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="5dbjq-0-0">We can vote. We can vote to fully fund our police departments. We can vote to establish accountability beyond some "civilian review board" that essentially rubber stamps anytime a gun is used. We can vote to put a framework in place that gets rids of bad cops quickly, and rewards good cops for solving problems, not ending lives, either literally or by putting away (usually) young men in prison and ruining their chances for gainful employment and all that goes with it. (The statistics in minority communities are terrifying. We have a real problem on our hands and it's going to last a long time).</span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="ft67o-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="ft67o-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="ft67o-0-0"><br data-text="true" /></span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="8jmsf-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="8jmsf-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="8jmsf-0-0">We can vote to fully fund education and keep our kids in school and encourage them to go onto to college and get jobs and become responsible members of our society. </span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="djo2j-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="djo2j-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="djo2j-0-0"><br data-text="true" /></span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="8jkde-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="8jkde-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="8jkde-0-0">We can vote to fully fund after school arts, sports, and cultural programs, to give people an outlet to express themselves that goes beyond standing on a street corner bored to tears and restless as hell. </span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="a5f5j-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="a5f5j-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="a5f5j-0-0"><br data-text="true" /></span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="9n30q-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="9n30q-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="9n30q-0-0">We can vote to let people earn a living wage, so that one parent can stay home and take care of the kids if the family so desires, keeping those kids off the streets. </span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="e852m-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="e852m-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="e852m-0-0"><br data-text="true" /></span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="6nb77-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="6nb77-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="6nb77-0-0">There are a million things we as a people can do to stop this, and none of them involve limiting choices, but the involve expanding opportunities. </span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="a0bcl-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="a0bcl-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="a0bcl-0-0"><br data-text="true" /></span></div>
</div>
<div class="" data-block="true" data-editor="3nlk8" data-offset-key="mr1h-0-0">
<div class="_1mf _1mj" data-offset-key="mr1h-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="mr1h-0-0">We, the people, have to fix this.</span></div>
</div>
</div>
Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-24249420665204421362016-05-03T09:33:00.003-04:002016-05-03T09:34:39.887-04:00Whither Bernie?In reality, the primary season is over. The path Bernie has to the nomination is basically to renege on his entire raison d'être, get a firm grasp on the Dark Side, and try to super delegate his way past the will of the people, the popular vote, and electoral process he so valiantly defends against "corporate money".<br />
<br />
In truth, the primary was over when Bernie announced he was running. He probably kept Joe Biden out of the race (who would have stood a decent chance against Hillary, and certainly could match her vote for vote at the super delegate level and could conceivably have energized the same young voters that Bernie has. Google "Biden Bitchin' Camaro"). Sanders' mishmash organization, inability to cultivate even the super delegates in his own state...I mean, really, if you're going to descend into openly trying to steal an election anyway, you may as well be honest about it and stop disillusioning the youth of today...and absolutely barebones campaign infrastructure speaks of a man who made this decision basically about as carefully as a rich person chooses toilet paper.<br />
<br />
His most important decisions -- hiring Tad Devine and Jeff Weaver -- speak volumes about his priorities and his willingness to thrown his believers under the bus for one chance at...what? The nomination? A chance to speak at the convention? A chance to get his issues on the party platform?<br />
<br />
He never stood a chance at the nomination. Coming from 65 points behind to ten points behind is an admirable effort but it's still a losing effort. Second place is second place and double digits is double digits, and my suspicion is that a ham sandwich could have accomplished the same, especially with a layer of bacon.<br />
<br />
He understood all this even as late as the New York primary, where he had a slim chance still but only spent $35,000 on a get out the vote effort. Now contrast that to the million he spent monthly on Messrs. Devine and Weaver.<br />
<br />
Sanders has reached a fork in the road. He can choose to embrace the dark arts of the possible, lawyer up, spend even more money on irrelevancies and make a joke of himself and a parody of his campaign. Or, he can choose to embrace the good in his campaign, the positivity he brought, and the idealism of the tens of millions who believe in him.<br />
<br />
See, he's in a difficult spot and there's a carrot dangling in front of him that, frankly, I don't see how he cannot take.<br />
<br />
For one thing, he has tens of millions in <a href="http://www.progressivestoday.com/bernie-sanders-campaign-now-investigated-illegal-contributions/" target="_blank">illegal campaign contributions</a> that have to be returned. Estimates run as high as $23 million. At March 31, <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/2016-fundraising-reports_us_571840e6e4b0c9244a7ae1c5" target="_blank">he only had $17 million dollars</a>, cash in hand. He is currently outspending his monthly hauls, diminishing faster than a reservoir in a drought in summer.<br />
<br />
If Weaver and Devine returned their stipends since they've been hired, that would be enough to pay back the money Sanders owes. But they won't.<br />
<br />
Sanders could hold onto the money, of course, but then he exposes the donors to criminal and civil prosecution and the campaign to sanctions (moot, as Sanders will not be running past the California primary).<br />
<br />
He's between a rock and a hard place, to be sure, so he'll probably request a bailout (heh!) from the DNC, which has a fund for just these purposes.<br />
<br />
The same fund that is replenished by those $350,000 a plate dinners George Clooney has to hold.<br />
<br />
Oh, the irony: the People's Candidate bailed out by the very corporate whores he hates.<br />
<br />
Note something else: because of this indebtedness (first to his donors, then to the DNC), there is no way in the world Sanders runs a third party bid. It would immediately be shut down by the FEC until the records are straightened out. He'd need an even faster cash infusion. Hello, superPACs!<br />
<br />
But there's a flip side to this whole conundrum: he can't *stop* running either, if he wants to be a player at the convention (and certainly if he has any chance of flipping the nomination). This means he'll be deeper and deeper in debt as the hours pass by.<br />
<br />
Which then calls into question his entire policy platform of redistributing the federal tax revenue to pay for his programs. After all, if he can't micromanage his campaign (and word on the street is that is exactly what he is trying to do, along with his wife) then how in the hell is he going to pay for college and single-payer, even with massive cuts to defense spending?<br />
<br />
These are issues I could never have foreseen <a href="http://simplyleftbehind.blogspot.com/2016/02/an-endorsement-and-explanation.html" target="_blank">when I endorsed Sanders back in February.</a> My concerns dealt with his possible success, but never about his probable failures.<br />
<br />
It concerns me because, right now, Bernie Sanders is at another crossroads that has nothing to do with his campaign and everything to do with the future of the liberal progressive movement.<br />
<br />
In the course of my lifetime, I've seen the liberal movement's concept of a President veer from the idealism of Robert F Kennedy and Eugene McCarthy to the sham of Michael Dukakis. You'll notice none of them won.<br />
<br />
Meanwhile, the Democrats who have won: FDR, LBJ, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama -- Jimmy Carter being a mild outlier -- have been centrists who have enacted policies that tended to pull the nation leftward.<br />
<br />
In FDR's case, yank it hard.<br />
<br />
Sanders has an act to juggle here: he has to keep liberal issues at the forefront of policy discussions, yet he can't afford to have himself shunted aside as just an angry old man in a bathrobe who yells at clouds, no matter how bright and sparkly those clouds might be. That would destroy whatever progress we can make in the next four years, and render the liberal movement dead in the water for decades.<br />
<br />
Again.<br />
<br />
I'm all for Bernie continuing his crusade but there's an exit strategy that he needs to start implementing. The country can't afford his embarrassment.Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-2487491787244869442016-02-25T08:25:00.000-05:002016-02-25T08:25:01.194-05:00An Endorsement. And An Explanation.<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
I’m supporting Bernie. He better (not best, better) represents the values I want to see in a Democratic candidate. </div>
<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
But Hillary is a very very close second. Close enough that the bullshit BernieBros and BernBots are tossing out there made me reconsider my vote, which is why I'm late to the endorsement. </div>
<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
I've decided that I’ll vote for him anyway, if only to register my support for a left-wing platform, but it will not be a particularly happy vote unless the rhetoric starts redefining itself.</div>
<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
I have very serious practical & pragmatic concerns about a Sanders candidacy:</div>
<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
1) He will have to raise at least a half billion dollars, and more likely $2.5 billion (if you include SuperPAC and 501(4)c spending). The Kochs have committed $1 billion to getting a Republican in the Presidency already. I don’t see how that happens without going to Wall Street and even then, how that happens going to the very people he’s vowed to destroy….unless he sells out the way BernBots claim Clinton has. </div>
<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
Maybe….MAYBE…if he gets the 50 million or so people who vote for him to pony up $50, he covers that nut. Maybe. Which brings me to point two:</div>
<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
2) He’s going to have to, inside of three months, define his brand of socialism to that slice of the population who have made reality TV popular — in other words, the uninformed. </div>
<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
In fact, I think I should probably amend that $2.5 billion to $3.5 billion because a rough estimate of the ads he’ll have to run that say “No, the OTHER kind of socialism!” is massive. Meanwhile, the Republican strategy to defeat him is simple: Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Sanders. </div>
<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
Hillary hasn’t stooped this low, thank God but does anyone think the Trumps of the world will play nicely? Which raises point three:</div>
<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
3) Right now, Bernie Sanders is the only candidate in either party with a net positive favorability rating (Dr Ben Carson flatlines at neither positive or negative. Hillary has a -8 net unfavorability rating). But you’ll notice, apart from the occasional joke tossed Bernie’s way, no one has truly vetted him in opposition research. There are serious issues surrounding him that have not come to light (or have been investigated and dismissed, a possibility I will admit). Burlington College will be an issue for his campaign (Jane runs his staff). His missing mid-1960s years (he’s not particularly forthcoming about them). His conscientious objector status during the Viet Nam war (remember, these are people who Swiftboated a decorated hero from that war). </div>
<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
None of these have to be true to quickly turn that positive into a negative, in the skilled hands of Frank Luntz and Karl Rove. Hillary, for all her baggage, is pretty much naked in the fields: her ratings build in the best the Republicans have smeared her with.</div>
<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
So well have they smeared her that Bernie’s most zealous supporters are parroting Luntz talking points. </div>
<div style="color: #333333; font-family: tahoma, geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
So yea, I’ll vote Bernie and if he’s the candidate, I’ll work my ass off to get him elected because the alternative is Trump and the Idiocracy. But I hold no illusions that it will be hard work. Very very hard.</div>
Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-62185332371603127322016-01-11T07:29:00.002-05:002016-01-11T07:29:32.198-05:00RIP David Bowie<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="http://www.snopes.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/bowie.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="http://www.snopes.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/bowie.jpg" height="199" width="320" /></a></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
The news of the <a href="http://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-35278872" target="_blank">death of David Bowie</a> was profoundly shocking to me, and it's taken me a moment to collect my thoughts why.</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
Bowie was an artist who was always able to stay relevant without becoming a parody -- unlike, say, Madonna. It was the endless variety of music he could produce without losing the underlying thread of his talent by imitating a style. He lived that style, worked that style, mined it and made it his own.</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
From his early glam-rock days to his more recent "rock crooner" era, he never let you lose sight of the fact that it was David Bowie, no matter what name -- Ziggy Stardust, Aladdin Sane, Thin White Duke -- he cloaked himself in. </div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
If anyone had found a veritable fountain of youth, Bowie had. The endless reinvention and reincorporation of music made him a walking performing encyclopedia of the past forty years.</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
And he never seemed to age physically. Sure, there were lines and wrinkles, the occasional wattle when he lost weight (possibly from the cancer that took him), gray hair so neatly combed and styled that you were sure he added the gray as a final touch, but you never sensed any less energy from him.</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
You look at a Mick Jagger or Paul McCartney, Elton John or Peter Gabriel, and you see how time wounds us, saps us of strength and vitality, despite our best efforts at covering that up.</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
But Bowie never seemed to drain, never seemed sapped. He seemed endlessly energetic.</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
Many years ago, he foresaw this day as Ziggy Stardust, in "My Death": </div>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
My death waits like a beggar blind</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
who sees the world through an unlit mind</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
throw him a dime</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
for the passing time...</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
My death waits there between your thighs</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
your cool fingers will close my eyes</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
let's think of that and the passing time</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
My death waits to allow my friends</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
a few good times before it ends</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
so let's drink to that and the passing time</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<br /></blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
But what ever lies behind the door,</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
there is nothing much to do</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
angel or devil I don't care</blockquote>
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
for in front of that door... there is you</blockquote>
</blockquote>
Of all the people I imagine who might beat death back, it was the Man Who Fell To Earth. Godspeed, David. You've brought us all joy. Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-13384306643051027082015-12-31T13:50:00.004-05:002015-12-31T13:50:54.727-05:00And So This is New Year...<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="http://thebootinn-houghton.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/boot-inn-new-year.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="http://thebootinn-houghton.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/boot-inn-new-year.jpg" height="120" width="320" /></a></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<br /></div>
So what have you done? Another year older. A new one just begun.<br />
<br />
(Yes, I took license with the lyrics, sue me)<br />
<br />
2015 was a weird year, to be sure. I remember writing early on that the year would be defined by marijuana, and while it wasn't as dominant an issue as I thought it might be, the year sure had the stank on it of old weed.<br />
<br />
I mean, really...Donald Trump, the front-runner for a major party nomination? Why? Because he speaks his mind?<br />
<br />
Yes, he speaks his mind, the trouble is he is half out of his mind. That this low-rent, tin-plated dickless wonder is even taken seriously by anyone is a testament to the failures of Republican education policies.<br />
<br />
Libertarians around the nation lifted their snouts from the troughs of crumbs from their overlords and snorted, squealed, and then rose up on their hind hooves and murmured approvingly. Fucking idiots.<br />
<br />
Personally, I can't complain. I had a good year. I cut a lot of chaff out of my life, culled the grain, dropped a lot of dead weight and managed to move on. I grabbed life by the throat and let me tell you, there is no more terrifying or liberating thing to do. And 2016 is poised to be fantastic now that I don't have all the hangers-on to deal with.<br />
<br />
So, my dear reader....and I hope I still have many of you around, because goodness knows there were times I wanted to give this up and forget about blogging anymore...thank you for 2015. Thank you to my friends, my family, and my casual acquaintances. Thank you even to those who wished me harm, because fuck you, I won. You only hurt yourself, not me.<br />
<br />
On to 2016, my preciouses!Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-81055441693727795632015-11-14T08:44:00.001-05:002015-11-14T08:44:11.600-05:00How to Defeat Terrorism<div data-contents="true">
<div class="_209g _2vxa" data-block="true" data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0">We need to try something different. America has waged a full scale war in South Asia for thirty years. We've waged a sort of Cold War against Islam for decades longer, going all the way back to <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammad_Mosaddegh" target="_blank">Mossadegh and Iran.</a> </span></div>
<div class="_209g _2vxa" data-block="true" data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0"><br /></span></div>
<div class="_209g _2vxa" data-block="true" data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0">All we've managed to do is inflame the situation. Europe has struggled with Islamic extremists for centuries, and while things were quiet for a long time, the beginning of the twentieth century saw Europe interfere yet again in Middle Eastern affairs, igniting old passions and angers.</span></div>
<div class="_209g _2vxa" data-block="true" data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0"><br /></span></div>
<div class="_209g _2vxa" data-block="true" data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0">Thirty years of war (going back to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan) has done nothing but make more rabid dogs. That's a failed policy. This is not a war against people, it's a war against an ideology -- the ideology of jihad -- and every time we've bombed a country, we created more enemies as we've attempted to wipe out that ideology. </span></div>
<div class="_209g _2vxa" data-block="true" data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0">
<span data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0"><br /></span></div>
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<span data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0">One reason President Obama has been correctly circumspect about mentioning Islam in discussing terrorism isn't that he's afraid to call it that, but that by linking it to the religion and not to the morons committing these crimes, he gives our enemy comfort. </span></div>
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<span data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0">The comfort of having his words slipped into a recruiting video to prove that "America is at war with Islam". A fine recruiting tool, to be sure. ISIS and Al Qaeda appeal to people who are looking for a scapegoat for their problems, and by isolating Islam as a cause of terror (it's not), we give the poor and tormented in South Asia something to vent their frustrations on. </span></div>
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<span data-offset-key="f9nuf-0-0">(It's the same schematic that the Tea Party uses here, I should point out, just not to such an extreme degree. That's a post for a different, more political day.)</span></div>
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<span data-offset-key="tu4e-0-0">All we've done with our "war on terror" is give potential members reasons to hate us, to join their organizations. We in the west have consistently installed dictators and tyrants over them and while those installations have helped tamp down the some of the international violence, it hasn't stopped the anger, only inflamed it. It's like clamping down a lid on a pressure cooker: you'll stop the steam from parboiling your hand over the pot, but eventually, the pressure will release in an explosion and destroy your hand. </span></div>
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<span data-offset-key="tu4e-0-0">When we've decided to take out one of those tyrants we've installed, it's the people we claim to want to protect that have suffered the most. A hundred thousand Iraqis died in our wars against Saddam, and that's ignoring the collateral damage of the Iran-Iraq war that we probably ignited by weakening Saddam in the Nineties, too. Or the Kurds we abandoned back then. </span></div>
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I want to be clear, the West is not the main problem here, but we exacerbate the very real problems of starvation and poverty and joblessness and the concomitant hopelessness all that implies.</div>
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It's no coincidence that since President Obama's "<a href="http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/obama-quotes/" target="_blank">apology tour</a>" early on in his administration that there have been no organized terror attacks in the United States. That's not to say that terrorists aren't licking their chops thinking about killing Americans, to be sure, but I'm betting it's been really hard to recruit suicidal terrorists to attack us, Obama is just that popular even in the Middle East and South Asia. </div>
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The takeaway, in my view, is that America and the west must disengage from the region and let things settle themselves down, or we're going to end up in a world war, if accidentally. Already we've had <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/us-and-russia-jets-fly-within-miles-of-each-other-over-syria-a6693191.html" target="_blank">frightening incidents</a> that could <a href="http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/oct/30/us-fighter-jets-intercept-russian-bombers-over-sea-of-japan" target="_blank">easily have triggered</a> nuclear annihilation. </div>
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So how to defeat terrorism? Better minds than mine...yes, there are some...have tossed this problem around and come up with nothing. I'm afraid I've done little better. I can imagine a framework that solution might take, however.</div>
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1) <u style="font-weight: bold;">Economics</u> -- This facet is the easiest one: stop buying crude oil from the Middle East. We've had thirty years of warnings to prepare for this, from skyrocketing gas prices to global warming's effects. It's about time we made a commitment to stop using fossil fuels, but particularly oil. </div>
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This might seem counterintuitive: if people are poor, buying oil can only help them. Well, no. That enriches the status quo, which means it enriches those who are at the top of the economic chain in the Middle East, like the emirs and kings, at the expense of the people. To give the people freedom, we have to defund those who would take that freedom. Note that this would also directly hurt ISIS, who have taken crude oil fields across Iraq. </div>
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But notice something: global warming also directly impacts the people in the region in another way: the troubles in Syria began with a drought in Syria, which forced farmers to abandon their farms and migrate to the cities where they might try to find gainful employment.</div>
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But those jobs were non-existent as the economic meltdown of the late Bush administration worked its way through the global economy. </div>
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We need to establish economies across the region that don't rely on the resources of the rich, but on the labor of the poor. Trade with the governments of the region is counterproductive. Trade with the <i>people</i> of South Asia is imperative. </div>
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Trade what? What can replace oil?</div>
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Frankly, anything can. Remember, facet one of this discussion is to stop using oil: no oil, no oil economy, no reinforcing the status quo. </div>
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2) <u style="font-weight: bold;">The Marshall Plan</u> -- After World War II, and despite the war's far heavier toll on the West, the United States in its capacity as the last man standing extended an olive branch not only to our allies, but to our enemies. <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Plan" target="_blank">We would commit to help them rebuild</a>. </div>
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Why? We learned the lessons of the interregnum of the two world wars: letting problems fester only made them worse, not go away. </div>
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We do <a href="http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-25299553" target="_blank">owe it to the people of South Asia</a>, we in the West. We created artificial borders that ignored tribes, rivalries, nationalities and ethnicities in an attempt to be expedient. Literally. The divisions were drawn with a ruler on a map. We reinforced those arbitrary borders with force and armaments, and interfered in internal matters when those matters threatened our interests.</div>
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Imagine if the cops taped off your house and prevented you from using the bathroom, then stormed your part of the house if you took a piss in a flower pot. That's what we're doing in the Middle East. </div>
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Some would call this appeasement. Some would call this a waste of resources. I would argue that the trillions the United States alone has spent in the last fifteen years to "defeat terrorism" was a waste of resources and that we have to find a better way. A few billion versus tens of trillions sounds like a bargain to me, even if the outcome might end up being the same (it won't.)</div>
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To me, this Marshall Plan redux would involve helping the Middle East and South Asia rebuild their infrastructure. It would bring permanent water to drought-stricken areas. It would rebuild roads that we've bombed to hell and back. It would build better schools and hospitals and it would all be done by paying the local residents to do the work and administer the projects. We'd provide resources. They'd get the credit for the accomplishments. </div>
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And yes, we'd rebuild mosques, too. We have to. </div>
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3) <u style="font-weight: bold;">Diplomacy</u> -- To sum this up, we need to get the fuck out of the way. The West has spent the last decade dictating policy to the Middle East and South Asia: you will do this, you won't do that, you'll take this and like it, we'll take that and you'll be quiet. </div>
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What I see happening is a Middle East summit comprised of everyone: the nation-states, the sects of Islam (including the radical Islamists in some capacity), the South Asian states like Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan, the Turks, the Russians, the Chinese and the West. </div>
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Obviously, we won't just hold one meeting and be done with it. This will take time and energy and focus. It will require reaching out even as we kill terrorists, or finding intermediaries to understand the problems that we can solve with diplomacy and those we'll just have to let them sort out on their own. We can't settle the Shi'a/Sunni divide, for one thing, but if we can persuade the Muslim people that we'll accept any settlement between them that keeps everyone in the region safer, they'll sort it out.</div>
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After all, Northern Ireland seems to be working its Troubles out, and surely they've been more peaceful now than twenty years ago. </div>
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Eventually, these disparate talks can be built upon, bringing factions together in the same room, then bringing the agreements made in those rooms to bigger rooms and higher levels. </div>
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If the West gets out of the way and makes the Middle Eastern nations enforce these agreements -- and frankly, without oil and the commitment to rebuilding, why the hell would we even be there anymore? -- they'll eventually work things out. We may not agree with their solutions, but the point is, we won't have to, as we do now.</div>
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4) <u style="font-weight: bold;">Stealth</u> -- Let's face facts: we're going to have to cripple ISIS and Al Qaeda (again). We don't have to commit to waging a regional war to do so. We have the tools and ability to decapitate the leadership. As we saw with Al Qaeda last decade, that at the very least buys us time. Time can buy us the space to implement the rest of this plan. It lowers the heat under the pressure cooker of recruitment. It buys us the eyeballs and attention span of the people we want to stop from joining these organizations. </div>
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Clearly, this means an unconventional war fought under the radar. We have national policies that prevent us from interfering in the internal affairs of other nations, but those were state matters, and this is a criminal enterprise. And besides, since when has the United States paid anything but lip service to any international agreement? If we're going to break one, let's at least break the right ones, and not the Geneva Convention.</div>
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5) <u style="font-weight: bold;">A Thicker Skin</u> -- This applies to the West more than to the Middle East and South Asia.</div>
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Americans and Europeans are going to die. There is no way to prevent that. Whether we declare all out war and our soldiers die by the thousands or we fight this fight the way I outline above, and citizens and soldiers die by the dozens, we're going to have deaths. My argument is that there will be far fewer casualties for a far shorter period of time.</div>
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We're going to have to mature a bit and shrug them off. A little. We're going to have to put aside the bloodthirst for revenge and retribution and work to understand that these deaths are martyrs for a greater cause: the safety and security of all citizens of our nations. </div>
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We can rattle sabres, to be sure, just as we did after 9/11 (and failed to defeat even the enemy that attacked us, much less protect ourselves from future threats), but remember that on 9/11, we even had the "Arab Street" on our side. And lost it in our monumental hubris. We had the opportunity to exhibit dignity and grace and would have prevented hundreds of thousands of enlistments against us. </div>
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Today, the day after the Paris attacks, even Iran has expressed condolences and condemned the attacks, as they too are in the fight against ISIS in Iraq. It's a glimmer of hope. We can take them up on that gesture. </div>
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The other facet of that "thicker skin" is the more troubling one: we have to present a unified front on this project. In America, that will be next to impossible and we may have to cede leadership here to China and Russia. The old dictum that politics ends at the border was thrown out the window by the yahoos of the Tea Party and any attempt to implement this program will have to shut them up somehow. They'll need to develop a thicker skin and stop betraying our national interests. That's the only way we can be effective in this construct.</div>
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I think this five step program may be the only way to defeat an ideology. A good parallel in American history is the Mob. We didn't beat the Mob on the battlefield, we beat them by starving them of them of members, by giving immigrants better jobs, and better education, by assimilating them into our culture and providing the opportunities to attain the benefits of that culture to them, and finding ways of tying up the resources of the Mob so they could no longer wage an asymmetric war. </div>
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<span data-offset-key="eg3kt-0-0">After all, it took an accountant to put Capone in jail and effectively end his reign of terror. We won't defeat ISIS or Al Qaeda in the desert, we'll finally defeat them when we get the people in the region to stop joining them. Suicide bombers and jihadists have a very short shelf life, so the organizations are always desperate for new members.</span></div>
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<span data-offset-key="eg3kt-0-0">It took decades, and even today, we still have mobs and gangs and violence, but only to the extent that we can now treat them as criminal organizations and not an armed resistance. We'll always have ISIS and Al Qaeda and Hezbollah and Hamas or something like them because there will always be underinformed people who are easily manipulated by charismatic leaders and simplistic solutions. This project will make it harder for them to be effective. </span></div>
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Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-15341429325219636692015-11-01T08:37:00.001-05:002015-11-01T08:37:21.709-05:00Innocent as ChildrenMy Mets are losing the World Series.<br />
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I'm OK with that. Truth is, I've watched about three innings of the Series in total. I may have watched nine all playoffs long.<br />
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Which is actually more than I watched all season.<br />
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That doesn't mean I don't have an emotional attachment to them. I do, and want them to sweep the next three games and take the trophy out from under KC's feet. They can do it. The one thing this team has demonstrated over the season is the ability to turn adversity into wins (see: <a href="http://www.sbnation.com/lookit/2015/7/31/9083261/wilmer-flores-went-from-crying-on-the-field-to-being-a-superhero-mets" target="_blank">Wilmer Flores</a>) and there's no reason to think that a team that should be up three games to one can't win three in a row, particularly one that has ben as streaky as the Mets season suggests.<br />
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That I know all that is a testament to my loyalty to the team. That said, it saddens me what sports has become in this country, and I think it's a large part of the underlying troubles we endure right now.<br />
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For instance, the reason I'm a wishy-washy fan when it comes to watching my team on the TeeVee. For not the first time in my life, I can't, and not because I'm superstitious or some such, but for a more prosaic cause.<br />
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The Mets network isn't carried on DISH and I'm more loyal to people who do right by me than I am to people who present a product and tell me to take it or leave it (In order not to sidetrack this discussion, let me just say that DISH has worked hard in the thirty years or so that I've been with them to keep me as customer, keeping my costs down while putting together programming and service to suit my needs).<br />
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SNY is not carried by DISH -- neither is MSG or YES, for that matter, which prevents me from following nearly every other local sports team on a regular basis except football, ironically the most socialist of all sports -- so the only games I can watch are the ones on networks or on the local broadcast outlet, WPIX. Those number maybe a dozen or so.<br />
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They were, but the Mets decided to abandon whatever percentage of Mets fans have DISH when DISH didn't buckle into their somewhat outrageous demands. Profit, before product.<br />
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The first time the Mets abandoned a significant portion of their fan base, that time was a lot harder to swallow. The team decided to take nearly all games off over-the-air broadcasts and put them on cable TV (first on Cablevision's SportsChannel, which morphed into FoxSports NY, and then ultimately to SNY, the Mets-owned outlet).<br />
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The team banked on fan loyalty to carry it through these, and they were pretty much spot on in this. As more and more cable subscribers signed on (that's another story, the roll out of cable in NYC), the team grew a larger fan base.<br />
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All the while, every month, nibbling away at the combined pocketbooks of their fans, even when the season was over. Profit, over product.<br />
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I wrote all that to personalize the rest of this post, which is really about the business of sports.<br />
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I could bore you with statistics and numbers about the growth and mutation of sports from entertainment to a large and wildly profitable business, but let me put it on a human scale for you.<br />
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When I was a kid, watching the Mets on a 19" black and white Philco, the average ballplayer made less than the average union worker. He had to take a job to feed his family until training camp opened up, usually blue collar since college sports was what it should be, a sidelight to getting an education, so most players if they wanted a major league career refused to forfeit four years of their prime for a degree.<br />
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If he was smart and good looking, maybe he quarterbacked the local team, he could get a white collar job in a bank or a brokerage, entertaining clients. Only the really big stars, the Willie Mayses or the Joe Namaths, made enough from endorsement contracts to tide them over between seasons, or could command a contract big enough to allow them to focus on their careers and not on survival after the season.<br />
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And God forbid you have a career ending injury, altho that happened all too frequently. You had no education, no job prospects (because, really, how many jobs require you to hit a 0-2 curve ball?) and an aching body. It's no wonder that, even today, all professional sports unions have to provide charitable help for their forebears, forty years after the explosion of money in sports.<br />
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Today? Even a slightly-better-than average player (say, Daniel Murphy, since he's on my mind, who has an average WAR over 162 games...I'll get to the statistics thing in a bit....of 2.27, meaning he'll give you almost three wins more than the average second baseman. A great player can give you ten or more extra wins) can command tens of millions of dollars a year.<br />
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The average player doesn't need to work a second job. He has healthcare through his union or his team, is vested in a pension based on his salary after a certain number of years playing (and is partially vested starting on day one of his contract).<br />
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None of this is to begrudge large money contracts. I'd rather a millionaire kid who busted his ass and forsook his youth take a few million than let some rich trust fund kid who happened to cobble together enough money from his inheritance or the markets take it.<br />
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Indeed, that's the point. The contracts are indicative of precisely how much money there is to be made in sports, if you can afford to take the risk (and once you reach a certain threshold, the risk is zero).<br />
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Case in point: my Mets. Concurrent with the launch of the SNY Network, the Mets also built an entirely new stadium, primarily with private funds (there were some municipal funds that targeted renovating the surrounding neighborhood and that's an entirely different story).<br />
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The owners, the Wilpons, were also friends with one Bernie Madoff, who suggested many years ago that they invest their money with him. Presumably, an awful lot of that loot was tied up into the stadium and cable channel deals. The Wilpons made money with Madoff, to be sure, so much so that, if not for an arbiter who took a very lenient view to their cause, they likely would be bankrupt today, forced to sell the team and channel.<br />
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As it is, they spent an awful lot of the last decade on a very tight team budget, what with building up reserves for the new stadium, the new channel (they lost all that guaranteed income from FoxSports, as well as a lot of fans who had to wait until SNY was carried on their provider), then building a reserve in anticipation of the Madoff decision.<br />
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In practically terms, this meant the on-field product suffered, since baseball is a business, not a sport, and athletes expect to be paid, and paid well. They aren't doing it for the love of the game anymore than the Wilpons are giving away a product for free.<br />
<br />
The short story, then, is the team sucked, the fans hated it and Citifield, a really beautiful ballpark, was basically empty for five seasons. Money was being lost hand over fist. Attempts to make changes that involved as little expenditure as possible (moving in outfield fences, twice, making the park's best quality, a pitcher's park, one of its worst) were made, but they didn't help. It was a dismal place to be.<br />
<br />
Once the favorable decision was handed down -- $75 million instead of $162 million -- things seemed to ease up, and spending commenced. That was in February of this year. Not coincidentally, the Mets made the World Series that same season, even if it was not smooth sailing the entire way.<br />
<br />
In 1964, the <a href="https://eh.net/encyclopedia/the-economic-history-of-major-league-baseball/" target="_blank">entirety of MLB</a> made $21 million dollars in television revenues nationally, all teams, including local TV deals. . The average player's salary of $15,000 (adjust to 2002 dollars, respectively, $123 million and $85,000). In 2001, the last year for which figures can be compiled, the national TV revenue jumps to an eye-popping $1 billion (average salary, $2.4 million). Note that, because teams are all privately held, we can't even put together a total television revenue figure anymore. That's just the national contract for FOX and ESPN (among others).<br />
<br />
We can't even estimate what the local contracts paid out, but <a href="http://www.forbes.com/sites/maurybrown/2014/01/07/mlbs-billion-dollar-tv-deals-free-agency-and-why-robinson-canos-deal-with-the-mariners-isnt-crazy/" target="_blank">someone has tried</a> and calculated a few billion dollars more annually, making the entire revenue package for baseball upwards of $8 billion dollars (including tickets, merchandising and other sources). Using those same estimates, as recently as 1995, baseball took in about $2 billion in real dollars ($1.4 billion unadjusted). That's about a 7% return every year for twenty years in real dollars.<br />
<br />
Staggering. It also explains the rise over the past two decades of the statistical analysis of games and players. I mentioned WAR earlier, or Wins Above Replacement. What this measures is the amount a player contributes to the wins his team gets each year. I don't want to get too technical so let's make this brief.<br />
<br />
The average wins a team has each year is 81 (there's 162 game schedule and for every win, there has to be a loss, so the league average is 81-81. It has to be). That hypothetical average .500 team is populated with precisely average players, then. If you replace that hypothetical average player (who hits .250, by the way; again, the league average) with any other player, how many wins does that player contribute to the team (or deducts, as the case maybe. Again, for every above average player, there must be a below average player).<br />
<br />
So a player with a positive WAR helps your team be better. Daniel Murphy helps slightly more than the hypothetical average player over the course of a season, giving you 1.6% better team. To put that into perspective, a team with 95 wins, which usually means its playoff bound, is about 60% better than average. He helps. Just not that much.<br />
<br />
Back when players worked as grave diggers in the off-season and families owned baseball teams and precious little else, teams could afford to assess players by the seats of their pants. There was a lot of scouting, talk about "five tool players" (run, throw, hit for average, hit for power, and field), and whether a guy had a "good attitude" (e.g. he could be counted on to make curfew). There was some statistical analysis -- batting average, ERA, slugging and fielding percentages -- but they were rudimentary and fairly unreliable for decision making.<br />
<br />
Back in the late 1970s, just after the introduction of free agency, and just as sports was becoming a billion dollar business in America and the world and computers were becoming something more than a defense contractor's wet dream, a group of statisticians and mathematicians decided that baseball needed an upgrade. Forming the Society of Baseball Research and led by Bill James, sabermetrics was born.<br />
<br />
The goal was simple: to try and understand why some teams win, and some teams lose. What factors play into this? Was there a way to codify differences in the outlying circumstances for a particular player that would allow a manager to assess a player objectively (apply the scientific method to baseball, in other words)?<br />
<br />
This could only have been accomplished with computers, of course. The massive amounts of data involved make this physically impossible, even with a good calculator.<br />
<br />
Naturally, as the science evolved, it started to attract interest from ball clubs desperate to field a winning team.<br />
<br />
Because winning teams attract money. Just ask the Yankees or Dodgers.<br />
<br />
Titles are nice, but money is nicer. That really could be the motto of all sports nowadays. But look what happens: once you start to codify precisely how to maximize the utility of your roster of players, you put yourself into a mindset of maximizing the utility of your entire investment.<br />
<br />
Sports becomes less game and more business. It becomes less about raising a trophy over your head and more about raising your dividend.<br />
<br />
And that sucks the joy out of anything. Just ask anyone who works a job. Or runs a small business.<br />
<br />
Once you introduce serious money into an industry, you start to attract serious businessmen. It's like farming: once a businessman realizes that your family farm is underutilized and could make a lot more money, he'll make an offer to buy you out.<br />
<br />
If you sell, the farm will stop growing potatoes, and start growing soybeans. Or worse, if it's in a valuable location, it'll start sprouting condos and mini-malls. It doesn't really matter if those potatoes were the best in the business, or if you fed an awful lot of families who needed the food. It only matters how many dollars could be combed out of your furrows.<br />
<br />
The same construct happens with sports teams, which aren't so much "teams" anymore as attractions for the mini-mall that a ballfield has become.<br />
<br />
Sports is not alone in this, to be sure. Everything has a price tag on it now, right down to the local news broadcast, which increasingly is filled with promotional pieces for the latest premiere from the flagship film company that owns the station, or whatnot.<br />
<br />
But sports holds a particular place in the hearts of Americans. Baseball, especially. After all...and I quote:<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
The one constant through all the years, Ray, has been baseball. America has rolled by like an army of steamrollers. It has been erased like a blackboard, rebuilt and erased again. But baseball has marked the time. This field, this game: it's a part of our past, Ray. It reminds of us of all that once was good and it could be again. </blockquote>
Which is why it still hurts to see my Mets losing, even tho they lost me years ago. In the end, I see Wilmer Flores crying at second base and I think back to Bud Harrelson and how much heart he played with. And I see Noah Syndergaard throwing a hundred mile fastball at someone and channeling Nolan Ryan. And I see Jacob de Grom with his wild hair, and Michael Conforto and Steven Matz, and look back to Tom Seaver and Ed Kranepool and John Matlack, heroes of my childhood.<br />
<br />
I'm reminded as I watch that this team that I follow has a history with me, and that history was a bigger part of my life than it should have been (even if I was thrilled when a Mets scout once told the adult me I could have been a big leaguer). Sports plays on that nostalgia, baseball more than others. It's long been promoted as a multigenerational game -- a dad tossing a ball with his daughter, a little boy biting into a hot dog at his first ballgame, grandsons and granddaughters arguing statistics with grandpa.<br />
<br />
And we'll gladly fork over hundreds or thousands of dollars a year without even thinking about it, for it is money that we have and peace that we lack.<br />
<br />
For me, baseball was about the only thing my dad and I shared a passion for. That was an innocent time, a better place. A part of me that was once good.<br />
<br />
But never can be again, and I'm having a hard time reconciling myself to that.<br />
<br />
Lets Go Mets!Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-59319041336229997032015-10-09T07:47:00.001-04:002015-10-09T07:47:32.919-04:00The Fiasco That Is RepublicanismYesterday's <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/10/us/politics/republicans-house-speaker-race.html?_r=0" target="_blank">stunning news</a>...stunning in the same manner that getting hit by a clown car is stunning...that the GOP can't even get a candidate to stand for the House Speakership speaks volumes to a terrifying prospect.<br />
<br />
A one-party America.<br />
<br />
Look, it's clear the GOP is falling apart much like a poorly-built Canestoga wagon careening down a Rocky Mountain pass, but the prospects of the nation after it crashes into the rock slide in the river valley are troubling.<br />
<br />
First, let's look at the likely scenario of the Tea Party or some form of it wresting control of the Republicans away. This is a small faction of America, roughly 25%, that lives in an insular bubble. It's well funded by con artists and Kochsniffers who have forgotten how hard it is to be an American.<br />
<br />
You could, rightly I think, make the argument that the wealthy in America are no longer American as much as they are transnational, which is not as "Caitlyn Jenner sexy" as that sounds. While the bulk of their corporate and investment empires are firmly planted in American soil, their money vacations in the Cayman Islands and winters in Gstaad, and works in China and Southeast Asia to maximize it's exploitative potential.<br />
<br />
They *say* they're American, but the truth is, that nationality will only last as long as it's profitable. After all, when Rupert Murdoch wanted to tame the entertainment frontier of China, he took a Chinese bride...after he became a naturalized US citizen.<br />
<br />
These are the people who control the Teabaggers: wealthy corporatist Americans who believed that, through Murdoch's FOX networks and other propaganda outlets, as well as dismantling any worker protections like unions and government labor boards, they could extend the American corporate empire by a few decades until China and India became ripe for exploitation. Now that they have, you'll begin to notice signs of American decay.<br />
<br />
This is because the construct that the Teabaggers have craved, a belief that somehow the private sector's patriarchal and patrician "bad dad" attitude is what makes America great -- that somehow individual greed adds up to social responsibility -- is being slipped out from under that small but vocal and violent crowd.<br />
<br />
Destroying the party most closely aligned with that construct along with it.<br />
<br />
Moderate Republicans, if any still exist, have long been pariahs in their own party, but you'll notice more and more that small voice of relative reason seeping through. Just yesterday, in the midst of the maelstrom of madness, Speaker-Apparent Kevin McCarthy<a href="http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2015/10/08/3710662/mccarthy-uncogovernable-house-rock-bottom/" target="_blank"> said something very telling</a>:<br />
<blockquote class="tr_bq">
<span style="font-size: 16px;">Asked if the House is governable, he says, “I don’t know. Sometimes you have to hit rock bottom.”</span></blockquote>
The rock slide in the river valley, in other words.<br />
<br />
The historical perspective on this is ironic: the Republican party was a splinter faction from the Whigs in the 1850s, when moderate Republicans decided the Whigs had become too batshit crazy even for them. Republicans were for modernizing the nation.<br />
<br />
Now the circle has turned. Moderate Republicans are in danger of extinction, leaving the Whigs back in charge. Karma, I suppose, but when you sell your soul to the Devil, he collects when its convenient for him.<br />
<br />
The prospects of a Teabagger-owned and operated Republican party means there are very few compromise positions that can be had, and that makes governance next to impossible, at least for the foreseeable future. We've already seen something on the order of twenty years of mismanagement and mislegislation on the part of Congress, ever since Newt Gingrich passed his Contract on America components, an early Koch brothers paean America.<br />
<br />
It's starting to look like the American people are about full of the nonsense, tho, and that may be a good thing. What may not be a good thing is that the conservative wing of the country played the long game of chess, and set traps and pitfalls that will be very hard to overcome: gerrymandering, wresting control of local and state legislatures to pass laws sympathetic to a fascistic hegemony of conservative oversight of the minutiae of local politics, all but guaranteeing a competitive advantage for any Republican candidate in nearly every district in enough states to ensure a voting bloc in Congress.<br />
<br />
See, it doesn't really matter what the majority of Americans want or even vote for. So long as the manipulation of process, including violating the right to "one American, one vote", can be allowed to stand by the Five Horseman of the SCOTUS, America will not be American again.<br />
<br />
We'll have what is effectively one political party, and a faction. And one political party...and here, I have to remind you how much I dislike Republicans...cannot govern effectively. Democrats need an opposition party, lest the country fall into a hive mind. Conflict generates ideas.<br />
<br />
Too much conflict stifles them, however. RINOs need to step up and reclaim their party.Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-73443659310984352132015-09-23T08:21:00.002-04:002015-09-23T08:21:40.758-04:00Day of AtonementToday marks <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yom_Kippur" target="_blank">Yom Kippur</a>, the most sacred day of the Jewish calendar, the Day of Atonement. It is, for want of a better metaphor, a day of soul-cleansing, when a Jew is supposed to make up for any slights and insults committed against his neighbors by asking their forgiveness.<br />
<br />
This is a good tradition to have, and it appears in nearly every major religion. Catholics have monthly confessions, Protestants believe in prayer at night to ask God's forgiveness...Christianity could take a page from Judaism here...Islam has the <i>tawbah</i>, and in fact discourages public confession of sin, altho it does permit the sinner to recompense the offended. Buddhism is unusual in that it is the offended that initiates the act of forgiveness to allow the offender to atone for it.<br />
<br />
In all circumstances, atonement requires humility. It requires letting go of one's exceptionalism, if only for a moment, and acknowledging that one is as mortal as anyone else and prone to mistakes, then asking forgiveness for those mistakes. One puts one's soul in another's hands. There are few experiences more equalizing in the human condition than an apology.<br />
<br />
As it is Yom Kippur, I want to focus on the Jewish tradition because there's a lesson to be learned here. The faith calls for making the body uncomfortable on Yom Kippur: no food, no bathing, no (leather) shoes -- altho I'm not sure how they view sneakers -- no perfumes or lotions, no sex.<br />
<br />
By making the body uncomfortable, the thinking is, the soul becomes uncomfortable, too. The pain one has caused others then registers viscerally in this discomfort. The only way to ease the soul is to unburden it, to cleanse the soul.<br />
<br />
I think it's time for America to come to this concept. I think a national day of atonement, both among the citizens as well as across borders, is in order.<br />
<br />
America is an exceptional nation, this has long been believed here and in many ways, we are. We have abundant natural resources, safe borders, plentiful land, beautiful landscapes, mostly moderate weather, and have been a beacon of freedom to people around the world.<br />
<br />
We are also an exceptionally evil nation. We lord it over everyone else that our way is the best way, the one true way, like Scientologists in a subway stall. Our culture, both the good but more importantly the bad, has infused itself globally -- to the point where <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2015/09/17/politics/republican-debate-iran-photos/" target="_blank">more Iranians know who is running for President</a> than Americans. When we can, we position troops to enforce our ideas of power.<br />
<br />
Force is not power, by the way. Force is a display of weakness, of acknowledging that you do not have control of a situation. Children use force. Adults use power. If you don't believe me, try not doing your job for a week or so. Your boss isn't going to call in the Seventh Fleet.<br />
<br />
For a brief shining moment in world history, we were literally the last nation on earth: Europe was rebuilding from World War II, Russia and China were emerging from internal revolts, Japan was scorched earth, India was a third world nation...only America had an economy poised to take advantage of the post-war expansion and rebuilding.<br />
<br />
You know the old saw about being born on third base, thinking you hit a triple? While that's not entirely true of America, it's not that far from true. But for an ocean, we would easily have been England or France. And given that Germany had made such advances in rocket technology as it had, we were maybe a year out from being England.<br />
<br />
But for the pairing of a great war and a Great Depression, we would have lingered in recession for nearly a decade longer. Public works were great programs (and we could use those about now, too) but it was the ramp up for war that kicked the economy into gear.<br />
<br />
But for our natural resources, we would have had trouble keeping up with our needs.<br />
<br />
We were able to exert power across the globe because other nations needed our goods, our products, our services, our resources. We were, quite literally, the Wal-Mart of the world, where you could buy anything, and we forced a lot of other outlets off the page for a while. When that started to dry up, we started throwing our weight around the world.<br />
<br />
We're a lucky country, maybe even a blessed country in that we have such bounties, but that's no reason to believe we are somehow divinity. Yet, all too frequently, we act that way. We need a dose, a large dose, of humility.<br />
<br />
Look at our Presidential candidates, for instance: how many of them have said "God told me to run"?<br />
<br />
Indeed, one, Scott Walker, compared himself to Jesus, saying that he was <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/politics/first-draft/2015/09/21/scott-walker-quits-2016-presidential-race/" target="_blank">called to lead by dropping out of the race</a>.<br />
<br />
He died for your sins, Ben Carson.<br />
<br />
Is it not the height of arrogance to claim that a higher power sought you and only you out and spoke to you and only you about the state of the union? Wouldn't we rather have a President who listened to the people and not the voices inside his own head?<br />
<br />
Yet, this is the face we wish to present to the world: the last humble man to sit in the Oval Office was Jimmy Carter -- and saying he's humble is by comparison to the others only. We revel in egoism. We bathe in it. And then when that President does anything to even slightly acknowledge that other nations might be in the same league as America, at least a loud cacophonous portion of us bang empty oil drums and rattle cans with stones about "selling us out".<br />
<br />
This is why we have troops in nearly every nation on the planet, enforcing our imperial economic hegemony. We lead not by influence, but by force.<br />
<br />
There are 7.5 billion people on this planet of which American make up about 4%. We have to live with these people, too. What we do affects them, and what they do certainly affects us, else why is there a refugee crisis from Syria? From Mexico and Central America? Why does our stock market get crushed anytime China's catches a cold?<br />
<br />
America likes to think of itself as the CEO of Planet Earth, Inc. Maybe it's time we picked up a bucket and mop and saw things from the other side.Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-81645874468206519842015-08-07T08:12:00.002-04:002015-08-07T08:12:52.694-04:00Adios, Jon Stewart<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />
I'm going to miss Jon Stewart. That <a href="http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/ss6u07/uncensored---three-different-kinds-of-bulls--t" target="_blank">final speech</a> (NSFW version) was a valedictory to carry on the torch of enlightenment, something those of us in Blogtopia (© <a href="http://xnerg.blogspot.com/" target="_blank">Skippy</a>) must keep burning. We will never be the concentrated force for all that is good and right in the world that he was (and still might be) but for sure, we can in our own ways make a difference.<br />
<br />
It's been a tough twelve months for those of us on the left who take great pleasure in ignoring the false narrative of the corporate conservative mainstream media like FOX, and CNN, CBS, et al. We've lost Colbert. We've lost Stewart. We lost Letterman, even if he was light on politics.<br />
<br />
And <a href="http://www.politico.com/story/2015/03/as-ratings-plunge-msnbc-faces-shakeup-116207.html" target="_blank">we're losing MSNBC to a madman</a> who somehow believes imitating a network with a dying audience is going to improve his ratings.<br />
<br />
Short term? Maybe, but long term, you want us liberals -- no, you NEED us liberals.<br />
<br />
Thank god for Larry Wilmore, Bill Maher & John Oliver, <a href="https://www.freespeech.org/" target="_blank">Free Speech TV</a> and <a href="https://www.linktv.org/" target="_blank">LinkTV</a> (both of which stream for free on your computer. Thom Hartman, Amy Goodman, Stephanie Miller, Bill Press...that's a really great line up of progressive voices, beacons in the wilderness all).<br />
<br />
And <a href="http://www.thewrap.com/insider-msnbc-not-talking-to-keith-olbermann/" target="_blank">there are rumors</a>...<br />
<br />
Back to Stewart. I first noticed The Daily Show when Craig Kilborn was the host. In fact, if you search the outtakes of his tenure there, you'll find my shining face being interviewed by him (ended up in the dining bay, sadly, altho my daughter splashed across the screen).<br />
<br />
I've been a fan ever since. I liked the idea of getting my news in an entertaining fashion. What I didn't expect, what I could not have expected, was to be informed as much as I have been. I will miss that. I will miss watching stories that the other "news" outlets had missed completely.<br />
<br />
And Jon had his causes, and he worked hard to bring them to the forefront of the American conscience: the Zadroga Bill springs to mind, as does the VA hospital scandal. He was a liberal, but he held Democratic feet to the fire when it was appropriate (see: the VA hospital scandal). His sense of fair play never got in the way of a good story because his stories WERE about fair play.<br />
<br />
And I think that's what I will miss most about Stewart: in a sea of bullshit, a cesspool of manufactured crises and FIRETRUCK! warnings, his show was a half hour (OK, eventually an hour, between Colbert and now Wilmore) where you could clamber onto terra firma and laugh at the ridiculousness of it all. "Restore Sanity," indeed!<br />
<br />
This is the torch you and I and everyone else we read and comment with must pick up, dust off, and run to the finish line.<br />
<br />
In a world where a blowhard egoist can lead presidential polling for one of the two major parties, we have to stand by, prepared to make fun of his pizza-eating habits and to deconstruct his personality, demolishing his ego and its defenses brick by prick. Why? Because it's just fucking insane.<br />
<br />
In a world where there is an huge disconnect between morality and morals, we have to stand guard against the invasion of morals into morality -- that is, to ensure that rational thought is held in the highest regard over the emotional gut punch of fear and hatred. Comedy, laughter, can do that.<br />
<br />
And in a world where it's way too easy to take yourself too importantly, there's Arby's.<br />
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Adios, Jon. You leave us, but you've not left us. Thanks for the laughs.Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-76002258942810881022015-08-06T06:19:00.002-04:002015-08-06T06:19:15.899-04:00The Best Photo You'll See All Day<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/nasa-photo-moon-dark-side_55c23d3ae4b0138b0bf4abb5?ncid=txtlnkusaolp00000592&kvcommref=mostpopular" target="_blank">Courtesy HuffPo</a><br />
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<div style="text-align: center;">
That's a lunar eclipse, from behind the moon.</div>
Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-20772849543622226682015-07-29T07:04:00.002-04:002015-07-29T07:04:42.056-04:00RIP, Cecil<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-43829741037109546522015-06-19T08:36:00.000-04:002015-06-19T08:36:04.491-04:00Racism and White America<div class="_209g _2vxa" data-block="true" data-offset-key="947b9-0-0" data-reactid=".4m.1:5.0.$right.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.1.0.0.$947b9">
<span data-offset-key="947b9-0-0" data-reactid=".4m.1:5.0.$right.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.1.0.0.$947b9.0:$947b9-0-0">Racism is about power. It's about realizing that each of us in powerless in this great big world, and so we band together, and find some way to grab a little power for ourselves. Strength in numbers.</span></div>
<div class="_209g _2vxa" data-block="true" data-offset-key="4p1i5-0-0" data-reactid=".4m.1:5.0.$right.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.1.0.0.$4p1i5">
<span data-offset-key="4p1i5-0-0" data-reactid=".4m.1:5.0.$right.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.1.0.0.$4p1i5.0:$4p1i5-0-0"><br data-reactid=".4m.1:5.0.$right.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.1.0.0.$4p1i5.0:$4p1i5-0-0.0" /></span></div>
<div class="_209g _2vxa" data-block="true" data-offset-key="4vs71-0-0" data-reactid=".4m.1:5.0.$right.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.1.0.0.$4vs71">
<span data-offset-key="4vs71-0-0" data-reactid=".4m.1:5.0.$right.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.1.0.0.$4vs71.0:$4vs71-0-0">It's easier to find power if you've got people who are even more powerless than you are. That's where the racism comes in. That's where the bigotry and hate comes in, because at some level, we understand that, but for the grace of God, that could be me. And that terrifies us. </span></div>
<div class="_209g _2vxa" data-block="true" data-offset-key="38lad-0-0" data-reactid=".4m.1:5.0.$right.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.1.0.0.$38lad">
<span data-offset-key="38lad-0-0" data-reactid=".4m.1:5.0.$right.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.1.0.0.$38lad.0:$38lad-0-0"><br data-reactid=".4m.1:5.0.$right.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.1.0.0.$38lad.0:$38lad-0-0.0" /></span></div>
<div class="_209g _2vxa" data-block="true" data-offset-key="8uenf-0-0" data-reactid=".4m.1:5.0.$right.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.1.0.0.$8uenf">
<span data-offset-key="8uenf-0-0" data-reactid=".4m.1:5.0.$right.0.0.0.0.1.0.0.1.0.0.$8uenf.0:$8uenf-0-0">So rather than fight the power -- which would entail actually putting some skin (no pun intended) in the game and putting our necks on the chopping block -- rather than pick up a pitchfork or a torch and go storming the castle and grabbing power where it actually lies, we're content to snipe power where we can find it, even if it means hurting innocent people. </span></div>
Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-31442050264177299902015-05-27T18:15:00.001-04:002015-05-28T07:52:17.587-04:00Party like it's 1992<p dir="ltr"><u>In</u> a hilarious, and profoundly obtuse, op-ed in Wednesday's The New York Times, Peter Wehner, a "senior fellow" at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, asks "Have Democrats Pulled Too Far Left?" And, as with most headlines that end in a question mark, the answer is No, they have not. What has moved to the left is the American people.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Wehner, who "served in the last three Republican administrations,” immediately shows just how out of touch he and the right are by comparing 1992 to 2015. He tries desperately to show that Barack Obama is so much further to the left of -- get this -- Bill Clinton. Alternatively, the GOP "hasn't moved very much from where it was during the Gingrich era in the mid-1990s"; as if that's a good thing.</p>
<p dir="ltr">For Wehner, this is a big problem for the Democrats because they lost BIG in the 2014 elections, which had the lowest voter turnout <a href="http://www.pbs.org/newshour/updates/2014-midterm-election-turnout-lowest-in-70-years/">since WWII</a>. He doesn't  mention that. He also doesn’t mention <a href="http://billmoyers.com/2014/11/05/gerrymandering-rigged-2014-elections-republican-advantage/">GOP gerrymandering, or gutted voter ID laws</a>.</p>
<p dir="ltr">What he does mention are a lot of scary things —  if you haven't had a new idea since the 1990s.</p>
<p dir="ltr">"Mr. Obama is more liberal than Mr. Clinton was on gay rights, religious liberties, abortion rights, drug legalization, and climate change," explains Wehner, apparently not realizing that is a new millennium.</p>
<p dir="ltr">I can’t believe I have to explain this but, American thinking on every single one of those things have shifted. </p>
<p dir="ltr">He even claims that at one point that the nation is “more conservative today than it was in the mid-1990s.” This idea is inferred from  a “recent Pew poll’ (that I could not find) that says the country agrees with Republicans on foreign policy and taxes. On Taxes, <a href="http://www.people-press.org/2015/03/19/federal-tax-system-seen-in-need-of-overhaul/">here’s a Pew poll</a> disagreeing with Wehner and the GOP.  </p>
<p dir="ltr">"[Obama] has focused far more attention on income inequality than did Mr. Clinton, who stressed opportunity and mobility," he continues, not caring that <a href="http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/22/the-uncomfortable-truth-about-american-wages/?_r=0">wages have stayed flat for the last 30 years</a>, which include the 23 years he is comparing, siphoning wealth upwards. Way harsh, Tai.</p>
<p dir="ltr">For effect, the bitter, pointless screed goes on to name other lefties like Holder, Hillary, FDR, de Blasio, and Warren, and Ed Miliband for some reason.</p>
<p dir="ltr">But, if you listen to the folks that Wehner does <i>not</i> call out — any of GOP presidential candidates — they are all promoting the same slogan: "Still The Same After 25 Years.” That isn’t what the country wants and that’s why the Right is trying to <i>fix</i> things, <a href="http://www.esquire.com/news-politics/politics/news/a35254/the-fix-may-be-in/">one-person-one-vote at a time</a>.</p>
Esteevhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07646674310737907361noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-91387651320795427172015-05-06T07:16:00.002-04:002015-05-06T07:16:22.010-04:00Barack Obama: Two Time Nobelist?<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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You'll no doubt recall the hue and cry when Barack Obama was awarded the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Nobel_Peace_Prize" target="_blank">2009 Nobel Peace Prize</a> for his stand on nuclear non-proliferation and his attempts to engage the Muslim world. Both the right and left in this country had great sport at this -- and here I'll agree -- premature awarding of a prize to a man with few signal accomplishments in foreign policy, apart from being "not Bush".<br />
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Six years later and I think it's time to give him the Prize for real this time. Think about this past year: for a man who started his administration hoping to <a href="http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/02/09/obamas-foreign-policy-summed-up-in-one-quote/" target="_blank">hit singles and doubles</a> in foreign policy (consumed as he had to be by the domestic economic crisis), he's kind of knocked a couple out of the park, provoking admiration from aboard and from mainstream Americans, and consternation from the idiot fringe that will sit on perches and poop all day, parroting "Obama bad, BRAWK!"<br />
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In general, his foreign policy across six years has been pragmatic rather than bold: he's taken a backseat in Syria and Libya despite being the single largest presence in either conflict. Of course, this makes the Ex-Parrots all squawk that he's done nothing, despite the fact that America has, if not the largest, certainly a large military and diplomatic presence in both of those conflicts.<br />
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He hasn't quite confronted Putin in Ukraine, a potential European Union and NATO member, to be sure, but then Russia has its own internal mess that prevents Putin from being as aggressive as he probably believes he can be. It's hard to invade a neighboring nation when your own people are having a hard time buying bread because <a href="http://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/2015/may/04/russia-climate-change-vladimir-putin-sochi-olympics-gay-pride" target="_blank">you've banned food imports</a> (shades of the Soviet!) Obama <a href="http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/against-putin-obama-gets-the-last-laugh" target="_blank">really hasn't had to take much action</a> against Putin. You know the old saying: when your enemy is drowning, don't throw him a life saver.<br />
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This also served to silence his squawkers....er, critics domestically, as well, all of whom marveled at the magnificence of Putin's strong aggressive display. The traitors. The same traitors who decided to cast their lot with Netanyahu over their own President, only to have it blow up in their faces as Americans decided, "You know? Enough is enough, guys."<br />
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The other intractable problem remains ISIS (and their sworn ally, Boko Haram), but here too, Obama has been working quietly in sync with allies in the region. It's a muddle, to be sure, so bad that Jon Stewart has remarked that the <a href="http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/1xg427/wait--whose-side-are-we-on-again-" target="_blank">United States is actually fighting the United States</a>, but it's better than our boots on the ground and gives political cover to the local nations to solve the problems that were ultimately imposed by western nations on their own terms.<br />
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Which brings me to Iran, of course. Here, Obama has taken bold action, action that scares the living daylights out of his conured critics, so much so that they attempted to undermine any agreement with Iran (and five other nations, I want to quickly add) only to have that, too, explode in their faces like a trick cigar.<br />
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A nuclear non-proliferation treaty with a nation that is far smaller than Russia, a treaty backed by Russia and China, one that can now be implemented to if not prevent, delay development of nuclear energy by Iran until we have had a chance to incorporate them into the world at large. Think it can't be done?<br />
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Is Iran any worse than Germany or Japan of the 1940s? Yet there we have two thriving members of the global community, trusted allies and partners.<br />
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And finally, there's Cuba. A sixty year old Cold War ended with the last regime standing. While de facto this freeze out ended after the Elian Gonzalez fiasco (and I say "fiasco" with respect to the Cuban-American mafia that forced politicians to genuflect to their whims in order to deliver Florida's electorate), it took an additional twenty years and a new generation of Cuban Americans to say "We'd really like to visit our relatives now." It was inevitable. Obama did the pragmatic yet bold thing, and he did it the right way.<br />
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Going forward, we see John Kerry <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2015/05/05/politics/us-somalia-key-moments/" target="_blank">making overtures</a> to the what can only laughingly be called "government" of Somalia. I anticipate next on the agenda will be the conflict in Mali (rebel forces there have aligned with Islamist extremists) and perhaps forcing Mugabe out of Zimbabwe, or at least holding his feet closer to the fire.<br />
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Obama will not be able to single-handedly in eight years create peace in the world, but the overall arc of his efforts has been towards that goal, reducing violent extremism in the world while creating economic opportunity in places it did not exist before. For instance, his advances in Africa and in South Asia will help make shipping lanes in the Indian Ocean a little safer from piracy when pirates no longer have chaotic ports to seek safe harbor in.<br />
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Despite the daily news reports, he's been generally successful in that goal: remember, when he took office, all those extremists had two honey pots to fly to, Iraq and Afghanistan, and the terrible tolls in those nations never really entered our consciousness because we became inured to the numbers and the stories and they all blurred together. Today, the death tolls from extremists worldwide (with the exception of Syria) are down and trending down.<br />
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This 2009 Nobel Prize, possibly not his last one, may have been the most prescient pick for the Nobel committee ever.Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-2428709976513409352015-05-05T14:22:00.001-04:002015-05-05T15:13:39.306-04:00The Future Has A Price<p dir="ltr">NASA, the space agency that has developed such technological wonders as Velcro, braces, Dippin' Dots, and <a href="http://m.space.com/29041-alien-life-evidence-by-2025-nasa.html">is close to forcing man kind to answering some deeply philosophical questions</a>, is at the mercy of blatant political partisanship and a poor understanding of science.   </p>
<p dir="ltr">The agency's budget for Earth science and research is being reallocated (read: cut) for space flight technologies <a href="http://arstechnica.com/science/2015/05/01/house-science-committee-guts-nasa-earth-sciences-budget/">to the tune of 40%.</a> The National Science Foundation's funding for Earth Sciences will also be slashed dramatically, and will no longer receive <i>any </i>funding for social sciences. </p>
<p dir="ltr">While it may sound obvious for the agency to conduct spaceflight missions, part of NASA's Vision includes "Conduct[ing] airborne remote sensing and science missions." In other words, NASA is responsible for studying Earth, <i>which is in space.</i> This recent budgetary issue appears to stem from the GOP's near-unanimous refusal to accept climate change as real and happening. </p>
<p dir="ltr">This literal denial of climate change can be seen most recently in Florida, where administration officials were ostensibly <a href="http://www.mediaite.com/tv/obama-jabs-fl-gov-scott-refusing-to-say-climate-change-doesnt-mean-its-not-happening/">banned from even uttering the phrase</a>. </p>
<p dir="ltr">For another example, the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee Chairman Lamar Smith wrote an op-ed titled "<a href="http://www.wsj.com/articles/the-climate-change-religion-1429832149">The Climate-Change Religion</a>." In the piece, Smith rails against Obama for making climate change so scary and claiming that it's even real. The title is especially weird because I thought Republicans were respectful of deeply held religious beliefs, going as far as passing bills to allow people to discriminate against others who do not adhere to those beliefs. But this time it's different because Mr. Lamar (<a href="http://www.opensecrets.org/politicians/summary.php?cid=N00001811&cycle=2014">nor his donors)</a> does not share those beliefs, and so he disregards them; despite the fact that there is an <a href="http://climate.nasa.gov/scientific-consensus/">ever-increasing amount of data telling us that climate change is real</a> and human activity plays a part. But, then again, these are peer-reviewed science papers, not the Bible or campaign checks, so point taken, I guess. </p>
<p dir="ltr">In the op-ed, Mr. Lamar makes some rather <a href="http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/7183314">dubious claims</a> about the threat, or lack of, from climate change including, that, over the last 15 years, the warming of the planet has stopped. Data shows that it have slowed, thanks to efforts by governments to curb emissions. He also claimed that climate change does not cause more severe storms, which is wrong. Climate change has been linked to stronger hurricanes and longer droughts, for instance. </p>
<p dir="ltr">It should be noted that <a href="http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/10/31/us/why-republicans-keep-telling-everyone-theyre-not-scientists.html?referrer=">Mr. Lamar, like many Republicans, is not a scientist</a>. He was a lawyer before getting elected to the House in 1986. It is strange that he would ignore the advice of the world's scientists at the peril of the country and the world for petty politics. Would you ignore your lawyer's law advice? </p>
<p dir="ltr">What is especially confusing is Mr. Lamar's introduction of the STEM Education Act of 2014 of which he, admirably, says "we have to capture and hold the desire of our nation's youth to study science and engineering so they will want to pursue these careers. A health and viable STEM workforce, literate in all STEM subjects including computer science, is critical to American industries. We must work to ensure that students continue to go into these fields so that their ideas can lead to a more innovative and prosperous America."</p>
<p dir="ltr">Except, of course, if the work of those future scientists hurt some of his donors. </p>
<p dir="ltr">It appears that instead of selling out the planet, Mr. Lamar and his colleagues should start investing in it. Otherwise, some day, it may never be cold enough to enjoy some Dippin' Dots.  </p>
Esteevhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07646674310737907361noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-23425009204612989462015-05-01T14:57:00.001-04:002015-05-01T15:08:44.694-04:00Mike Huckabee vows to fight the modern world<p dir="ltr">Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee took time away from <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2015-03-16/that-s-mike-huckabee-former-diabetes-cure-spokesman-to-you">selling snake oil</a> to old people to <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2015/05/01/two-minutes-that-show-mike-huckabees-promise-as-a-presidential-candidate/">pre-announce his annoucement to run for president</a>. Or his book isn't doing too well. </p>
<p dir="ltr">In a two-minute video, Pastor Mike previews the themes of his candidacy and almost immediately mentions the Clintons. Granted, Huckabee never actually beat Bill Clinton. Huckabee assumed the governorship after Gov. Jim Guy Tucker resigned but that's not the point. Who's going to remember way back to 1996?</p>
<p dir="ltr">Be damned sure that Huckabee will mention religion <i>a lot.</i> Most recently he said the the <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2015/04/29/politics/mike-huckabee-god-election-2016-supreme-court/">Supreme Court cannot "overrule God" on gay marriage</a>. Too bad your religion does not trump the rights of others, Pastor. </p>
<p dir="ltr">But that's not the weirdest thing he has said. He has also recently complained that <a href="http://washington.cbslocal.com/2015/04/29/huckabee-we-are-moving-rapidly-towards-the-criminalization-of-christianity/">"we are rapidly moving toward the criminalization of Christianity,"</a> which, is odd because he's running for president. If Christianity was soon to be outlawed, one would think he'd be in Jesus Jail instead of on national TV all the time. In reality, he's just upset that some Christians can't openly hate on gays without being called bigots. </p>
<p dir="ltr">He has gone further off the deep end, <a href="http://www.mediaite.com/online/huckabee-suggests-new-recruits-wait-to-join-military-until-obama-leaves-office/">telling potential military recruits to wait to join up until after Obama leaves office.</a> Why? You guessed it, because of the Obama Administration's perceived hostility to the Christian faith. What those two have to do with one another is an excellent question. </p>
<p dir="ltr">Down the rabbit hole we fall. </p>
<p dir="ltr">As a regular contestant on the horrific Family Research Council's Washington Watch program, Huckabee recently claimed that gays won't rest until <a href="http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/mike-huckabee-gay-no-churches">"there are no more churches."</a> What the actual hell? It's more likely the other way around. </p>
<p dir="ltr">If anything, Huckabee has all the super-right-wing rhetoric down pat: gay marriage is like the ISIS threat; if someone breaks into his home, he calls 911 to tell them where to pick up the body; contraception is tryanny; America is going down the tubes and we should pray for fire from heaven; etc. (I think that last one is a liberals-cause-volcanos reference).</p>
<p dir="ltr">It appears that the world is passing Huckabee by, and I hope flipping him the bird as it passes. </p>
<p dir="ltr">As one 5-star reviewer of Huckabee's book (#62, 954 Amazon Sales rank) says: "Easy read for an older guy like me. Makes a lot of sense about the sad state of our country, not the USA I grew up in!"</p>
<p dir="ltr">Thank God for that.</p>
Esteevhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07646674310737907361noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-20612389062783342182015-04-30T12:58:00.001-04:002015-04-30T13:17:30.675-04:00Ted Cruz and the Race to the Bottom of the Barrel<p dir="ltr">As he runs for president, Senator Ted Cruz is still in the news, even though he will never be president. After the kerfuffle surrounding him and some prominent gay hoteliers, he's back on the stump reminding folks that Barack Obama is black and it is the president's words that are causing cops to kill other black people. </p>
<p dir="ltr">As <a href="http://www.politico.com/story/2015/04/ted-cruz-obama-baltimore-racial-tensions-117484.html#ixzz3YoJ2xLtT">Politico reports</a>, Cruz, speaking at an event hosted by the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, insists that it is not systemic poverty or militarized police forces or unfair drug laws that are inflaming racial divides, but rather the Obama Administration's rhetoric. </p>
<p dir="ltr">"...[Mr Obama has] made decisions that I think have inflamed racial tensions that have divided us rather than bringing us together.”</p>
<p dir="ltr">Similar to his campaign platform, Mr Cruz doesn't give many specifics. He mentions one quote made in 2012 by Vice President Joe Biden, who said that the GOP is trying to put people back in chains. Damning stuff. </p>
<p dir="ltr">He also, for some reason, links the Sandy Hook shooting tragedy to racial and societal divides. Gun are too unfairly treated in this country, I assume. </p>
<p dir="ltr">President Obama, <a href="http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2015/04/28/obama_baltimore_press_conference_president_s_comments_on_police_and_poor.html">in his inflaming way</a>, recently called police violence a "crisis" and condemned the neglect of the poor. How incendiary! The poor are neglected and unfairly treated by police and the judicial system?! I never. For his part, Mr Obama seemed frustrated that people are more concerned with broken windows than broken necks. A reasonable, sober response, in this blogger's cheeto-stained opinion. </p>
<p dir="ltr">Is this the "incendiary" language Mr Cruz speaks of? Or is he just pandering. Nah, couldn't be: “I think Republicans are and should be the party of the 47 percent," Mr Cruz said with a straight face. </p>
<p dir="ltr">In true Cruz fashion, when pressed to discuss something about his own platform, namely Obamacare and immigration reform, he dodged and weaved like the true pandering asshole he is, saying only: “What you’re hearing me say is, my message is going to be consistent.”</p>
<p dir="ltr">That message being what, exactly?</p>
Esteevhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07646674310737907361noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-15110286.post-86788115052289552852015-04-16T07:20:00.001-04:002015-04-16T07:20:42.010-04:00UpdateIt's been a busy winter/spring around Chez212. I've been pursuing multiple career options -- photography, writing and acting -- all while managing a rookie softball team. To boot, I've decided I'm bored and want a job again, so I've been searching for that, too.<br />
<br />
I had a dream in the early morning today that I'd like to share:<br />
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I was walking with a group of people in some ravine or valley. We needed to climb up to a plateau to get to where we needed to get. We had two choices: walk up the built-in stairway into the cliffside, or climb a fairly treacherous rock face about four or five hundred feet high.<br />
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We had already been on the plateau earlier before descending into the valley (there may have been a festival up there. That bit of the dream is really fuzzy.) We wanted to return.<br />
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I couldn't see my companions but perhaps six of us were walking.<br />
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Anyway, I started to climb the rock. It was a very smooth surface, like granite that time, water and wind had scrubbed smooth. Some footholds and handholds, enough to make the climb doable without lines or harnesses.<br />
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Now, I have a terrible fear of heights.<br />
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No, let me rephrase that: I have a terrible fear of falling from heights. But unusually for me, I climbed and kept climbing, even after I looked down and swallowed my fear hard.<br />
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I reached the top. Almost. I was literally a hand-hold away. I could reach out and grab a pinnacle, but the pinnacle crumbled in my grip. I reached for a hand-hold of granite, and the granite shuddered and fell away. I could almost grip the top, the plateau, my goal, but every time I tried, it fell away.<br />
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I slinked back down. As I began to make for the stairs, this being of slime and goop started to climb. He -- because I'm assuming -- climbed the same route I did, but faster and with more confidence.<br />
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When he reached the top, he didn't grab hold of anything, he leaped from the pinnacle to the cliff face and hoisted himself up. I woke.<br />
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Did you ever have a dream where, when you woke up, even though it was a metaphor and even though the imagery was completely irrelevant to your life, you knew exactly what it meant?<br />
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That was this dream. I get my message.Carlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03664920037425489644noreply@blogger.com