Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Local Community

We are constantly hearing the need for local communities.  The signs of this working are occasionally seen like what happened in Wisconsin or Michigan-people taking power to do something.  This article is worth reading and I want to share it here.



The Corporate State Wins Again
By Chris Hedges
25 April, 2011
TruthDig.com
When did our democracy die? When did it irrevocably transform itself into a lifeless farce and absurd political theater? When did the press, labor, universities and the Democratic Party—which once made piecemeal and incremental reform possible—wither and atrophy? When did reform through electoral politics become a form of magical thinking? When did the dead hand of the corporate state become unassailable?
The body politic was mortally wounded during the long, slow strangulation of ideas and priorities during the Red Scare and the Cold War. Its bastard child, the war on terror, inherited the iconography and language of permanent war and fear. The battle against internal and external enemies became the excuse to funnel trillions in taxpayer funds and government resources to the war industry, curtail civil liberties and abandon social welfare. Skeptics, critics and dissenters were ridiculed and ignored. The FBI, Homeland Security and the CIA enforced ideological conformity. Debate over the expansion of empire became taboo. Secrecy, the anointing of specialized elites to run our affairs and the steady intrusion of the state into the private lives of citizens conditioned us to totalitarian practices. Sheldon Wolin points out in “Democracy Incorporated” that this configuration of corporate power, which he calls “inverted totalitarianism,” is not like “Mein Kampf” or “The Communist Manifesto,” the result of a premeditated plot. It grew, Wolin writes, from “a set of effects produced by actions or practices undertaken in ignorance of their lasting consequences.”
Corporate capitalism—because it was trumpeted throughout the Cold War as a bulwark against communism—expanded with fewer and fewer government regulations and legal impediments. Capitalism was seen as an unalloyed good. It was not required to be socially responsible. Any impediment to its growth, whether in the form of trust-busting, union activity or regulation, was condemned as a step toward socialism and capitulation. Every corporation is a despotic fiefdom, a mini-dictatorship. And by the end Wal-Mart, Exxon Mobil and Goldman Sachs had grafted their totalitarian structures onto the state.
The Cold War also bequeathed to us the species of the neoliberal. The neoliberal enthusiastically embraces “national security” as the highest good. The neoliberal—composed of the gullible and cynical careerists—parrots back the mantra of endless war and corporate capitalism as an inevitable form of human progress. Globalization, the neoliberal assures us, is the route to a worldwide utopia. Empire and war are vehicles for lofty human values. Greg Mortenson, the disgraced author of “Three Cups of Tea,” tapped into this formula. The deaths of hundreds of thousands of innocents in Iraq or Afghanistan are ignored or dismissed as the cost of progress. We are bringing democracy to Iraq, liberating and educating the women of Afghanistan, defying the evil clerics in Iran, ridding the world of terrorists and protecting Israel. Those who oppose us do not have legitimate grievances. They need to be educated. It is a fantasy. But to name our own evil is to be banished.
We continue to talk about personalities—Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama—although the heads of state or elected officials in Congress have become largely irrelevant. Lobbyists write the bills. Lobbyists get them passed. Lobbyists make sure you get the money to be elected. And lobbyists employ you when you get out of office. Those who hold actual power are the tiny elite who manage the corporations. Jacob S. Hacker and Paul Pierson, in their book “Winner-Take-All Politics,” point out that the share of national income of the top 0.1 percent of Americans since 1974 has grown from 2.7 to 12.3 percent. One in six American workers may be without a job. Some 40 million Americans may live in poverty, with tens of millions more living in a category called “near poverty.” Six million people may be forced from their homes because of foreclosures and bank repossessions. But while the masses suffer, Goldman Sachs, one of the financial firms most responsible for the evaporation of $17 trillion in wages, savings and wealth of small investors and shareholders, is giddily handing out $17.5 billion in compensation to its managers, including $12.6 million to its CEO, Lloyd Blankfein.
The massive redistribution of wealth, as Hacker and Pierson write, happened because lawmakers and public officials were, in essence, hired to permit it to happen. It was not a conspiracy. The process was transparent. It did not require the formation of a new political party or movement. It was the result of inertia by our political and intellectual class, which in the face of expanding corporate power found it personally profitable to facilitate it or look the other way. The armies of lobbyists, who write the legislation, bankroll political campaigns and disseminate propaganda, have been able to short-circuit the electorate. Hacker and Pierson pinpoint the administration of Jimmy Carter as the start of our descent, but I think it began long before with Woodrow Wilson, the ideology of permanent war and the capacity by public relations to manufacture consent. Empires die over such long stretches of time that the exact moment when terminal decline becomes irreversible is probably impossible to document. That we are at the end, however, is beyond dispute.
The rhetoric of the Democratic Party and the neoliberals sustains the illusion of participatory democracy. The Democrats and their liberal apologists offer minor palliatives and a feel-your-pain language to mask the cruelty and goals of the corporate state. The reconfiguration of American society into a form of neofeudalism will be cemented into place whether it is delivered by Democrats, who are pushing us there at 60 miles an hour, or Republicans, who are barreling toward it at 100 miles an hour. Wolin writes, “By fostering an illusion among the powerless classes” that it can make their interests a priority, the Democratic Party “pacifies and thereby defines the style of an opposition party in an inverted totalitarian system.” The Democrats are always able to offer up a least-worst alternative while, in fact, doing little or nothing to thwart the march toward corporate collectivism.
The systems of information, owned or dominated by corporations, keep the public entranced with celebrity meltdowns, gossip, trivia and entertainment. There are no national news or intellectual forums for genuine political discussion and debate. The talking heads on Fox or MSNBC or CNN spin and riff on the same inane statements by Sarah Palin or Donald Trump. They give us lavish updates on the foibles of a Mel Gibson or Charlie Sheen. And they provide venues for the powerful to speak directly to the masses. It is burlesque.
It is not that the public does not want a good health care system, programs that provide employment, quality public education or an end to Wall Street’s looting of the U.S. Treasury. Most polls suggest Americans do. But it has become impossible for most citizens to find out what is happening in the centers of power. Television news celebrities dutifully present two opposing sides to every issue, although each side is usually lying. The viewer can believe whatever he or she wants to believe. Nothing is actually elucidated or explained. The sound bites by Republicans or Democrats are accepted at face value. And once the television lights are turned off, the politicians go back to the business of serving business.
We live in a fragmented society. We are ignorant of what is being done to us. We are diverted by the absurd and political theater. We are afraid of terrorism, of losing our job and of carrying out acts of dissent. We are politically demobilized and paralyzed. We do not question the state religion of patriotic virtue, the war on terror or the military and security state. We are herded like sheep through airports by Homeland Security and, once we get through the metal detectors and body scanners, spontaneously applaud our men and women in uniform. As we become more insecure and afraid, we become more anxious. We are driven by fiercer and fiercer competition. We yearn for stability and protection. This is the genius of all systems of totalitarianism. The citizen’s highest hope finally becomes to be secure and left alone.
Human history, rather than a chronicle of freedom and democracy, is characterized by ruthless domination. Our elites have done what all elites do. They have found sophisticated mechanisms to thwart popular aspirations, disenfranchise the working and increasingly the middle class, keep us passive and make us serve their interests. The brief democratic opening in our society in the early 20th century, made possible by radical movements, unions and a vigorous press, has again been shut tight. We were mesmerized by political charades, cheap consumerism and virtual hallucinations as we were ruthlessly stripped of power.
The game is over. We lost. The corporate state will continue its inexorable advance until two-thirds of the nation is locked into a desperate, permanent underclass. Most Americans will struggle to make a living while the Blankfeins and our political elites wallow in the decadence and greed of the Forbidden City and Versailles. These elites do not have a vision. They know only one word—more. They will continue to exploit the nation, the global economy and the ecosystem. And they will use their money to hide in gated compounds when it all implodes. Do not expect them to take care of us when it starts to unravel. We will have to take care of ourselves. We will have to create small, monastic communities where we can sustain and feed ourselves. It will be up to us to keep alive the intellectual, moral and culture values the corporate state has attempted to snuff out. It is either that or become drones and serfs in a global, corporate dystopia. It is not much of a choice. But at least we still have one.
Copyright © 2011 Truthdig, L.L.C.
Chris Hedges writes a regular column for Truthdig.com. Hedges graduated from Harvard Divinity School and was for nearly two decades a foreign correspondent for The New York Times. He is the author of many books, including: War Is A Force That Gives Us Meaning, What Every Person Should Know About War, and American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America. His most recent book is Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle.

Monday, April 18, 2011

A naturalist speak for the earth

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=24374

This article highlites the current and long term damage our military has done to OUR society, the planet earth and the individuals that were trained to be killers.  In this region, weekly there is a domestic violence case, often  family murder involved.  Read it, so the next time you hear a jackass say we have no money for health, education, roads, bridges, jobs, handicap, energy research, care for the elderly, you will remember this article and the companies that sponsor our war machine, their profits and their lack of paying taxes.

In the meantime, the Pentagon's budget is unquestioned!  It could be dropped by 85%!!  WE HAVE NO SECURITY PROBLEMS!

Note this article was written by a naturalist that lives in the state of Washington.

Friday, April 15, 2011

The Times are a changing

If one is to believe history, Christian doctrine change with the influence of one woman in Constantinople in the year 553.  It involves a woman named Theodora and her husband, the Emperor Justinian.  The struggle for power included political and the church and the destiny of the population under their control.  In the end, Theodora won a major change for Christianity, the doctrine of reincarnation was abolished.

 The idea of suffering in this life for some afterlife reward is very fine for those in control of a population.  It is control in the purest form.   Control either by governments or religions include power from above, not power from self choice.  If a soldier thought that for each killing he did for the glory of the state, he would have to suffer that pain himself, would he be so willing to go to war?  If a population believed that each act of kindness created a reaction of goodness who would be in control of the population?  Where would greed GO!

The jokes that are said and discussed about reincarnation seems to me made by people that have a fear of responsibility to take control of what they believe and want, in this life time.  It is easy to get a neatly packaged rule set and don't have to personally think about decisions.

Reincarnation was an accepted principle for most of the world during Theodora's time,  including India, Tibet, the Himalayas and China. Up to the sixth century even Christians were not opposite to reincarnation.  The idea that one is responsible for one's own destiny is very simple.  It is the third law of Newton's.  For every action there is an equal opposite re-action.  Or another way of saying, the golden rule or you get back what you give out. 

All humans have had the feeling of instant comfort on meeting a new person.  Is that memory?  All humans have a sense of being in a place or knowledge about what to do in a particular set of circumstances.  Is that a deep memory?

For years, I have been open to the possibility of reincarnation.  It makes sense that the people in my current life I have had an attachment to before.  My purposes and life lessons in this life, give my time meaning.  We are all on a journey to live a life of principle and learn to care for ourselves and others-golden rule.

I have many interests, so many, that it has to be, a collection of many life times that are part of me.  My love of art, gardening and cooking that is part of my soul.  My ease with children and the power of their wisdom is been known to me my whole life.   My interest in world travel is probable visiting places that give me comfort.  How could it be so random, where I have visited?  Why do certain stories of the past, I can not learn enough about?  Maybe I was there!

The time of Theodora and Justinian's were very troubling and violent but one thing remains, the Christian rule book was changed by a woman.
I think it is about to be changed back again with a new enlightenment.     

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Can it be true

"""There is an old Chinese aphorism, which your articles illustrates perfectly: If you want to be happy for an hour, take a nap. If you want to be happy for a day, attend a banquet. If you want to be happy for a week, go on vacation. If you want to be happy for a month, get married. If you want to be happy for a year, inherit a fortune. If you want to be happy for a lifetime, help others."""'''''

this was on a blog about Paul Allen and Bill Gates, it is the first time the Chinese saying had no gardeners in it!

I like the one about gardening better.

Friday, April 8, 2011

the new coffee can

I believe..........before the next election and maybe this fourth quarter of this year we will have a collapse of the US Stock market, the value of the US dollar, .........the housing market is falling monthly on the west coast and in Olympia, the cost of food and goods are raising monthly,  we are enter third unpaid/unfunded war, the congress refuses to regulate banks or wall street which collapsed in '07 putting the world finances at risk, congress refuses to tax the top one percent of the wealthy in this country as their wealth expands, the slide is on and will not stop until we see the big crash. 

this was written in March 2010 but I believe it to still be true.

"""""""""""With the US dollar increasingly perceived to be walking on shakier ground, and no significant signs in sight that the US will be able to pay off its debts without radical quantitative easing (i.e., effective devaluation of the dollar); continued unemployment levels near 10% and no short-term fix in the ongoing housing slump (more foreclosures expected throughout 2010 and 2011), more Americans are beginning to look north for investment opportunities that might provide a safer haven for their money.
And Canada is probably one of the best places American investors could park their money abroad.  Canada’s federal debt is actually lower than it was ten years ago, and percentage of debt-to-GDP is the best among developed nations (Germany ranking second).  It may be largely oil money, but there’s no denying that Canada is the new Switzerland: probably the best fiscally-managed country in the developed world.


I’ll repeat a few facts that certainly almost all Canadians will be aware of  by now:
1. Several of its banks were rated the safest in the world in the midst of the financial crisis of 2008-2009.
2. None of Canada’s banks needed (or asked for) a government bailout.
3. Canadian banks are all trading at or slightly above their 52-week highs – even a month ago, before the big comeback rally started last year.
4. Fiscal health extends beyond the banking sector – right before the credit crunch and market crash, two of Canada’s provinces were completely debt-free (Alberta and Newfoundland) with a third (Saskatchewan) close behind.
5.  Canada also has a sub-prime housing market, but perhaps due to different regulations and a different culture of consumption, there was never the debilitating wave of foreclosures that hit the U.S.  Then again, there were no “NINJA” mortgages in Canada, either.""""""""""""


It is time to open a Canadian saving account.

the long slide

Seems all the noise about the government shut down is to cover the fact that we are ready to put BOOTS ON THE GROUND IN LIBYA. ,,,,,,,,,,,three unpaid for wars at one time.

just divide the country Libya in half and take the oil producing part for Europe and the gas consumers of the world,,,already!  Isn't that what a world power does?

http://www.globalresearch.ca/

We need gas at $7 a gallon, a government shut down, transportation of food to come to a halt, maybe the citizens will raise up and riot and tell those clowns in the circus tent --- the show is over.  We can't reach the golden age until we get though this free fall.

Circus Tent

I get the sense in quiet one on one conversations, there are many people have lost confidence in our government.   The problems are growing so large with no honesty or facts being used in the discussion of solutions.  We all are in the magic world of the circus.


Simple things like the national budget, that "tent of fools" refuses to address the facts about the big spender, the Pentagon. It is off limits for deep cuts.  These corporations that build our war machinery pay for their political campaign costs.  The corporations start the think tanks, the foundations, pay for the livelihood of these performers in congress.  It has reached the point that few honest people can live in or get elected for the circus tent, our national capitol.

Don't let the facts get in the way of their beliefs.  Political beliefs should get respect.


Looking at the news out of Mississippi that close to a majority of the citizens still believe that inter racial marriages are wrong and should be define by law and stopped.  The black tar of racism is very alive in a state that is defined as Christian.  The "Tea Party" has been hijacked.  This racism, this narrow view of values is used by this pink skinned and red necked population that say they believe in the new testament, believe in justice for all.   Look at their candidates for president.

Don't let the Jesus get in the way of your beliefs. Your beliefs are sacred.


Medical errors in 2008 cost $17.1 billion and one in three patients encountered medical errors in the hospital. People in the circus tent in Washington want to save our medical system from change and believe we have the best in the world.  Because these fools in the circus tent can not look at facts and compare our system to Europe, Canada or parts of Asia we suffer the results.


Don't let the facts get in the way of your beliefs or medical profits.

Finally, let's believe our truthful government about radiation!  Let's assume their honesty is based on doing the right thing to help citizens of this country understand the risks and the dangers of nuclear fall out.   Let's assume they have our interests above the profits of nuclear power profits.  Let's assume the citizen panel of creating jobs in this country is not headed up with the CEO of General Electric, the builder of many of the world's nuclear power plants, and that he is concerned about our future.  Let's assume they will advise us.


Don't let your hopes get in the way of the facts.