January 9, 2008

  • Quotable Quotes

    Obama's Platform

    (This could really be said of ALL the Presidential candidates.  Ed.)

    "Barack Obama is in favour of hope, unity and change. If only his rivals
    would
    agree to campaign on a ticket of despair, discord and stagnation, the
    electorate
    would have a real choice."
         --Gideon Rachman, Financial Times, January 7 2008

    Film Review: Chalmers Johnson on Charlie Wilson's War

    (Any of you old enough to remember when it was ILLEGAL for Ollie North to
    channel money "under the table" to the Contras in Nicaragua?  Now, in the case
    of Charlie Wilson, it's humorous and just a trifle heroic.  Ed.)

    [....]

    One of the severe side effects of imperialism in its advanced stages
    seems to be that it rots the brains of the imperialists. They start
    believing that they are the bearers of civilization, the bringers of
    light to "primitives" and "savages" (largely so identified because of
    their resistance to being "liberated" by us), the carriers of science
    and modernity to backward peoples, beacons and guides for citizens of
    the "underdeveloped world."

    [....]

    When imperialist activities produce unmentionable outcomes, such as
    those well known to anyone paying attention to Afghanistan since
    about 1990, then ideological thinking kicks in. The horror story is
    suppressed, or reinterpreted as something benign or ridiculous (a
    "comedy"), or simply curtailed before the denouement becomes obvious.
    Thus, for example, Melissa Roddy, a Los Angeles film-maker with
    inside information from the Charlie Wilson production team,
    <http://www.alternet.org/stories/71286/> notes that the
    film's happy
    ending came about because Tom Hanks, a co-producer as well as the
    leading actor, "just can't deal with this 9/11 thing."

    [....]

    The tendency of imperialism to rot the brains of imperialists is
    particularly on display in the recent spate of articles and reviews
    in mainstream American newspapers about the film. For reasons not
    entirely clear, an overwhelming majority of reviewers concluded that
    Charlie Wilson's War is a "feel-good comedy" (Lou Lumenick in the New
    York Post), a "high-living, hard-partying jihad" (A.O. Scott in the
    New York Times), "a sharp-edged, wickedly funny comedy" (Roger Ebert
    in the Chicago Sun-Times). Stephen Hunter in the Washington Post
    wrote of "Mike Nichols's laff-a-minute chronicle of the congressman's
    crusade to ram funding through the House Appropriations Committee to
    supply arms to the Afghan mujahideen"; while, in a piece entitled
    "Sex! Drugs! (and Maybe a Little War)," Richard L. Berke in the New
    York Times offered this
    stamp of approval:
    "You can make a movie that is relevant and intelligent
    -- and palatable to a mass audience -- if its political pills are
    sugar-coated."

    [....]

    My own view is that if Charlie Wilson's War is a comedy, it's the
    kind that goes over well with a roomful of louts in a college
    fraternity house. Simply put, it is imperialist propaganda and the
    tragedy is that four-and-a-half years after we invaded Iraq and
    destroyed it, such dangerously misleading nonsense is still being
    offered to a gullible public. The most accurate review so far is
    James Rocchi's summing-up for Cinematical:
    <http://www.cinematical.com/2007/12/21/review-charlie-wilsons-war-jamess-take/>

    "Charlie Wilson's War isn't just bad history; it feels even more
    malign, like a conscious attempt to induce amnesia." 


January 5, 2008

January 2, 2008

  • Is Iowa Important?

    Options in America: Kill Yourself or Have a Baby
    By ALEXANDER COCKBURN

    Time made Vladimir Putin its Man of the Year. Chalk it up as nostalgia for
    the cold war, when America was great, and a working man in a state like Michigan
    had two cars, a nice house, a country cabin, a health plan, a pension and a wife
    who stayed at home, canning fruit and batting her eyes at the postman. These
    days he has two lousy jobs, she has three and they have negative equity in their
    home, no health plan and no pension.

    A couple of indices of how down many Americans are feeling about the
    future: The suicide rate among middle-aged Americans has reached its highest
    point in at least 25 years, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    recently reported.

    The rate rose by about 20 percent between 1999 and 2004 for U.S. residents
    ages 45 through 54 ­ - far more than among younger adults, whose own suicide stats
    are also on the rise.

    In 2004, there were 16.6 completed suicides per 100,000 people in the 45-54
    cohort, the highest it's been since the CDC started tracking such rates, around
    1980. The previous high was 16.5, in 1982, a year when there was a terrible farm
    crisis in the Mid-West.

    These days it's the health care crisis. People can't even afford to get
    finished off respectably by a doctor or a hospital, so they have to do it
    themselves.

    The second index of desperation is a sudden spike in teen pregnancies,
    particularly among young black women. As R.F. Blader wrote a few days ago here
    on this site, "When we believe in our opportunities, we safeguard our futures.
    Conversely, we behave self-destructively when we have no hope. For many
    teenagers in America, the options aren't heartening. In a society where
    opportunities are scarce and life is getting harder, getting pregnant puts a
    positive spin on a vote of no-confidence." Indeed some argue that having babies
    early is a very rational choice for a young black teen, since her support
    network of kin are still alive, and her own body not wasted by the toxins
    associated with low income neighborhoods.

    In less than a week America will start trudging through the endless months
    of Campaign 2008. Worthy Iowans, their quadrennial season in the limelight at
    its apex, will cram into the caucuses and kick off the horse races. In all the
    torrents of rhetorical hot air thus far expended, it's hard to find a single
    sentence from any politician that could give any comfort to that suicidal
    50-year old or the teen with a toddler as her only solace. There are gestures to
    populism by the Democrat John Edwards, but I've not met anyone who believes that
    there is the slightest chance of substantive reform of health care or a reversal
    of soaring trends in inequality. The bad guys have a lock on the
    system.

    The default option these days is fantasy, ­ a trend in American politics
    kicked off in this epoch by Ronald Reagan. Reagan knew how to keep things
    simple. When Reagan died a Pentagon official told me that when Ron became
    president in 1981, and thus "commander in chief", the Joint Chiefs of Staffs
    mounted their traditional show-and-tell briefings for him, replete with simple
    charts and a senior general explicating them in simple terms. Reagan found these
    briefings way too complicated and dozed off. The Joint Chiefs then set up a
    secret unit, staffed by cartoonists. The balance of forces were set forth in
    easily accessible caricature, with Soviet missiles the size of upended
    Zeppelins, pulsing on their launchpads, with the miniscule US ICBMs shrivelled
    in their bunkers. Little cartoon bubbles would contain the points the joint
    chiefs wanted to hammer into Reagan's brain, most of them to the effect that "we
    need more money". Reagan really enjoyed the shows and sometimes even asked for
    repeats.

    Reagan set the bar for the level of national political debate. They called
    him the Great Communicator, and no one has moved the bar since. So who cares if
    his great contribution to the national fantasy - "missile defense", aka, "the
    strategic defense initiative" aka "Star Wars - is now scheduled to consume 19 per
    cent of the defense budget even though it's well nigh universally admitted the
    system is useless? The system is impregnable to reform and everyone knows
    it.

December 25, 2007

December 21, 2007

  • Imagine, Part 2

    Wouldn't it be remarkable if the Lakota actually got away with this, without being savaged once again by arrogant, benighted, bestial white men? Among other things, they could finally grow industrial hemp legally.

    http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5iVC1KMTOgwiSoMQyT2LwZc9HyAgA

    Descendants of Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse break away from US

    WASHINGTON (AFP) — The Lakota Indians, who gave the world legendary warriors
    Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse, have withdrawn from treaties with the United
    States, leaders said Wednesday.

    "We are no longer citizens of the United States of America and all those who
    live in the five-state area that encompasses our country are free to join us,"
    long-time Indian rights activist Russell Means told a handful of reporters and a
    delegation from the Bolivian embassy, gathered in a church in a run-down
    neighborhood of Washington for a news conference.

    A delegation of Lakota leaders delivered a message to the State Department on
    Monday, announcing they were unilaterally withdrawing from treaties they signed
    with the federal government of the United States, some of them more than 150
    years old.

    They also visited the Bolivian, Chilean, South African and Venezuelan
    embassies, and will continue on their diplomatic mission and take it overseas in
    the coming weeks and months, they told the news conference.

    Lakota country includes parts of the states of Nebraska, South Dakota, North
    Dakota, Montana and Wyoming.

    The new country would issue its own passports and driving licences, and
    living there would be tax-free -- provided residents renounce their US
    citizenship, Means said.

    The treaties signed with the United States are merely "worthless words on
    worthless paper," the Lakota freedom activists say on their website.

    The treaties have been "repeatedly violated in order to steal our culture,
    our land and our ability to maintain our way of life," the reborn freedom
    movement says.

    Withdrawing from the treaties was entirely legal, Means said.

    "This is according to the laws of the United States, specifically article six
    of the constitution," which states that treaties are the supreme law of the
    land, he said.

    "It is also within the laws on treaties passed at the Vienna Convention and
    put into effect by the US and the rest of the international community in 1980.
    We are legally within our rights to be free and independent," said Means.

    The Lakota relaunched their journey to freedom in 1974, when they drafted a
    declaration of continuing independence -- an overt play on the title of the
    United States' Declaration of Independence from England.

    Thirty-three years have elapsed since then because "it takes critical mass to
    combat colonialism and we wanted to make sure that all our ducks were in a row,"
    Means said.

    One duck moved into place in September, when the United Nations adopted a
    non-binding declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples -- despite
    opposition from the United States, which said it clashed with its own laws.

    "We have 33 treaties with the United States that they have not lived by. They
    continue to take our land, our water, our children," Phyllis Young, who helped
    organize the first international conference on indigenous rights in Geneva in
    1977, told the news conference.

    The US "annexation" of native American land has resulted in once proud tribes
    such as the Lakota becoming mere "facsimiles of white people," said Means.

    Oppression at the hands of the US government has taken its toll on the
    Lakota, whose men have one of the shortest life expectancies -- less than 44
    years -- in the world.

    Lakota teen suicides are 150 percent above the norm for the United States;
    infant mortality is five times higher than the US average; and unemployment is
    rife, according to the Lakota freedom movement's website.

    "Our people want to live, not just survive or crawl and be mascots," said
    Young.

    "We are not trying to embarrass the United States. We are here to continue
    the struggle for our children and grandchildren," she said, predicting that the
    battle would not be won in her lifetime.

December 15, 2007

  • Imagine

    Imagine a Campaign that Called for Slashing Military Spending 75%
    by Dave Lindorff
    Thursday 2007-12-13

    While the Democratic and Republican candidates for president blather on
    about non-issues like who will be meaner to immigrants, who will use the most
    water on torture victims, who wanted to be president at the youngest age, who’s
    the best Christian and other such nonsense, and while Congress and the president
    dance their meaningless dance of pretend conflict, let’s for a moment ponder
    something more momentous.

    What if the US just packed up and left Iraq and Afghanistan, and brought
    the troops all home, shut down the 750-odd overseas bases we operate around the
    globe, and slashed our military budget by 75 percent?

    That would be an instant savings of roughly $365 billion per
    year.

    Now, the first thing we need to do is address the criticism that such an
    action would be abandoning the people of Afghanistan and Iraq, whose countries
    we have been systematically destroying for the last four to six years.

    Okay. I agree we have an obligation here. So let’s allocate say $50 billion
    in annual aid to those two countries, to be funneled through international aid
    organizations, from the U.N. to CARE and the Red Cross/Red Crescent.

    That still leaves $315 billion in funds to play with.

    We also have to address those who will ask fearfully if we aren’t opening
    ourselves to attack from our many enemies abroad.

    But hold on a minute. If we cut the US military budget down to a paltry
    $115 billion a year, that would still leave us with by far the largest military
    budget in the entire world. The next biggest spender on its military is China,
    at $62.5 billion, followed by Russia, at $62 billion. That is to say, our
    military budget, if slashed by three quarters, would still be about equal to
    Russia’s and China’s military budgets combined. And that only tells part of the
    story. Most of China’s army is a repressive police force, required to keep order
    in what is a widely despised dictatorship, and would never be available for
    foreign adventures. (That’s why China, with a million or more soldiers, hasn’t
    ever invaded Taiwan, with a population of just 23 million. The army China could
    spare for an invasion would probably be no larger than the one little Taiwan
    could field to defend itself.) The same can be said for Russia, which is
    eternally in danger of splitting apart into myriad smaller states, and has to be
    held together by threat of force. Figuring that neither China nor Russia is
    likely to attack us anyway, given that one needs us to buy all the junk they
    make, and the other needs us to buy their oil, maybe we should look at those
    “axis of evil” states and their ilk, that might think we’re easy pickin’s if we
    were to slash our military spending.

    Well, maybe not. It turns out if you add up all the military budgets of
    America’s other “major” enemies—those so-called “rogue” states like Cuba, Iran,
    Libya, North Korea, Sudan and Syria—and throw in a few extra possible hostiles
    for good measure like Myanmar, Somalia and, oh, what the heck, Grenada (you
    never know when that troublesome little island might have another revolution!),
    it comes to a grand total of $15 billion spent on military stuff. That’s less
    than one-seventh of what we’d still be spending.

    And of course we wouldn’t be alone. Our allies—Britain, Germany, France,
    Japan, Israel, Holland, Canada, Italy, Australia, South Korea and Spain for
    example, though there are surely more who would come to our aid in a
    crisis—collectively spend another $258 billion on their militaries (and yet even
    today we have our military based in many of those countries. Go figure!). So we
    would hardly be at anybody’s mercy.

    We could even take a few billion of that $115 military budget and shift it
    productively from our huge and useless strategic nuclear program (you know, the
    one that just lost six nuclear-tipped cruise missiles for 36 hours, and flew
    them across the country, unprotected and unnoticed) over to operations like
    border patrol, satellite monitoring, and the Coast Guard, where it might
    actually help protect us, instead of just funding futuristic weapons that will
    never be used for anything but helping generals justify their stars by having
    units to command.

    So here we would be with still, by a factor of two, the largest and most
    advanced military in the world, but at peace and with $315 billion a year
    suddenly freed up and at our disposal.

    What might we do with all that money?

    Well, for starters, if we accept for argument’s sake that the Social
    Security System is running at a deficit and will eventually be defunded (which,
    by the way, I do not for a minute believe), actuaries say that injecting about
    $130 billion a year into the fund (the equivalent of increasing everyone’s SSI
    payroll tax by 2 percent) would solve the alleged problem indefinitely, allowing
    all current and future Americans to count on an inflation-adjusted secure
    retirement forever. So let’s do that. Then there’s education. Currently, the
    federal government spends about $58 billion a year on education. That gives us
    classroom sizes in our cities of 30-35 kids (40 here in Philadelphia). That’s
    not education—that’s child abuse (and teacher abuse). So what say we boost that
    amount by 50 percent—a much better educational reform than a lot of stupid “No
    Child Left Behind” testing regimens. Then there’s healthcare, on which the
    government spends a paltry $52 billion, leaving us with declining life
    expectancies and infant mortality rates, particularly among our poorest
    citizens, that are a scandal. Let’s boost that spending by 50 percent,
    too.

    Geez! We still have another $130 billion left!

    The federal government right now only spends some $40 billion a year on
    science, energy and the environment. That includes nuclear power and waste
    containment, and the entire NASA budget. Given the global climate change
    disaster we’re facing, we should probably double that, with the added $40
    billion going all to environmental research, don’t you think?

    Now we’re left with $90 billion.

    Well, it turns out that’s about what the government spends on “social
    programs.” You know, like welfare—the thing that we were supposedly ending?
    Truth is, of course, that over the last decade, the number of poor people and
    hungry people in the US has been rising, not falling, so maybe we should rethink
    that “ending welfare as we know it” mantra, and start thinking about improving
    the lives of those at the bottom of the ladder. That extra $90 billion, by
    doubling social programs—especially if it was spent on housing and job
    creation—would go a long way towards making America a better place for all. It
    would also reduce crime significantly, meaning we’d have a whole lot of money
    freed up that currently goes to police and prisons, so we could spent that money
    on other good stuff too.

    So who’s going to make this eminently sensible proposal?

    I’m frankly sick to death of hearing about how “tough” our next president
    is going to be.

    Our current president has shown just what being tough is good for: nothing.
    The country is less safe, we’ve got 80,000 returned soldiers suffering from
    life-long injuries, we’ve made enemies out of friends all over the world, and
    this country’s been going down the tube, with joblessness rising, the economy
    teetering and the once mighty dollar headed for Third World currency
    status.

    Until I hear political candidates start talking about slashing military
    spending -- and I mean on the order of 75 percent, none of this nickel-and-dime
    stuff, and about funding the things that really need funding -- I’m not even
    listening to these moronic campaigns.
    -----------------

    DAVE LINDORFF is a Philadelphia-based journalist and columnist. His latest
    book, co-authored by Barbara Olshansky, is "The Case for Impeachment" (St.
    Martin's Press, 2006 and now available in paperback). His work is available at
    www.thiscantbehappening.net

December 2, 2007

  • Where I've Been

    Yeah, I know you've all been terribly worried about me. Thanksgiving did suck big-time, as most of my holidays do. I was planning to go to Chicago, but my plans fell through. I ended up just staying home, sleeping and eating chicken soup.

    As I mentioned before, I've been over on Facebook quite a bit playing Scrabulous. My current record is 21-0, although fratmom is about to hand me my first humiliating loss. She's amazingly good, though she downplays it by saying that it's "just the luck of the draw".

    I've also been creating a new world music folder for your listening enjoyment. Some of you may recall that I have a little weekly world music radio show on a local community radio station. Every year, at the end of the year, I choose what I consider to have been the best of the year's world music, and in early January I devote a show or two to playing my selection of the best of the previous year's music. Now that I have my little web site where you can go and listen to the podcasts of my radio show, I decided to create a new folder containing the best artists/albums of 2007. I tried to limit my selection to ten albums, but got a little carried away, with the result that there are 24 songs from 13 different CDs for your listening pleasure. Go to http://www.esnips.com/user/NSEWEFT to listen to them and, of course, to my weekly podcasts.

    My next project will be to create a folder containing some of my favorite world music songs of all time. That will obviously be an ongoing work in progress.

    So as you can see, while Rome burns I've been fiddling, in a manner of speaking.

    Much love to you all.

November 22, 2007

  • Veteran Suicides Up, Free Speech Down in Amerika

    Here's a moving 9-minute video about a Veterans for Peace group that was denied the right to march in this year's Veterans Day parade in Boston. They marched anyway, and eighteen of them were arrested, including a 92-year-old veteran.  Most of them seem to be older vets, from the Viet Nam era.  There's one especially touching scene where a belligerent veteran in the crowd who feels they're "traitors" ends up breaking down in tears and being consoled by some of the Vets for Peace.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YnwXHBxD9s&eurl

    In related news, CBS learned in a five-month investigation that the suicide rate among veterans 20-24 years old is two to four times the rate for non-veterans of the same age.  Dr. Ira Katz, the head shrink for the Department of Veterans Affairs, falls all over himself trying to avoid calling it an "epidemic".

    http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/11/13/cbsnews_investigates/main3496471.shtml

    From the article:

    Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., is a member of the Veterans Affairs Committee.

    "If you're just looking at the overall number of veterans themselves who've committed suicide, we have not been able to get the numbers," Murray said.

    Later in the article, after CBS "got the numbers" and presented them to Murray:

    Sen. Murray said the numbers CBS News uncovered are significant: "These statistics tell me we've really failed people that served our country."

    Do these numbers serve as a wake-up call for this country?

    "If these numbers don't wake up this country, nothing will," she said. "We each have a responsibility to the men and women who serve us aren't lost when they come home."

    Now who says our legislators are not sincerely compassionate?

November 12, 2007

  • The Interview with God

    This is definitely worth two or three minutes of your time.  It reminds me of something Kahlil Gibran might have written.  Just click on the link below, then when you get to the site click on "View Presentation".

    THE INTERVIEW WITH GOD

    Its tone is not at all one of proselytizing, and it isn't as sappy as you might anticipate.  There are some very beautiful pictures.  May there be a message in it for each of us TODAY.

November 4, 2007

  • Would you become an organ donor?

    This is a no-brainer.  I AM an organ donor, and have been one for years and years.  I'm going to have no further use for my body once I'm dead.  Neither will anyone else after it's been cremated.  So my various organs and tissues may as well be used to save the lives or improve the quality of life of those who are still living.

    It's the same philosophy I have about money.  Money is needed by the living, not the dead.  Hence no expensive, elaborate funerals for me.  A simple cremation, the cheapest possible.

    (I'm reminded of a PBS documentary about funerals that I saw the other night, and also about my father's death.  My father was NOT an organ donor, and he was buried in the conventional way.  As an only child, I tried to assist my mother in making the preparations after his death.  The funeral director urged my mother, in his subtle unctious way, to purchase, for $500 extra, a casket with a rubber gasket around the lid, which he said would keep water out of the casket and keep my dad's body dry and worms out and so forth.  I was standing there just seething, not wanting to make a scene.  The death of a loved one is a very emotional time, and if preparations haven't been made in advance hasty and foolish decisions can result, always for the ostensible purpose of "honoring the deceased".  My mother agreed to the gasket.  When we got home I was able to convince my mother that the rubber gasket was going to rot in a few years, so she would be prolonging the inevitable by only a little bit.  I convinced her that she needed the $500 more than my father's body needed it.  She called the funeral parlor and cancelled the gasket.)

    But back to organ donation.  A lot of people don't realize how many different organs and tissues can be used.  It isn't just the kidneys or the heart.  Your corneas can be used for corneal implants or transplants.  Veins and arteries can be used for bypass surgery.  Your skin - the body's largest organ - can be used for skin grafts on burn victims.  The list goes on and on.

    I do draw the line, though, at "donating my body to science".  What that generally means is allowing your body to be used as a cadaver for first-year medical students to carve up while they're learning anatomy.  I realize that first-year medical students do need cadavers, but it ain't gonna be MY body.  I've heard too many horror stories about said medical students hiding their assigned cadaver in a closet as a Halloween prank, etc.  The earthly abode of my soul/spirit deserves a little more dignity than THAT.  And I want its various functioning parts to improve as many lives as possible.

    It used to be that, even though you had designated yourself as an organ donor, your family still had to give permission before the doctors could begin to harvest organs.  In many cases that situation would result in unnecessary delay as family members proved difficult to locate, reluctant to give permission, etc.  Recently, though, at least in the state of Illinois, a law was passed creating a new organ donor registry, where the donor's agreement is sufficient.  The family's permission is no longer required.  Definitely a step in the right direction.

    All of the previous discussion involves organ donation after one is dead.  Occasionally the situation arises where one is asked to donate a portion of one's body, such as a kidney or bone marrow, while one is still living.  That would be a much tougher decision.  I personally know of one instance where a woman - and her family members - expended a tremendous amount of money, time, and energy to donate a kidney to her niece, and the niece never even said thank you.

    The bone marrow people are always soliciting donors, saying how desperate they are for bone marrow.  So bleeding heart that I am, I tried a few years ago to be tested to see if I could be a bone marrow donor.  But the organization made it so damned difficult for me to be tested that I finally gave up in frustration and disgust.  They wanted me to pay a fee for my own testing, make multiple trips to their clinic which was inconveniently located, etc.  I wrote a vitriolic letter to their home office.  They replied apologetically, but I don't know if they've ever changed their practices because I haven't tried again.  I do know that any organization like that should do everything possible to minimize the inconvenience to the potential donor.

    At any rate, I strongly urge any of you reading this to register as an organ donor.  It's the last gift, and very possibly the best gift, you can give as you depart this earthly plane of existence.

    I just answered this Featured Question, you can answer it too!