Tuesday, November 11, 2008
whoa!
While most administrations create these kinds of last minute regulations, Bush and Co. appear to continue their assault on civil liberties, the environment, the little guy, etc... And, they are trying to get these regs in with enough time to prevent Obama from reversing them without a great deal of work. It must me noted that these guys are so totally shameless in their pursuit of their agenda.
Which brings me to note the continuing self-immolation of the Republican punditry. There is this kind of self-righteous flagelation that only reveals a total lack of acceptance of the failure of their ideology. It continues to be so hard for me to hear this kind of sour grapes stuff from a group of people who have engendered the kind of hatred that leads to booing and cat calls when McCain makes his concession speech. Liberals are so much more respectful.
I also have to say that it feels quite weird to feel that one's perspective in the world is validated. I feel that I have been exiled for so long (I even wrote the following song several years ago):
Enlightenment has faded
A new world is comin’ to be
I’m havin’ trouble seein'
What it has to do with me
Primitive are the words I hear
Comin’ from your mouth
I don’t want to say it
But we’re all headin’ south
The world I know has crumbled
Replaced by things I can’t see
I’ve heard talk about what’s ahead
It’s not including me
I want to get up – run and hide
But there’s no place to go
A gerbil runnin’ on his wheel
That’s me, that’s me so
I’m Exiled - within my own space
Exiled - a refugee in my place
Exiled - that’s the case
Exiled - like having mace sprayed in my face
I thought my mind was flexible
In that I guess I’m wrong
I'm havin' trouble writin'
These feelings in a song
Days go by and I feel worse
My ideas have been pushed aside
The feeling of being exiled
Tears me up inside
So what am I supposed to say
How are we to talk
When our ideas are so divergent
And there’s no place to walk
I don’t see my way beyond
The place we are today
You rise up and I fall down
That’s all I've got to say – so
I’m Exiled –in my home
Exiled – no place to roam
Exiled – there's no place for me
In your ideology
I’m Exiled - within my own space
Exiled - a refugee in my place
Exiled - that’s the case
Exiled - An IED in my face
I'm really not sure how to feel about this so far. Our man Obama is certainly a mixed bag, but I still have to accept that only 43% of white voters in the country voted for the man. That means that 57% of whites continue to hold extremely right wing views. I guess one has to look at the bright side and see that 43% of whites were willing to vote for a black guy - that is something after all.
Still, I think the Republicans have been incredibly successful in their agenda to make sure that governement would fail so that government would look like the problem they have been saying it is all along. This success, and the mess that this agenda has left for us, will make it very difficult for anything to get done (I'm not sure we can pay for any of the things Obama has promised). But I guess we shall see.
My main hope is that Obama will reverse the Bush adminstration's policies on domestic spying, suspension of Habeas Corpus, Guantanamo Bay detentions, and all of the rest of the unconstitutional abdications. Again, I would reiterate that the right wing tends toward paranoia (not to diminish the real threats that are out there) which leads to these kinds of failures of rationality and sticking with the country's fundamentals (which, by the way, is the right wings mantra when it comes to Judicial appointments and constitutional issues - but they are really a bunch of hypocrites when it comes right down to it - the 2000 election decision by the right wing of the Supreme Court is a prime example).
But no one is really talking about this particular issue, and as I have said before, there was little to no mention of the suspention of constitutional protections during the primary or election campaign (much to my chagrin). I would like to see some signal coming from the Obama team that they are going to work on this.
I think that it would be a great idea for Al Gore to be involved at a cabinet level position to direct global warming initiatives (Though he may be doing a better job outside of govt. than he would inside it). I am happy Obama is talking about green technology and starting a kind of New Deal infrastruture plan to encourage this kind of growth, but I would really like to see a real push by Congress and the Executive to institute mandates for renewable energy sources and cars that don't run on fossile fuels.
I heard on NPR part of a conversation in which the host was asking if the election of Obama was a signal to the country that the 60s were over. Actually, I think that it is a signal that the 60s have only just begun! Lets continue to hope and work together to really transform how people in the country see themselves in relation to the world (acceptance of a more global and historical outlook), see themselves in relation to others (stop being a bunch of bigots and xenophobes), and being able to value intelligence (and understand that there are people who know more than you do, to seek out answers through exploration of ideas and not to just reject ideas because they conflict with an uninformed world view). Let us hope that we can achieve some of these goals while we have the upper hand - and while the forces of ignorance that drag us backward are in decline once again.
Finally, a much more personal note. On the night Obama won, my father called me to say that he hoped that this election will lead to a country in which my children would have the same opportunities that his generation had. On the one hand, I felt that there was this feeling in his generation that their children have had to struggle more then they did because of the catastrophic policies of the last 30 years (and especially the last 8). On the other hand, his comment really expressed in a nut shell the type of coming out from under the lead blanket that has been pushing the country down for so long. Lets hope that the forces of ignorance, fear, oppression, and radicalization don't drag us back into hiding.
Friday, October 24, 2008
Random incomplete thoughts
1. Why are neither of these candidates really talking about the suspension of constitutional rights? Habeas Corpus? Patriot Act? Torture? Extraordinary Rendition? Yeah I've heard some superficial talk about these things but I don't think either of the candidates has really laid down the gauntlet and said they would purge these horrible Bush policies.
2. McCain has a clear misogynistic streak and the choice of his wife and Palin are evidence of it.
3. The psychological factors that lead one to be on the right vs. on the left. That is conservatives have an underlying paranoid personality - the belief that the world is a dangerous place from which you have to protect yourself. Liberals have an underlying depressive personality style that leads to feeling more responsible for the human condition and the fantasy that things can be better through human acts. These positions are not of course comprehensive and people land on a continuum, but they lead one to see the world in a very different ways and thus guide your positions on how the world works. There is also the way these two positions relate to authority. Of course the paranoid position tends to be suspicious and rejecting of authority in a fundamental way. The depressive position seeks for authority to do something about it all. Another factor in this who issue is that the paranoid position stems basically from fear and the depressive position stems more from resignation/helplessness. Again the repercussions for how you see the world and governmental policies are enormous. The other thing that one has to address when talking about psychological effects, and this goes largely ignored in media discussions about psychological issues, is that each position also has a paradoxical effect. That is, each position also in engenders fantasies about and wishes for a powerful authority that will swoop in and take care of everything for you. This is where we get the fantical fascist tendencies in the right wing and the socialistic/communistic tendencies on the left. What confuses these issues so much is that when either position becomes too extreme, the outcome becomes the same - the radical who seeks for government to leave them alone engenders a government that becomes all controlling.
4. I've have accepted that I am quite suspicious that electronic voting machines have been part of the election problem. In fact a relative of mine told me that when she voted in 2004, she knows she voted for Kerry but when she checked her vote the machine indicatd that she voted for Bush. This is just one incident and there have been reports of many others. It seems conceivable to me that if John McCain wins this election despite poll numbers still giving Obama a wide margin of victory up to election day and in exit polling, there could be some more significant social unrest than has been seen in the past. I say conceivable because US elections have been remarkably peaceful up until now. We'll see what happens. I need to make sure my passport is up to date!
5. I have always felt that despite the poll numbers it is likely that McCain will win because I have little faith in the American people to make the correct choices (they have not for decades). If you look at the polls the numbers for McCain are still around 43% - there is that number again that I talked about in RANT (see below). The 42, 43% number of Americans who are the ones who vote and are right wing. This is of course not the whole picture since only about half of the eligible voters vote in any given election. Who are the other 50%? They are the ones with learned helplessness, not caring or not believing that they have a say. I wonder if you polled these people what their positions would be or if they would have any at all. It seems that the Republicans are trying to disenfranchise voters while Democrats want to get them to vote - doesn't this indicate that these other 50% would lean the country to the left?
That's about it for now.
Saturday, October 11, 2008
DHS and the Patriot Act Become Personal
To whom it may concern,
A few months ago there was a news report about the INS holding people for hours with little reason other than superficial suspicions. According to this report, INS officers were extremely rude and did not tell the detainees why they were being held.
I never thought that this would happen to my family. My niece is a Swiss citizen and has been visiting our home between August and December 2008. On October 6, 2008 my 19 year old niece was returning from a 5 day trip to Mexico to visit her friend. Her port of entry was Houston, Texas. As she passed through customs she was tagged and escorted to a separate room. She was taken to a room where there were several other people waiting to be interviewed. She was not told why she was taken out of the line. She was not told how long the wait would be. She had 30 minutes until her connecting flight to Newark was scheduled to leave. The DHS agent who initially looked at her passport flagged her after asking how long she would be in the United States. (include all the details here). Another agent came to the desk and, without any explanation, took her to a separate office where she was ordered to wait with several other detainees. My niece waited about 10 minutes and was called over to another desk where she was interrogated, questioned about all the details of her trip and how long she would be in the United States. The officer then, with no additional explanation, asked her to wait. My niece was getting more and more nervous because she was now going to miss her flight. She was again summoned to the desk, this time her belongings were searched. The officer became ruder and more intimidating while he asked her about a name she had written down in her purse, a letter she wanted to post from the United States, and other items in her bags. After this second round of interrogation, my niece was asked to sit down again while the officer consulted with another officer in the room. My niece was again summoned to the desk and then allowed to leave. In her own words, this is how the experience effected her:
"It’s not only that I got detained on my way from Mexico back to the United States. What also made me very angry was how they treat you. English is not my mother language as the people who are working there should’ve seen this by my Swiss passport. Nevertheless, the woman at the border control was very unfriendly when I had to ask her for some words twice or three times. Without any comprehension of my situation. And also the man who was working on my case. Of course he told me what he wanted to know when I didn’t understand the question, but in a way that I had the feeling I am really stupid. There were other people waiting in the office, among them a woman with a kid. A worker asked suddenly who the child belongs to and looked at the first row, directing to a man. He thought that he has to go to the desk and stood up and then she asked again and he was confused. Perhaps he didn’t spoke English as his mother language. Then the mother said that it’s her child and the woman at the desk said without any respect and in a way you speak to dog that the man has to sit back down and that she wasn’t talking to him and why is he standing there. I felt really dirty in there and as if I did something wrong or I am a criminal. When I came out of the office and called my aunt, I just cried because it was so overwhelming and too much for me. I was shocked and also sad because I thought that I have to go back to Switzerland now."
I was shocked and disturbed by these events and I could not believe that my niece would be treated in this manner by our country. A nineteen year old young woman traveling alone on a Swiss passport could not possibly be a threat. I can understand customs being concerned about drugs or illicit material, but this could have been dealt with by a customs agent and not through a rude and deliberately harassing DHS agent. If this could happen to my young niece, it could happen to any of us. She was violated, harassed, and her rights were taken in a way that was totally unnecessary.
As an American citizen I am outraged by these events. I expect you to take some action to correct this horrible travesty. I do not mean that the particular INS officer should be sanctioned. I believe this is a systemic problem and overcompensation for the events of 911 and the Patriot Act. Please do not respond to this letter with one of your form letters, I will be offended. I would like a direct and personal response to this letter directly from you. Or, I would be happy to meet with you in your Newark, Elizabeth, or Jersey City office so that I can be clear that you are going to take meaningful action.
Thank you for your attention to this matter and I look forward to hearing from you.
Disingenuous Hypocrites
These types of commentaries (and the many other conservative bemoaning of late – Fred Barns, George Will) indicate a deep fear within the republican conservative/neo-conservative party. Hopefully they are in their death throws. However, it is unlikely that they will truly take psychological responsibility for all of the horrible policies they have foisted upon the country. David Brooks is absolutely right that it has been the Republicans who are engaged in Class Warfare (though they of course feel that the class warfare began with social security, welfare, the new deal, great society, and other progressive movement policies). The Republicans have been so tunnel-visioned in their pursuit of these policies that they are unable to account for the failures other than blaming the system for not really trying their ideas fully. (Though to me, as I have written before, are ideals which can never really be fully implemented). The death throws are a relief to see, but why have we had to go through this entire cycle of self-destruction to begin with? There are of course many reasons but one of the central reasons is that human beings have the need to self-destruct. We seem unable to maintain stability within ourselves or within the greater society. We seek out reasons to create problems for ourselves.
A real means for fighting against this has always been the acquisition of knowledge and a memory for history. When those in power want to lead us down the path of self-destruction they devalue education and devalue history. This is precisely what has occurred. David Brooks’ own analysis indicated that the republicans have “Alienated whole professions” and “It (republicans) has lost the educated class by sins of commission – by telling members of that class to go away.” And Brooks concluded “Republicans developed their own leadership style. If democratic leaders prized deliberation and self-examination then republicans would govern from the gut.” Aside from the problem of Brooks semantics – calling educated people a class – he is absolutely right. There has been a total devaluation of being educated, smart, sophisticated in ones thinking, and mindful of history. The fact is that it is the conservative ideology that logically leads to these types of tactics, though right wing thinkers cannot accept this basic truth. Brooks asserted that original thinkers in the conservative movement did not devalue these things and the movement was taken over by those who did, or at least used these means to win power. To me it does not matter, it is the logical conclusion of such an ideology to lead to these kinds of problems. Actually, it reminds me of my hundreds of interviews with gang members while working in state prisons and how street gang members (Bloods, Crips, Latin Kings, and others) talk about their gangs. They say that it all started with a good idea – that if society were not going to care for them then they would care for themselves. Then they bemoan the way the idea was implemented. The problem with this reasoning is that fending for themselves could never work because they are part of a greater society that would not tolerate such behavior. Then the gangs had to turn into criminal organizations in order to function, and then they turned into plagues on the very society they were “meant” to uplift. Then they created their own history (completly distorted) and version of reality. The gang member cannot accept that it was the very ideology that led to these problems in the first place. This is precisely what has occurred in the Republican party/conservative movement. They cannot perceive how their original ideas were so fundamentally flawed that the inevitable result would be economic and social tragedy. The same thing happened in the early 20th century that led to the great depression and will likely happen again because no matter how many times we say it, history repeats itself and people do not learn from history - especially when they forget it or are never taught it or just plain ignore it because their ideology blinds them to it.
Monday, September 29, 2008
Black Hole
This entire process, the implosion of the American financial system, the set up by house republicans, the power grab by the white house, etc... has led me to believe that the United States is going down. We are still the center of the world financial system and power, But actually we are the Black Hole of the world - sucking everything in, destroying it, and nothing is coming out. We all better get ready for many years of decent into economic decline, perhaps perpetual decline. China, India, South East Asia, and the European Union are breathing down our necks.
I have to say that I am very disappointed with Obama during this entire financial crisis and legislative craziness. This crisis is a great opportunity for Obama to present a new ideology that will lead us out of this mess. He has not presented any real leadership during this mess. I guess it is probably smart not to involve himself in this (as we saw with McCain who really messed up by advocating the passage of the bill, then claiming victory and leadership in getting a compromise, and then having the bill fail). Obama should step out from behind his silence on this issue and make some useful proposals and show some leadership. If he could manage to do this he would blow by McCain and never look back. But he is being politically savvy and letting the crisis itself take the republicans down. Its the best tactic to add to his strategy of saying as little as possible so as not to be left open to specific criticism. Blah!
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Some Debate Thoughts
While talking about Obama’s statements regarding crossing the Pakistan border to get members of Al Qaeda, McCain condescendingly stated that this was proof of Obama’s naïve and dangerous lack of experience. However, what was most fascinating, and something that has not been picked up in any press reports that I have read, was McCains statement that (and this may not be an exact quote) “You just don’t say that kind of thing out loud. You do what you have to do…” McCain indicated there that he was willing to lie to the American people. Basically what he said was I’m going to do what ever I want but I’m not going to tell anyone about it (much less the leaders of the countries that are being violated.
The second, and again something that has not been discussed in the press, was McCain’s most amazing statement during the whole debate. That is when he stated that Obama was like Bush in his stubbornness and inflexibility. This was an unbelievable statement coming McCain of all people. It also revealed that McCain gravely misjudges the character of his opponents. He misjudged Bush (several times) and he is misjudging Obama. To claim that Obama is not flexible in his thinking and is alike to the Bush administration’s unprecedented exclusion of ideas and adherence to ideology (something by the way that all of the republicans believed was a virtue – showing that he had principles). This revealed that McCain is a lousy judge of character.
McCain’s performance as a candidate. His adoption of Rovian tactics – that is to attack the virtues of the opponent as if they are the problem, his willingness to lie (his adviser’s company getting 15,000/month from Fannie Mae among many others), and his inconsistent positions on several issues – veteran’s benefits, the Iraq war, not knowing the difference between Shiite and Sunni, blindness to the ethnic cleansing of Iraq, being against the Bush tax cuts and now being for them, and many other issues all indicated that he has a serious credibility problem.
In addition to these issues, I was astounded to find out that Obama supported a missle defense system, illegal attacks on individuals within sovereign nations, and further warlike talk regarding other nations.
I have been deeply disappointed that these candidates have not been asked direct questions these debates about constituational threats to civil liberties, Extraordinary Rendition, Guantanomo Bay, torture, illegal wiretapping, and the Patriot Act. To me these are the most important issues of our time. Important because they have been the ideals of the USA and what guarantee our freedoms and what has led to the 20th century positive regard of the world. I want to hear Obama and McCain talk about his, and especially to hear Obama say he is going to reverse all of these horrible policies and to hear McCain try to defend them. Its like the ideology of the Federation in Star Trek - you act as a model for others and don't impose your ideology on them. The model you present is what acts as the catalyst for change - much as Ghandi and Martin Luther have represented. This is the path that Bush/Cheney etc... have completely destroyed and substituted imperialism/crusadism.
Finally, I feel the need to add here something to update my thinking about the economic crisis. The idea of allowing the economy to fail, to what ever degree it has, is a golden opportunity for us to really make a difference. The bail out is a bandaid that may last for some time but we will eventually be back into the same problem. The reason is that the fundamentals of the economy are flawed and especially when you get free market capitalists and corporate control of the goverment (and media). Obama has a great opportunity to raise this issue and really run with it. He can talk about returning the US to properity that is rational and slow moving rather than the idea of a rapid growth. In addition, the whole ideology of the free market can now be so obviously seen as flawed and that the federal goverment is really the only power that balances corporate/business interests. Rahl Emmanuel said it fairly well in his post financial legislation agreement press conference today. However the point needs to be made strenuously and with a ferver that will turn the entire financial/corporate/business ideology around.
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Sacrifice - Are you willing?
I am wondering what would happen if there was no intervention in the current economic “crisis.” What would be the actual result? Giant financial companies failing, those people out of work, people not being able to get a loan for houses, cars, etc... This would result in more people out of work. The US auto companies going bankrupt. More people losing their mortgages. No construction, therefore construction workers out of work… more unemployment.
What industries would continue to operate: oil/energy companies? Advertising?
Ok, so we would all have a lower standard of living for a while. How long? 1 year, 2 years, 5 years? Has anyone actually (actuarially?) looked at these possibilities? I have not heard about them. How can we make a decision if we don’t know all of the facts. Perhaps we should know the answers to these questions and make a choice based on actual information (instead of the “we would enter into a deep recession” – I already thought we were in one.)
My feeling is that they really just don’t want us to know. But why? They think the majority can not understand it well enough to make sense of it – the likely reason. Or, if we actually had the options laid out, maybe we would allow the rich folks to lose their money and have their businesses fail.
I find it so unbelievable that this government is going socialist. The part that bothers me even more is that they don’t want anyone reviewing their decisions – I don’t have the actual paragraph for you to read at this moment but I’ll link it in when I can. The whole thing sounds completely consistent with the Bush administration’s totalitarian leanings anyway – let us take care of everything – attitude. They took over the constitution, suspended important civil liberties (habeas corpus, illegal wiretapping, etc…), they started a preemptive war for no reason, they allowed the CIA and Army to torture prisoners, they moved people illegally to other countries (extraordinary rendition), and who knows how many other travesties of our freedoms. Now they want to own the entire financial system. When they talk about an ownership society – its like Animal Farm – Ownership for them means ownership for them not the rest of us.
I for one am willing to pair down my lifestyle, live much more simply, sell my house and live smaller, halt the consumerism rampant in my life, and sacrifice a lot to see the system fail and have to be rebuilt on a better foundation.
So, Are You?I am wondering what would happen if there was no intervention in the current economic “crisis.” What would be the actual result? Giant financial companies failing, those people out of work, people not being able to get a loan for houses, cars, etc... This would result in more people out of work. The US auto companies going bankrupt. More people losing their mortgages. No construction, therefore construction workers out of work… more unemployment.
What industries would continue to operate: oil/energy companies? Advertising?
Ok, so we would all have a lower standard of living for a while. How long? 1 year, 2 years, 5 years? Has anyone actually (actuarially?) looked at these possibilities? I have not heard about them. How can we make a decision if we don’t know all of the facts. Perhaps we should know the answers to these questions and make a choice based on actual information (instead of the “we would enter into a deep recession” – I already thought we were in one.)
My feeling is that they really just don’t want us to know. But why? They think the majority can not understand it well enough to make sense of it – the likely reason. Or, if we actually had the options laid out, maybe we would allow the rich folks to lose their money and have their businesses fail.
I find it so unbelievable that this government is going socialist. The part that bothers me even more is that they don’t want anyone reviewing their decisions – I don’t have the actual paragraph for you to read at this moment but I’ll link it in when I can. The whole thing sounds completely consistent with the Bush administration’s totalitarian leanings anyway – let us take care of everything – attitude. They took over the constitution, suspended important civil liberties (habeas corpus, illegal wiretapping, etc…), they started a preemptive war for no reason, they allowed the CIA and Army to torture prisoners, they moved people illegally to other countries (extraordinary rendition), and who knows how many other travesties of our freedoms. Now they want to own the entire financial system. When they talk about an ownership society – its like Animal Farm – Ownership for them means ownership for them not the rest of us.
I for one am willing to pair down my lifestyle, live much more simply, sell my house and live smaller, halt the consumerism rampant in my life, and sacrifice a lot to see the system fail and have to be rebuilt on a better foundation.
So, Are You?
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
On the Economy
Here is the way I see it. I am not an economist. I have never taken a business class. There are undoubtedly many things that I am not clear about. However, here goes.
The problems with Milton Friedman’s economics are the same as the problems with Marx’s economics – Both are fantasies of extreme proportions. It is impossible to conduct business in a massive society without governmental regulation and guidance of business just as it is impossible to conduct business in a massive society completely determined by governmental determinism. The current failures of Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac, Lehman Brothers, Bear’s Sterns, AIG, and whoever is next are ideal examples of these problems. Radical free market economists with contend that we have not had a truly free market so the failures should not be bailed out and the government’s intervention is inappropriate. What is interesting to me is that the current administration with the help of a compliant congress, has moved closer to the free market ideal than any in the past (at least since the early 20th century). It is when these ideals are reached for and deregulation of business/markets occurs, that businesses fail and threaten the economy. It seems to me that the same thing happened just before the great depression and the markets/business crashed.
When are we going to learn? The whole thing began with Reagan. I guess Carter began it at the end of his administration. But Reagan really pushed it and the Right is much more prone to these types of problems. The push was for deregulation. The results of obvious. Business needs regulation in order to function properly and in the best interest of the greater society.
The same process was in play at the interior department as recent revelations indicated.
No oversight leads to abuse.
This is a simple psychological process. Human beings do not do well without structure, boundaries, and restraints. Some of us develop enough internal regulation to exist independently, but the vast majority of people do not. Therein lies a serious problem with humanity. Human nature is not self-regulating, we are led by instinct, impulses, urges that cannot be totally overcome. This is why so many of us fall into hypocrisy – claiming to be anti-homosexual and seeking homosexual relationships in airport stalls, abusing power by having sexual relations with an intern in the oval office, etc… etc…Or claiming Miltonian free market economics and then bailing out your buds on Wall Street (Paulson and the Bush administration), claiming to want governmental reform but doing virtually nothing to enact legislation to make it happen (Pelosi/Reid). The list can go on and on. Your neighbors are just the same.
Children are in need of structure and restraints and boundaries to help them feel secure in the world and grow up internalizing their own self-imposed restraints and boundaries. If a child’s parent does not provide the child with sufficient boundaries and structure the child experiences fear, anxiety, anger. It becomes much more likely under those conditions that the child will act out, lack inhibition of urges/impulses, become aggressive, and unregulated. On the other hand, parents who are overly restrictive also create children who are more likely to act out, be frustrated, and lack initiative.
Don’t these scenarios sound familiar? The government’s main function is to act as the “parent” for the greater society. This is why there is a constant struggle between the two extremes of “parenting”: being overly permissive and being overly regulating. The reality is that because of the conflict we fall somewhere in between most of the time. It is unfair to say that one party is totally one way and the other is totally the other. Republicans tend to be overly permissive toward business interests and overly controlling in the social sphere (regulating abortion, religion, anti-constitutional/civil rights issues just to name a few. Democrats are have an opposite problem, mostly wanting to exert regulations on business but allow more freedom socially.
The battle between these two sides of the conflict is thoroughly natural and reflect the childhood conflict inherent in all of us. How we resolve these conflicts inside ourselves determines how we think politically.
This gets me into an entirely other issue which I hope to write about in the future – The idea that Republicans tend to be psychologically more in the paranoid range of personality and Democrats tend to be more of the depressive personality type. The implications for public policy in each of these types is quite clear.
Digression aside, the need for balance is obvious and our constitutional democracy helps us achieve some form of balance. The problem arises when those in power, especially executive power, try to undermine this balance. Now what administrations have done this? Republican – that is Nixon, Reagan, Bush (especially Bush). Dick Cheney is a paramount example of this (see the new book by Barton Gellman “Angler.”). Not surprisingly, Cheney was part of the Nixon Administration as was Rumsfeld.
Deregulation of any agency, business, etc.. will lead to the “child” becoming unwieldy and out of control. It is human nature. It is a fact that is seen repeatedly throughout the course of human history both societally and individually.
More about this another time.
The Democratic/Liberal National Campaign Dilemma
So democratic political consultants will never get this problem right because they can not understand it. Americans have turned a very significant corner away from enlightenment ideology and toward theocracy. Even if you are not particularly religious but just not educated you are susceptible to the same thought process (a thought process that is quite psychologically primitive). And yes this sounds quite elitist, but fact are facts.
How one fights this is by presenting the same kinds of illogical and irrational arguments and using them to twist reality into what you want it to be. This is not something educated people are good at because it feels unreal, illogical, and irrational and therefore wrong. Unfortunately for us, republicans are very good at this and it fits into their worldview.
Rant 2
I will preface this writing by saying that I am not against religious pursuits. I have spent years studying religion and have a long experience with religious people, though I am not one.
I have been very disturbed by the recent rise in religiosity in the public discourse. The founders of our country did not intend for a rise of religious beliefs to determine the course of politics in this country. There are those who would try to convince us that the founders were religious in the way that the most extreme of us are today. This is propaganda. The founders were, for the most part, men of faith, though their faith was not the determining factor in how they constructed the rules under which we live. These rules emerged out of a belief in a secular based philosophy. What is particularly disturbing now is that faith is in competition with “reason” and fact. When your faith leads you to negate scientific reality (fact) because the science is contrary to the direction of your faith you are no longer functioning in a rational manner.
As a person of faith you no longer have an open mind to question your beliefs – if Jesus said it its got to be true. I recently heard a friend – who has an immutable deeper faith – a fundamentalist actually, say that his belief is “rational” because what he believes is fact – its in the bible, its written there, it’s the word of god because god said it is!
I remember a Star Trek episode where the enterprise encounters a planet that was visited by another Earth ship in the past. The previous ship accidentally left a book about the Chicago era mob on the planet. When the enterprise returns to the planet, the entire planet has adopted that book as a sort of bible and based their entire culture on it. If asked the inhabitants of that planet would say the same thing as my friend – that their belief is rational because it was given to them by “God” (the earthlings of that past). You might say that this is just a story, but so is everything – including the bible.
Are the believers so uneducated and ignorant that they don’t know that the New Testament was written and compiled in the 3rd century, with many exclusions determined by political needs of the time. So this is the “truth” handed down by God?
These are the reasons why I have made up my mind that there should be no religion in public life. The Maplewood school board and others around the country are correct in taking out religious songs from holiday celebrations. Public life should be determined by secular pursuits. Religious pursuits should be a private matter. The beliefs of one group should not determine how the entire group should live their lives. This was exactly what the colonists of this country were attempting to get away from – as were the founders. They did not want to fundamentalists of England to tell them how to live their lives or pursue their beliefs.
Religious believers want to change education to conform to religious faith. The central example is making creation equivalent with evolution in biology classes. This is absurd. Keep religious faith private. One might say that it is like comparing apples and oranges, but that would make the comparison too close – apples and oranges are both fruit. Religious based creation belief and evolution are not both fruit, they are not in the same class and should not be given equivalence in public discourse. Education can be faith based, but if you want your kids to be exposed to religion in school you can make that choice and sent them to private school. Public education needs to be secular because of the very diverse backgrounds we come from. Teaching about different religious beliefs in school can be done as long as it is from an academic perspective “we are learning this to learn about the variety of beliefs with which we come into contact because of our diverse culture.”
It seems to me that religious people would be happy to have a theocracy in this country, one in which their religious beliefs become public policy. Pray to Jesus in school before games, before tests, before class as public policy. Then of course there is the determination of other policies – against homosexuals, contraception, abortion, death penalty, preservation/destruction of natural resources (I once heard another religious extremist say that God would not have put the resources there if he did not want us to use them and that there would be enough always no matter how much we used because God would take care of it. There is enough evidence to prove over and over again that God does not take care of us very well – holocaust, mass murder, starvation, pestilence, natural disasters, toxic contaminations, etc, etc. But oops, I forgot that I have come to this conclusion through experience not belief!
There is nothing more antithetical to the fundamental beliefs by which we have lived in this country for two hundred years. There has always been a tension between the religion and the secular. We do not like it when strict ideological beliefs determine the lives of people in North Korea, China, Soviet Union, Iran, Iraq, Taliban Afghanistan, etc…. However, it is more likely that religious belief will lead in that direction than a secularist or liberal ideology.
I also had a conversation recently with a man I deeply respect and with whom I share a great many beliefs (he is a radical and liberal). However, one area of disagreement is around religion. He is not a fundamentalist, but is a deist. He believes that there is no way to preserve morality without religion. “why would the world not descend into egotistic chaos in which we all pursue purely hedonistic needs.” My response to this is that I am an example of why not. There has not been a day in my life that I have had any belief in a God or other creationist creature. Yet, I am a deeply moral and ethical person committed to respect for all people. By your deeds shall you be judged, not by God, but by your fellow people. Furthermore, I believe that religion was created to standardize, so to say, the morality that already existed, not the other way around. It was not God/religion from which morality came, but God/religion came out of morality. Therefore, the world would not descend into chaos, but would be exactly as it is with religious beliefs.
The Rant #1
Why is it that so many people are turning to faith and extremism?
Why do 42% of Americans consider themselves fundamentalists or born again?
Why 44% do not believe in evolution.
Why there are so many cultures that are moving toward more extremist beliefs
a. Middle East – including Israel and Jew in general
b. Russia
c. Afganistan, Pakistan, Iran and soon to be Iraq?
Is it the fall of rationalism, empiricism, the enlightment/modernism?
If these things dissolve what else do people have to turn to besides more base/instinctual belief systems – e.g. looking to the “devine” or a megaman (Nietzsche)– a power larger than yourself – to guide you and then only believe that that is the true path to relief from all the bad things in the world.
These beliefs (empiricism) have failed to solve basic problems, they seemed to hold promise starting 400 years or so ago, they allowed leaps of understanding and development far beyond anything that had come before (or so it seems) – but they repeatedly fall short of expectations. Some of the negatives include the alienation from nature, alienation of self, the detachment from community, narcissism as a reaction formation to these alienations.
Another way they fall short is that the empirical model/enlightenment/rational/modernist belief system fails to bring a large enough majority of “believers.” This model engenders, in fact, a lack of faith – even to itself – in its own system which makes it unavailable to large numbers of people. It also requires a certain level of education and understanding to gain adherents (though there are of course those with that education and understanding that continue to adhere to fundamentalist religious beliefs [a fact that I can not really understand]).
It is also failing to substitute for faith in the sense that faith brings, or can bring, full release from pain, a full letting go of “seeking” for answers which is incredibly comforting. There is no release of that kind in empirical model/enlightenment/rational/modernist belief system and really the two are largely incompatible. So we get the conflict the friction and fights over basic truths and human endeavors. It is ironic that the Judeo/Christian model was the progenitor of the emiricist/enlightment model and then it tried to suppress it.
Empirical model/enlightenment/rational/modernist belief system has also failed to really bring enough people to make it a workable system for very long. This “democracy” is foundering (some might say failing) because of that friction. Those of faith are programmed to believe without doubting that things are as they believe they are – that whatever falls within their context is true – even when there is a mass of evidence to the contrary – the evidence is dismissed because it does not fit with their “faith.”
The same thing happens, by the way, in the empirical model/ enlightenment/ rational/modernist belief system – people stick with their derived theories for a long time, even when there is clear evidence against the theory. However, eventually, there is a shift that occurs (e.g. flat world/round world, or creation vs. evolution).
The rational system becomes troublesome because of the inherent nature of questioning and the expectation that the belief you have today might be wrong, and can be proven wrong, with evidence presented in “the right way.”
This makes defending your position much more difficult (if you might be wrong then your belief can be more easily undercut). If you have faith – you are never wrong. This makes for a much seemingly “stronger” position (especially if you share faith and reject “empirical thought.”
The failure of the rationalist approach, evidence collecting, hypothesis testing to come up with the answers to the basic questions of human life: self-meaning, aggression, hatred, poverty, racism, disease, inequality (domination of one over the other), nutritional needs, health, as well as search for meaning… means that you are drawn to seek answers to these problems elsewhere. Once obvious direction to look is faith – it is a going back to the pre-rational mode, a more basic fundamental (primitive perhaps is I dare to use the word) way of thinking about these questions.
Another way is to succumb to anarchy – total disorganization and meaninglessness (the kind of direction laid down by simplistic readings of postmodernism and deconstructionist metaphors).
Can we move beyond empiricism and faith to another mode (paradigm) that will push us to being able to find better answers to these problems? I put forth that no model has worked well enough to secure a survivable future for humanity. It is always easier to see the problem than to find the solution.