Dishonor Leading Superstition

epiphenomena: John McCain has surrendered his campaign to the same political fearmonger who smeared him out of the race in 2000. So long as there are reporters like Katie Couric out there stupid and desperate enough to let situations like this play out on their airwaves, the McCain camp can now create controversies out of thin air by arguing with itself on national television.


The reason Rove continues to survive is the same reason that Johnnie Cochran was called a genius for keeping a double-murderer on the golf course — because this generation of Americans has become so steeped in greed and social Darwinism that it can no longer distinguish between cheating and achieving, between enterprise and crime, and can’t bring itself to criticize winners any more than it knows how to be nice to losers.


Overview of Down

Get away from hot head media! Turn it off. These fools search for scapegoats to avoid apology.

Be thoughtful instead:

BILL MOYERS: We’re in a downward spiral.

GEORGE SOROS: We are in a downward spiral.

BILL MOYERS: How long will it go on?

GEORGE SOROS: Look the one thing that my theory says is that you can’t predict the future because the future depends on how you react to it. So if we do the right things then things will not — will be less painful. If you do the wrong things, they’ll be more painful. Now, so far we’ve been doing the wrong things. I very much hope that we’ll have a different government in a few months and they’ll be doing the right things.

BILL MOYERS: Well, don’t be shy. What do you think the new government should do?


BILL MOYERS: Would this all be happening if we still had a strong sense of the social compact? I mean, our social safety net has been greatly reduced. The people have a real sense that the gods of capital have left little space for anyone else. People at the top don’t have much empathy for people at the bottom.


If you want a long view, read something truly sour, The party’s over – our children won’t always be richer than us.

a tear may fall for truth

Hmmm… to children

may you believe deep inside that someone loves you,
may you have shelter and food, safe places inside and outside of yourself,
may you have the opportunity to fall down, to pick yourself up
without having to be told how to do it,
may you have the freedom to express all things without fear,
I blow a wish for love to come from many places so you can see its many forms,
may you learn peace and tolerance as you learn to disagree,
learn to find solutions that don't involve too much comprimise of your will
if it is true,
may you have arms to hold you
kisses for your cheeks and head
someone to tickle-wrestle
someone to love,
may you be spoiled just a little by a special friend,
may your caretakers set limits and teach boundaries,
may they know theirs as well,
understand that grown-ups are learning too,
may your dreams be nurtured
your nightmares quelled
your prayers heard
your hand held
your hair caressed
your stories listened to
your self appreciated
your body safe and
your spirit free

Republicans Quit 2008

Journalists in China have discovered factories preparing promotional goods for the Republican 2012 Schwarzenegger-Palin campaign.

2012 Schwarzenegger-Palin campaign

McCain Praises Obama

Are you a redneck who supports Barack Obama?Obama has “served this country with honor, and he deserves our thanks for that.” – John McCain

Obama is “a decent, family man.” – John McCain

“I admire Senator Obama and his accomplishments and I will respect him.” – John McCain

“I want to be president of the United States, and I don’t want Obama to be,” he said. “But I have to tell you, I have to tell you, he is a decent person, and a person that you do not have to be scared as President of the United States.”

[link CNN]

What is our government?

Government has a longstanding role in underwriting scientific research and regulating or (with less positive results) deregulating industries, government doesn’t really innovate, at least not in the sense of readying technologies for the marketplace and integrating those technologies into mainstream companies.

Capitalism to the Rescue?

No. Magic fails.

The U.S. has always prided itself on being the world’s undisputed leader in technological innovation. Since World War II foreign demand for aircraft, computers, automated tools and other products of American labs and workshops could be relied on to provide a fat surplus in the nation’s balance of trade. No more.

About 1978, Ronald Reagan failed.

Nuts for Food

Intimidation Matters:
The government’s hoops and moral judgment of Food Stamps makes people crazy.

Social and health costs greater than cost of food. [link]

Slipping On A Banana Republic

Now ask yourself:

Has anybody resigned, from either the public or the private sectors (overlapping so lavishly as they now do)?

Has anybody even offered to resign?

Have you heard anybody in authority apologize, as in: “So very sorry about your savings and pensions and homes and college funds, and I feel personally rotten about it”?

Have you even heard the question being posed? O.K., then, has anybody been fired?

Any regulator, any supervisor, any runaway would-be golden-parachute artist? Anyone responsible for smugly putting the word “derivative” like a virus into the system?

To ask the question is to answer it.

So long, Alaska

Voodoo dolls of Palin, bikini, and McCain, POWThe Palins’ un-American activities
Imagine if the Obamas had hooked up with a violently anti-American group in league with the government of Iran.

Palin’s radical right-wing pals
Extremists Mark Chryson and Steve Stoll helped launch Palin’s political career in Alaska, and in return had influence over policy. “Her door was open — and still is.”

Juicing up the ticket
Dishonest, cynical men put forward Sarah Palin for national office, but the truth emerges: The lady is talking freely about matters she has never thought about.

Carter Blames Bush

The last President who was also a public servant?

Jimmy Carter, 30 years ago:

“We are at a turning point in our history. There are two paths to choose. One is a path I’ve warned about tonight, the path that leads to fragmentation and self-interest. Down that road lies a mistaken idea of freedom, the right to grasp for ourselves some advantage over others. That path would be one of constant conflict between narrow interests ending in chaos and immobility. It is a certain route to failure.

All the traditions of our past, all the lessons of our heritage, all the promises of our future point to another path, the path of common purpose and the restoration of American values. That path leads to true freedom for our nation and ourselves. We can take the first steps down that path as we begin to solve our energy problem.”

He says about George Bush and the economy:

“The economic situation is an entrenched problem. It is going to take years to correct what has been done economically,” Carter said, adding he hoped Democrat Barrack Obama would win and immediately improve Washington’s image in the world.

Eight years ago, the United States had a budget surplus, low inflation and a stable, strong economy, he said.

Carter said he was astonished that the United States now owed China “in the neighborhood of $1 trillion.”

Deregulation and what he called a withdrawal of supervision of Wall Street had encouraged irresponsible elements in the U.S. financial system, enabling banks to borrow 30 times their value.

Carter told reporters profligate spending, massive borrowing and dramatic tax cuts since President George W. Bush took office in 2001 were behind the market turmoil and economic crisis.

“I think it’s because of the atrocious economic policies of the Bush administration.” [Reuters]

Next Is Now

Thoughts on the Financial Crisis – O’Reilly Radar

It’s not an accident that economist Joseph Schumpeter talked about the ‘creative destruction’ inherent in capitalism. Great problems are also great opportunities for those who know how to solve them.

And looking ahead, I can see great opportunities. … what we can do now are the things we ought to be doing anyway: Work on stuff that matters.

Earth Worth

“I love you as much as… “ Here she paused and I pictured her casting about for something with which to compare her love for me. “I love you as much as all the sofa pillows on all the sofas in the whole world,” she ended triumphantly.

I was charmed. Imagine! Not to be outdone, I told her, “Well, I love you as much as all the leaves on all the trees in the whole universe.”

There was a little silence. Then, “I love you as much as all the clouds in the whole universe.”

“And I love you as much as all the grains of sand on every beach in the whole world.”

She paused and sighed. “I love you as much as all the raindrops that ever fell and ever will fall.”

And with that, “I love YOU infinity times infinity.”

We should all try it.

Peak Metals

If Americans get around to worrying less and rope the moon, we’ll need it.

Metals and minerals are being used up.

Antimony, 15 – 20 years.
Hafnium, 10 years.
Indium, 5 – 10 years.
Platinum, 15 years.
Silver, 15 – 20 years.
Tantalum, 20 – 30 years.
Uranium, 30 – 40 years.
Zinc, 20 – 30 years.

Years Remaining:

Only the rich have thrived

Toronto’s Linda McQuaig talks about inequality and elitism in the US presidential election:

Massive Favoritism

A fundamental problem in the last few decades – both in Canada and the United States – has been the relentless campaign waged by the financial elite to overturn postwar social and economic policies that provided significant gains for the middle and lower classes in the decades following World War II.

The campaign has been phenomenally successful.

Katrina Vanden Heuvel is Taking On Inequality:

The richest 1 percent of Americans currently hold wealth worth nearly $16.8 trillion, $2 trillion more than the bottom 90 percent.

According to the Center for American Progress, since 1979 the average income for the bottom half of American households has grown by 6 percent. In contrast, the top 1 percent of earners have seen their incomes rise by 229 percent during that same period.

You are only as good as the love you have for other people. gapingvoid.com

Burning Heaven Poems

This fine fellow, Jim Minick, helps words work:

Singing the Pebble

At river’s edge, he found
all water, earth and mirrored sky
in one small stone, hazel and round.

He rolled it on his tongue,
tasted springhead and creek,
the roiling river, the sky’s lung.

He carried it between lip and gum
the rest of his life, trying
to sing this one pebble unsung.

Panic Planning 101

The man on the street would like to panic but they don’t know how to do it. – Wednesday, NPR NewsHour

Draft Every Leader

We all want to fix society.

Here’s Brock’s idea found in the comments:

We need a Draft for Congress. As in, people are nominated for Congress by their neighbors and get drafted. Like jury duty. Anyone who volunteers (or can be shown to have asked someone else to nominate him) is automatically disqualified. Once they’re elected all of their assets are seized and not released until their term of service is over.


Are Narcissists Natural Leaders?
COLUMBUS, Ohio – When a group is without a leader, you can often count on a narcissist to take charge, a new study suggests.

Researchers found that people who score high in narcissism tend to take control of leaderless groups. Narcissism is a trait in which people are self-centered, exaggerate their talents and abilities, and lack empathy for others.

Breach Breaks Everyone

Lisa Rein, Washington Post Staff Writer, finds the error of police too powerful to be restrained by law.


Before you finish this post, try an experiment. Jefferson noticed we are tender and nervous and easily shrink; that a people can waste promise and lose the hope of their times when force and danger is nearby. A child will quiet. A student will tire. A farmer will shrink away from his tinkering at night. A club of men grow cynical and women stop encouraging. Instead, he pleaded, we must regard each other and widen our civility at every blink and greeting. We rely on a hidden tomorrow, he explained, and no one knows who will bring it. We depend on the willingness of each other and this is the most tender thing of all. We cannot march loudly or steer our poor explanations into each other. We are too timid to be struck outside our door and too afraid our walls are thin. He said we would freeze history itself unless we gave a fair and forthright nation to each other. There are thick walls in our law to help us trust and there are unbending rules over our homes to help us trust. Only then will we work for each other and bring our gifts. Our nation risks its existence if it will not protect what might arrive unseen. If we are threatened, too many of us will quit and we can never see what they were bringing.


The Maryland State Police classified 53 nonviolent activists as terrorists.

The State Police entered their names and personal information into state and federal databases that track terrorism suspects, the state police chief acknowledged yesterday.

This Story at the Washington Post

* Maryland Police Put Activists’ Names On Terror Lists

Police Superintendent Terrence B. Sheridan revealed at a legislative hearing that the surveillance operation, which targeted opponents of the death penalty and the Iraq war, was far more extensive than was known when its existence was disclosed in July.

…state police superintendent who authorized the operation, Thomas E. Hutchins, defended the program in testimony yesterday. Hutchins said the program was a bulwark against potential violence and called the activists “fringe people.”

…undercover troopers used aliases to infiltrate organizational meetings, rallies and group e-mail lists. He called the spying a “deliberate infiltration to find out every piece of information necessary” on groups such as the Maryland Campaign to End the Death Penalty and the Baltimore Pledge of Resistance.

“I don’t believe the First Amendment is any guarantee to those who wish to disrupt the government,” he said.

One well-known antiwar activist from Baltimore, Max Obuszewski, was singled out in the intelligence logs released by the ACLU, which described a “primary crime” of “terrorism-anti-government” and a “secondary crime” of “terrorism-anti-war protesters.”


About the experiment.
Are you wondering for a moment if all of us will be cringing soon because these folks in Maryland are cringing now.

Do you feel cooperative toward your fellow citizen at this moment and will you bring your prizes and will you vigorously labor on behalf of your nation? Or are you worried, nervous, distrustful and distracted?

You see? Jefferson wasn’t wanting a perfect State made orderly and pretty and quiet. He wanted a Society made encouraging and restrained or all gifts and prizes and our solutions will hide as easily as activists and protesters who are now the first.

When Governors Were

Campaign in poetry, govern in prose, said former Governor Mario Cuomo.

And here’s his year-old scathe:

Governor Mario CuomoHowever good his intentions may have been, President Bush and his Administration have demonstrated an appalling incompetence in handling the machinery of government.

They started a war that has taken hundreds of thousands of lives on false pretenses, produced a fragmented economy and a devastated budget, showed callousness toward people in need especially after Hurricane Katrina and have been guilty of a shocking disrespect for the Bill of Rights and balance of powers which are the heart and soul of our Constitution. The Administration’s awkwardly elite foreign policy and its Iraq catastrophe have lost us the hard won respect and cooperation of much of the world and increased the hostility of many who were already our enemies. Their reckless tax cuts and spending have created deficits and debt that make it more difficult to deal with the undernourished vital federal programs, including Social Security, Medicare and education.

Those failures were so many and so blatant that all the Democrats needed to do to win back power in the Congress in the 2006 elections was to recount them loudly without having to propose significant and persuasive major policy alternatives.

The elections in 2008 will be a different matter: the burden of proof will be on the Democrats. If they want to hold on to control of Congress and win back the presidency, their candidates must spell out in some detail what they propose to do and how they propose to get it done, including how they intend to pay for whatever costs are involved. Many significant questions must be answered: how do we deal with our loss of jobs to other countries, our increasing inequality of wealth, failing public schools, the threatened insolvency of Social Security, the escalating costs of Medicare, the 47 million uninsured Americans, the terribly ineffective health care system, withering pensions, huge trade and budget deficits, the inconvenient truth of global warming, middle class malaise, 12 or more million undocumented immigrants?

For how long will we continue to be distracted from the war on terrorism in Afghanistan and other parts of the world by the debacle we have created in Iraq? When and how will we be able to remove our troops from the front lines in Iraq? How will we know when it is safe to bring back most of our troops? Should we bomb Iran?

It’s hard to recall a time in the modern history of presidential elections when we had before us as many vital issues.

Screw 08

Damn these silly days.

Maybe presidents follow the plow and politicians the horse’s gas, because what frontier has been made in Washington and when did we think so?

Of course this is rhetorical. But no, it’s not a dumb question.

Weak solutions offered in this election say a great deal. I wonder if any people in history have argued so much about so little? None of us could screw together a package to please a nation, none should try perhaps, but if my house was burning, I wonder if I’d fight my way into the kitchen to douse a match?

We’re distracted each four years. If a campaign lasts two years, then we’re moving ahead only half the time. Our fathers and mothers walked in localities and regions and made a world here and there with friends and so and so until we gathered up this thing America. Imagine if we first cranked a phone to see what Washington thinks!

Because our politics are so poor, I’m terrifically hopeful. Our nation has done better when we tire of noise and build America hand in hand. Our progress is each other and what we do, not mere representatives of what we’ve done.

Did I miss something?

Somewhere not long ago we forgot what government is. And in so doing we neglected to march ahead without it.

Politicians are never better than where we take them.

Years

Tons

Uses

Germanium

5

500,000

semiconductors, solar-cells

Indium

13

6,000

solar-cells and monitors

Arsenic

20

1,000,000

semiconductors, solar-cells

Hafnium

20

1,124

computer-chips, nuclear

Silver

29

569,000

jewelery, industrial-catalysts

Antimony

30

3,860,000

pharmaceuticals and catalysts

Tin

40

11,200,000

cans, solder

Lead

42

1,440,000

pipes and lead-acid batteries

Gold

45

89,700

jewelry, electronics

Zinc

46

460,000,000

galvanizing

Uranium

59

3,300,000

nuclear power and weapons

Copper

61

9,037,000

wires, coins, plumbing

Thallium

65

650, 000

superconductors, reagents

Cadmium

70

1,600,000

batteries

Nickel

90

1,430,000

batteries, turbine-blades

Tantalum

116

153, 000

cell-phones, camera-lenses

Selenium

120

170,000

semiconductors, solar-cells

Chromium

143

7,790,000

chrome plating

Phosphorus

345

49,750,000

fertilizer, animal feed

Platinum

360

79,840

jewelery, fuel, pollution

Aluminum

1027

32,350,000

transport, electrical, consumer