And thousands die nearby

Burma's Suu Kyi Under Arrest For 13 Years ~Richard S. EhrlichAbout hard times,
she’s been under arrest 13 years,
democratically the leader,
shriveled in a corner,
tucked to a blanket,
shuffling a dim room of rice and relief,
noble yearning,
hope bloating,
scars breathing,
pain and horror and damn resignation,
the weak strength of humanity when we accept torment…
a starvation of our victory.

Justice Is Before Democracy


I tried to purchase Burma once.
Well, a few swashbucklers too.
…ports and airports, huge hotels and smooth highways, lights and power lines, water and solids treatment, export agriculture and tech packaging, all that over-prime stuff we’ve forgotten. Folks visited and dined and toured but D.C. said an embargo is better…. Sub-prime can do that.


Sheep Walking

Years ago I taught local leaders that it’s untrue we live in a chain of command; that locality is our essential prosperity and not once have any laws or rules taken that from us. Today our future is again nearby: Vigor to assure sustenance and a growing justice is our tomorrow – the same frontier that built us.

Communications Consulting

[NYTimes] Who was the highest paid individual in McCain’s campaign down the homestretch?

Sarah Palin’s traveling makeup artist – $22,000 for two weeks.

Who’s next up?

Palin’s hair stylist – $10,000 in two weeks for “Communications Consulting”.

Company Store Serfdom

Charles Hugh Smith offers a horrifying jolt:

I actually lived in one of the last plantation “company towns” in Hawaii, and though Dole Pineapple didn’t operate a “company store” in 1969, earlier plantations (and coal mining towns, etc.) did–and the set-up was sweet indeed.

Much like a serf renting/sharecropping land owned by a manor-house or nobility, the plantation worker needed to borrow money to buy food and other necessities at the company store, which just happened to operate as a monopoly and just happened to charge sky high prices. (The serf needed to borrow seed for the next planting, and money to buy food for the family in between harvests.) The rate of interest paid by the serf/worker was always much higher than market rates–another monopoly capital (and highly profitable) feature of the set-up.

The system’s most pernicious feature: the worker/serf never escaped debt. Indeed, the system was constructed to increase the debt to the point it could never be paid off, insuring a lifetime of profitable servitude to the nobility/corporation.

Now the Powers That Be, as embodied in this Republican Administration and its lackeys/minions in both parties, have perfected an entire economy based on this “Company Store”


And if against all safeguards and probability this succeeds in gaining power, and burning the Constitution to preserve our freedom becomes a popular slogan, and a slyly articulate but otherwise inexperienced, almost mediocre, leader arises, and the corporate powers support this person in order to achieve their ends, then it will be time to leave, without looking back, before the storm breaks, and madness is unleashed, and a darkness falls over the land.

I would add only this: the middle class is an illusion, a false construct created by the Ministry of Propaganda to provide self-delusional cover for the serfs whose pride might be pricked by a realistic self-assessment of their true servitude.

The only people who can claim to be middle class are those few with virtually no debt and an income independent of the corporations who view employees as expenses to be slashed and burned as needed and the soon-to-be-bankrupt welfare state. I would estimate that by this more realistic and rigorous definition, no more than 4% of the nation’s households are truly middle class: independent professionals, small landlords, small business owners with no debt and agile, recession-resistant enterprises, etc.

The pickle we’re in

Eric Roston at WorldChanging writes a short rhythm, a rant, a message.

Understanding the pickle we’re in
might prepare us to help.

Americans’ requirement for health care, education, labor, and pensions is thought of, at least by inference, as a hand-out, something the state shrugs its shoulders and begrudgingly offers to balance the scales. They are anything but.

These policy areas make up the four corners of human capital investment.

health care
education
labor
pensions

In the 21st century, democracies that understand this and invest in their populations will thrive. Other nations will atrophy.

This observation applies most vividly in education. Every nation that can afford it (or that funds it) builds schools so that the youngest generation can acquire the knowledge and skills that allow civilization to perpetuate itself. I think this is incontrovertibly true; what’s sad is that the state of our schools is such that the previous sentence is a howling absurdity.

Barack Obama for President

Everybody will know soon that the New York Times has endorsed Barack Obama.

New York Times“This country needs sensible leadership, compassionate leadership, honest leadership and strong leadership. Barack Obama has shown that he has all of those qualities.”

And slammed McCain-Palin.

“As tough as the times are, the selection of a new president is easy. After nearly two years of a grueling and ugly campaign, Senator Barack Obama of Illinois has proved that he is the right choice to be the 44th president of the United States.

“Mr. Obama has met challenge after challenge, growing as a leader and putting real flesh on his early promises of hope and change. He has shown a cool head and sound judgment. We believe he has the will and the ability to forge the broad political consensus that is essential to finding solutions to this nation’s problems.

“In the same time, Senator John McCain of Arizona has retreated farther and farther to the fringe of American politics, running a campaign on partisan division, class warfare and even hints of racism. His policies and worldview are mired in the past. His choice of a running mate so evidently unfit for the office was a final act of opportunism and bad judgment that eclipsed the accomplishments of 26 years in Congress.

“Given the particularly ugly nature of Mr. McCain’s campaign, the urge to choose on the basis of raw emotion is strong. But there is a greater value in looking closely at the facts of life in America today and at the prescriptions the candidates offer. The differences are profound.”

Theory Tipping

Ideoblog is valiantly hoping headlines are not where we learn.

What Greenspan actually said was

I made a mistake in presuming that the self-interests of organizations, specifically banks and others, were such as that they were best capable of protecting their own shareholders and their equity in the firms.

Greenspan was wrong in thinking banks wouldn’t take the risks they did.

So perhaps, this whole incentive thing that is at the root of capitalism, the profit and loss system that incentivizes firms is overrated.

Well, Greenspan’s not the first one to say that. Here’s what another free market guy, Adam Smith, had to say:

The directors of . . . companies … being the managers rather of other people’s money rather than of their own, it cannot well be expected that they should watch over it with the same anxious vigilance with which [they would] watch over their own. . . .Negligence and profusion, therefore, must always prevail, more or less, in the management of the affairs of such a company.

Wrap up.
“The idea that incentives can get out of whack was not exactly invented by Alan Greenspan or Henry Waxman in Congress today. The question has always been whether the market or government is better able to figure out incentives.”

Wet Nude Nation

“A banker is a fellow who lends you his umbrella when the sun is shining, but wants it back the minute it begins to rain.” – Mark Twain

Stuffed Couch

Harrod’s is selling this Teddy Bear sofa. At first I was delighted and then I realized I would feel cruel sitting on these sweet bears.

Harrod's Stuffed Teddy Bear Couch

The Oops Nation

Knock it off. It’s not right. The American people are not running against each other for office… [Danny Sullivan, search techno leader]

Palin Prayer Wars

Todd and Sarah are unabashedly asking “for God’s intervention” on election day.

About God on election day, Sarah says “God will do the right thing on election day.”

“It is that intercession that is so needed. And so greatly appreciated.

“And I can feel it too…

“I can feel the power of prayer, and that strength that is provided through our prayer warriors across this nation.

“And I so appreciate it.”

jwalk noticed God Runs The Election

define:unabashed

Now that’s Socialism!

Stupid stupid wingers, so inflamed to merely win, fail to see simple principles in the slogans cemented to their thoughts.

profile of Adam SmithThe grandfather of market theory Adam Smith said,

“The necessaries of life occasion the great expense of the poor. . . . The luxuries and vanities of life occasion the principal expense of the rich, and a magnificent house embellishes and sets off to the best advantage all the other luxuries and vanities which they possess. . . .

It is not very unreasonable that the rich should contribute to the public expense, not only in proportion to their revenue, but something more than in that proportion.”

The ultra-rich bajillionaire Warren Buffett “blasts the system” that lets him pay less tax than his secretary.

Class is open in Europe, Canada and Mexico, but hidden in the USA. We know nothing about the rich.

This election seems like parents arguing if spanking is a good thing. Our nation is better than that.

Idiots Rule America

John Ralston Saul

“I’ve talked to several Supreme Court justices, several times in several countries and I say, look, in your rulings, can you differentiate easily in cases between the social contract and the commercial contract, and to which the answer is, we can no longer differentiate. And that lies at the heart of the problem.

“You don’t have the concept of the other, and of obligation of the individual leading to individualism.

‘You can’t have that if the whole legal system has slipped over the last, really, 50 years, increasingly, to a confusion between the social contract and the commercial contract. Because they are two completely different things.

“The social contract is about the public good, responsible individualism, imagining the other. The commercial contract is a commercial contract. They’re not supposed to be confused. They don’t actually fit together.

“The commercial contract only works properly when the social contract also works in a democracy.”

Behold, the Undecideds

Mark Morford:

I’m told it is sometimes helpful to project outside yourself, to mess with your own ideological boundaries, to attempt, however exasperatingly and however much it makes you want to hose yourself down with the cool fire of intellectual clarity afterwards, to enter the minds of your enemies, or those with whom you merely disagree, or — perhaps most challenging of all — with those whose mental gyrations you simply cannot fathom in the slightest.

Strong and optimistic? Yes. Only with vision and decision.

Rush Limbo

I laughed when I believed future history will call us Limbos in the same way history called them Luddite.

Hate Radio is as real and will be forever noticed.

To make easy victory the angry fool yells ‘Kill Him’ near our Secret Service, while our wealth is slipping away and while the world scorns us not for our dead but its dead.

We compete in falsity to only win pride. Does fear do this? No. Only lies make fools. Is superstition against reason? No. Our thinking is losing to simple dominance.

What horrid shame is poor freedom?
Reporters Without Borders, burdened with a checkered pedigree, tells us that our nation ranks only 46 of 169 for a free press. See Reporters sans frontières – Annual Worldwide Press Freedom Index.

In good Virginia, are they waking?
The Newport News Daily Press headline says, October 21, 2008, “Government Lies Are The New Normal”.

Fear, which had cut through us like a hot poker, became instead a low- grade fever, ambient noise, wallpaper, something you feel without feeling, hear without hearing, see without seeing.

Then you look up one day and realize how profoundly that fear has changed your world.

Is losing normal?
A good American replies,

“I would rather be killed by a terrorist than oppressed by my own government.”

Other good American friends also say:

  1. I only fear that we will wait too long and sacrifice too much of our freedom and self respect as a people before standing up to the deceit, tyranny, and oppression that is becoming so commonplace.
  2. I don’t know what people are talking about. The war on terror has not affected me one iota. However, it sure has made life miserable for terrorists! Which is great! I don’t care if the ragheads have to suffer. They started it and by God, we’ll finish it.
  3. For all the reasons we initially broke away from England can now be leveled our own “elected” Government. The Red and the Blue have been screwing you, and its been going on for 50 years. Think about it, All of the major issues that face this country back then are the same things the politcians run on today. Nothing has really changed except that now more wealth is concentrated to 1% of the Population.

“So what is a Limbo”, a future student asks?

A good person trapped in anger, failed by style, poor often, saying nothing.

Extreme napping

It’s easier to relate to people than to countries.

Chinese show extreme napping
A German photographer has spent six years taking photographs of Chinese people sleeping in any position and situation.

“Dear Visitor,

I gotta warn you! Before you click through my large collection of photos, you should not forget, what you hear and read daily in the media of your home country about the booming China.

Photo Collection of sleeping in ChinaVery often with a strange kind of undertone which is supposed to frighten us, they talk about “The Sleeping Giant”. About “The Birth of the New Super Power” or “Awaken of the Red Dragon”.

The reality looks definitely more peaceful.

Since years I am fascinated by the country and the people. Whenever I linger through the boomtown Shanghai, I carry my snap shot camera with me. Because at every corner you can discover people that either are napping in the strangest positions and situations, or are even snoring, while sunk in a deep sleep. Noteworthy are the missing mattresses and pillows!

The calmness, the flexibility and the adaptability of the ones, who are jointly responsible for the revival of China, are fascinating me. I would be happy, if I can bring over some of these feelings to you.

Enjoy now a selection of my already over 600 photos large collection of SLEEPINGCHINESE.”

Fisting Conviction

Palin Think‘Palin Think’

Sarah Palin says If Ice Melts, Polar Bears Can Adapt!

Sarah Palin’s wisdom is cold and polar. Without study. Without empathy. Without regard. Without success.

“Palin has the most anti-environment record of any governor in the US.” [link UK’s Telegraph]

But don’t worry. Sarah says if she’s elected she’ll be in charge of the Senate!

Q: Brandon Garcia wants to know, “What does the Vice President do?”

PALIN: They’re in charge of the U.S. Senate so if they want to they can really get in there with the senators and make a lot of good policy changes that will make life better for Brandon and his family and his classroom.

Boomer’s Lament

Suicides for whites ages 40 to 64 rose between 1999 to 2005.

Middle-age white men rose 16% to 26.9 per 100,000 in 2005, from 23.1 per 100,000 in 1999. For white women in that age group, the rate rose 19%. For black men ages 40 to 64, the rate rose 5% to 10.4 per 100,000 from 9.9 per 100,000, and for black women in that age group, the rate rose 14%. Researchers found little or no change in the suicide rates for three other age groups: 10 to 19, 20 to 29, and over 65.

A boner is not a vetting process

Seriously, what in the fuck is it with John McCain and beauty queens? His first wife, Carol Shepp McCain, was a swimwear model. But she got into an automobile accident and became only normally attractive, so he cheated on her with a 17 years younger beauty pageant winner named Cindy Hensley, whom he ended up divorcing Carol for and marrying. Then she got to be middle aged and a little plastic looking, and what do you know, McCain starts being seen everywhere he goes with, and doing some potentially lucrative favors for, a cheerleader turned bribe lobbyist, named Vicki Iseman, who’s 13 years younger than Cindy. He gets outed on that, cuts off ties with her, and then a couple of months later (after viciously humiliating his wife in front of a group of bikers, to her face) he picks as his “running mate” yet another beauty pageant winner who’s almost half his age.

McCain family’s slaves

McCain family's slavesFrom NowPublic:

This documentation includes slave schedules from Sept. 8, 1860, which list as the slave owner, “W.A. McCain.” The schedules list the McCain family’s slaves in the customary manner of the day — including their age, gender and “color,” labelling each either “black” or “mulatto.” The slaves ranged in age from 6 months to 60 years.

Douglas A. Blackmon, author of Slavery By Another Name, which tells of a form of slavery extended well into the Twentieth Century until the start of World War II, through the use of the prison camp system that existed throughout the Southern states in the United States, wrote an article, Two Families Named McCain, that appeared at the Wall Street Journal online on October 17, 2008.

Just say goodbye good riddance

In its major assessment of the global economy’s health, Deutsche Bank also warned that Britain is even more vulnerable than the US or the euro area, as it predicted that the powerhouses of India and China would fail to support the wider global economy through the downturn.

The banks’ economists Thomas Mayer and Peter Hooper said: “We now expect a major recession for the world economy over the year ahead, with growth in the industrial countries falling to its lowest level since the Great Depression and global growth falling to 1.2pc, its lowest level since the severe downturn of the early 1980s.”

According to the International Monetary Fund, global growth of anything less than 3pc constitutes a world recession. The warning was echoed by Richard Berner of Morgan Stanley, who said: “A global recession is now under way, and risks are still pointed to the downside for commodity prices and earnings.”[The Telegraph]

They say Bush has made noise about new solutions upholding ‘free markets’, but the Europeans sum up their reaction to him:

“We cannot continue along the same lines because the same problems will trigger the same disasters.

“This sort of capitalism is a betrayal of the sort of capitalism we believe in.”