truthspeakertwo

This is a space to share my thoughts and those of others on some major issues of the day. Please look in the archive for more articles.

Sunday, January 07, 2007

INTERLOCKING PROBLEMS AND OUR ROLE IN THEIR 'FIX'

The recent Congressional election offers the tantalizing hope of addressing some important national issues in a way that will refurbish our tarnished image and allow us once again to think of our country as America the beautiful. However, one sure-fire path to failure would be to address each of our many issues as if it existed in isolation. Unfortunately, politicians tend to have tunnel vision and to look at issues in isolation. Perhaps it’s the nature of the beast. New bills are approved [or not] by specialized committees focusing on a narrow spectrum of the whole picture. This needs to change. Problems do not exist in isolation. Just because Congress is shortsighted doesn’t absolve us from viewing the broader picture. War, health care, minimum wage, whatever the concern, it is connected with many, if not all, other issues. All social/political concerns are interlocked, and I use that expression to emphasize how strongly bonded all the issues are with each other.

I can offer an example of this interlocking matrix from my background which is food and agriculture. One of my issues is that we need a vastly improved food supply that emphasizes quality. However, this is not just an agricultural issue. It is a social, and most emphatically, a political issue. Here we arrive at the interlocking matrix. How food is grown and processed seriously impacts many other issues, including our health care system, the environment, water resources, immigration, minimum wage, energy consumption, wildlife protection, educational values, and even our ability to respond to needs with action, which is a measure of our physical and moral energy.

If we dig down one level deeper we can put each of those connections in a matrix of its own. Consider just the health impacts. How does food quality impact our physical being? The list of actual and likely negative impacts is long and includes a huge matrix of items such as pesticide residues, genetically modified foods and yeasts, preservatives, artificial flavors/vitamins/colorings, homogenized and pasteurized dairy products, overly fertilized and irrigated vegetables with cosmetic beauty but no real value, hydrogenation, emulsification, and all chemical imitations of the real thing. USDA research has found that today’s food does not have the nutritional content of 40 years ago. Is there any doubt that the result is a weakening of our innate health and strength? Sadly there may be many other influences that are not easily recognized.

I speak as a farmer of about five decades. I did my time with synthetic chemical inputs and then switched to Biodynamic and organic agriculture. I experienced a dramatic difference in my energy level and in the health of my farm. I am convinced that our food is often lacking in life giving energy due to the way it is grown and processed. Our country’s attitude toward food has not served us well.

In fact, the enormous cost of cheap food isn’t even on the table for national dialogue, but it is definitely there in the background as a crumbling foundation stone of our complex society. It is an issue we need to be aware of, because, as per my opening premise, we cannot divorce any issue and deal with it successfully without seeing it as part of a whole interlocking matrix. We cannot effectively deal with health care without including food quality in the equation. We cannot deal with immigration without also looking at how and where food is grown and harvested.

OUR ROLE
Each of us has particular issues important to us. Before attempting action on those issues, we need to put the tree back in the forest and look at the whole picture, as I am trying to do with agriculture, otherwise ‘solutions’ will lead to further problems. Is the environment and global warming your ‘tree’? Many trees impact that one, including war and its massive contribution to pollution. After we see the whole forest, we need to broaden the vision of our politicians by informing them that a narrow approach will not do the job.

But wait, there’s more that we can do. Before swinging into action or being discouraged by the immense complexity of it all, I want to turn your attention to something we all can do and fairly easily. It doesn’t cost a dime, we don’t have to join a rally, or even write letters. We only have to approach problems, and each other, with a good spirit. This may strike you as a non-sequitur to the above premise, but in fact it is very relevant. In struggling to decide questions of war vs. peace, a healthy environment vs. a desecrated one, the opportunity for a fulfilled life vs. an alienated life, for all of this and more the attitudes and values we each bring to the table are bedrock.

The Network of Spiritual Progressives [www.spiritualprogressives.org] offers a most practical and hopeful approach to dealing with our social and political dilemmas. It is work that begins at home with us. Their tactic may appear naïve on the surface, but profundity can live in simple, obvious statements. The NSP’s focal point is that finding our way through every social problem depends on our individual capacities for things like compassion, integrity, reverence, acceptance, forgiveness, resourcefulness, courage, cooperation, etc. Not your usual campaign slogans but soul work vital to success if we want to accomplish change.

There is reminiscence here with what Martin Luther King was getting at in stating his six points for social change. At the end of the day, after the dust has settled, he preached that reconciliation must follow. These are wise attitudes from NSP and MLK.

To rephrase an old axiom: every step forward in the public good needs to be matched by several steps in personal growth. If we can model the values we want to see in our country, we will have taken a basic step toward changing the social and political landscape. It’s a step with enormous potential.

As we all search for ways to make our country and ourselves better, we can start the process by making a more conscious effort to live values that will lead to the common good. We each need to be engaged, with all the courage and understanding we can muster, to find our way through the matrix of interlocking problems that confront our country. Let the work begin now, and with us.

Thursday, September 07, 2006

GLOBAL HEGEMONY - A LOOK AT THE BEAST

“I did a lot of talking during the business meeting,” I said to the woman standing before me. “It’s just so wrong. We make an excellent product, and we’ve stood behind it for 44 years.”
My boss was sympathetic. “Don’t think we haven’t tried and tried. We don’t want this to happen, but what can we do? The outfit in Malaysia can supply a similar product for less than half our cost.”

GLOBAL HEGEMONY – A LOOK AT THE BEAST

As you have no doubt heard, we are on the cusp of a new world, and most of us are either in denial or rebellion, or have our heads somewhere else.
• The inventions of the past 200 years
• The vast land to be claimed and tamed
• The noble experiment in self governance
• The ingenuity, resourcefulness and neighborly cooperation once so essential
• Individual success as the motivating force of a life…
... all this has changed. We don’t live in that world today. We face a different set of paradigms that need a different response. This new world is quite changed, and if we mourn for the old ways, I’m afraid that the crass and heartless expression applies here ... we will have to ‘get over it.’ What has changed is so all encompassing that there is no turning back the clock.

• This new world is corporation run.
• Greed is the motivating factor.
• The labor force resides mostly in undeveloped countries
• Skilled labor is losing or has lost its value and benefits
• International norms, banks, and trade agreements supercede national interests
• Work in developed countries is changing in character from production to service –
- Doctors service ill bodies
- Lawyers service people with complaints
- Teachers service children’s minds
- Clerics and managers service a wide array of insurance, public relations,
mortgage, travel, and investment accounts
- Distribution/fulfillment centers send goods on their way
- Lobbyists and journalists service the interests of their parent corporation
- Non-profits service their core issue and constituency
- Maintenance crews service grounds, buildings, equipment
- Bureaucracy grows

We are challenged to react to a situation that we hardly understand, purveyed by a sly government of whose actions we have little knowledge. We are challenged to develop a modus operandi, a philosophy to deal with a new and strangely monstrous world.

The starkness of the change begs a plethora of questions.
• How can we approach this monster?
• How can we wrap our minds around what appears to be incomprehensible?
• Can we influence anything at all? Affect any outcome?
• Can we inject any of our cherished human values into the new system?
• Can we tame greed?
• What is our personal value? Are we as individuals flotsam in the new world
order, our essential purpose being to use the services and bring home the
goods that keep the monster alive?
• Do we need a new chart by which to navigate our lives.. a new political
party?
• Is there any role for democracy? For compassion?

The brute facts of this new world are that a few corporations control almost everything. Some examples:
the world food chain Cargill, AGM, Philip Morris, Heinz
world oil reserves Shell, BP, Exxon-Mobil, Chevron, French Total
world health supplies, aka Big Pharma Pfizer, Merck, Johnson & Johnson, Bristol Myers Squibb, Wyeth, UK GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca, Swiss Novartis, Roche, French Aventis
world seed stocks DuPont, Monsanto, Swiss Syngenta/Novartis, Mexico’s Seminis, UK Advanta, Dow, Delta and Pine Land, [source: Rural Advancement Foundation International]
world money & finance Citigroup, JP Morgan Chase, HSBC, Bank of America, UBS, Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley, and Bank of Scotland [source: Wikipedia]
world media AOL-Time-Warner, Disney, Bertelsman, Viacom, Vivendi, GE, Sony, News Corporation (Rupert Murdoch) [source: The Nation].

Keep in mind that mergers are occurring continuously, changing and usually reducing the players. A word about the current state of each of these activities:

* Industrial agriculture promotes mono-cropping, soil depletion, and heavy chemical inputs. Small farmers everywhere are squeezed out because factory farms in general run along soil destroying and animal exploitive principles, not soil building or humane animal husbandry. “The history of the twentieth century was dominated by the struggle against totalitarian systems of state power. The twenty-first will no doubt be marked by a struggle to curtail excessive corporate power.” Eric Schlosser, Fast Food Nation

* Battles are waged, regimes are changed, and environments destroyed in the manic pursuit of oil. Need I say more?

* Some of the most fraudulent research is done in support of new drugs while government regulators look the other way. Follow the money. Researchers obtain the results wanted by those who pay the bills. Negative results are fodder for the document shredder.

* Seed companies have one goal .. to patent every life form, including those plants and seeds used for centuries by indigenous farmers, and to replace farmers’ home-grown seed with expensive, genetically modified, patented ‘intellectual’ property.

* It is reported that the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, working together, impose severe conditions upon borrowing countries, reducing them even further to poverty. Chief among the imposed conditions are the requirement to privatize [read: sell cheaply to international corporations] the country’s public utilities such as oil and gas refineries, electric generating plants, water resources, and to cut employment and reduce wages. [source Greg Palast, The Best Democracy Money Can Buy.]

* Political news is so heavily censored that when something real gets through to us, we question its validity. Print media certainly suffers this censorship; some electronic media such as the internet clings precariously to freedom.

As is very obvious in this brief survey of a few important and fundamental aspects of our world, the new system is designed for short term manipulation and profit, not for long term sustainability. The new world dynasty cares nothing for the environment, nothing for the well being of the planet, nothing for the populations living here. Corporations see people [us] as pawns in their world chess game.

Previous dramatic changes, i.e. buggies to autos, cannons to rocket launchers, have been largely technical. Excepting the time of the Great Depression in the 1930s, a relatively small percentage of jobs were discontinued. When the village hoop maker, wheelwright, or blacksmith went out of business, it was likely a 1-2 man shop, a different scale than when one manufacturer lays off hundreds at a time, and now that manufacturer may be going out of business, too. What we are seeing now is the emergence of a new ruling class that denigrates people in general. A greater percentage of us are falling into the position of having no more value than our buying pattern, or a cipher in account books.

It’s the pendulum swinging. The 19th century Robber Barons exploited labor in unbelievably cruel and uncaring ways. Gradually unions gained strength enough to bargain for a good wage, safety standards, and benefits. That time seems to be fading as we swing again to mega capitalism in the ascent. The difference between the 19th century and now is that it’s not an individual Rockefeller, Carnegie, or Mellon calling the shots. It is huge corporations linked to other huge corporations or subsidiaries in gigantic corporate chains that encircle [and strangle] the globe.

So what to do? Where can we turn for comfort? The major religious movements absorb and channel a lot of general discontent and anger. But some religion has also joined the corporate movement via mega churches, a worrisome development. Islam has attracted militant extremists who in my opinion are actually suffering the same political and economic alienation many of us are feeling, the difference being that their comfort lies with bombs and destruction. We do have this in common with bin Laden and his gangs, and that is a deep dissatisfaction with the values controlling the political/economic landscape. The terrorists in the Middle East don’t envy our democracy. They are trying to tell us that we are messing up, which we are.

If we are to preserve our ideals, to value all human life, and to create better and more compassionate societies, more caring communities, we have to get busy without delay. We must constantly carry the consciousness that we need to be very proactive as well as reactive in seeking the kind of world we want.

THE BIG THREE RESPONSE
There are three very doable things that will make a huge difference for our future. First, we need to remodel some attitudes starting with ourselves and working onward to our political representatives. To begin with we have to believe that we can make a difference. That confidence gained, there is a whole lot we can do to solve our own problems at home more peacefully and compassionately. We need to act from our highest moral convictions and see that those who represent us do also. Michael Lerner and the Network of Spiritual Progressives have the best handle on this task of bringing about a change in our national attitudes and adding other values to the current mix. Their 8-point covenant [not contract!] is quite comprehensive. The first covenant states: ‘We will challenge the materialism and selfishness often rooted in the dynamics of the competitive marketplace that undermine loving relationships and family life.’ Rotating shift work would be one example of such a family life destroying dynamic. Further covenants relate to
• personal responsibility in caring for each other as well as for
self-development,
• social responsibility of corporations,
• education that includes teaching the values of generosity, tolerance,
intellectual curiosity,
• health care in a broader context,
• environment stewardship with ethical consumption,
• foreign policy with a strategy of non-violence and generosity,
• separation of church, state, and science but without keeping all spiritual
values out of the public sphere.

When enough of us adopt a program such as this and speak with conviction to power, we will be heard. I believe speaking to power is absolutely THE duty of every person living in this country. If we don’t speak up for our values, and shepherd them into reality, who will do it for us?

Equally important is what message we send with our dollars. Actions convey concerns. I don’t purchase anything from Wal-mart, and I try to avoid anything made in China or other locations where cheap labor is exploited. I buy food items from as close to home as possible to reduce the major actual and environmental cost of transport and mileage. I don’t drink soda with its empty calories and toxic sweeteners. I research alternatives to prescription drugs; there are lots of healthier options and I always request that my doctor talk to me about alternatives. Good food, good diet is of primary importance to our mental and physical stamina and energy, and we will need plenty of both to tame the corporate monster that is controlling the world and devaluing our lives.

Another way to make dollars count is with modest donations to social justice, humanitarian, and environmental causes.

Finally it is critical that we educate ourselves. Fortunately we are not dependent on one source for this. There is a huge variety of books, and most of them can be found in local libraries. Here are some good ones:
The Left Hand of God; Taking Back our Country from the Religious Right, Michael
Lerner
The Best Democracy Money Can Buy, Greg Palast
Our Endangered Values, Jimmy Carter
American Theocracy, Kevin Philips
anything by Noam Chomsky

For those with internet access, the net is full of blogs. Some examples:
www.truthout.com www.democracynow.org
www.worldcantwait.net www.mediachannel.org
www.grist.org www.gregpalast.com
www.dailykos.com www.alternet.org
www.libertyforum.org www.opednews.com
Or Google ‘political blogs’

The real hard core truth is that ninety-nine percent of us feel disconnected from this new world that is rising around us. So why not join together and do something about it? Talk to friends. Invite neighbors in. Write a Senator. Send a letter to the newspaper. Find your voice. Sow seeds. It will make a difference, and that’s a fact you can count on. ****


“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it’s the only thing that ever had.”

“It may be necessary to temporarily accept a lesser evil, but one must never label a necessary evil as good.”
Anthropologist Margaret Mead

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

Gender Balance - A Radical Notion

Katie Couric was being her usual good-natured self as she smiled brilliantly and spoke personally to the dozens [hundreds] who were honoring her farewell from the Today show. She was gracious, appreciative, totally sincere, warm, maybe embarrassed by all the acclaim and review of past moments. She is a woman of immense talent. Serious and funny. Powerful yet humble. One staff member sharing her thoughts said they could be in a disagreement uproar over something, but when Katie walks into the room, her presence immediately changes dynamics for the better .. like balm on troubled waters. I can imagine that for many people being interviewed by Katie Couric is a high honor. She exudes empathy …and it is intelligent, not shallow, empathy. Katie is all woman, with style and grace…a model for many of the qualities I want to see women bring to the table everywhere…at home, in the business world, especially in national politics.

Women in the U.S. are struggling to claim their place at the table, place they have been denied a long time, some say since the Council of Nicaea in the 4th century, maybe since forever. It is said that the Roman church burned millions of women as heretics or witches with the goal of reducing their position and influence [New England Puritans did the same thing on a smaller scale], a murderous legacy that has put women and their unique character off the stage of history for centuries. Thomas Aquinas is reported to have stated in the 13th century that woman is “a necessary object who is needed to preserve the species and provide food and drink.” The ultimate denigration, and we are to consider him a saint? The ultra-conservative Catholic institution Opus Dei to this day maintains the same attitude. Women have a lot of work to do to overcome and reverse that misogynist thought process. Women should have equality, surely, but what I am seeking goes beyond equality. I seek gender balance, using the superb but long overlooked spiritual qualities of women as ballast in juxtaposition to the many fine qualities of men. Equality speaks to what is right and fair in a legal sense, and I’m all for that. But balance speaks to what is sorely needed in a human sense to correct an out-of-balance, off-center, centuries-old, screwed up world. I want to see women brought into the conference room. I want to see their opinions given much more consideration and respect in decision making.

This is a radical notion, so let’s take a closer, impersonal look at personality and character differences related to gender.

On a big screen, looking totally at generalities, what major qualities do men bring to our joint human struggle?

Five come quickly to mind:
• Intellect – men can think their way through problems and come to a logical conclusion. Men can create and fathom complex theories and then create the logical support systems to back them up. Think of Einstein and many of today’s science researchers.
• Aggression – men defend what they believe in and are not afraid to do so. They take on jobs and professions that may put them in the public eye in an unfavorable way. They stand up and speak out.
• Creativity – in my mental review of artists, composers, writers, inventors, the major players have been men. It’s possible this is more the result of gender imbalance than innate ability. This question is not likely to be resolved in my lifetime.
• Physics – all those laws of physics that apply to plumbing, carpentry, engines come easily to men. If something doesn’t work, men can fix it. Men are builders and menders in the physical world. They are also adventurers and will try crazy things, like flying a kite in a thunderstorm [Ben Franklin].
• Coolness under pressure – I wasn’t privy to the inside story, but from the outside my prime example of coolness under extreme pressure is Jack Kennedy handling the Cuban missile crisis. The ability to stay calm, impersonal and focused is something we expect from men.

These are all wonderful qualities and we would be in dire straits without them. I am not suggesting that women do not possess any of these qualities. Many do and in good measure. Impressive as the list is, though, we can’t forget that there is a major shadow side to all of this. Intellect that only serves the goal of power, aggression for the sake of building empire and extending power, creativity that designs cruel and inhumane punishments to reinforce power readily come to mind. We so desperately need balancing qualities.

What could women bring? Again, I see five stand-outs:
• Intuition – that unidentified, illusive, and fairly rare ‘knowing’ that comes occasionally to some of us. Many intuitions are ignored because they don’t make ‘sense’ but prove later to have been the correct path. Intuition needs a place at the table when anyone is struggling with a hard decision. It also needs time to develop, as well as recognition of its value.
• An understanding heart – this could also be thought of as sensitivity to aspects of a question that are not so immediately obvious to the logical thinkers.
• The ability to read people – to see through the façade of geniality, confidence, or whatever to what is really behind the façade and driving the action.
• Graciousness – the ability to make other people feel at ease, needed and helpful.
• Humility – a quality that doesn’t grab all the credit, that puts other people first.

Many of these feminine qualities we lump together in the general category of people skills and the ability to build friendships. Again, a disclaimer. These qualities are not limited to women. Many men excel in these areas, but in general they are what women do well.

Think about the contrasts and how they balance each other. Intuition and an understanding heart can balance a purely intellectual/head approach. People skills are a good balance to physical skills. Humility balances aggressive domination.

To understand the great need we have to make gender balance a priority, consider the state of affairs in the U.S. We are in a non-justifiable power war that bleeds us economically and spiritually and is both the cause and the excuse to downsize vital social programs. The war gives a huge boost to many corporations which are motivated solely by profit. It left many of us politically and morally stranded because we could not and cannot swim in the raging current of war mania. Those who got us in seem disinterested in getting us out. It is a prime time for qualities which women bring to the table. Just at this very moment, the opinion of Condoleeza Rice that our president needs to talk directly with Iran’s president has prevailed over that of much of the rest of the Bush cabinet’s desire to send in the bombs. Dick Cheney is said to be a prime holder of that position. A rare moment of praise is in order for Ms. Rice for taking a non-aggressive, non-violent stance.

And here is an important caveat. Women need to claim their place in our cultural, political, and economic life not by imitating men, not by being more intellectual, more aggressive, more cool, but by developing our own innate qualities. We need to manifest heart, compassion, warmth, kindness, sensitivity, generosity … all the relationship skills that can bring a tough talking ‘enemy’ to the table believing that we will listen to his point of view and treat him with respect. Men in general need to exhibit that same kindness and generosity in how they relate to women. Give Aquinas the boot. Gandhi is a better spokesman for our time [see end quote]. Rejecting all the derogatory terms of thought and expression so prevalent in the way men think about women is an absolute prerequisite for making room for women at the round table of decision making.

With the mention of ‘round table’, I see that I have introduced a counter-productive image. The legendary Round Table of King Arthur and his knights conjures up an all-male assemblage and a concept that only men do important things. Well, men do fight for what they believe in which certainly comes through in the Morte D’Arthur legend. In keeping his legendary women behind the scenes, Sir Thomas Malory may well have been under the same churchly influence in the 15th century as Aquinas was in his day. Most importantly, what about the historical Christ who preached feminine qualities of love and forgiveness and traveled with his circle of 12 male disciples? Did he only call male disciples, and was this because they most needed to hear the message, or have women been scrubbed from the Biblical text as some were from life? I leave the question for another day.

Like many women I have some pet moments of peeve, images that stick in my mind from every- day kind of experiences. I recall an example of balance vs imbalance in a non-profit board I served on for about 20 years. When I first joined, the male/female membership was about equal…4-5 men and 4-5 women. We got along well and accomplished some good things. Over the years, women began to drop out until I was the only one left. This created a totally different dynamic. Things got tense and adversarial at times. The men would figuratively knock their heads together. I well remember one interview the board had with someone wanting to do a project for the organization. It was embarrassingly hostile, but we lacked someone who could smooth the troubled waters.

At another meeting on another board, I remember a candidate telling the board with almost livid conviction: “You would be crazy not to hire me.” I almost went into cardiac arrest at the blatant hubris of this statement. I don’t think many women could even approach such bullying arrogance in aggrandizing themselves.

Once at a conference I got a rude shock. Walking into a Q&A plenum, I noticed that the stage was full of suits, about a dozen or so! All were men. I looked around at the crowd and saw any number of women present who had made great contributions to the subject matter at hand. Why weren’t some of them on stage? I rose from my seat and asked this question, but it was considered rhetorical, I guess. Nothing was done. The suits stayed.

Sometimes women lack the confidence to step forth, having picked up various societal messages through the years that they aren’t as good as their men-folk. Ladies, we’ve got to change that message. How can this be done? Here’s a suggestion: pick a female as your role model, someone that you admire, and try to grow into your image of that person. If Katie Couric can interview anyone on earth without being intimidated, if Condi Rice can challenge Dick Cheney and succeed, if Erin Brockovich can take on PG&E, if Rosa Parks can take on segregation, maybe there is something each of us can do in a new direction, like new growth from an old tree. It is critical that we do this because our country so greatly needs the qualities women can offer. We must answer the call at whatever level we can, wherever we are. Many are doing so, and more of us must join them or see our nation’s values, our national character, our culture, and our former good will in the world hit the sewer. And men must not be afraid to acknowledge that the world might be better served by gender balance. Every person is needed, everyone has a place in the world. This is about men and women working together to create balance… a radical concept whose time is long, long overdue. #

To call woman the weaker sex is a libel; it is man’s injustice to woman. If by strength is meant brute strength, then, indeed, is woman less brute than man. If by strength is meant moral power, then woman is immeasurably man’s superior. Has she not greater intuition, is she not more self-sacrificing, has she not greater powers of endurance, has she not greater courage? Without her, man could not be. If non-violence is the law of our being, the future is with woman. Who can make a more effective appeal to the heart than woman? M. Gandhi, 1930

Thursday, May 25, 2006

The Face of Fear

Kate and I were attending a very vibrant and powerful conference. During a brief Q&A period, Kate had wanted to go to the mike and say ‘We’ve heard enough words, could we just have a moment of silence to help us take in all that we have heard?’ But she didn’t do it, she didn’t make her appeal. Later she explained that she was too ‘shy’ to speak, and when pressed, said really she was afraid others would not have the same need for silence and she would be forcing her wishes on us all.

Another friend is finding it painful to realize that her beloved university .. the place where she met her husband, where her mother and father met, where her aunt and uncle lived while he went to school, an institution that has always valued individual initiative and inspired great loyalty among its graduates … has gone over to the corporate column, seduced by the corporate mindset [and funding]. She grieves the pending loss of so much that she loves about her alma mater.

I have been dealing with future grief also. My beautiful, sweet canine companion, not yet 5 years old, has pelvic dysplasia, a condition the vet tells me might mean putting this dog down in a few months. I can hardly bear the thought.

These are the two faces of fear. Though it is couched in many other ways, the fear of not being found worthy as in the first example above is absolutely foundational to almost everyone. We clothe it in many garments. We say we are afraid of not being loved, of being lonely, of hurting someone, of doing the wrong thing, of showing our ignorance, of bothering someone with our needs or questions, of being unable to care for ourselves, of being ‘too shy’. But it all boils down to our fear of not being good enough as people, of not being worthy of love, care, acceptance.

The other foundational fear is that of losing something of value as illustrated in examples of grief. This ranges the vast landscape from the death of someone we love to the loss of some thing of sentimental or functional value…. a house, a reputation, a book, a democracy, our very life.

These foundational fears are quite legitimate. They do not need to be denied, rather they need to be brought into the full light of consciousness so that we can learn not only how to cope with them, but how to overcome them so they do not deny us our fullest humanity. Obviously, some fear is necessary for our health and well being. Fear of dying in a fiery automobile crash is what keeps us driving defensively.

Of the various so-called deadly sins, my personal perspective is that anger is probably the most recognizable, open and obvious. It is often loud and boils easily to the surface, even when we think we have kept the lid on. Most of us sooner or later, when forced to do so, will recognize and acknowledge our anger. Hatred is fairly obvious also.

But fear likes to hide in the shadows. Often it is couched in more socially correct euphemisms such as worry, concern, shyness. Fear can be a very debilitating emotion, and keeping it hidden keeps us enthralled to it, keeps us under its spell. How many times have you not spoken up because you were ‘afraid’ of being thought ignorant or unprofessional or boring? How many times have you not asked someone for help because you didn’t want to ‘bother’ them? Were you not really afraid of being turned down or being asked to reciprocate in some inconvenient way? How many times have you not stated your needs because you didn’t want to ‘impose’ on someone else? Translation: you didn’t think the other person would find your need worthy.

How do we deal with the fear of not being worthy? For those souls who face the world with a supremely confident personality, this may not be a problem. For others it may take a lifetime of daily struggle. We have to keep getting up and coming back when we are repeatedly knocked down. After a while we may suddenly realize that we have learned how to handle being knocked down with some degree of grace, maybe even a touch of humor. We may realize that how others value us is not as important as how we value ourselves. We may realize that recognition from others, sweet as it is, is just frosting, not the cake.

We don’t enter kindergarten as full blown PhDs, neither do we enter life as perfected beings. Life is a schooling. The important thing is that we keep learning, keep moving up and on at whatever pace we can manage, that we forgive ourselves for not being born as already perfected human beings. None of us are alone in our imperfection. As someone wisely said, we are all screwed up. We must get over it and get on with the lessons. It helps to recognize also that others are dealing with their own imperfections as best they can, as are we, and to treat them with understanding, if not compassion.

If we were perfect, we wouldn’t be in this life. The key is to learn how to handle our imperfections without being debilitated by them. For some, religion gives strength, for others sheer stubborn determination gets them through the tough times. At one time in my life, now long ago in the past, I was totally knocked down, totally depressed. I moped around, not having the will to move, asking myself what was the point in doing anything? With my action oriented temperament, however, it was fortunately a very short time before this condition became so totally boring that I could no longer stand it. I simply said to myself: ‘I’m not doing this.’ and I got up and went to work. We each have a well-spring of strength within ourselves to keep us working on us. We will get better, it will happen, we can’t give up on ourselves. The only thing not acceptable is not trying.

What about our fear of losing the things we value most .. our soul mate, our life, our children, our freedom, our democratic way of life, our job, our dog? These fears require a different approach. As I write this, I wonder if it would work to make a list of the things we most fear to lose. Once the list is made, we can study it, think about how we need to prepare ourselves to handle some loss that seems inevitable, think how to become less emotionally and physically dependent on people or things, think how we can take steps to alleviate, forestall, or prevent certain other losses such as a job, or our country’s highest values. Probably we should add a category of unexpected loss, because it will happen. Laying all this on the table, acknowledging it, planning an accommodation, will cause some of the fear to subside, and will take some sting out of the actual loss should it occur.

Why do we do this? Why is this important? It is important because fear is an oppressive master; it makes us its slaves. We are not free when we succumb to fear. Since 9/11/01, fear has become pervasive in so many ways and has been used politically to gain power and to rob us of constitutional rights. It governs so much of our lives, so much of what we do every day. We want to give power to those who denounce fear, including our own better selves, to those who lead us in a spirit of hope that through our honest striving, we can not only survive, but be the kindest, most generous, most tolerant people in the world. Succumbing to fear is to be victimized by those powerful forces that want to control us. Letting go of fear is not easy, especially since we are so conditioned to it that we hardly notice it is there, but the rewards are a richer, more open, more satisfying life. Each of us must aim to put our trust in our own ability to handle whatever life gives us. And then we may be surprised to find that we have become more than we ever thought possible. We may have put a new face on fear.

New Paradigm, New Hope

For the multitude of us who are dismayed at the lack in both political parties of anything we can hold on to, there is hope. A movement which I intend to support and I hope others will also is the Network of Spiritual Progressives. NSP espouses a badly needed new paradigm which is not really new, just not seen in public for many a year. This network has the revolutionary goal to bring spiritual values and meaning into politics. The most visible leader of the network, Michael Lerner, comes from a background in research psychology, magazine editing, and was ordained a rabbi in 1995. The ‘platform’ of the network is an 8-issue covenant still undergoing some development.

The first covenant states ‘We will challenge the materialism and selfishness often rooted in the dynamics of the competitive marketplace that undermine loving relationships and family life.’ Further covenants relate to
• personal responsibility in ‘caring for each other as well as to self-development’,
• social responsibility of corporations,
• education with added values of generosity, tolerance, intellectual curiosity,
• health care in a broader context,
• environment stewardship with ethical consumption,
• foreign policy with a strategy of non-violence and generosity,
• separation of church, state, and science but without keeping all spiritual values out of the public sphere.

Michael Lerner’s recent book, The Left Hand of God, Taking Back Our Country from the Religious Right, is basic and gives full background and explanation of the issues covered by the covenant. In my opinion, this covenant is the three-fold social order, [equality, freedom, brotherhood] in modern context.

The websites for NSP and Tikkun magazine are a plethora of ideas and information: www.spiritualprogressives.org and www.tikkun.org. The location is 2342 Shattuck Ave, Su 1200, Berkeley, CA 94704, phone 510.644.1200. I urge all readers to learn more. I think you will be glad you did. The eight covenants cover every cultural, economic and rights issue I am concerned about at the national level.

Friday, March 31, 2006

Mountain or Molehill

Sometimes Congressional hearings reveal more than is intended.

On March 29, an interesting exchange took place at a Senate judiciary committee hearing working on new legislation relating to wire taps and FISA oversight.

As background to the exchange: a Democrat Senator thanked chairman Arlen Specter [R/PA] for holding this hearing and told Specter he is the only one on the Hill willing to look into the issue of illegal wire taps.
Chairman Specter noted that the Democratic Senator is a long time member of the committee, a former chairman, and understands well how difficult it is to set priorities for the committee and to get everything done.
Dem. Senator: I’m glad you are chairman now.
Specter: [grinning broadly] So am I.

Ouch! Was this an unconscious slip? I am no psychoanalyst, but what immediately popped into my mind is the possibility – could it be? - that Democrats don’t even want to be in the majority! Considering their actions over the past several years, this is not a difficult premise to envision. The Kerry campaign is a prime example of how not to win an election while strenuously going through the motions.

One can consider also how little fight there is in a D.C. Democrat these days and how little resistance to being run over. Late in 2005 Senate Democrats made a strong stand to remove approval for oil drilling in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge from an appropriations bill. Now it’s back in a budget bill passed by the Senate. Where was the fight this time? The issue now goes to the House.

Alas it was also late in 2005 that Senate Democrats fought hard to get all the privacy protection provisions in a revised Patriot Act which had passed the Senate almost unanimously but did not survive the conference report. They insisted that the expiration date of the act could well be extended to buy time to ‘get this right’. When a watered down version came back to the Senate in February, which definitely wasn’t ‘right’, Democrats as a whole did not even support a filibuster, though about half did. Some, like the NY Senators, withheld their vote until it was obvious which way the wind was blowing, then blew with the majority.

Everyone you hear or read – whether on the street, TV commentary, editorial, whatever - everyone knows that no Democrat leader since maybe Howard Dean during his sabotaged run in the primary has articulated a strong clear positive compelling image of where they want to go with domestic or foreign policy. Is this the way to set up for an election you want to win?

Why might Democrats not want to be in control of Congress? Could they be afraid of success? Or was the committee Democrat simply suggesting that chairing this committee at this time is not a lot of fun? I continue to wonder while looking for signs of life and courage.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Two Troubling Questions

Two questions go with me virtually every minute of every day and during sleepless minutes at night. One is: What can I do to make a difference in the dire direction and skewed values of my country? The other is: Why have the Democratic politicians – those we count on to get something constructive done - lost their voice? I look for answers everywhere.

In mulling the first question, the following points jump out with impressive clarity. People who have made a difference often have in common:
• They devote their energy to a single issue
• The issue may be a result of grievous personal experience
• They stay on task for decades, or for as long as they live.

Cases in point: M L King and many others/unfair treatment of black people;
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and others/ women’s right to vote; Sarah & Jim Brady/gun control; Chris Reeve/spinal cord research; Cindy Sheehan/military action in Iraq. Of these examples, only one can be considered a fait accompli and its time frame is instructive. From Stanton’s demand for suffrage in 1848, it took approximately 70 years of focused, dedicated work before women finally won the right to vote in 1920! By then Stanton herself had passed from the scene in 1902. In most cases, reforms that move society forward non-violently toward more tolerance, greater enlightenment, more freedom, take a very, very long time to accomplish.

On the other hand, moving backward happens at breakneck speed. Waterkeeper Alliance says that in the last 5 years, more than 400 environmental laws have been weakened. A Democratic Congressman from Virginia says that war in Iraq is costing us $100,000 per minute! and that tax cuts for the rich cost us $200,000 per minute! Does this mean our national deficit ramps up at the rate of $300,000 per minute? How can we survive?

With so much going retrograde so fast, how does one focus on a single issue? It takes only minutes to identify at least 20 major issues that need urgently to be infused with radical energy. Aside from major issues, there are those that are still important but less overwhelmingly so, and these crop up daily. In the past week, 1) the Senate has debated an asbestos trust fund compensation which Democrats think is a Trojan horse. 2) Bush has agreed to a so-called compromise on the Patriot Act that most Senate Democrats stand ready to cave to but which is quite meaningless in terms of improved protections. 3) The current budget bill will further increase the miles between impoverishment and wealth in our country. 4) Also in the last week, AOL and Yahoo want to charge large grassroots political action groups [MoveOn, PFAW, ACLU, which are not administration friendly] a fee for sending their emails. 5) Vaccines are being gene-spliced into plant materials whose spread cannot be controlled. 6) A few weeks ago EPA announced a plan to weaken reporting standards for toxic wastes. And 7) we know from recent tragedies how lightly mine safety standards are taken.

It is impossible even to be aware of everything that is in retrograde, much less to focus on one issue. I mentioned that radical energy is needed, radical because the usual methods of political action aren’t getting the job done.

This leads to the second question plaguing me: why have Democratic politicians lost their voice? I am not clear how to analyze this one. To some extent, the answer to loss of voice is ‘because no one is listening.’ On every issue that comes before Congress, the Republican majority has already been told what to think and how to vote. They don’t want debate or to hear any other opinion. The media is mostly ho-hum on opposition arguments, presumably because those opinions are doomed. Another reason for vocal decline seems to be that some politicians would rather get along with power than rile it. How else to explain the game played by 16 Democratic Senators [not the 2 from NY fortunately] who voted yes to cloture on the Alito confirmation but no to confirmation. Who did they think they were fooling? For sure it is discouraging to be at the mercy of a non-compassionate majority which doesn’t allow Democrats to attend some so-called joint committee hearings, that adjourns conference committees so things can be changed after the Democrats have left, that does not allow Democrats to offer amendments, but jumping down a rabbit hole is not the solution.

I don’t know the solution, and I would welcome further discussion of these troubling questions.
2/15/06

The Demise of Democracy – and the Danger of Silence

Observing our government in action it seems frighteningly clear: We are watching the demise of democracy. The impending demise has been superbly crafted and accelerated in the past 5 years since G W Bush manipulated his way into the White House. Notice I do not use the word elected, for good reason, because he was not. We, in the United States, are witnessing severe changes in many areas of life, including the rapid escalation of the national debt which triggers other economic disasters. The disregard and disrespect for all who oppose the current regime is palpable and a warning that democracy, as we know it, is in the crosshairs.

If we choose to look, we cannot miss the obvious signs that point to our fading democratic life. Globally we have lost international support. Nationally we have lost our sense of security and our national electoral system is being brutally manipulated. As a nation of caring people we spent decades fighting for laws to protect our environment and preserve our individual civil rights and now we watch the demise of both. Individually we face the deepening hardship of planning for financial security in retirement when the nation has massive debt, pensions and health care are scrapped. This is a short list pointing to severe strain, if not the dying gasp, of our democracy.

What is being deconstructed is the image many of us have of the kind of country we live in. Some say things have gone so far down the wrong road that it seems doubtful that we can turn back. That is true in part, the future is frightening, but we cannot give up hope that with effort and diligence things could spin on a dime.

It is a time to ponder. What is our role as ordinary people? We recognize that history proceeds cyclically, that extremes are followed by a correction as the pendulum swings in the opposite direction. Shall we stand by while disintegration proceeds, espousing the long view that evolution happens with or without our input and so our involvement will not make any difference? I think not! Being conscious of the play of events is certainly very important; however, I think that just being aware of the wrong turn of events is not good enough. Rudolf Steiner [20th century spiritual leader] did not hesitate to try to influence the direction of his country, Germany, after WW I. He worked vigorously to direct the political and social structure toward a non-exploitive economy, a free cultural life, and legal equality. That his efforts did not prevail does not negate the effort.

Spiritual leaders Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. were both active in the social/political realm. The voice of a spiritually focused life is not inconsistent with political activism; in fact it speaks with the most integrity.

Why are we so reluctant to try to influence our nation’s history? It’s daunting, no doubt about that, and the time and energy commitment can be overwhelming. And where does one start when the major players are likely not even known to us? Nevertheless, to enter the political fray of our present alarming national situation and to try to influence its outcome would be a task worthy of all of us. This is a time when wrong comes up to meet us everywhere, to quote from Christopher Frye’s A Sleep of Prisoners. We cannot just watch objectively, pacifying ourselves with the notion that such large scale events are beyond our control. Are they? Or are we acquiescing to this belief not because we agree but because we are at a loss as to what to do about it. We need to engage, but how?

One thing can be done right at home. We all like to meet with others who can be supportive in our times of need. I suggest that the current political atmosphere is teetering on the edge of tragedy and we are players in a time of great need. What better reason to gather in small groups than to have a vital issue that brings us together? What better reason to pool our collective resources, our minds and our energy, than to work for change? What better reason to unite than to refuse to give up hope that things can improve? We can choose to work on issues with enthusiasm, something large and worthy, or small and local, and while we are at it, what better way to accomplish a little self development and some good for our children than to engage in the most far reaching issue to confront us in our life time?

The tasks and challenges are many and we will each have our own list, but three stand out for me that must be addressed first:
1)Downsize the military and drastically scale back the aggressive stance of our country.
2)Restore our human rights lost via the Patriot Act and other various pseudo-paternalistic government/industry/military actions, policies and attitudes
3)Rebirth our nation as the republic that it is meant to be so that government represents us, the people, not big business.

By engaging ourselves and achieving some degree of accomplishment in these issues, I believe other concerns, such as the earth’s destruction and our poor reputation everywhere [I am not necessarily equating these two] will begin to be affected in a positive manner. Let’s look at the three priorities.

Militarism Out of Control
We have been warned -
“Overgrown military establishments are under any form of government inauspicious to liberty, and are to be regarded as particularly hostile to republican liberty.”
President George Washington, farewell address 9/17/1796.

‘This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience…The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted.”
President Dwight D. Eisenhower, farewell address 1/17/1961.

“Of all enemies to public liberty, war is perhaps the most to be dreaded because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the parent of armies; from these proceed debts and taxes; and armies, and debts, and taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under the domination of the few.” James Madison, an author of the Constitution and President:, quoted by Ralph Raico in American Foreign Policy – The Turning Point 1898-1919]

But we have not heeded these warnings.

I rely on Chalmers Johnson’s The Sorrows of Empire for my understanding of our current military situation. This book has provided the information I use in this section.

Our country has about 1700 military bases, approximately 700 of them in 100 foreign countries. There are 38 separate bases on Okinawa alone. This is certainly over-kill in terms of defense, though if we continue at our present national aggressive rate, there may well be over 100 countries that want to attack us. Many of these foreign bases no doubt are due to the complications of high tech modern warfare with its stealth bombers, cluster bombs, unmanned robot surveillance, etc. Some of the bases protect business investments overseas. This is the kind of aggressive warfare and aggressive commercial interest that we, as a peace loving people who espouse freedom for all, should not be engaged in.

Just as there is a revolving door between the Federal Drug Administration and the drug companies it is supposed to regulate, so there is a revolving door between the Pentagon and defense contractors. Peter Teets, former Chief Operating Officer of Lockheed Martin, was appointed by Bush as undersecretary of the air force. He stated in 2002 that “the U.S. can control the world through a planned domination of space and that it intends to ensure that domination.” He opposes cooperation with NATO or the U.N. or other forms of ‘burden-sharing’. Controlling the world is not ‘bringing freedom and democracy’ to anyone, rather the antithesis.

Quoting from Johnson: “The Space Command’s policy statement .. argues that ‘the globalization of the world economy will continue with a widening gulf between haves and have-nots’, and that the Pentagon’s mission is therefore to ‘dominate the space dimension of military operations to protect U.S. interests and investments’ [emphasis added] in an increasingly dangerous and implicitly anti-American world. One crucial goal of policy should be ‘denying other countries access to space.’’” An alarming goal. Is this aggressive stance the will of the American people?

Johnson goes on to state: “Such an aggressive attempt to ensure unilateral military hegemony requires that this country abandon all arms control agreements and constraints, including the 1967 Outer Space Treaty which placed limits on the militarization of space …”

World domination is clearly the policy, and on the ground the ammunition of choice is depleted uranium [DU], a waste product of nuclear power generation, with the potential for severe health effects, including birth defects. “In 1991, American forces fired a staggering 944,000 DU rounds in Kuwait and Iraq….The Pentagon admits that it left behind .. 320 metric tons of DU on the battlefield.”

320 tons of DU deposited on the landscape is an abstraction for most of us who have not faced that kind of scenario. Our government wages war in our name while most of us have no real understanding of what war means to people and landscapes which are the target and who are mentally and physically injured, maimed, killed, and have their land contaminated for generations.

The Bush administration has been the aggressor in taking the U.S. to war in Afghanistan and Iraq. It is not the first time the U.S. has chosen this role, but it is shocking to realize how utterly focused our country and the current administration is on world domination. It should not be shocking, but it is, to realize how we have so willingly sacrificed our democratic way of life for the chimera of security. The question is, has not the quest for security tipped the balance and put us at more risk? We have seen this played out on the ground in Iraq especially. Our presence there is not wanted; it is resented just as the early New World settlers resented the English authority. Has the war in Iraq and our 700 bases around the world made us more secure? I would feel more secure if my country were not so intent on dominating every inch of world real estate and the space overhead. I do not want my country to be the world’s bully, especially for the primary purpose of protecting overseas investments. A dictator bullies; a democratic administration leads with the best interest of the people at the heart of its decisions.

Human rights abused
Illegal search and seizure
An American Muslim army chaplain at Guantanamo was accused of espionage, arrested, held in solitary confinement for 76 days, threatened with death, while his wife was bullied by government agents looking for evidence. In the end all charges were dropped; the government had no case. According to author and Chaplain James Lee*, no charges were made at the time of his arrest, no attorney provided, no communication allowed, no information given to frantic relatives, his personal property seized and still held a year later. At the end of his ordeal, even though he was completely cleared of any wrong doing, his reputation and career were ruined, his family life unbearably stressed, and all this was set in motion by fear. Our government tried to save face by concocting a bogus misdemeanor charge against Lee [which he appealed and won], and making it abundantly clear that a Muslim chaplain was not welcome in the army. Lee knows of others similarly falsely accused. Can we keep our silence? What if this terrifying experience happened to you, or to your relative? Don’t assume it isn’t possible. Even though it sounds like something that would happen under a dictatorship, it happens in the U.S. *See James Lee, For God & Country, Faith and Patriotism Under Fire.

Loss of privacy
Chalmers Johnson states in his book: “Today the federal government can tap into and listen to all citizens’ phone calls, faxes, and email transmissions if it chooses to. It has begun to incarcerate native-born and naturalized citizens as well as immigrants and travelers in military prisons without bringing charges against them.” Military prisons operate outside the realm of constitutional and civil justice safeguards. New York Times reporter Bill Saffire revealed recently that his phone had been wire-tapped for 6 months, as well as that of a reporter with whom he was in contact.

Protections missing
How is it that we could rush military personnel to Pakistan to assist in the earthquake there but could not rush help to our own people caught in the Katrina disaster? In many circumstances, the current administration clearly displays a cavalier attitude toward the well being of people at home, perhaps because it is focused so intently on world dominion. Disaster relief is not mandated by the Constitution, but we have come to expect some federal oversight of natural disasters as befitting ‘general welfare’.

Freedom of speech, assembly
Many of our hard won civil and environmental rights are falling victim to the war on terror. The gravest terror is really right here at home and is spreading silently, secretly.
•Bush political events are largely stage managed, limiting speech and assembly.
•The Clean Air act of 1970 and the Clean Water act of 1972 are set aside and weakened. Some large industries are exempted wholesale from clean air and water compliance, meaning that the air we breathe and the water we drink are not protected for the common good.
•Bankruptcy laws have been restructured for the benefit of banks.
•Peaceful demonstrations are met with police in riot gear. ‘If you’re not with us, you are against us’ implies that protesters are part of the ‘axis of evil’.
•Elections are manipulated, the campaign process subverted by outrageous lies and illegal use of campaign funding.
•News is controlled and manipulated

Too many legislative acts are formulated to benefit corporations, not people, though the wording is often ambiguously phrased to hide the true purpose.

Our republic under attack
Ethical slippage and voodoo vocabulary Daily we are reminded of the lack of ethics in high places. We know of election rigging and the fraudulent reasons given for going to war in Iraq. Equally depraved is the scurrilous, mystifying use of language … words like compassion, democracy, freedom, liberty, national security, prosperity, opportunity, peace, support for our brave men and women fighting in Iraq, tax relief for the American people, conserving our environment, fiscal responsibility, a policy of life - all mean the opposite in current-politico-speak. This is voodoo vocabulary, but it lulls many into believing the president is doing the right thing. Add use of torture at will, disregard of the Geneva Convention against torture, lack of regard for any framework that doesn’t serve the hidden purpose of world domination … does this sound like democracy at work?

Extra Constitutional powers assumed
After 9/11/01, George W. Bush persuaded Congress to give him the power to decide if and when to send the military to Iraq. Essentially the Congress, which has Constitutional responsibility to declare war, handed it to the president, thus abdicating important legislative power and adding to that of the executive. Democracy at work? Recently we have learned of ‘signing statements’. This is a backdoor veto, with the president essentially saying that he will decide whether to accept or ignore the legislation he is putting into law. Bush has used such statements more than one hundred times.

Financial secrecy
N.D. Senator Kent Conrad spoke on 10/20/05 and many times since on the Senate floor re what he terms our approaching financial train wreck. With charts based on Congressional Budget Office and Dept of Treasury figures, he illustrates the point that the Bush administration budget double speak is wildly out of sync with reality. See website http://Conrad@senate.gov. The so-called deficit ‘reduction’ in spending of $35 billion (later raised to $40 billion) for Medicaid, student loans, agriculture, and all entitlement programs, said Conrad, is off-set by more than that amount in up-coming tax cuts that will benefit the wealthiest, thus giving no deficit reduction at all, rather an increase. Due to heavy public lobbying which resulted in House passage by only 2 votes, it is unclear at this moment whether House/Senate reconciliation on the budget bill will achieve the common good or support White House chicanery in reducing support for needed social programs while declaring murkily that the deficit is being reduced. Often, we the people are unsure what our tax dollars are doing.

[After this was written, the Senate deadlocked on passage of the conference bill and Dick Cheney, who had been rushed back overnight from the Middle East, was whisked into the president’s chair in the Senate chamber to break the tie. Democrats managed to temporarily stall implementation by raising several points of order. Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton D/NY, speaking on the Senate floor and referring to the handouts oil and drug companies received in the bill, stated: ‘Never has so much been done for so few who need it so little.’ She could have added: And never has so much been taken from so many who need it so greatly.]

A business controlled government
Congress is controlled by corporate business, not by the electorate, and this is the hallmark of a power structure inimical to a republic. Franklin Roosevelt warned that “the liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a point where it becomes stronger than their democratic state itself. That, in its essence, is fascism.” [Quoted by Robert F Kennedy, Jr. in Crimes Against Nature.] In a republic, the people control government. In fascism, business and government have a very close and symbiotic relationship.

On any given day, hundreds of lobbyists are busy in Washington, D.C. and state governments calling on legislative staff, pushing agendas for clients who are big contributors to party coffers of both sides. The money spent by business on lobbyists and contributions is staggering, but it pays off in industry-friendly legislation and lucrative contracts. Democracy at work?

Corporate interest to the forefront
N.C. public officials, bought out by the mega hog confinement operations in that state, allowed those companies, Smithfield primarily, to pollute the eastern shore of N.C., loading waterways with many toxic products such as pfiesteria which is deadly to fish and devastating to human health. Whole communities have been left uninhabitable. With payoffs and favors, the political muscle could not be found to stop the pollution and protect farmers, fishermen, and residents. The self-interest of a major business entity was over-riding [‘Waterkeeper’, Fall ‘05]. There is currently a moratorium on new mega hog operations, but massive pollution by existing operations continues

And the blame award goes to –
I write in sharp criticism of the Bush administration, its control of Congress, news media, and the judiciary, but I want to make it quite clear that both political parties are failing us. Politicians of all persuasions are embedded in corporate and military imperialism, with the difference that at home some have a degree of social conscience as well. Neither party is four square behind people oriented values such as national and international cooperation rather than competition and policies that support living wage jobs and good health for people over profits for corporations.

Both political parties need to get the message that we want less military deployment [especially egregious when done to enable U.S. corporations to exploit cheap labor elsewhere]; more respect for civil rights at home; more environmental leadership that will reduce America’s share of global pollution; and reform of lobbying and election financing that now enables corporate control over legislation.

At the moment our vote verges on being a chimera because neither party has true human values at its core. But the Bush regime is more blatant and at the same time more deceitful in pursuing world domination ... deceitful in concocting the excuse that its global ambitions are somehow protecting us from terrorism. It does this hypocritically, all the while supporting ‘life’ while ignoring the fact that we are the world’s leading terrorist. Three thousand died in lower Manhattan’s Twin Towers. We have killed by Pentagon admission over 30,000 mainly civilian Iraqis in Bush’s war of terrorism. The real figure could be closer to 100,000.

For the most part, TV and periodical media are not telling us what is really going on. In many cases, media owners are celebrating all the way to the bank as they profit from military spending, lax environmental enforcement, and a corporate-friendly regulatory climate.

And so to the bottom line
While Bush confuses the American public with his jargon and deceit, his clear intent is undeniable. Those that choose to see through the smoke screen can no longer deny that the single goal of the Bush administration and the neo-conservative coalition is world domination, a goal to be reached by a global military presence. When we awaken to this reality, things begin to make sense.

Democracy in the U.S. [and anywhere else it gets in the way] is collateral damage on the way to building empire. In like manner, the environment, human rights, America’s good will abroad, needed social programs at home are all collateral damage. We are watching the planned and orchestrated demise of a republican form of government and the rapid acceleration of imperialist power. Many U.S. citizens, lulled by poor diet, poor health, economic stress, misplaced belief in government, will be blind-sided. Those who do wake up in time will be appalled at the vast scope of the military/industrial/neo-conservative agenda. To those I say, ‘How can we stand silently by and watch this horror unfold?”

Historically, empire building eventually fails. It becomes top heavy with fraud, greed, secrecy, depravity, and it collapses as a result of its own corruption. Witness Rome, Spain, Great Britain, Holland, Japan and other empire building nations of the 19th and early 20th century. More recently recall the fall of the Soviet Union. With our ‘en current’ global awareness, one would think that empire had seen its day and could fade into the past. Surely we should have learned the lessons by now and be able to graduate to some type of national ambition that is more humanistic, more sustainable, and more respectful of the rest of the lives on our planet. Some countries may have learned, but some are just entering into the process, or at least are trying desperately to protect themselves from us. The current political craziness that aims to dominate earth and weaponize space may be the last gasp of empire. If so, it will be a big gasp, and the fall will be catastrophic. What is our role?

Our role is huge, and it is urgent. If we are to avoid further collapse, chaos, and the tendency toward fascism, we must be engaged in any way we can devise. We must find ways to become informed, to alert others to what we see, and then to stay engaged. Our actions can be customized to align our diverse talents with any of the many diverse areas of our political life in need of action.

A RECIPE FOR ACTION USING HEART, HEAD, AND HANDS
•Pick an issue that fires your heart
•Learn the facts that relate to the issue
•Use your skills to educate others by writing a pamphlet, giving a talk, making a video, joining or creating a grass roots campaign, writing letters to your politicians and your hometown paper.

The voice of the people is heard in Congress when enough of us speak. When the USDA came out with the first draft of a National Organic Program that included irradiation, genetically modified organisms, and use of sewage sludge, processes that were absolutely anathema to organic methods, 250,000 of us protested and we were heard. USDA capitulated and the rule was changed to eliminate the ‘bad three’. Success is not always so immediate. When efforts are stonewalled, we can negotiate, and offer to help move the process along. Falling back to a smaller agenda is still a way forward. In some cases, a com-promise is better than no promise at all.
The most important principle in reaching any goal is to take the first step. No matter how outlandish the goal, no matter how small the step, acknowledge the goal and take the step. It can be a test of will not to be daunted by the overwhelming nature of the task but to strap on our boots and step forth. Rosa Parks took her step by keeping her seat; by this action she sparked the civil rights movement. Do we need a better show of courage? Our united voices can change our nation’s destiny and get us back on track for putting people first.

But let us not go into this thinking we know absolutely what is right, that we, too, always have truth on our side. We must constantly re-visit and re-evaluate our plans to see if they are taking us, in our best judgment, in the direction of truth, freedom, equality, economic fairness. We want to resurrect these values, and we will need to re-check our guidance from time to time in whatever way we each choose.

Little by little, step by small step, I believe one, two, three or more people can change the course of events, but we have to start now.

A FEW SMALL BUT PRACTICAL STEPS
•As consumers, we can refuse to buy items that come from countries with known low wages.
•We can avoid the siren song of cheap food and purchase organic items that bring those farmers a slightly better income.
•We can protest unjust treatment of workers, and bullying wherever it occurs.
•Many cases of pollution go unnoticed; notice them and speak out.
•Falsehoods coming from power are so common that we hardly pay attention; start paying attention and challenge falsehood.
•Join other groups who are protesting war, social security ‘restructuring’, our loss of privacy rights and clean environment.
•Support others who are willing to work toward change with financial contributions.
•Get on the list serve for MoveOn.org and People For the American Way.
•Subscribe to publications that are free of corporate ownership
•Keep informed and let Congress know where you stand…i.e., Patriot II, reduction in social ‘safety nets’, profligate spending for empire building, roll-back of environmental regulations.

And most important, never believe that there is nothing you can do. That’s what the controlling powers want you to believe. There is always something. Don’t ever give up. Silence practically shouts consent, and we do not want our silence to give tacit support to an empire building government unresponsive to a majority of its common people. Democracy isn’t in its grave yet; but its heartbeat is faltering and in need of life support. What is your silence saying?

© 2005

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

Animals and Me - A Symbiotic Relationship

I was very young when my parents got us a family dog. I don’t remember much about this dog. Maybe it didn’t stay with us long. Certainly in college and then living in New York City, owning a pet was out of the question.

When I moved to the country to take up farming, a dog became a constant in my life. At one time I housed a litter of collies, of which I kept three – Buddy, Suzie, and Champ. When these were gone – Buddy died peacefully one night lying by the front step – I switched to German Shepherds, a superior dog for farm chores. A black shepherd named Hazard was the first of several. Hazard got her name as a small wiggling pup when she climbed out the window of the farm grain truck as I drove down the road. I stopped to rescue her and my husband said we should call her Hazard because she certainly was one. Hazard became the guardian of my young son. He of course ran all over the farm .. even, at about age 3, to the woodlot. But finding him or knowing where he was, was never a problem. If Hazard wasn’t actually with him, she always had him in sight. The devotion of that dog was incredible.

All this while, my farm was becoming home to many animals. I raised hogs, sheep, chickens, and beef cattle. Franchesca – a shepherd mix picked up at the SPCA after Hazard was gone – was the best herd dog I ever had. If the cows got where they didn’t belong, Franchesca would get them heading back in the right direction, and then back off. She died after about 15 years with us, on the hottest day of the summer, and the only day I was away from the farm. I never found her body though I searched the farm everywhere .. sheds, ditches, woods. A couple of months later, I came upon her collar, nothing more. She could have just vaporized. I heard then that shepherds like to die alone.

For farm animals, I always enjoyed keeping hogs. They are such an animated, playful breed. Their antics are quite humorous, and they like human contact. They love to be rubbed, to have their ears scratched. Hogs recognize different people of course. They may jump en masse and ‘woof’ if a stranger surprises them. I never had any trouble working with hogs or cattle. Stay calm and the animals will do the same. Get excited, act like a bully, and you will have a rebellion on your hands.

One day when I was new to the hog raising business, I took a load of hogs to the buying station. They were all penned together on the scale when I walked out to see them, to say goodbye. Instantly there was a great chorus of recognition and greeting as I approached. It was as if they knew everything would be all right as long as I was with them. I stayed a few minutes and then had to turn my back and walk away. It was the hardest thing I have ever done. I am still sad today just remembering this goodbye of 5 decades ago. Those animals trusted me, and I let them down because I couldn’t go with them.

This raises the difficult question: How does a farmer come to terms with raising livestock that will be slaughtered for food? It is a soul searching question.

Philosophically we know that sacrifice happens at every level of life, in all kingdoms, at every moment. Mother earth is making a tremendous sacrifice every instant to sustain human life and the plunder that accompanies our use. Vegetation is sacrificed for our sustenance and for livestock sustenance, but we don’t agonize over that because we don’t assign feeling to plants, though some experiments have indicated otherwise. Wild animals feed upon each other in a never ending and intricate web of sacrifice and dependence. As humans, we often sublimate our personal desires and interests to help others and at the same time, we are supported by an invisible network of the sacrificial energy of parents, friends, and many others unknown to us. Sometimes even lives are sacrificed for us. I think of the thousands [millions] who die in wars. The theologically inclined, or those who have read Rudolf Steiner, will know that the highest hierarchies, i.e. the Seraphim, made sacrifices so that mankind could come into being with certain capabilities.

That Being whom many of us know as the Christ made just such a sacrifice to leave the spiritual world, to come to earth, take on a physical body, and walk the human walk for 3 years to bring us insights into how to live and to change the construct of our life after death. He brought spiritual nourishment. One thing we learn in our earthly life is that sacrifice and service are a big part of this experience .. that if we are not doing something useful for someone or some cause higher than ourselves, there is very little purpose in our lives. Being useful, being needed, doing something good for the earth or for our fellows gives us the greatest satisfaction. We hope that our contribution is recognized and appreciated. But whether it is or not, we keep at it. Sacrifice, or giving, is one of life’s measures.

Livestock in their life path face the same situation. The group soul of each type of animal knows sacrifice is unavoidable. I mentioned that hogs are outgoing extroverts. Sheep are the opposite. Sheep and lambs are so docile, so willing to give up once they are caught, that it is easy to see why sheep and lambs have historically been the sacrificial animal. They almost patiently await that role.

Animals, like us, want to be well treated. Rudolf Steiner tells us that animals need to experience love so that they can move along the path of evolution. They are here to experience love and being cared for, and we can give them that love and good care. But we also need to appreciate the sacrifice they make for us. If we don’t, the sacrifice is still there, but its value is diminished, and we are diminished because we lose the chance to be in thankfulness for their gift.

Sacrifice is compensated by thankfulness. Life is the fulcrum; sacrifice and thankfulness are two ends of the balance beam.

Sacrificing an animal for our physical nourishment is not a sacrilege if it is accompanied by thankfulness. End of life for any living thing is a sad event because we cherish life. We balance this sadness by offering thanksgiving for the life of a person we loved and lost. We can do no less for animals.

2/06

Monday, March 20, 2006

Death Penalty Issue

For those of us in NY there is an issue which needs our immediate comment. Quoting from the local paper on Friday 3/10/06:

"The state Senate Codes Committee on Tuesday approved legislation co-sponsored by state Sen George Winner Jr R/Elmira, to reinstate New York's death penalty for violent murderers who kill a police officer, peace officer or employee of the state Dept of Correctional Services.

"A vote by the full Senate could come soon and Winner, a strong death penalty advocate, called on state Assembly Democratic leaders to 'wake up to the real world' and also allow a vote on the measure."

We need to write our state Senator immediately and also for good measure, a copy to our assembly member. Addresses will be in your phone book.

Just as when I was on my high school debate team many decades ago, the same arguments are still 100% valid:
1) the death penalty does not deter crime - not one iota
2) It costs many times more to execute than to incarcarate for life
3) execution can be quite psychologically brutal to those whose job it is to carry it out
4) the issue of 'closure' for anyone is bogus. Grief goes on forever, is never neatly 'closed'.
5) Making the state an official murderer implicates us all and does not advance humanity

Killing a police officer occurs during the heat of a crime with adrenaline high and the criminal seeing no other option. State murder occurs as a calculated act and one also based on an emotional response. Neither act is valid, both are criminal, and official murder rectifies nothing.

A very good book to read on this issue is Sister Helen Prejean's Death of Innocents.

Please do what you can to see that NYS remains capital punishment free. It is a more humane environment.