Thursday, December 15, 2011

An American Vision



Here we are again…another deadline to avert a financial crisis. America is about to run out of money… once again. Hostages are being taken and a Washington “pissing contest” is under way. The first to blink loses and neither side is prepared to blink so the standoff and gridlock continues and continues and continues!

Why don’t those damn Democrats just give in and go along with the Republican Vision for America?

The vision goes something like this: Smaller government and free enterprise! Cut wasteful spending and do away with costly environmental regulations that only get in the way. Let the free market reign. Let trickle-down economics take care of those less fortunate Americans or let the churches and faith based organizations take care of the sick and the poor. Gays should just get right with the Lord and start being straight. They should find a good person of the opposite sex and get married for God’s sake. Illegal aliens should all just go back to where they came from and stop taking our jobs, all 12 million of you. All the lazy, single moms collecting welfare and creating babies and their shiftless young men with no education and no future should just take a bath and get a job, by God! The elderly, the sick and the poor should just keep working and stop being such a drag on the American economy. The working poor should just get better jobs and stop complaining, at least they have jobs. Better yet, why don’t they just save up their money and go back to school or learn a new trade, but don’t count on the government to help you with grants or scholarships because that’s just more wasteful government spending that needs to be cut like Social Security and Medicare.

People of America pull yourselves up by your own boot straps! Get a job and stop complaining! You are not entitled to anything, unless you are among the wealthy. If you are wealthy, you deserve to keep what you earned through your hard work and investments. The wealthy are the job creators and should be revered in this society. Conversely, unions are greedy, worthless institutions that only get in the way of free enterprise. Their demise in this country would be of no consequence.

Long live the military industrial complex! As long as there are wars, America will have jobs for soldiers and munitions factories, the backbone of our economy. And, oh yes…God Bless the United States of America. You are either with us or against us. You are either a patriot or a terrorist and we get to decide.

Damn Democrats! They tax the wealthy and spend their money on the 99% of this country that don’t matter. Tax and spend! Tax and spend! Take the pledge now fellow job creators and gird your loins for the liberals are coming for you!

Visions are funny things. Sometimes in the light of day…they make no sense and we see them for what they are.

Food for THOUGHT…

Saturday, November 5, 2011

We Have Nothing to Fear but Ignorance and Greed

 
I came across this YouTube video clip of a woman, a Tea Party Republican, being interviewed about President Obama. Her comments were shockingly commonplace among many conservative voters today. I hear these pronouncements from people I work with, friends and even some family members. I hear these same mantras over and over as if they came out of some “play book” for how to win at politics all costs.  I hear the conservative political pundits in the media, most notably on FOX News, spewing these same lines with the zeal of a preacher to a congregation shouting in unison, ”Amen!”

What is so frightening to me is that the woman in the video looks so “middle-of-the-road America.” She looks like a grandma, an elderly aunt, a solid citizen and yet her statements are so filled with fear and hate and outright…ignorance. I feel like I am witnessing the dumbing down of America. It is like some sci-fi movie plot where the hero realizes that all the people around him, people he knows and loves, are being transformed into “party line” spewing “zombies.” They are no longer able to think for themselves. They can only repeat the latest Glenn Beck or Rush Limbaugh revelations about Obama’s unfitness for office and why the wealthy must be protected at all costs from his attempts to tax them.

In this movie, Americans are being sucked into this big machine rolling across the country. It sends out waves of fear. It provides slogans to chant, signs to carry and big screen TV’s filled with talking heads, all bent on making Americans feel afraid. Democrats, liberals…and Obama are easy targets. “They” want to tax Americans and make them pay for government programs like Medicare and Social Security that will surely bankrupt America. (No one can really see who is driving the big machine with mirrored windows.) Banners and flags streaming from the machine call for smaller government, doing away with regulations for energy production, the environment and Wall Street. Leave the wealthy “job creators” alone! They must be free to “do their thing” for America’s economy to survive and recover. The wealth they amass will eventually trickle down to the masses. Get a job and stop being a drag on society. No compromise with “the Devil.” Make Obama a one term president… at all costs.

In its wake, the hero of the movie finds the most vulnerable of American society huddled in the wreckage of humanity, civility and cooperation. They were the sick and disabled, the homeless and people without jobs. They were old men and young, starving children with frightened single mothers. Some were illegal without any plan, except to survive. They were the huddled masses that once believed in the promise of America, but that promise had now been taken by American Fear and Greed.  A numbing ignorance hung over the land as the zombies marched on with the big machine. Taking back America!

Sleep well America. We are almost there…2012.

Food for THOUGHT…

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Occupy Wall Street: Mobs or Grassroots Discontent?



"I think it’s dangerous, this class warfare."
Mitt Romney, former Massachusetts governor --- October 4, 2011 remarks at Florida retirement community.

"... I happen to believe that these demonstrations are planned and orchestrated to distract from the failed policies of the Obama administration. Don't blame Wall Street, don't blame the big banks, if you don't have a job and you're not rich, blame yourself!”
Herman Cain, radio personality, businessman --- October 5, 2011 remarks to the press.

"What are these people for? To the degree that they're for anything, it's left-wing nuttiness."
Karl Rove, Bush administration senior advisor, Republican strategist --- October 10, 2011 remarks to Fox News anchor Sean Hannity.

"I see the president’s rhetoric of envy inflaming the public and saying, ‘Go get yours because rich people don’t deserve it.'

"I see it as inflaming this Paris mob that I hope doesn't result in a lawlessness where they say, 'Well, gosh, those nice iPads through the window should be mine and why don't I throw a brick through the window to get them because rich people don't deserve to have them when I can't have them.'"
Rand Paul, U.S. Senator from Kentucky --- October 7, 2011 remarks to Fox Business News.

"These are the same old folks who have been protesting since the Vietnam war ... they really don't curry much favor in my book."
Rick Santorum, former U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania --- October 7, 2011 remarks to CNBC.

"Well, if you look at what they’ve been telling in the media, they don’t know why they’re there, they’re just mad. And I see people angry in my district too, but this attack upon business, attack upon industry, attack upon freedom, and I think that’s what this is all about."
Paul Broun, Congressman from Georgia --- October 7, 2011 remarks to ABC News

*Above quotes from: About.com website

Do I need any better examples of the kind of partisan disconnect going on right now in America? These quotes from GOP movers and shakers pretty much fall in line with the sentiment expressed by my conservative Republican friends and co-workers. “They are all a bunch of nut-jobs that don’t have a message,” they complain.

To me, that’s the scary part. The Wall Street crowd and their Republican legislator friends and Tea Party supporters just don’t get it. They can’t understand where this anger and frustration is coming from and why it is spreading across America. They blame President Obama and his “failed policies.” They blame the poor and the out of work middle class for not having jobs in this economy. They see it as some sort of attack by the unwashed, lazy masses upon the hard working “job creators”… the wealthiest in America. It’s an “attack upon freedom” no less! “These are the same old folks that have been protesting since the Vietnam War,” as if protesting was somehow UN-American.

Failed policies? Certainly! We have had years and years of failed policies on both sides of the isle in Washington. There were policies that provided American businesses with tax incentives to move jobs to third world countries so they could exploit cheap labor and maximize corporate profits. Unions did not help as they sought more and more bloated benefits for workers without considering the cost of cheap foreign competition. Failed policies resulted in the loss of American jobs, the closing of American factories, and our whopping trade imbalance with China. Failed policies did not start and end with President Obama, despite what Republicans and Tea Party conservatives would have us believe.

So now we have conservative Washington politicians, lobbied by the big banks and wealthy corporations, bent on gridlock. Political compromise and tax reform have become dirty words. Their battle cry is…CUT! CUT! CUT! Their plan is to block everything Obama proposes from healthcare and jobs legislation to appointments in order to make him “a one term president,” even if this myopic view means the destruction of this nation and its economy. If nothing gets passed, nothing gets done and they can turn around and blame all of this on President Obama and his “failed policies.” These same politicians then scratch their heads as angry American citizens “Occupy Wall Street” and settle in for the long haul. They scramble to point fingers of blame everywhere, but at themselves. They just don’t GET IT! It is truly amazing that they don’t see any political fallout except for Obama and Democrats. They must really think voters are dopes.

History is full of tales about kings and queens who were so high in their “ivory towers” that they failed to hear their subject’s petitions far below. Imagine their shock when they realize their ivory towers are only houses of cards, when they realize that banks and corporations don’t vote…people do.

Food for THOUGHT…


Thursday, October 20, 2011

Where Do We Go From Here?



The news is filled with the death of a dictator, gridlock in Washington, GOP contenders running for President, world economy on the brink of catastrophe, millions of people out of work, foreclosures and abducted children. Our lives are filled with worry, challenge and heartbreak. We are starved for good news, for hope that things will get better. So where do we go from here?

What’s next depends on each one of us. We just have not realized it yet. It is so easy to blame external forces, people or groups of people for trouble in the world. What we just don’t get…yet…is that each of us has the power to create our own reality. Each one of us has the power to change that reality. Each one of us is not only connected, but a part of the Whole of what Is. No more and no less than each microscopic cell is a part of our body as a whole.

So many of us live our lives as if there is no connection. We live our lives in isolation, in separation from our fellow human beings. We live in a world of “not enough.” We come to believe that there is only so much love out there. There is only so much money, so much food and water, etc. From the moment of birth, we perceive our lives as a race to get… enough. Our fellow humans are seen as competitors for those resources. Once we feel we have enough, we race to get more than enough. Having more seems to give us power over those that have less. “I have mine…now you go scramble for yours!”

Having and not having allows us to judge our fellow humans. We assign worth and value based on what we have or don’t have. It is so easy, if we see ourselves as separate, little islands in a sea of humanity. If I have more than you, then I must have worked harder than you, making you lazy, less valuable, less worthy. I must be more blessed by God than you because… I have more. Once I judge you as less than me, it becomes easy to treat you differently. We are no longer equals.

As we accumulate resources in this perceived “race,” we seek allies. We seek out those that have our similar values and levels of power, influence, status and ideology. We invent “Us” and “Them.” We label people as liberals, conservatives, Christians, Muslims, Jews, blacks, whites, gays, any one of a number of groups and sub groups. Labels come to define the group.

Once we have “Us and Them,” it becomes easier to value one group over another. It can ultimately allow for one group to enslave or oppress another. In its extreme, it can lead to humans torturing and killing their fellow human beings. It can lead to war between nations, murder and mayhem. It only requires one group, one nation or one person to see the other as…less than human, worthy of atrocities and death. The Holocaust is only one recent example of man’s continued inhumanity to man over human history played out on the world stage… time and time again.   

Mankind is at a crossroads, as I see it. We can stay with this ancient model that has not served man well at all, or we can choose a new path, a new vision, a new reality. Will that vision allow us to see ourselves as connected and a part of the whole of humanity? Will we see a world of plenty rather than not enough where cooperation and sharing is valued over having more than others? Will each of us reach a hand down to pull our fellow humans up? Man is so ready, so close to the next evolutionary leap that many of us can feel it. We must first understand our relationship to one another and our relation to the Whole of Existence.

Where oh where do we go from here?

Food for THOUGHT…

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Puppies Adopted!


A week after Lisa and I turned our foster puppies over to San Antonio Animal Care Services (ACS), we made a trip back out to the city shelter to follow-up. We had hoped for one last time with our little guys, but that was not to be. We walked through the puppy kennels and did not find Big Boy, Baby or Brownie. We were directed to the adoption office to confirm their adoption. At the office, we gave the clerk their ACS ID numbers and held our breath.

Brownie was the first to be adopted, only a day or so after we dropped them off. Brownie was Lisa’s favorite and she started to cry tears of joy. Baby and Big Boy were picked up by a no-kill shelter, near Austin, called Austin Pets Alive. When we got home we went to their website and learned that Big Boy was adopted on Monday, the day after he arrived. His sister, Baby, is still pending, but I’m sure she will be or has already been adopted by now.

The month and a half that the puppies were in our care were a wonderful mix of early mornings, late nights and worries, but also laughter and amazement. They went from little, furry lumps into active, healthy and very happy little creatures that loved to dig and play.  We miss their little puppy faces of excitement, but we love the fact that they have now found new homes, homes that they would never have known if they had been left to die by the side of the road in the summer heat.

The day we took them back to ACS, I took each puppy in my lap and looked them right in the eye and told each of them that the only job they have to do is to get adopted and to be the best puppy they can be. I gave them each a big hug and told them I loved them. Then I accepted a few licks in the face. I guess they were paying attention.

Well done puppies! Well done!

Love, your foster mom and dad.

Food for THOUGHT…

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Puppies Update

Our puppies are doing well. In less than 2 weeks we have watched our little charges go from being furry lumps, infested with fleas and ticks, clinging to life, to frisky, healthy puppies. When we brought them into our home they did not even have their eyes open yet. They rolled and crawled to get around and Lisa had to feed them with an eye-dropper. Once we had formula from Animal Control Services, the puppies were introduced to bottle feeding and they really began putting on weight. With their eyes wide open, they began to wobble around on all fours. They were eating so much formula that Lisa had to go back to ACS for more food. She came back with not only more formula, but bags of dry puppy chow and canned dog food.


Lisa had the idea of doing away with the bottles and letting them learn to lap the formula from bowls. It worked so well that we decided to gradually add solids to their formula. Their teeth are starting to come in so they are ready. We began adding more solids to make the mixture thicker and once again our puppies rose to the challenge by eating and lapping up their food out of their own little bowls, but their feedings have become a lot slower and messier. They like to step in their bowls and wander around to see what the other puppies are eating.

Did I also mention…they are all pooping and peeing very well now? We change a lot of newspapers! Newspapers are like gold to us now! We were getting to the point that we had to hurry and read the day’s paper so that we could turn around and use them. We have enlisted the help of our neighbor across the street. She is bringing over her used papers so we are getting by for now.

The bathtub in our guest bathroom was getting too confining for three active puppies so I built a “playpen” for them in the sun room. They love their new digs. There’s plenty of room to run around, wrestle with their siblings and take naps. Their little personalities are really starting to come out now. Big Boy gets sleepy after he eats and is getting huge. Baby is the most vocal and lets you know if things do not suit her. Brownie is a good eater and loves to play, but she often gets nosed out by herother siblings when push comes to shove.

Lisa takes the puppies out for a bath almost every morning and the same puppies who once yelped “bloody murder,” now love this time with her. They love being bathed and having their bellies rubbed. She puts them in the crate to dry off after their baths. They let her know when they want to go back inside the house. It gets pretty warm by mid morning here.

Yes, we are getting attached to our little puppies, but we also know that we cannot raise and care for 3 grown dogs and two cats in our house. We are just their current stop on their way to their forever families. They are out there and we are doing our best to get our puppies ready. Next week we take them into the ACS vet for shots and work ups prior to adoption. They should be weaned in a few more weeks and our job will be done. They are a lot of work, but they will be missed. Lisa and I would love to see how they turn out as full grown dogs and they lives they will change.

It is truly a shame that many people do not take responsibility for their pets. The animal shelters of San Antonio are doing their best to spay and neuter as many stray cats and dogs as possible. Lisa and I work as volunteers for the Animal Defense League of Texas and its no-kill shelter. Soon we will be trained to go out and work community events to talk about the importance of spaying and neutering pets. Our puppies were lucky that they were found in time. There are way too many kittens and puppies that suffer cruel, needless deaths because owners did not care if their pets roamed the neighborhoods creating more generations of starving and unwanted animals. Sadly, so many or these animals wind up in the pound, unable to be adopted and they are put to sleep.

I urge all pet owners to stop the suffering, give a damn…and do the right thing.

Food for THOUGHT…

We are Foster Parents!

Lisa and I have become official foster parents! We took in 3 abandoned puppies from the neighborhood..


Monday, Lisa was out for her early morning walk when she noticed something in the street. At first she thought it was a dead cat, but as she got closer she could see it was a puppy. It was twitching. She noticed two more puppies nearby in a vacant lot by the street. They were also twitching. Lisa did not have the heart to leave them to die so she went home and got something to collect dogs and bring them home.

The poor creatures were filthy. She put them in a box and set the box in the bathtub while she went to the Internet to get some information on how to care for them. All three puppies did not have their eyes open yet. Puppy's eyes open around two weeks of age so we had some idea of how young they were. She found a makeshift formula online made of milk, egg yolk and oil to feed them. She found an eye dropper to use and learned that they need to be fed every 3- 4 hours. Yikes!

Her next plan was to find a shelter to take them. This is where things took a real turn for the worse! Because of their age and the condition they were found, most shelters will not take puppies under 6 weeks. They need to be weaned and weigh about two pounds. Even the animal shelter where Lisa and I volunteer would not take them at their age. Now what!? We are cat people. We are not set up to care for or raise puppies! Our cats were getting very suspicious of the yips and yaps coming from the bathroom.

When Lisa entered the bathroom to feed the puppies, she noticed they were covered with fleas and ticks. She decided to give them a bath in Dawn detergent to help kill the fleas. Did I mention that little puppies do not like to take a bath? During the ordeal she realized there were a lot of ticks on their underside. Did I mention that Lisa hates ticks? The puppies looked much better but now Lisa had to clean and wipe down the bathroom looking for stray fleas. She fed all three puppies with the eye dropper and they took to the home made formula well. After eating, the puppies had to be burped and their privates wiped with wet cotton balls to get them to pee. She was getting overwhelmed and was beginning to wonder what she had gotten into.

Lisa called our vet to see what to do about the ticks and the remainder of the fleas after their bath. The vet recommended a flea and tick spray that could be used on new born puppies. The problem was I had taken our car to work and had a meeting after work. My meeting ran late and Lisa was about to tear her hair out. When we finally connected after the meeting, I raced to PetCo to get the spray before they closed. When I returned with the spray, Lisa and I took each of the puppies outside and doused them good. We left them outside in a box to dry off while Lisa and I had a much needed glass of wine. Then we took the puppies back inside to feed them with Lisa’s eye dropper. What a day!

The next morning things started to improve when Lisa ran to the store early and picked up some small baby bottles and dry puppy formula to replace the homemade stuff. The dogs took to it and the bottles much better than the eyedropper and they were able to eat their fill. In one day, their strength and activity started to improve a lot. Most of the ticks and all of the fleas were gone thanks to the spray. Puppies were looking good and they were even peeing on their own. Then, the two females opened their eyes for the first time. They had names! “Big boy,” the lone male still had his eyes closed, but he had the best appetite. “Brownie,” the middle female was a fussy eater and looks different from “Big boy” and “Baby,“ the runt of the litter. Big boy and Baby look like a black lab mix while Brownie looks like a German Shepherd mix.

Lisa finally got through to San Antonio’s Animal Care Services and she talked to the foster care coordinator. She told us that if we could keep the puppies until they are weaned and weigh two pounds, they would be able to take them and try to find a home for them. Puppies are adopted fast they said. They asked us to fill out some paperwork and bring the puppies in for a look. While we were there, they gave us formula, bottles and a large cage for when they become mobile. We have to bring them in for a work- up and shots in two weeks. We also have access to vet care while we are foster parents. So here we are…foster parents to 3 adorable little mugs. Are we up to the challenge?

Food for THOUGHT…



Saturday, August 6, 2011

Jobs

So we have this deficit thing going on in the United States. It amounts to not having enough incoming revenues to cover the outgoing spending. This imbalance creates debt. Just recently our congress, after much contentious debate, voted to increase our “debt ceiling” so that we can continue to borrow money to make ends meet. Uncle Sam is spending more money than he’s taking in and he’s been borrowing money from the neighborhood loan shark, China. Are you getting the picture?

Now, one way to deal with this deficit is to cut expenses. Well, what are our national expenses? What do we spend our tax money on? The Federal Budget breaks out something like this:

19% Non Defense Items (Discretionary)
16% Defense (Discretionary)
34% Entitlement Programs like Medicare and Medicaid (Mandatory)
8%   Interest on National Debt (Mandatory)
23% Social Security Trust Fund (Mandatory)

As you can see, some of our expenses are discretionary and some are mandatory. Mandatory items are contractual items that the government is obligated to pay. Discretionary items are at the discretion of Congress. They can choose to fund them or not. A discretionary item in our home budget might be something like spending money on ice cream or going out for dinner. A mandatory item would be something like paying your electric bill, your doctor bill or paying off a car loan. If we only cut expenses, which type of expenses should we zero in on? Now I don’t like paying on my car loan, but I do like going out to dinner. If I choose to keep going out to dinner and skip paying my car loan, I could find myself without a car and no way to get to my job. Then I’d be out of work. I guess looking at discretionary expenses first would make more sense.

Only cutting our discretionary budget items won’t solve the deficit problem alone. Some items like Defense are necessary in a dangerous world. We can’t go blindly hacking away at that budget and not put ourselves in danger, but we can still find substantial cost savings as we review our national policies for getting into war. Iraq and Afghanistan are wars that have now lasted 10 years and are costing taxpayers $10 billion a month. I’m not saying that mandatory expenses are exempt either, but just like the defense budget, we cannot make drastic cuts to entitlement programs that harm our elderly and the poor who depend on them. Yes, we will need to find cost savings in Medicare and Medicaid. We will have to find more efficient ways to administer these programs and reduce healthcare costs in the marketplace. In all of these programs, discretionary and mandatory, we will need to root out waste and corruption for substantial budget savings, but it will most certainly take political will, compromise and technology to make it happen.

So if we can’t solve the deficit problem by just cutting the budget items, what else needs to be done? We also need to raise revenue. Raising taxes? Horror of horrors, I brought up the “T” word! Wash my mouth out with soap. The bottom line is that we need both spending cuts and more revenue. One Democratic plan called for increasing taxes on the wealthiest Americans and corporations and actually lowering taxes for 95% of the rest of us and small businesses. Another plan calls for reforming the whole U.S. Tax Code and doing away with loopholes for millionaires, billionaires and large corporations. Some corporations like GE pay no taxes at all while qualifying for billions of dollars in tax credits. “Between 1986 and 2006, the top 1 percent of U.S. households almost doubled their share of the nation’s income, from 11.3 percent of the total to 22.1 percent. Over that same span, the share of top 1 percent income paid in federal income tax dropped by nearly a third, from 33.1 to 22.8 percent.” Is that fair?
-Source: Kyle Mudry and Justin Bryan, Individual Income Tax Rates and Shares, 2006, Statistics of Income Bulletin, Winter 2009, Internal Revenue Service.

Even with a more balanced approach of both cutting expenses and enhancing revenues with tax reform, there is still one more very important thing to do. Jobs. We need to create jobs and get people back to work. Working people don’t draw unemployment. Working people buy things. Working people pay their bills and their mortgages. Working people pay taxes. Taxes bring in revenue that can pay down the debt. For too many years, our government has allowed and even encouraged large corporations to take American jobs out of this country by offering tax incentives and tax breaks. These same corporations turned around and exploited cheap, third-world labor, leaving factories in this country shuttered and Americans unemployed. Perhaps it is time to start bringing the jobs back home.

Here’s a novel idea! Let’s bring back the WPA! Let’s provide jobs for all those folks who have exhausted their unemployment and are still looking for work. They can build things, clean up our parks, repair our nation’s crumbling infrastructure and install solar panels on homes. They can go back to school and learn a new trade, new skills and technology for the 21st century.

Our nation is at a crossroads and it is time to put political ideology and rhetoric aside for the good of this once great nation. It is a time that calls, no, it screams for innovation and new ideas. Liberals and conservatives must stop digging in their heels in this endless gridlock. America must reinvent itself and get our economy moving and growing again. Oh, but wait… all these things will cost money and this government and this congress is all about cutting things…not growing things. Just remember… fertilizer is cheap and water is free, but pruning blindly… could be deadly to this American tree.

Food for THOUGHT…

Saturday, July 23, 2011

American Tragedies

Might Makes Right


After World Wars I and II, The United States of America came to view itself as a great, if not the greatest, military force on this planet. Having defeated Germany, Italy and Japan in these hard fought wars, we saw ourselves as a great power, a great defender of right and freedom in the world. And we were. We were soon countered by the growth of Communism and the rise of the Soviet Union and the “Iron Curtain.” We began to see militarism as part of the American character. American corporations began to grow rich on developing and supplying weapons and arms around the world. President Eisenhower warned America in the 1950’s of the “Military Industrial Complex,” but no one was listening. America was becoming rich and full of itself. As a people, we became believers that military might makes our actions in the world right!

This belief has led us into conflicts and wars that were costly, not just in money, but in American lives and ultimately in America’s image in the world. Korea, Vietnam and the Gulf War were costly and ultimately led to American defeat or stalemate. These wars began with American hubris and seemed to end with our trying to find a way out of a quagmire, to “save face” for American pride and justify the expense and loss of life. In too many ways, Iraq and Afghanistan, the longest wars in U.S. history, are no different. These were wars of our making against stateless enemies with no boundaries and goals that were never clear. America will have to wait and see if there are winners or losers here. Clear victories and goals achieved will be subjects for debate among future historians. The U.S. is currently spending $10 BILLION a month on Iraq and Afghanistan at a time when Americans are calling for spending cuts and tax increases to deal with an unimaginable national debt in the TRILLIONS of dollars. The belief in “might makes right” was and still is an American tragedy.

Big Business vs. Unions

At the dawn of America’s Industrial Revolution, our country began to see the migration of workers from rural farms to big cites in search for industrial jobs. American industry needed masses of cheap, expendable labor to work in factories and mines that could produce large quantities of manufactured goods not only for the United States, but for the world. American big business was being forged in this revolution. The image of large smoke stacks belching out thick, black smoke became America’s symbol for prosperity and progress. The output of American factories and mines began to rival the world. Companies and corporations became rich and powerful, but at a growing cost to the American worker. Images of child labor, sweatshops and unsafe working conditions called out for the creation of labor unions. Big business seeking to maximize its profits fought long and hard against the unions, but in the end unions prevailed. American business and industry now had to contend with new laws, new regulations in regards to their workers. For the first time, American workers could bargain for better wages, better working conditions and benefits. American union bosses grew rich and powerful on dues paid with a growing union membership. Soon they rivaled the captains of industry for power and influence in Washington. The pendulum swung to the unions, but not without a price. American products were becoming too expensive on the world market. American workers were becoming lazy and complacent in union protected jobs that did little to improve innovation and productivity.

The animosity between big business and unions continued to grow until big business found a way out. By sending American production overseas to third world countries, American companies could take advantage of the cheap, expendable labor, free from troublesome labor laws and unions. China and India proved to be a “gold mine” for American industry. The cost of shipping these cheaply produced goods back to the U.S. could easily be offset by the lower cost of labor and production in these countries. Big business was able to influence Washington to give out tax breaks and write laws that not only protected large corporations, but encouraged them in this migration of American jobs overseas. Familiar American companies and corporations began to disappear or merge with larger and now multi-national corporations. These huge corporations began to have decreasing ties or allegiance to American coffers and taxpayers. Today, some of these monoliths, like GE, pay no taxes at all, while receiving huge American tax credits. China and India’s economies began to flourish, while our balance of trade with them continued to grow in their favor, increasing our national debt. A truly global economy was being born. It was extending far beyond American shores. The pendulum was swinging back to big business in a very big way leaving American unions wondering about their relevancy in this new global economy.

The cost of this swing has been devastating to our country. American manufacturing jobs have steadily declined leaving shuttered factories and deteriorating infrastructure in its wake. Unemployment in America is now over 9% and millions of American workers are scrambling for fewer and fewer available jobs. The cost of higher education and college degrees are steadily increasing beyond the average American’s ability to pay for them. More and more, the jobs that remain here require a greater level of education and training than our crumbling public school system can produce. Increasingly, American high tech companies are hiring better trained workers outside the U.S., countries like India and Ireland. Many of these workers come highly educated, but they lacked opportunities in their own countries. In relatively short order, America went from a country of belching smoke stacks and production rival to the world… to a “service economy.” Little by little, America has come under the economic thumb of the very countries that we sought to exploit only decades ago. “Made in China or India” are on many of the abundantly cheaper products Americans now buy out of necessity, rather than out of quality or loyalty to American workers. If American labor unions and American industry had found ways to work together, who knows what the face of America would look like today. The rivalry between business and unions remains an American tragedy.

Banks and the American Dream.

As America grew in the Industrial Revolution, so did the banking industry. In time, just about any town of any size had one or more banks. They were the center of local trade and commerce. People went to their local banks for business loans, mortgages and personal loans. Americans got to know their bankers as well as their doctors or dentists. Banks were an intricate part of the community.

Big banks and financial institutions came into being to meet the needs of American industrial growth. The captains of industry needed a place, a tool, an instrument to use their growing capital. Financial markets provided for the buying and selling of their stocks and bonds to help fuel America’s growing economy. Over the years big banks have become Mega-banks as Wall Street’s influence and power have grown. Small, community banks were slowly becoming a thing of the past and bank mergers were becoming commonplace. The face of banking was changing with ATM’s and drive-thru windows and credit cards issued by these big banks. Today, online banking over smart phones has come into being. Gone are the days of shopping for a bank by the sort of premium they offered to open an account. It was not uncommon for banks, in those days, to offer a new toaster or some other small appliance to attract customers. Today, we shop by which bank will charge us the fewest fees, service charges and penalties. Which bank will allow you to have the lowest minimum balance in your account? Forget paying interest on that account. Are you kidding? Banking in America went from what they would offer you to have your account with them to what they will now charge you for having and using your money to make the bank even more money.

The American dream has always centered on having a home, a farm, a ranch, something that through hard work and perseverance, you could come to own. The vehicle to this dream of ownership was more often the home mortgage. It was something you worked out with your local banker. He knew you as a person. He knew what you did for a living and what your resources and abilities to pay back the loan were. If you got into trouble, you and your local banker worked things out. The mortgage stayed with your local bank. A few decades ago, a national idea took shape in Washington. It was a good idea. Let’s help returning veterans buy homes. It worked pretty well. Then it moved on to include the thought that middle class Americans and working class Americans could use some help reaching their American dream, too. Federal agencies and corporations were created to help reach this goal. If Americans could find a way to own their own home, they would feel more invested in their communities and neighborhoods. The middle and working class would thrive. It was a truly remarkable vision for the future of America.

The unraveling of this great American dream came with deregulation of big banks, financial institutions and insurance companies by Washington over the last few decades and by both parties in power. Home mortgages could not only be obtained by community banks and big mega banks, but more and more by sub-prime lenders offering seemingly low rates and fewer background checks on the families being loaned the money. The lenders no longer knew their customers. Many people were given loans with such impossible terms that they were doomed to fail. It became not the quality of the loan, but the quantity of loans generated by these often unscrupulous lenders that generated their quick commissions. These good and bad loans could then be bundled up and sold off to Wall Street investors and used as complicated financial instruments to create even more wealth. The American dream was about to become the American nightmare.

The housing market took off like a rocket. Suddenly, real estate was an extremely good investment. With the help of questionable home appraisers, used by these sub-prime lenders, the values of homes began to ratchet up quickly. Speculators came into the market turning homes in a matter days or weeks for a quick profit. Clearly the housing market could not sustain this kind of growth. The bubble burst! Too many bad loans were being held by financial institutions like Lehmen Brothers. In turn, their bad loans were insured by large insurance companies like AIG. One by one, the big banks and Wall Street investors began to realize the mess they had created. Some giants went under. The American economy was about to collapse and markets were in free fall before our government could finally stabilize and bail out these reckless financial institutions..

Housing prices began to fall across America. People who could no longer afford their complex mortgage rates from these sub-prime lenders quickly lost the option to sell their homes. These homeowners soon found themselves “under water,” owing more on their mortgage than the house was now worth on the market. Today, millions of Americans now face foreclosure of their homes or the prospect of simply having to walk away from their mortgage, leaving the banks holding the proverbial “bag.” All around America, whole neighborhoods have been abandoned to weeds, vandalism and neglect by their former owners. With little prospect of resale any time soon, the glutted housing market continues to stay depressed. The American dream lays shattered for so many people. Greed and the inability, or even worse, the unwillingness by Washington to regulate America’s financial industry is, and will be for some time to come, an American tragedy.

The End of Civility, Common Sense and Compromise

Perhaps the greatest American tragedy is being played out before us right now with the debate in Washington over extending the debt limit. If the financial experts are correct and the United States of America is allowed to go into default, America as we know it, may be over and even worse… the world economy could come to a crashing halt. Then again, perhaps it won’t, but a small group of freshmen house Republicans are betting that America and the world won’t crash and burn on August 2nd, 2011. They have steadfastly dug in their heels for their ideology, as have their Democrat counterparts to be sure, and together both sides have brought our country to the brink of an abyss.

Perhaps it does not even matter if they are proved right or wrong. We have seen our national leaders time and time again place party ideology, politics and future election chances ahead of civility, common sense and most importantly…compromise, compromise to get things done for the good of our nation. It is what we have witnessed over these last few weeks, months and years in the halls of our government that is the REAL American tragedy.

Food for THOUGHT…

Thursday, July 14, 2011

The Republican “Brand”

Some congressional Republican leaders are worried that failure to reach an agreement on extending the debt ceiling would “destroy the Republican Brand.” The Republicans would be blamed for their refusal to negotiate with President Obama and the Democrats. They are starting to worry about how the voters will view them in 2012. It started me thinking about the concept. Just what is the Republican Brand?


If you were to ask a Republican today, they would probably say that their “brand” stands for smaller government, less regulation of business and banks, lower taxes, the sanctity of marriage and pro-life. The Republican Brand stands for family values and fiscal responsibility. Now that sounds reasonable. Who wants a “big brother” government dictating your every move? Why should banks and corporations be bogged down with all kinds of troublesome regulations that prevent them from doing what they do best…make money? Who wants to pay higher taxes? That’s a no-brainer! Duh! Marriage should always be thought of as sacred in my book and who’s not for life…liberty… and the pursuit of happiness? In fact, who’s not for family values or balancing the old checkbook? Sounds like a pretty good brand that even Martha Stewart would be proud of.

Then I started thinking about how Republican President, Herbert Hoover, ushered in the Great Depression. Another Republican president, Richard Nixon, had to resign because of a little thing called “Watergate” and dirty tricks against the DNC. Thank God for the savior of the Republican Party with President Ronald Regan. Finally, the golden age for Republicans! But wait, wasn’t there that little thing called, “Iran-Contra?” We finally arrive at President George W. Bush, former Republican governor from the great state of Texas. When he left the Oval Office after 8 years, he had turned a government surplus into a huge deficit. America was involved in two costly wars that were adding billions of dollars a month to that deficit. In the middle of all this national expense, Republican President Bush gives tax breaks to the wealthiest Americans. When this president left office, America’s economy was headed to the toilet, rivaling another Great Depression. (Remember President Hoover? Full circle?) The economic crisis that resulted was helped by years of a Republican administration’s neglect and undoing of banking and finance regulations.

During this last Republican administration, Americans saw the size of their government explode with the creation of another cabinet level position called Homeland Security. Americans began to stand in long lines as a new government agency, the TSA checked, scanned, poked and prodded airline passengers right down to their shoes, socks and fingernail clippers. This Republican administration expanded our government’s reach right down to town librarians with the passage of something called the “Patriot Act.” George Orwell had nothing on this group of NEOCON Republicans. Now what was that about smaller government and getting government out of our lives?

And talk about your “military industrial complex” warned about by President Eisenhower back in the 1950’s, VP Dick Cheney’s corporation, Halliburton, has done very well contracting with our military in Iraq and Afghanistan. (No conflict of interest there!) Large corporations and their lobbyists descended upon Washington and helped write all kinds of laws and regulations from environmental protection to banking to big oil and gas. (Remember Tom Delay?) Jobs went not to Americans, but were exported to cheaper labor in India and China further widening our trade gap and adding to American unemployment. Large corporations like GE could avoid paying income taxes and earned large tax credits under this Republican administration.

Today, under Democratic President Obama, the Tea Party Republicans have added a whole new dimension to their “brand” with opposition to the Affordable Healthcare Act (they continue to call it “Obama Care”) which seeks to do for the American Middle Class what Medicare did for our seniors and Medicaid did for dependent children and families. Republicans today want to cut back or eliminate altogether long treasured entitlement programs, including Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid that the disabled, seniors, women and dependent children depend on for their survival in this economy.

And finally in Wisconsin, the state’s newly elected Republican governor has launched an open attack on public service unions triggering voter outrage and recall elections to help overturn the governor’s anti-union law. Republican dirty tricks again raised its ugly head when they ran “fake Democrats” against bonafide Democrats in Wisconsin’s open primary. The Republicans poured a lot of outside money into these fake Democrats to foil the election. They failed, but the fact that they tried to pull it off to cheat voters…speaks volumes about the Republican Brand.

So what is the real Republican Brand? Is it to cut crucial programs that act as a safety net for millions of vulnerable Americans under the guise of deficit reduction while preserving tax cuts and credits for the wealthy? Is it doing away with the EPA and all their bothersome regulations? Is it the union busting party? Is it the mean-spirited, Party of NO? Is it the party of intolerance? Is it the party of I’ve got mine now you go scramble for yours? Is it the party of no taxes for the wealthy, because we provide the jobs? (oh, really) Should Americans continue to buy and vote for this brand?

So what is the Democratic Party Brand, you ask? Is it the tax and spend liberal party? Is it the massive debt party? Or is this the party of Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, alternative energy, education, jobs and recovery? Is this the party of the greatest good for the greatest number?

Food for THOUGHT…