Monday, September 12, 2005
Mark Morford and Hurricane Katrina
Stop criticizing! The rich man’s CEO president is executing his job requirements perfectly. Actually, while there is a lot of criticism directed toward George W. Bush, in reality I think the administration as a whole and a lot of Southern politics came into play throughout this whole mess (note: to access this video clip, click on the link, click on the free pass, watch the ad, then come back and click on the “Southern politics” link again). I mean, who really believes Bush is in charge, anyway? (Just type in “failure” and see what I mean.) Mark Fiore also had something to say about it (big surprise). And as for me? *sigh* There’s not much to say anymore, is there? Just to say, thank you to the rescuers that risked their lives (and live gunmen) to get people out. Thank you to the Air Force helicopter pilots that stopped and rescued 150 people (and received a reprimand from their commanding officer because of it). Thank you to the people that extended a hand to someone else in need, whether or not it was caught on tape via news crews. And thank you to those, both overseas and at home, who have contributed to relief efforts. We are not the sum total of our government…
Saturday, May 7, 2005
And From Russia...
Friday, April 29, 2005
Orwell Rolls in his Grave
Taking Back Christianity: Ten Reasons Republicans think they are “God’s Party” — but aren’t. I’m sick of this kind of conservative bias everywhere. But anyway, back to “Orwell Rolls in his Grave”… what I did enjoy about the movie was the consensus that anti-trust laws need to be rewritten. I have felt, for a long time, that this is key to reform in all areas of our society. Anti-trust legislation is now a hundred years old, which means that corporations and media giants have had a hundred years to figure out how to get around it — and they have. Look at the franchise system: this is a system of corporate control that allows monopolization without, ahem, monopolization under the law. Take any fast food chain: each is privately owned, but do we ever see any kind of customization or individuality? All are under tight corporate control — almost like, gee, a corporation — without falling under anti-trust legislation, even when they dominate a market. We also see buy-ups of competitors: for example, Microsoft now owns 49% of Macintosh/Apple. They cannot hold a “controlling” share, but they can certainly influence decisions with 49% of stock. In addition to this kind of economic monopolization is polarization in the media (either liberal or conservative — what really happened to “fair and balanced”?) and a kind of ideological monopoly. For example, the same media corporation owns both the Washington Post (liberal) and the Washington Times (conservative) — I had to read both when I lived there to get a decent idea of what was really happening. Now I read the internet — and not msn.com or cnn.com, but a host of news agencies from all over, as well as individual bloggers. I really believe that anti-trust legislation is key to allowing diversity of opinion and free speech to all people, not just speech in the corporate interest. When I was a child, we used to talk about communism and fascism arising “from within” the U.S. and threatening Democracy, but I never believed I would live to see it. And yet, I have.
Monday, April 25, 2005
Ten Signs of Fascism
1. Powerful and Continuing Nationalism.
2. Disdain for the Recognition of Human Rights.
3. Identification of Enemies/Scapegoats as a unifying cause.
4. Supremacy of the military.
5. Rampant Sexism.
6. Controlled Mass Media.
7. Obsession with National Security.
8. Religion and Government are intertwined.
9. Corporate Power is protected.
10. Labor Power is suppressed.
11. Disdain for Intellectuals and the Arts.
12. Obsession with Crime and Punishment.
13. Rampant Cronyism and Corruption.
14. Fraudulent Elections.
Friday, April 22, 2005
George W. Bush -- Red Communist?
Recently my husband and I took a long drive: destination, Las Vegas. There we met my sister (it is a halfway point) who took our son for a brief visit. On our way home, in the accompanying silence that comes sans 3-year-old boy, we talked politics, and M., my husband, made a wild statement: George W. Bush is a communist. Now, you have to understand, M. is a Republican who has voted for W., so it wasn’t like I was settling in with Noam Chomsky (who wouldn’t consider the “C” word an insult, anyway) for a nice long talk. No, this is M., former Marine and homeschooler, saying such a wild thing. I loved it. I wanted to make it a headline. Then, when I had calmed down a bit, I said the question that is probably on everyone’s mind. “So how d’you figure that one?” Here it is, the best as I can put it, and for this special post I have turned on my comments just to chronicle the hysteria.
Social security is considered a form of “lite” socialism that is essentially a support for seniors, widows and the disabled in our country. And everyone knows that W. would like to priva— I mean, personalize social security. But what does this actually mean?
Well, it means that citizens could opt out of regular SSI accounts and put their money into personal accounts to invest in private business. Keep in mind, Social Security does not invest in private business; it is a murky system I won’t get into but primarily the money is kept in government bonds. Well, if citizens invested in private business through the government, essentially this means that the government would own parts of private businesses. Yes, the money would eventually go back to the private citizen at retirement, but for the 40+ years in between, the government would be in control of those shares. Moreover, if, as is likely, enough people invested in a company through these shares, it is possible that the government would have controlling interest in that private company.
Chilling, isn’t it? And while many would protest that this is not the aim of those in government, but that the ultimate aim is for people to have more money for retirement (or for Wall Street to have more money for retirement, depending on what side you might be on) the truth is that this would allow government an “in” that might be exploited at a later date (I do not mean to invoke slippery-slide argumentation, but simply to point out a loophole that could be exploited). It also means that, at some point, this could become a serious challenge to the sovereignty of private businesses. The fact is, as long as the government is managing those accounts, it will have control over those businesses. If the government does not manage those accounts but instead says private citizens have complete control over them, well, then we simply have the abolishment of social security payments and “encouragement” for private citizens to start more IRAs or 401Ks. If the government is forcing a private citizen to pay into an account, it is managing that money, one way or another. Which means interference in private businesses and which equals Red Communisim. No more pinko commies, now we have the real thing in our midst.
Just something to think about — the comments are on.
Thursday, March 10, 2005
Nietzsche
I was looking over some of the news articles by Giuliana Sgrena, an Italian journalist who was held captive for a month by Iraqi insurgents. Interestingly enough, 35 minutes after her release she was nearly killed by U.S. troops as she was trying to exit Iraq. There are some theories that this was “accidentally on-purpose,” as she found some pretty controversial stuff — you can read about a woman who spent time in Abu Ghraib here, and there are other stories in the Il Manifesto, an Italian newspaper. This particular story about prisoner abuse brought to mind a quote from the (in)famous Nietzsche, Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. And when you look long into an abyss, the abyss also looks into you.
Not much to add to that, and thanks to Nafisi, who put that poignant and timeless quote into her book.
Baghdad Burning
Now that I have my new Bloglines account set up, I can get the feed for my newest favorite blog, Baghdad Burning, a blog written by an Iraqi woman about the current situation there. Since I am currently reading Reading Lolita in Tehran, an amazing book about an English Lit professor whose study of 19th century American novels was considered “revolutionary” in Iran after the ayatollahs gained power in the 1980’s, the allegations that radical Shias who came into power during the last elections may make Iraq another Iran is downright chilling. It seems counterproductive that our administration may do such a thing, but actually, what most people do not know is that, in general, women’s rights are not considered “human rights” by U.S. policymakers, which is why there was no protest regarding the Taliban regime before 9/11 (although press made it seem that saving women was one of the reasons for destroying the regime, there were other — primarily geo-political reasons — that are far more plausible). This means that, were the Iraqi clerics who came “democratically” to power to bring stability to the country, even at the expense of women’s rights, it is totally possible that the U.S. may leave it at that. I mean, who can justify staying in Iraq longer than necessary? The protesters want the U.S. out of there right now (yesterday, really), and so does everyone else who has taken a hard look at the U.S. deficit. Would there really be the political pressure to stay in Iraq for the sake of women who do not want to wear the chador or for girls who don’t wish to be married at the age of 9? Or will this be left to “the Iraqis themselves” to iron oPost Options ut what is often considered either a cultural or a religious problem? Who could justify spending billions of more dollars — or for our troops to continue getting killed on foreign soil — for human rights violations that the U.S. certainly has never cared about before?
This is what struck me about Nafisi’s novel: I am working hard to help children who have been sold into slavery and prostitution. But, in Iran, even today, men can have “temporary marriages” that are as short as ten minutes (in addition to four wives) and men can also marry a girl as young as nine years old. What I work against every day is legal there. If we turn yet another country into a duplication of that — well, this is what I think about it : And whosoever shall offend one of these little ones that believe in me, it is better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and he were cast into the sea. (Mark 9:42, The Bible)